THE UNIVERSITY DAILY SNOW KANSAN Friday, April 1, 1977 Vol. 87, No.117 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Balloon issue still unresolved See story page 12 Sport funds loss likely for women The Student Senate probably will allocate funds to Women's Intercollegiate Athletics during this spring's budget hearings but it won't be in office until Harper, StudEx chairman, said yesterday. "We're going to recommend that the budget be passed including the funds for Women's Intercollegiate Athletics but include a rider on the bill saying we're going to discontinue funding intercollegiate activities." Harner said. The Women's Intercollage Athletics request is a line item of $45,406 on the Senate budget. The amount is approximately one third of the program's entire budget. THE STATE provides the remaining two thirds of the budget but won't reimburse the program for the entire amount if the Senate doesn't fund them this spring, Harper said. "The state's budget is completed just as we begin ours," he said. If Women's Intercollegiate Athletics isn't mandated, they have nowhere else to turn for help. Jill Grubaugh, who is on the Women's Intercollegiate Athletics advisory board, said that without the Senate funds, the university would not be able to fund athletics. "The program needs the money to send teams to the various universities," she said. Women's Intercollegiate Athletics are nurtured from men', which are self-supporting." HARPER SAID he was confident that the Senate would approve funding for the program this year because the program could end without Senate funds. Another reason for funding Women's Intercollegiate Athletics this year, he said, is to give the state a year in which to provide the funds the Senate will stop providing. The state is required to provide funds for women's sports in compliance with TITLE IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded educational institutions. Harper said the Finance and Auditing Committee's general budgeting philosophy of not funding intercollegiate activities was a long-term Senate policy. Funding requests flood Senate budget hearings ★★ 1976 first of the Senate's spring budget hearings, three Student Senate committees last night heard funding requests from 21 student organizations. The three committees - Academic Affairs, Cultural Affairs and Student Services - have a total of $48,729 to allocate to the 21 groups and 25 other groups they will hear from on April 4 and 5. The 46 groups are requesting a total of $82,362. The organizations presented detailed budgets to the committees justifying their proposed expenses for the coming year. The budget requests included many routine allocations for such things as office supplies, publicity material, office rental, telephone services and salaries. At their meetings next week, the budget includes all of the in the budgets, and will then present them to the Student Senate at the April 12 meeting. The requests heard by the Academic Affairs Committee were Blacks in Communications Caucus, $5,000; Student Association for Combined Health Services, $796; Dicta, $864; Undergraduate Atthropology Association, $39; Vertebrate Biology, $39; Asian Studies, $300; Entropy, $238; Undergraduate Philosophy Club, $210; German Club, $200; and KU Student Art Education Association, $95. The Student Services Committee heard requests from Kansas Environmental Services, $10,543; Consumer Affairs Association, $8,269; Friends of Hillsboro, $8,064; Dollars for Legal Aid, $4,100; MECHA, $2,300 and Hillop, $1,075. The request heard by the Cultural Committee were Tau Sigma Dance Society, $, $\phi$; 0651, International Club, $, $3.500, University Dance Company, $, 1.000, KU Folk Dance, $735; Operation Friendship, $00. Scoop 'er up Mike Lundblade, Wichita senior, found himself without a bat. while nlaving softball yesterday in front of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. A nearby shovel seemed to do quite nicely though as Landblade hit grounders and飞 balls to some of his friends. Newly appointed vice chancellor plans to survey student opinion A survey to sample student opinion on various topics will be developed at the university of Kansas, David Am伯, Binghamton, for a facelab encoder for student affairs, said yesterday. The survey will be patterned after one now used at Kent State University, where Ambler is vice president for educational and student services. Ambler, who was in Lawrence this week to look for a house and meet with University and student officials, will take office here July 1. The Kent State survey samples students for their perceptions of the school and their opinions on issues facing the university and awareness of the university's resources. "WE CAN T RELLY on just our hunches as to what the students know and are also. Amber said. "We need to try to get a system up where those things can be tested out." Computerized lists are made of different Kent State student classifications, such as muter and married student A random sampling is then taken from each category. Ambler said the Kent State system once discovered that a large percentage of students there had never heard of the student health center. He said he hoped the new system at KU would help avoid such problems. Textiles subject of art research The system also will examine student attitudes and problems and try to discover why some students leave school prematurely. BY CAROLELL Staff Renorter A By CARL CEDER Except for a vacuum cleaner, Marshra Craig appears to have all the necessary instruments to perform surgery; a scalpel; a pair of sharp, tapered tweezers; a magnifying glass and a bright light to illuminate her subject. The subject Craig, Newark, N.J., graduate student, works with isn't human or vegetable, however, it is mineral. It is also about 600 years old. She works with 30 fragments of pre-Colombian textiles at the Museum of Art in Spoon Hall. Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Craig is doing research on the textiles for a curatorial problems course taught by Charles Eldridge, director of the Museum of Art and associate professor of art history. The textiles are remnants of tapestries, garments, fishnets, baskets and blankets from the Chancay Indian civilization in Peru, Craig said. "TWO OF THE most interesting pieces we have are the fragments with bird and feline characters woven in the design," she said. Textile preservation Marsha Craig, Newark, N. J., grad, student, works with Those characters, drawn in an abstract design, seemed to have been very popular in the Chancery Indian culture, Craig said, and their faces were made exclusively with natural dyes. the Chancay Indian used certain berries in their coloring process to make a color: certain vegetables, such as cucumber; certain vegetables, such as a yellow color; and tree bark for brown tortoiseshells. she said that because the civilization was limited to using only natural dyes, the Indians didn't have the great variety of colors that are available today. One of the problems involved in working with the fragments of textiles is testing them for color fastness, Craig said. "THERE ARE two techniques used for cleaning textiles and checking color fastness in the said. "One is wet cleaning, which is done with a brush. Another is dry cleaning, which uses chemical Craig said that before she had test the fabrics in water, the pH content and acidity had to be checked because too much acid in the water would damage the fibers. The textiles are cleaned primarily to "I WANT to start looking immediately at information to see how we can improve our services and help students and student decision-makers involved in decision-making," he said. "WHAT WE ARE concerned with in terms of conservation of textiles is halting deterioration by not exposing the fabrics to dirt, humidity and light," she said. restore them as closely as possible to their original condition, Craig said, so they could be used in instruction or could be placed on exhibition. However, Craig said many of the fragments were so damaged by weathering and so deteriorated by microorganisms that restoration wasn't feasible. "From my studies so far, the material used in the weft, or horizontally woven fibers, was wool or other animal hair and cotton." "The fibers of the weave, was cotton," Craig said. "As long as there is an understanding about where responsibility rests, I see no area where student involvement can't be encouraged." he said. Craig said that her main concerns now were cleaning, identifying and cataloging the textiles. After a textile has been cleaned by vacuuming, it is identified by examining a strand of its material under a microscope, she said. Ambler said he hoped students would become more involved in matters affecting the school. ACCORDING TO Craig, most of the The recent investigation into the alleged beating of an Iranian student was handled by a law enforcement agency. tapestries, garments and blankets were woven on backstraps or ankle looms, primitive and movable machines used to weave thread or yarn into cloth. "The basket and fisnet designs were done with macrane knots, which are the same as those used today because they are universal technicians." she said. See TEXTILES page three The textiles are part of a major collection, craig said, and their historical and artistic value is not to be missed. "IF A STUDENT is unhappy with his course load and living situation, he has a greater potential for dropping out," Ambler said. "We need to find these problems and solve them so we won't waste that student's resources." "PD LIE to see student issues like that handled by students themselves," he added. When you have conflicts between student and faculty, the students will be involved in the final decision." Ambler said he wanted to start on the system immediately but wasn't sure how much he would accomplish before he arrived in Lawrence. Ambler was hired to replace William Balfour, who resigned to resume teaching as a professor of physiology and cell biology. He said his immediate concern after taking office would be to become more familiar with KU and to analyze information from the student survey. However, matters such as the judgment of faculty members should be left to other faculty members who know the issues best. The knowledge suggested ways teaching could be improved. Ambler said the best way to combat KU's predicted enrollment was to continue maintaining the quality of KU's programs. "Nothing sells like the product itself," he said. Clever capers a part of April Fool frenzy "Freeda," she screamed. "Your dog—it's lying in the street. It was just standing there, in the middle of the street, when this car came along. He slammed on his brakes, and well, I don't know if Tippy's hurt, but he's just living there." Muriel rushed panic-stricken into the bedroom this morning. Freeda threw off her bedcovers. Fumbling around for her robe—bug-eyed and frantic—she was distracted by muffled laughter coming from Muriel's direction. The chuckles rolled into hysterical laughter as Muriel, gasping for air, said, "APA!" Funny? Perhaps, but Freeda didn't think so. She dumped a can of dog food into Muriel's bed and decided not to talk to her for several days. April Fool's Day, also known as All Fool's April, is, according to 'Armour's Almanac', a day when it is customary to play practical games—risking the possibility of losing them. Christine Chaudier, in "Everman's Book of Ancient CUSTOMs," says, "It's 'a day when everyone is entitled, if I can, to make other people look ridiculous by getting them to believe something that isn't true, or by being unsuspectingly on some foolish erasure." Where in the world did a custom employing such acts begin? Some say France initiated the custom in 1564, when it adopted the reformed calendar, thus changing the beginning of the year to Jan. 1. Previously, the New Year's Day was celebrated March 25, followed by a week of festivities. This made April 1 the eighth day of the feast and a magical time. - Although the once-central spring day has lost its prominent position, many people still keep up the old April Fool's Day customs. Spreading from France, the custom of playing tricks, which appeals to the prankster innate in most people, won general adoption. Chaundier has suggested that the holiday came from an ancient Jewish custom commemorating the day when Noah supposedly sent the dove out of the ark too soon. Finding no ground on which to rest, the dove had to return to the ark. According to the theory, Chaundair said, when old Jewish people forgot the anniversary, their friends sent them on useless errands to remind them not to forget to carry out the rites, whatever they may have done, while making the fruitless journey of Noh's dove. Whatever its origins All Fool's Day continues to be a thorn in the side of the more sober-minded, and a source of joy and amusement for the more fun-loving sorts. "Armour the Almancar" says that in parts of Scotland, the custom was known as "dabaw". "In other parts," the book says "it is known as 'hunting the cuckoo,' a cuckoo being a glove. In France the person who does this is called Davil, and one man's gouw is another man's poison." 2 Friday, April 1, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Military called unprepared WASHINGTON - A Senate investigative report charged yesterday that U.S. military forces are in a shocking state of unpreparedness for combat, having only 51 percent of troops trained. The report by Sen. John Culver, D- Iowa, to the Senate Armed Services Committee said that, on any given day, only half of all U.S. combat planes and ships were operational and that few servicenf their weapons often enough to become proficient. "In short," Culver said, "we do not have the ready military muscle to match our strength on paper." Pentagon spokesman Tom Ross said the armed forces were now in an adequate state of readiness to carry out their assigned duties, but he asked Congress to take action. WASHINGTON—Although more Americans are committing suicide today than 25 years ago the top killers of 1060 have either been eliminated or are in a relapse. Housina costs to skurocket The report, compiled by the National Center for Health Statistics and presented to the Senate health subcommittee, said the health status of men aged 25 to 44 had Of the five leading causes of death in 1950, the report said, only suicide has increased. The report said a startling increase in lung cancer death rates had occurred since 1960, including higher rates for women. Killer diseases in decline WASHINGTON - The median-priced new home will cost almost 800,000 by 1986, and the average downpayment will be almost $23,000, driven nearly half of the way by a 5% tax. The Senate Banking Committee met a senate committee yesterday in Kenneth T. Rosen, professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University, told the Senate Banking Committee that the nation was in a housing crisis, and that the American dream of universal home ownership is virtually dead. Rosen urged passage of legislation, sponsored by Sen. Edward Brooke, R-Mass., that would permit graduated mortgage payments, which start low and increase. It would allow families to deduct up to $2,500 a year from gross income, which would be put into a separate account for accumulating a downpayment. SALT talks will resume WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States and the Soviet Union, glossing over their failure to reach any accord on strategic arms limitation, announced it would resume SAIT talks and discuss Middle East peace prospects in Geneva in May. In Moscow, however, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko accused Washington of trying to achieve one-sided privileges in the nuclear arms proposals the Kremlin rejected Wednesday. He asked for more realism in the Geneva talks. "I would like to express the hope that U.S. leaders will stand on a more realistic position, taking Soviet security into consideration," Grumky said one-sided privileges," Greymko said. In their joint communique marking the end of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance's three-day Moscow visit, however, the two nations tried to accentuate the positive—promising to work together for just and lasting peace in the Middle East and saying they achieved several understandings on lesser issues during the Vance visit. Pot bill passes committee; Senate debates it Monday The committee voted seven to three to report the bill to the full Senate but reported that it was not passed. A bill to reduce the penalties for possession of an ounce or less of marijuana passed the Kansas Senate Committee on State and Federal Affairs yesterday and probably will be voted on by the Senate Monday. The bill is sponsored by State Sen. Mike Glover, D-Darreville. State Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Westwood. Senate majority leader, said he expected debate and a final vote Monday. State SNE. Don Allegruci, D-Pittsburgh, a committee member, said yesterday that reporting the bill without recommending or allowing it to pass the Senate to debate it without restrictions. If passed as it now stands, the bill would make possession of an ounce or less of marijuna punishable by a fine of no more than $100 for the first two offences. Any offense after the second would be a class A misdemeanor. Possession of more than an ounce would be a class A misdemeanor for the first two offenses and a class D felony for subsequent offenses. If passed on its present form, the bill would go to Bennett to be either signed or vetoed. If the Senate amends the House bill, it would be better to accept the Senate's amendments. MONDAY 2 setups for the price of one TUESDAY Couples night mix or match 2 draft beers for the price of one Rubayyat SOMETHING HAPPENING EVERY NIGHT! THURSDAY Free Jukebox FRIDAY and SATURDAY LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Michael Baers 12-9 p.m. WEDNESDAY LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Michael Beers 9-12 p.m. Get Your Membership Now! Ramada Inn 茶壶 SILVER AND STREAK. Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud THE SEVEN-PER-CENT PG SOLUTION Granada Every day 8:17 - 9:10 & 10:10 Sat, Sun, Mat 1:15 (924) 336-2222 www.granada.com An Epic Fantasy of War & Peace 10 Academy Award Nominations "ROCKY" "WIZARDS" *Starring* SYLVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7 & 8; 9 & 40 Sat.Sun.Mat.1 & 45 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:05 Hillcrest PG Hillcrest Eve. 7:30 & 9:15 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped, underwater. AIRPORT 77 Varsity INITIATE - DEPARTMENT OF LIFE "SUPERVAN" Eve, 7:30 & 9:45 Saf.-Sun, Ma1, 1:55 Hillcrest "THE BIG BUS" Show starts at 7:15 Sunset Wine & Spirits West in Eagle Hill Bernard W. O'Connor ELECT M. D. VAUGHN School Board #497 Aims Vitally interested in efficient growth and development of local school systems super .. 11 years President of Lawrence Savings As- sociation 6 years teacher & coach at Fr. Scott & Pratt Kansas Educ. B.A. - Washburn University M.A. - Emmanuel State College I would appreciate your support for M. D. "Arkie" Vaughn. Add: grad, work---Oklahoma State University Committee to Elect M. D. Vaughn, Jack Moore, Treasures Applications Now Available For Rock Chalk Revue "78" Producer Business Manager KU-Y office (110 Kansas Union) Interviews April 6th - 7th A very special offer from BREAD G's U'S Bar-B-Q bring in this coupon and receive your choice of chopped or roast beef with fries or tater-tots ONLY $2.00 530 W. 23rd Up with People in cooperation with Lawrence High School Haskell Indian Junior College Musical entertainment for the entire family Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Tickets: SUA Office, Lawrence High School, Haskell Indian Jr. College, Rusty's IGA stores $3.50 public/$2.50 students Your challenge is to discover words of four letters in this pentagon. Discover them by following the straight lines to and from the letters, forming words The challenge. you go. You may not use two of the same letters in any one word. If you can make 30 words or more, you've met the challenge. A H N P T E L O D I R When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference. We hope you have some fun with the challenge. There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too. The Pabst challenge: We welcome the chance to prove the quality of our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has. Robot Blue Ribbon PABST. Since 1844.The quality has always come through. E cl Info import to chairr Abuse The U specia traini the K "Of stress often, "WJ each, said. Adr Counc progr the al Ba fo to 1 The electic assist studer Assen Eletc College the email s the mail she sa allow The the co repres meetin Thin and 50 ballot 3 Friday, April 1, 1977 3402 Educators to study child abuse problems Informing educators about child abuse is important because they are in the position to recognize it first. Barbara Clarke, a special education teacher at Child Abuse and Neglect, said yesterday. The Council for Exceptional Children and the University of Kansas department of education will present such a training and tomorrow in the Kansas Union. Adrienne Redel, president of the Student Council for Exceptional Children, said the program also would focus on understanding the abusing parent. Clarke, instructor in special education, said most of the people attending were involved in education. The program will recognize and deal with child abuse, she said. Clarke' said part of the program would deal with identification of physical abuse. WE WILL include legal definitions of each, as well as see indicators., Clarke said. "Often, someone who abuses is in a situation of need, and needs a release often, the child." The deadline for receiving ballots in the election of teaching assistants (TAS), assistant instructors (AIS) and graduate instructors (GIG) must be set by Assembly has been extended to Monday. Ballot deadline for Assembly to be extended Eleanor Turk, assistant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the extension was granted to offset slow mail service. Some ballots were delayed in the past; they were sent to the voters, she said, and then to the governor, who allowed them to meet yesterday's deadline. The new deadline isn't expected to delay the counting of ballots or the seating of new representatives by the April 19 assembly meeting, Turk said. Thirty graduate student representatives as and As will be elected in the balloting. Clarke said the program would cover the legal action that occurred when a child abuse case went to court, as well as other cases involving violence and possible treatment strategies. CLARKE said that if a child anuse case was taken through criminal court, the parent was treated like anyone else who had used it. If the parent's consideration is given to the child, she said. "Very often jail is not the answer, but some kind of treatment is." Clarke said. MOST CHILD abuse is caused by a combination of four things, the potential for abuse to occur and the child seems handicapped in some way to the parent; and a lack of relief for the parent. Clarke said it was best to take a case to juvenile court. "That way, there can be treatment for the family, and if at all possible, the family can take care of their own." Redeel said that prevention of child abuse and treatment, and that being a good parent, is important. Clarke said, "Everybody has the potential to abuse." Redel said that child abuse cut across all social, racial and economic lines. child abuse as a poor family," she said. "More than 80 per cent of the parents who abuse were abused themselves," Clarke said. "A rich family is just as vulnerable to child abuse as a poor family," she said. She said many times they abused their children because they didn't know the cause. Redel said that last year 2,000 children were in need of abuse, including 12 children in Kampala. The American Humane Association estimates that battered children cases number between 30,000 and 40,000 a year, and suggests that at least 100,000 children are admitted to an additional 200,000 to 300,000 abuse abused each year, Clarke said. Use Kansan Classifieds V Because You Demanded It!! Featuring— From Kelsey's Bar in Kansas City. Jumpin Jay, the Bartender. Male Dancers Night Tuesday, April 5 Back by Popular Demand The Flamingo 9 till? Ladies Only Sailboat Racing on Potters Pond? Yes, the Great Potters Pond Puddle Jump is today, April 1, 3:30 p.m. at Potters M.Pether Also included is a sailing demonstration all performed by: Sponsored by KU Sail Club SUA Textiles . . . The pre-Colombian textiles are on loan to the Museum of Art from Barbara Jarrau. From page one Waggoner said that the fragments were acquired from burial sights along the coastal region of Peru, where the Chancay Indian civilization blossomed. which produced some of the most famous of the textiles, was in Poracas, Peru. Peru There were many burial grounds in the area around Lima, she said, and some of the fragments may have been religious or ceremonial pieces. ONE OF THE more popular burial sights, "The Chancay Civilization was eventually conquered by the Inca Indians, who in turn were conquered by the Spanish conquistadores," she said. "So the actual history of this issue is hard to determine because all of these cultures overlapped each other." "One Peruvian author dates the culture of the Incas from 1,380 to 1,600 A.D. so the textile fragments are likely from the Inca." Job program head named summer openings offered County commissioners yesterday approved a new coordinator for the Douglas County Youth Jobs Program. Next week applications for the program will be sent to junior highs, counseling services and the job opportunity center. The program will begin June 6 and continue for 11 weeks. Martha Jean O'Toole, named to the coordinator position, said yesterday the students between the ages of 15 and 24 were enrolled in vocational courses who met federal eligibility standards. Thirty-three positions will be available to students in Lawrence, Eudora, Baldwin and Perry-Lecompont. Each participant will be work a maximum of 150 hours at $2.30 an hour. The maximum one person can earn during the program is $345. O'Toole, business education instructor at High School High School, said the part-time work was fun. University Daily Kansan allow students to attend summer school or take driver education O'Toole said that she transferred some applicants to the Community Development youth job program because it offered more hours at a slightly better wage. Students on the program are evaluated twice during the summer, she said, and most who have problems get a second chance before they are replaced. County revenue-sharing funds pay for the program, which provides jobs with the city, county and schools. Job openings are for custodial services, clerical work, library work and painting and maintenance at the county fairgrounds. "We're here to help people," she said. "Her community pretty well complements other youth programs." O'Toole said the jobs were designed to help students learn the responsibilities of working. She said many of the participants had never worked before. TACO TICO® BUY ONE SANCHO SUPREME GET ONE FREE Delicious! Extraordinary! Taco Tico Sancho Supremes. 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Limit one per customer. --- TACO TICO Always in season and seasoned to please APRIL'S FOOLE SUN., APRIL 24 Reserved Seats Only GEORGE CARLIN at Kansas University Hoch Auditorium TICKETS ON SALE MONDAY, APRIL 4 AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION A RICHARD DEUTSCH I SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas TICKETS— Reserved Seats Only $5.75, limit 10 at: SUA Box Office, KIEF'S in Lawrence 4 Friday, April 1, 1977 University Daily Kansan sun THE UNIVERSITY DAILY DRY KANSAN Editorial focus on the Kansan The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 1, 1977 Vol.87, No.117 Everything expressed on this page is utterly untrue Law school subcontractor could be RIZTAK agent 100 Crumble! Crash! Progress on the new KU law school building is proceeding slightly behind schedule. Part of this is because of the substdurable wood that was used in the construction. By MALLORY JOHNS Staff Reporter BIZTAK agent. The law school is scheduled for completion this fall and may be placed in space for at least 200 students, and maybe even more than that. A minor subcontractor for the new University of Kansas law school building probably may be an agent of RIZTAR, the Secret Police, the Kansan has learned. The subcontractor's firm, F. Lawrence Byrne and Sons, is under contract to the state to supply it with substandard wood paneling. Its president, F. Lawrence Byrne, visited Assyria in the summer of 1974 According to the minutes of an F. Lawrence Byrne and Sons executive board meeting Feb. 26, 1975, the Assyrian venture was a "business trip." "F. LAWRENCE III asked his grand-father in the world he went to Assyria and everyone said 'yea, why?' and F. LawRENCE I was event on a business trip," the minutes say. According to a dependable source, F. Lawrence Byrne was then, and still is, a boardman at the University set that Byrne was responsible for an incident earlier this month in which a piece of substandard wood paneling allogged fell on an Assyrian student near the new law court. In an interview in the doorway of Byrne's Plush Ohio street villa, he denied being a political figure. "WHAT ARE YOU, some sort of crazy nut," Byrne growled as a huge guard dog stood behind him, holding a Luger. "Get here before you gets hurt, small stuff." Later that same evening, a Kansas reporter was followed by an unknown car for more than an hour. One of the secretaries, Mitzi Jones (not her real name), said KU's bill burglar not yet been kicked off the calendar. But, she said, it wasn't a high-air itemty. TOPEKA-Sources in the Kansas Legislature yesterday called reports that the legislature might end its 1977 session without acting on the University of Kansas' fiscal year (FY) 1978 budget requests, "but dunc." Legislators cut, defer KU budget THE BILL, which has been approved by the Ways and Means committees of the House and Senate, now calls for increases in faculty salaries of 1.3 per cent and 2.961 per cent increases in other operating expenditures (OE). KU had originally The secretaries to two state senators said the Board of Regents' appropriations bill, of which the KU requests are a part, might be considered by the Senate following discussion of bills making limestone the main creation a state department of navigation. The budget measure was cut more Staff Reporter Bv CHAD AMORY At that time Bennett said the requests were reasonable, but would bankrupt the state. He reduced the requested increases to 25.6 per cent for faculty salaries, 31.8 per cent for administrators' salaries and 48.3 per cent for administrative expenses would allocate $18.38 million for improvements at Robinson, the Field House and the chancellor's residence. THE LETTER said that there were at least two students who saw the piece of paneling alledgedly fail on the student. It said that these students were in potential danger from RIZTAK and that their names were Lynn McDonald, Lecompton freshman, and LeRoy Buttone, Albe, N.J., special student. Leben said he was conducting an informal poll on the contents of the letter and should have the results shortly. His personal impression, he said, is that the student probably did get alledgedly hit on the desk as a piece of substantial wood paneling. Also requested was $79.35 million for additions to Fraser, Summerfield, Flint, Blake, Bailey, Strong, Snow, Marvin and Lindley hills, Robinson Gymnasium, Allen Field House, Memorial Stadium and the chancellor's residence. THESE REQUESTS were approved by the Regents at a cocktail party last fall and sent to Gov. Robert Bennett. At first Bennett said he didn't remember receiving the requests, but later announced he had found them in a Cedar Crest luxury cabinet. "What else have you to got to work with?" he asked. In a letter intended for Steve Leben, the same dependable source told the Student Senate to "use its pull" on the administration to punish Byrne for the injuries the undisclosed Assyrian student suffered when he fell off a ladder and wore panoeling allegedly fell on his head. requested 38.7 per cent per applicant for faculty and hirers and OOE increases of 79.62 per cent from left into a fast-food restaurant on 23rd Street severely in legislative budget hearings. There, KU officials testified that unless additional funds were provided, Watson and Spencer Research libraries would probably lose their funding. The library fund after hearing that Lawrence had a public library students could use. THEY DID, however, vote to support an integrated outreach rural family residency practice program, which would train KU Med Center students for special problems they might encounter while practicing in the community. They are included Wichita, Kansas City and Topeka. IN A RELATED incident, a check with the Lawrence National Bank revealed that a check for $5.89 written by Byrne on the company account to pay for some groceries bounced less than three years ago. A bank spokesman said the bank had covered the check for Byrne but had charged him a service fee. State Sen. Bruce Binkley, R-Overland Park, and State Rep. Lester Tucker, D-Ebson, said they thought KU's requests were a little high. Buttonte said that the incident happened. "Vaughn it happened all right." he said. An amendment to this proposal stipulates that a student pay current Med Center tuition fees if he agrees to practice in Kansas for at least 35 years. Participants wouldn't be allowed to leave the state at any time; if they did they would be subject to fines equivalent to $4,692 a credit hour for each hour of medical school taken. "YEAH," the requests were a bit much, Binkley said, "but comparable to past weeks." The spokesman said that the fact that Byrne had been in Assyria was a pretty good indication that he was a RIZTAK agent. Tucker said he had sensed some hostility to the legislature toward giving KU more money. State Sen. Elmer Smucker, R-Cawker City, said he understood the need for improved athletic facilities, but saw no evidence that the proposed building improvements. "This foreign student was just walking along, studying a textbook or something, when—wham—he was hit on the head by a bullet that struck him. The wall of one of the upper stories," he said. "Foreign agents often forget to register when they enter this country," a FBFA spokesman said. "They're so busy paying deposits on their apartments and buying housing to meet new friends that they forget all about telling us they here." Foreign Agents (FBFA) in Washington D.C. revealed that Byrne wasn't on the official list of Assyrian agents in the United States. This, however, may be meaningless. "I can remember when Marvin Hall was built," he said. "It's a beautiful building, and sturdy too. I can't see any need to fix it." because of extenating circumstances which I'm not at liberty to discuss at this point in time," Teebe said. "I will say, however, that the cancellation of the Prize concert was not due to financial squabbling." Binkley said that he thought senators would vote to approve funds for new road All four concerts were sellouts. Ticket holders may petition the SUA Board for possible refunds, Teebe said, although their tickets will be honored at a performance by the High School Girls Glee at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Chintz Room of the Kansas Union SUA concerts canceled Those concerts that have been cancelled include the Simon and Garfunkel reunion (April 8), the James Brown/Aretha Franklin/Earth, Wind and Fire Revue (April 27), the Berlin Philharmonic (May 1) and the Freddie Prince Show (May 6). Due to scheduling problems and contractual misunderstandings, SUA has been forced to cancel several spring semester courses. Jason Teebe, SUA chairman, said yesterday. signs near campus and six fluorescent light fixtures in Strong Hall. University officials refused to comment on the affair, saying that the facts would all come out. "YOU CAN'T say this Senate is neglecting KU," he said. "We've had to cancel those concerts State Sen. LeRoy Sviervinsky, D-Narka, agreed. Rick Von Ende, executive secretary, said he didn't really know what exactly was goo- "You've got an office complex up there in King Hall that every citizen in the state of Kansas has access to." StateRep. Waldo Ferguson, R-Flush, said and some other representatives were upset. "Up there, we're teaching ichthyology, psychology, sociology, entomology, pharmacology and a heap of other studies that don't mean a goddamn thing to a lot of students. There's not a single class on fertilizer applications at KU. There's no vet training." “BESIDES, I heard the other day on TV that kids in all your dormitories are smoking marijuana. Should we spend precious tax dollars on that?” Chancellor Archie Dykes said he remained optimistic that KU's budget would increase. "This could, however, be a banner year for higher education in Kansas. I have been impressed with the concern manifested by many legislators, alumni and friends of the Senate that we should occur in classroom situations if the Senate approves the bill in its current status." Dykes had said earlier this year that he expected as many as 30 per cent of the faculty to seek jobs at other universities if he received at least a 30 per cent pay increase. Waitress' life total waste By ROD McNURT Staff Reporter How's tips? "Could be better," says Jane (not her real name), a waitress at a local restaurant. To this 38-year veteran of the art of waitressing, the shiny, polished things that surround her are the only bright things in her life. Amidst gleaming porcelain counters, surrounded by glittering steel beverage dispensers, Jane stands and pours a cup of milk to cup of coffee. She drinks it black. It is 2 a.m. Other than that, Jane's life is incredibly dull. "YOU WOULDN'T believe how in- bing the shaving cream, rubbing her cappuccino into incense-dried fingers. She blows on her coffee cup to cool its contents. Her teeth are stained. Thin, sharp lines etched at the corners of her eyes and the corners of her mouth remain motionless as she speaks—a dull, monotonous alto. A CALL TO the Federal Bureau of "You get the same type crowd in here nearly every night—you've got your "You just wouldn't believe it." truck drivers, the students, the drunks—the same old thing." A DRUNKEN man, probably in his mid-fifties, staggers from his booth to the counter. He orders a slice of picean pie. Almost without thinking, Jane skillfully slices it and puts it on the pie showcase, grate the plate and hands it to the swaying customer. He winks at "Ireally don't know why you're even interviewing me." "Well wait a minute...this is sorta memorable I guess. Well, we'll aim it ain't that good afterall. Let me think about it a bit." her, belches and stumbles back to his booth. "See what I mean? That guy is in here every night. Every the same line, too. told me he must to be in show business. I hear a lot of that in this dive." Asked whether anything stood out as a particularly memorable event in her career as a waitress, Jane responds quickly: SIE PAUSES, seemingly catching her breath. Once again her furrowed brow furrows once again as she seemingly thinks. "A last back-bek, it's got to be at least 20 years ago. Anyway, I hadn't hit my stride yet, you know, wrist-wise. Some old woman comes in for a cup of coffee. It looks like she'sAnyway, this old bread comes in. And I thinks to myself 'She's $9 if she'a day.' "KNOW what I mean? Old. "Anyway, somehow I forgot to make a fresh pot of coffee. I do that every two hours, you know, but I guess this time it was hard enough to cut with a buzz saw." I was not alone as the memories flood "Got it. Got a good one for ya "Probably could burned a hole in the floor. But heck, I mean what did I know? I poured the old lady a cup of that sludge, she took a sip, gagged and fell over. Dead. Just like that, I mean really dead—dead than a mackerel." "Oh, the cops came over and all. checked her out. Had an ambulance, too, and a doctor. But I knew she was dead "SHE HAD this funny look in her eyes—like she'd just stuck her little toe in an electric socket or something. I mean it was really weird. "As soon as the ambulance guys got her out, I just broke out laughing. I couldn't help it. Faint rays of early morning sunshine dart through slits in the restaurant window's curtains. "But don't print that. They'd fire me in a minute. Jack (not his real name either), he's my boss, you know. He's been trying to firme me for two years." "Old Jack sure would like to get rid of me. I guess he's still mad about the frozen shrimp." quired. "Well, it's a long story..." WHAT FROZEN shrimp, this reporter queried. And on goes the story of the frozen shrimp. On goes the meaninglessness of Jane's (her real name is Marcia Bodine) existence—another dull waitress, an incoming wave battering away at the seas of time and oceans of stale coffee. Force's goal two-fold; trim fat, save meat SenEx yesterday formed a task force to oversee the work of a steering committee, a campus-wide committee and 15 ad hoc sub-committees, as well as a memb of the ballooning college hurry-up. BY CONSTANCE BERFDORF-GOODMAN The task force will make recommendations on how to streamline the work of the various groups. The recommendations will be presented at the University Council, which will pass them on to the Faculty Council for approval. The Faculty Council, in turn, will send them to the Student Senate, which will assign them to the faculty council which will turn them back to the full Senate. CHANCELLOR ARCHIE Dykes and Del Executive, executive chancellor, have vision on the future. Council members expressed hope that the recommendations of the task force and committees would help simplify the University's decision-making process. If approved by all bodies, the recommendations will be voted on at the University Senate's annual meeting in May—unless he is elected to a quorum, as it has for the last two years. “Our maze of committees is just ridiculous,” one Council member said. “I hope this task force will begin to organize the 17 teams that we've assigned to work on this problem.” THE TASK FORCE will be composed of administrators, students from both campuses, faculty and staff members, a night janitor in Snow Hall and the Tan Man. The Office of Affirmative Action requested at yesterday's meeting that the committee contain appropriate numbers of blacks, whites, left-handed relief pitchers and students from Hackensack, N.J., in order to meet Affirmative Action guidelines. 1 Meanwhile, administrators expressed hopes that the committee, sub-committees, steering committee and task force would continue to work on decision-making system at the University. "You'd be surprised how often this maze of committees and sub-committees can be used to lose a touchy problem," one administrator noted. "Why, if we assign a question to a committee, it wonders off on me, never to be seen again. It is marvelous." IN OTHER action, the University Council's Academic Procedures and Policies Committee (O&A) and Planning and Resources (P&R) committees reported to SenEx on the research of work in the work of teaching assistants (TAs) and assistant instructors The committee referred to a report by the University Committee on the Progress of Teaching Assistants and Assistant Instructors and Other University Employees and the Freshman and Sophomores Occupied during the Day (UCTPA148IKFSOFD) See TFSM page 19 Eyes have it Staff photo Two KU students desperately try to remove painful large growths of hard, black skin from their eyeballs. See story page 18. Friday, April 1. 1977 --- --- Washington on the of the United meaning- o register a BFBA paying ents and new friends us they're fact that is a pretty RIZTAK t to work check with vealed that rne on the e groceries ago. A bank covered the ghed him a comment s would all etary, said tly was go- ld; aurs, a night Man. The requested at committee, of blacks, schers and i., in order delines. expressed committees, correspondence would be a University university this maze can see be can "one," one adam e assign a off on again. It's University Coun- dition Policies ministration process (P&R) on the prog- of teaching instructors a report by the Progress Assistant In- y Employes shman and the Day 10 101.1 data $taff photo d, black skin Marketplace offers food, arts, classes By MISSY PETERSON Staff Reporter A little more than a year ago, John Dobbin explored Lawrence for a spot to bowl. When he noticed a "For Sale" sign on an 11,000-square-foot building at eighth and New Hampshire streets, Dobbins' ideas began to grow. Within a year that empty building became the Marketplace, the first shopping mall in Lawrence. A concept new to Lawrence, the Marketplace has been referred to as the city's answer to Crown Center's West Village in Kansas City, Mo. Much smaller than West Village, the Marketplace has eight shops under one roof. The shops' items range from Mexican chess sets to Chinese antiques. DOBINS, A 26-year-old Lawrence native, and Jack Gaunnitz, associate professor of business at the University of Maryland worked out an idea to remodel the building. Design Build Architects of Lawrence designed a building for the shops. Dobbins and Gaunnitz formed a partnership with three Lawrence businessmen: John McGrew, John Eceldil and Gary Rauck. Five bought the building on Eighth Street. Originally, Dobbin said, he wanted mostly arts and crafts in the school to give him inspiration. THE ARTISTS and buyers who leased their property have the responsibility of designing the corporate facade. Aline Holtzman, owner of Su Casa, a Marketplace shop that specializes in Mexican imports, said she had been told by the store that her store was like being in a museum. "This is something a little different from what you find in the Mexican border shops," she said. "We sell ceramics, wall hangings and copies of pre-Colombian artifacts." Native American Artists, a shop owned by local Indians, draws from resources a little farther north. The Indians trade with tribes in New Mexico and Arizona for handcrafted turquoise jewelry, paintings, pottery, baskets and rugs. THE STORE also sells custom jewelry and offers jewelry-making classes. MARK A. WALKER Staff photo Marketplace originater University Daily Kansan Another class, choosing antiques, is taught by Mary Mallinowsky, manager of Dirty Thirty's and Earlier, another Marketplace show. The man behind Lawrence's first shopping mall is John Dobhnes, a Lawrence native. Dobbins first noticed the property at 8th and New Hampshire was her searching for The owners of the Gallery provide local artists with a place to sell hand-made pots. tery, sculptures, textiles, weavings and paintings. The Marketplace hasn't attracted a great deal of business. Bobbins said. "The only problem with the Marketplace now is that no one really knows we're here." Platinum donor visits jewelry professor A businessman who recently loaned 20 ounces of platinum to the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts visited campus Carlyle Smith, professor of design. The donor, David E. Lundy, president of Battley-Bishop, Inc., Malvern, Pa., said he wanted to meet Smith, who founded KU's School of Nursing. South retired at the end of this school year. Smith and Lundy had talked to telephone and exchanged several letters, but hadn't met before Wednesday. Smith's reputation and that of the jewelry department were the reasons KU was selected to receive the platinum, Lundy said. The platinum is "on loan" to the University for as long as the school finds it useful with, Lundy said. If the metal becomes contaminated, Battie-Bishop, Inc., will replace it. Platinum is concentrated through frequent melting and pouse. Several other colleges also have received quantitie s of the precious metal from the company. Members of the jewelry department are experimenting with the platinum to learn how its properties compare with those of silver and gold. Platinum is stronger and more durable than other metals, making it possible to use smaller amounts in jewelry production. "Platinum can stand on its merits as a material for jewelry," Lundy said. Platinum loans to colleges were begun to encourage the use of the metal in jewelry "The more people who have experience with the metal, the more widespread interest there is." Batty-Bishop uses platinum to manufacture industrial items, such as decals and paint. The metal also is used in cancer research, and is found in the batteries, glass fiber, automotive tires, glass fiber, and automobile catalytic converters, Lunday said. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 Kelly Cahill Anytime, Anytime AM Karla Coulter Dylanema, Dylanema SOME OF AMERICA'S BEST SONGS JUST GOT TOGETHER WITH RITA COOLIDGE. "Anytime...Anywhere" Songs by Boz Scaggs, Smokey Robinson, The Bee Gees, Neil Sedak, Kris Kristofferson, and Sam Cooke. Styled by Rita Coolidge. Kita Coolidge Anytime Anywhere Making '77 Sound Better AM UBL AMC ON SALE! ONLY $399 THORENS YAMAHA King & Olsen TEAC PIONEER REVOK Parks, who has since married and is now Carol Schrader, testified that she had received a broken rib and a facial cut during the altercation. Joseph Gardner Jr. 28, was found guilty yesterday in the Douglas County District Court of aggravated battery against his former girlfriend, Carol Parks. Schrader testified that on the night the battery occurred she told Gardner she didn't want to see him anymore. She and Gardner were discussing a broken date on the porch of the Anthony house when Gardner attacked her, she said. Testimony during the trial indicated that Gardner and Schrader had lived together from March to October in 1976, but the jury returned earlier he left him to join a Christian relapse. Man guilty of 2 battery charges He was also found guilty of battery against Robert Anthony, who had tried to intercede in an altercation between Parks Home, 1333 Broadway, that took place at home, 1333 Broadway, November. Anthony said that he had suffered a groin injury after Gardner kicked him when he was playing. Gardner testified he had asked Schrader to come out to the porch to smoke a cigarette and then became irritated watching them through the front window. GRAMOPHONE He said be then asked her to go for a walk with him and she refused. NAKAMICH BEVER DYNAMIC Schrader testified that after she refused, Gardner grabbed her arm and when she tried to pull away, he pushed her onto the porch railing. 842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6 Anthony said he came onto the porch at that point and was kicked by Gardner. Gardner then threw Schrader over the porch railing, according to Schrader. Hard Schrader said that during the confrontation, Gardner kicked her three times, twice in the rice and once in the face. She ran away when he heard police car sirens. Gardner said that he had kicked Anthony because he had feared an attack. He hit Anthony's groin although he had tried to hit his midsection. Gardner testified that he and Schrader fell against the porch railing and that Anthony came into the porch in a threatening manner. ESS inc Garrard INTERNATIONAL Accuphase KENWOOD Gardner said that he had tried to help Schrader to her feet, but that her bulky coat made her hard to hold. He had released her and she fell over the porch railing. Gardner said he thought he was kicking at her posterior when he kicked at her. "I kicked at her because I wanted her to get up off the ground and because I was mad and couldn't figure out what was going on," he said. Dual Carwin Vega audio-technica TDK KOSS SANYO He said he loved Schrader and hadn't meant to hurt her. The jury's decision was reached after one ballot. But the jury deliberated 90 minutes before they reached the verdict of guilty of aggravated battery. One juror said last night that the jury agreed initially about Gardner's belief that he spent most of the 90 minutes to determine whether Gardner had acted with intent to injury. To find Gardner guilty of aggravated battery, the jurors had to be convinced that Gardner acted with intent to injure Schrader. After the verdict was announced, Jack Maxwell,贤律师 for Gardner, requested a poll of the jury, requiring the jurors to individually announce to the court that the verdict handed down was their own. Gardner has been held without bond at the Douglas County Jail in connection to a pending murder charge in the slaying of Margaret Maxey, 46, Feb. 6. His brother, James Gardner, 18, will be arraigned in Douglas County Court for assaulting his son, David today. J. Watson's Lawrence's Newest 18 club Friday - April 1st MILLIONAIRE AT MIDNIGHT-- Special Added Attraction —SPARROW— 8:00 to 12:15 a.m. WATSON'S PEANUT GALLERY Open all weekend 12 noon till closing. Featuring: beer, peanuts, popcorn, new game room and our 7 foot T.V. screen. Hillcrest Shopping Center 841-BEER 9th & Iowa QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE GOLD IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER PRINTED WITH DISTRIBUTOR QUATERN NUEVA CALIDA UVAREZ TEQUILA TEXAS 175 ml JUAREZ 80 PROOF TEQUILA TEERIAJA-WHSCO SA SAM & JIM sportswear from Polo by Ralph Lauren . . . exclusively at Mister Guy great for spring... open Thursday nights till 8:30 MISTER Guy 920 Mass. --- 6 Friday. April 1. 1977 University Dally Kansan Women in jazz mix old and new for unique sounds By BILL O'CONNOR Guest Writer Women and jazz have been having an affair for some time. But many changes have taken place in the relationship since the days of Ma Rainey and her Rabbitfoot Today's women in jazz still tend to be mostly singers. It's the way that singing is, as it is today, about 10 years ago, there were primarily two types of jazz singing - a blues line and a song line. Now there appears to be a third, an incorporation of both with electronic music. MA RAINEY was the mother of the blues line, and Bessie Smith the empire. But, ironically, it was the onset of real blues that killed their popularity. The Great Depression brought into vogue the song line that Esther Waters and Mildred Bailey made popular. Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald formed later branches to this historical tree. The song line dominated until the blues线 re-emerged with Jane Wynn and young singers. Today, singers incorporate many different styles as possible. Probably the most well-known jazz singer today is Flora Purim. Born in Brazil, Florla left that country to tour with her future husband, Alto Meira, and Hermeto Mendes. She began her career years from mid-1974 to late 1976, while she served time for cocaine possession. PURIM WON the 1974 Downbeat Leader's Poll in the female vocalist category. lyrics to Stanley Clarke's "Light as a Feather," McCoy Tyner's "Search for Peace," Neville Potter's "San Francisco Rover" and George Duke's "Love Reborn." Her unusual success at bridging Brazilian jazz and American pop music is explained in her philosophy: "My principle in teaching is to listen to the music on-chex-lex one of my main instruments, because I developed my wordless singing using the electronic device to distort, change or duplicate the sound as I need it, in order to team up with such instruments as flute, soprano sax, guitar, trombone and piano or pain of happiness or simple talking." URSULZA DUZIADA also used electronic devices to achieve startling effects. Born in India, she graduated from the University of Ursula. to Ella Fitzgerald's scat singing, with the blues interpretation of a Billie Holiday and the instrumentation of a Miles Davis or Wayne Sharp. Married to jazz musician Michael Urbanik, with whom she began her career in Europe in 1963, Dudziak first came to prominence in America with her album *Broadway*. Her albums by Dudziak include "Fusion" and "Atma" with Urbaniak, and "Journey" with Arif Mardin. Two women jazz performers who are very much in the spotlight today, and who uphold some of the traditional approaches to jazz, are Cleo Laine and Toshiko Akiyoshi. Shakespeare and Ogden Nash that have been set to music. Laine, born in England, sings in all forms. Her repertory includes the blues line and the song line; songs by Noel Coward; and poems by the likes of Elliot, Donne, AFTER ONE OF HER performances, John J. Wilson of the New York Times described Laine's voice as "richly colored in the lower range, brilliantly articulate when she puts into falsetto and fantastically adieu to the areas in between." The lady who is currently leading the hottest big band in the country came from the opposite side of the world. Toshiko Akiyoshi was born in Manchuria, educated in Japan and began her jazz career playing with the Tokyo Jive Combo. In 1951, she was leading her own group when she was discovered by Oscar Peterson, Norman Gantz and Bill Fryer until 1956 that she came to the United States to study in Boston at the Berklee School of Music on scholarship. Duke Ellington wrote similarly for his band. Voted the best big band in Japan the last three years, Akyouni's West Coast orchestra has recognized the recognition it deserves in this country. It has been a long, old road for women in jazz, just as Bessie Smith proselyted in one of her songs in 1928. But women are finding the way, and it is jazz lovers who benefit. Bill O'Connor is a senior majoring in journalism. 'Uncle Vanya'an emotional fall, technical success By JULIE LENAHAN Reviewer "Uncle Vanya," Anton Chekhov's Russian drama about boredom, romance and old age, was a disappointment for University theatregoers last night. The two and one-half hour play had a slow start and gained little momentum as it wounds its way through lethargic character confrontations. The drama picked up speed late in On Stage the second act, climaxed in the third and concluded on emphasized low note in the fourth. EVEN GUEST actor Sean McGuirk add the spark that one musician expected from a professional. The play was emotionally draining and implemented a menage of personal traumas how or personal traumas he weaves his Russian tale with his own life, who loves and is not loved in return, the disillusionment of one who is relatively young and feels his luseless. He also learns about the hypochondria, the boredom of a spoiled city enchantress stifed by country bumpkin life and the exhaustion of a country man and I understand how his life has charged the past 10 years. 'Conpersonas now published --- "Conspersonas" was also performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., as part of the award. Paul Stephen Lim's first play, "Compersonas," has now been published as part of the top prize Liam won in the original play. It is one of the American College Theatre Festival last spring. The play is available from Samuel French, Inc., 20 West 45th St, New York, N.Y. 10036, for $2 plus tax and postage. SEVERAL actors deserve recognition for the element of pathetic tragedy in their characters, if nothing else. He is an exceptional graduate student, portrayed Ucany Vane, perhaps the most sympathetic character in the cast. Weiss did a commendable job of communicating his melancholy existence throughout the play, being appropriately foretold, hurt or angry. Arts & Leisure Teligeyin, played by James Paul Ivey, South Holland, III., senior, provided a scanty amount of humor in the play. An idiosyncratic walk and manneries made Mrs Teligeyin perhaps the most lovable figure in the play. A I LASTLY, Sean Griffin, professional actor and KU graduate, gave the audience an exhilarating break from the play's dolldrum country life, as Dr. Astrov, a doctor and aspiring environmentalist. Griffin's portrayal was crisp and lively, but he noteworthy more polished than the rest of the actors in the cast. M. RICHELLE Although the play was a disappointment, it wasn't a disaster. FRED MAYER The set, designed by Pat Atkinson, assistant instructor of speech and drama, was masterfully done and created an impressive atmosphere for the play's action. AUGUSTINE AND MICHAEL JACKSON Constructed as an open frame, the set was built on a turntable and mounted directly act. The viewer was able to experience the dimensions of an authentic country estate by taking one room directly into another. Characters could be seen entering and leaving the rooms, which added to the play's action. The multilevel seted two actions, isolating certain character involvements periodically. Last night's University Theatre production of "Uncle Vanya" was technically good and well executed. The play, however, was an emotional flasco. A. M. G. The spirit: Anton Chekov's. The faces: cast members of Chekov's "Uncle Vanya," which opened last night in the University Theatre. From top left, clockwise, they are George Weiss (Vanna), Lawrence graduate student; Peter Garrison (Scribrakloh), Linden, N.J., graduate student; Sean Griffin (Dr. Astrov); guest actor from Glen Head, N.N.; Rhoenka Blair (Snail), assistant instructor of speech and language. By KATHY GANNON Personality, translations become one Staff Writer Stan Writer The art of translating classical literature isn't at all Greek to Douglass Parker. professor of classics at the University of Texas. Parker, who has translated the works of Aristophanes, Terence and Seneca, is visiting "TRANSLATING is like looking at a building in stone. Weekend Highlights Theater "UNCLE VANYA," 8 tonight, Saturday and Sunday. University Theatre. "HOW THE EASTER BUNNY GOT HIS EGGS" and the "ADVENTURE OF THE BRIDE SPHELOR 1962." Seem to Be-Players. 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Lawrence Arts Center. 'THE WONDERLAND PUPPET TURTLE' puppet turtles. 1: 30, 3; 1: 30, 3; 7: 30, p. Saturday and 1, 2 and 3, p. Sunday. Oak Park Mall, 8: 30, p. Sunday. Concerts KANSAS CITY BALLET performs "Giselle" and performs "The Martha McBride and Heiql Tomasson from the New York City Ballet. 8:15 tonight and Saturday. 2:15 p.m., Sunday, Lyric Theatre. PETER GABRIEL from Genesis, 8 tonight. Uptown Theater, Kansas City, Mo. MASKED DANCE-DRAMA OF KOREA, 2 p.m. Sunday. Swarthout Recital Hall. LAWRENCE SYMPHONY CONCERT featuring Sequela Costa, piano, 8 p.m. Sunday, Lawrence High School Auditorium. Recitals DELORES BRUCH, ROGER DERS, organ; trumpet and trombone; 8 p.m.; Saturday; Saints Stone Church, Independent TANIA ACHOT, piano, wife of Sequestra Cequina, professor of music, Visiting Artist Series, 8 tonight. Swarthown MASKED DANCE-DRAMA OF KOREA WORKSHOP, by enrollment p.m. p.m. Sunday. Robinson Gymnastics Dance Participants must register at the University Theatre box office. ALBERT GERKEN, carillon. 3 p.m. Sunday, campanile. JEFFREY SMITH, viola. Student Recital Series, 8 p.m. Saturday, Swarthout Nightclubs THE TOM MONTGOMERY guitar, 9 to midnight Fridays Paul Gray's Jazz Place. MIKE Gang. 9 to midnight Saturday UNMIGFUNG Saturday. FESTIVAL! show band, 9 to midnight Friday. Opera House. THUMBS and MILLIONAIRE AT MIDNIGHT. rock bands, 9 to midnight Saturday. THE POT COUNTY PORK ARABA (AUSTRALIA) midnight Friday, Off the Wall Hall. COUNTRY HEIR, country rock band, 9 to midnight THE NAIROBI TRIO, with drummer JOHNNY MOORE, midnight to 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday, the Seventh Spirit. 'THE BARGE SHE SAT IN: SHAKEPEARE, PLUTARCH AND EOBARUBUS.' Douglas Hawks departments of English and classics. University of Texas. 3:30 p.m. today, 405 Wescoe will take the leading role the 'Thieves' with the classics department playreading group. 8 tonight, Union's Jayhawk Lectures 'UNIVERSAL MAN OR ROUND PEG IN A SQUARE HOLE?' Reyner Banham, professor of history of ar- tures University College. London. 3:30 p.m., today. 3140 Wesce Hall. S P A R R O W MILLIONIARE A T MID- night Friday, J Watson's night Friday, J Watson's MILLIONIARE A T MID- night Friday, J Watson's GREEST WEB, tok singer 9 to midnight Friday, Sister Katie Cate BARRY BERNSTEIN; tok singer 9 to midnight Saturday Films SEVEN PER CENT SOLUTION-Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud in the movie adaptation of Nicholas Meyer's best seller, Nicol Alkiri is Fred Rowe, Robert Arkin is Freud, Robert Duvalis Watson and Herbert (RD) is seasonal is flat. (PG) ROCKY-Winner of the Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Director, the film is more satisfying than the one you believe. Sylvester Stallone write the script and stars. (PG) SILVER STREAK—A comic suspense film set on a train. The story fails to get up steam until Richard Pryor gets on board. The stagnant direction keeps it from getting untracked (PG). WIZARDS--Ralph Bakshi's fiery tale about the struggle between two sexes is beautifully animated in a style that will thrill adult as well. AIRPORT 1977—This series is now threatening to draw out as much of the movies did. This time the plane goes under water somewhere in the Bermuda Triangle, but the movie shows that Charles Hinton isn't in the cockpit—if you think Jack Lemmon is an improvement. SHERLOCK HOLMES* SHERLOCK HOLMES* Wilder directed this mildly pleasant spoof, and stars with Melissa McCarthy and DeLuce and Madeleine Kane (G). KANSAS UNION SUU SUNU nallam contest winners and the National Cone Box Show, an exhibition of ceramic moulds Exhibits THE ADVENTURES OF LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER—Third Annual Juried Painting Show, ends today. LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY—Lawrence Public Schools exhibit, through April. LERN—Ann Nunley paint and silversmithing, Sunday through April. 7E7 GALLERY—H. J. Bott. sculpture, Saturday through April 28. SPOONER-THAYER MUSEUM OF ART—The Salite Casey Thayer Collection, Main Gallery. UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS CITY Women Artists 77 Exhibition; Sunday through April 29. tearing it down and then rebuilding the same structure in brick," he said yesterday. Parker began translating Greek and Latin literature 25 years ago because he's "devoted to the idea that there's something particular about what can't be found elsewhere." His first translation was a work of Aristophanes that took him almost nine years to complete. "I'm lazy, given any good occasion," he said. Such occasions don't often occur in Parker's life. As a musician, poet, actor, translator and professor, Parker has contributed his talents to many fields. --- YEARS AGO, Parker played a trombone in a jazz band and still plays occasionally. Once a year, he acts in productions of Shakespeare plays at the University of Texas. When Parker returns to Texas, he will act in a television drama. "I am a ham," he said, "like to act, but I've known very few hams in the teaching profession." Waving his arms, shifting his eyes and changing his voice, Parker explained the stories of seven works he has translated. "When I make translations," he said, "I have to play all the parts." PARKER ENJOYS comedy and it's in insuperable from most of his work. He writes comical诗 ("Fypapers," a three- Personalities Michael Shaw, assistant professor of classics and a former graduate student of Parker's, said Parker was lost in a labyrinth of puns, jokes and quoted lines. poem collection, is letters written to a trapped fly's mother), with a dramatic and best portrays the comical characters in plays. "He's always footnoting himself. Everything Parker does comes out a Parker. Itkersa," she said, but comes out as a Parker." Parker was the translated one of Seneca's poems, "a rude jumpon on the dust" and a parody of the poem "cateay at the Bat," HE SAID he puts his personality into his translations but added, "Some people say I put translations into my personality." Translators must often explain details in a play that weren't 'included in the original version, he said, so that an audience understands the circumstances. But translator notes in a play often accumulate and result in "islands of text and oceans of notes," he said. S do Parker said notes are awkward if a translator tries to retain the humor of a joke in a Greek comedy. Tom soccer KII "Wo game need other The tommor Heart Jayha but K-ma- make during The cordin keene KU glad t "II the st see ou to wo Mul remai pions correc hamp "BUT YOU CAN'T play God "and every student to take four years of Greek and Latin, he said, unless you want to empty your university very quickly." "There's nothing that kills a joke like a note saying. This is what Parker said when he talked Parker he said he thought the classics should be emphasized more because they force one to look at life at a sophisticated level." "Tl comi the some and more "T mistu and Korean dance here Sunday THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during weekdays. The second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 65072, second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 65072, second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 65072, second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 65072. In Decatur County and $10 a semester or $20 a year outside the c Korean stagecraft is virtually an undiscovered treasure for Americans accustomed to dance-dramas traditionally from Japan and India. At 2 p.m. Sunday, the masked Dance-Drama of Pongsa Korean will visit Hall, the first appearance for such a group at the University of Kansas. The performance is sponsored by the International Women's Committee in cooperation with the Department of East Asian Studies. Those interested in learning techniques of the masked dance-drama may register before Sunday's performance at the University Theatre box of theatre. Tickets are $2 at the box office. Tickets are $2 at the box office. ls Music on the Lew Band and material musicians, y for his Japan the Const recognition women in died in one are finding no benefit. majoring in 1 Staff photo Staff photos riffin (Dr. speech and By DENNIS MINICH ands the Sports Writer ies in a play and result in oceans of Soccer club to play despite cancelation that kills a ing. "This is he said. thought the emphasized force one to ophisticated are awk- or tries to a joke in a T play God to take and Latin, you want to rsity very The KU Soccer Club will play host tomorrow to a representative from the Heart of American Soccer League. The Jayhawks were scheduled to play K-State, and they played game so they could make a trip to Colorado that was canceled during spring vacation. Tomorrow's game will be at 2 p.m. at the soccer fields at 23rd and 12nd ance KU coach Bernie Mullin said that he was glad that the game was canceled. Mullin said that with only two weeks remaining until the Big Eight championships, KU must concentrate on having a winning streak. He have been harperring all season. "We played them last Sunday in our final game of the Jayhawk Invitational, and we need to gain some experience by facing other teams," he said. "ILOOK at our depth and think we have the strongest team we've ever had. Then I see our 5-1 record and realize we have a lot to work on. is virtually measure for attempted to additionally a. at A.P. 2nd dance. Korean will be taught. availance for University "Last spring at this time our record was 84. While I don't really care what our record is, I do think it's an indication of how we are performing." Mullin said. "The offense has done a good job of coming out early and putting pressure on the opposition," he said, "but then something goes wrong and we don't score and all of a sudden we can't generate any more offense." e is spontaneous international militaries in Mexico in university studies. in learning we masked register be- fore performance at a box of at 7 p.m. Tickets are Tickets are The areas that need the most work, according to Mullin, are the offense and goal line. HE CONTINUED that goal keeper David Boyles has made mute errors that have broken the rule. "The goal keeper can make a mental mistake and instead of being ahead or fired, he can just go out and run." "The problem isn't Dave's ability, its just but he loses his concentration for a minute and then he's gone." have to set back and start playing catch up One reason for the Jayhawks lack of scoring punch has been injuries and academic conflicts. KU hasn't started the four ourwards in any two games this season. Monsour Tahaderzhe who last fall combined with Mohammed Ait-Amere to make up what Mullin called the one-two of this week, until this week because of school conflicts MULLIEN SAID he hopes having the two together again will help generate some Still hospitalized for the Jayhaws is forward Mustafa Abderhaman, who has been admitted to the hospital. Also miss this weekend's action will be Felipe Santos, another forward, who has double vision in his left eye from a collision in the K-State game. When these two return KU will be at full strength for the first time since this early period. "We need to gain confidence in our ability before the conference championships. Then the games are shortened, and they cost you the championship," he said. He said that KU has looked very good at times, but they haven't been consistent. "So far we have looked like a car firing on two cylinders, we can't consistently play as well as that," she said. Use Kansan Classifieds Precious pleasures for the palate. Delicious Italian Cuisine from Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park 843-9111 Precious pleasures for the palate. Delicious Italian Cuisine from Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park 843-9111 ... Graduates! Order Caps, Gowns, and Hoods now! Orders taken April 1-29 Lawrence campus graduates place orders at the Kansas Union museum --- LEASING NOW If you desire a pleasant place to live, and if your parents will sign the contract, then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W.25th St. PARK25 The Brewery 714 Mass. presents Willow Wind Fri. & Sat. April 1 April 2 9 - 12 No Cover University Daily Kansan Friday. Auril 1. 1977 BROTHERS MOURN MURPHY'S PASSING The men of Sigma Alpha Epsilon wish to thank you for your warm hearted affection and words of encouragement in this time of strife. It was learned last night that Patty Murphy was found dead in the settling tank of the Lawrence Sewage Treatment Plant. How he got there is unknown. Medical reports show that death was caused ironically by overconsumption of alcohol. Murphy, well known for his ability to consume spirits, apparently over reacted after his brief withdrawal last week. Murphy apparently left the hospital last night under his own power after drinking the contents of his thermometer holder. We will all miss him, but as you know there will be no FREE LUNCH. SUA POPULAR FILMS POPULAR FILMS Gene Wilder Madeline Kahn Marty Feldman The adventure of SHERIOCK HOLMES' SMARTER OF BROTHER A RICHARD A. ROTH/JOUER PRODUCTION Dom Deluise - Leo McKern RICHARD A. ROTH - GENE WILDER JOHN MORRIS Fri April 1 & Sat April 2 Fri., April 1 & Sat., April 2 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. MATINEE EACH DAY $1 Tickets available at SUA office Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union "This is the only light the brigade would charge for." (Tennyson) NIGHT RECIPE 96 calories, approximately one third fewer than our other fine beer. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. TOM SEE Schlitz Campus Rep. 843-3058 8 Friday, April 1, 1977 University Dally Kansan Relays circuit opens in Texas By ROBRAINS Sports Writer AUSTIN, Tex.—There is a saying that everything in Texas is either the biggest or the best. That generally holds true as far as oil, football or cattle drives are concerned. Today and tomorrow, it will also be true of a track meet. Taking center stage at the University of Texas" Memorial Stadium for the next two weeks, the Midwest Relays circuit. The list of competitor reads like a who's who of college sports. Five of the individual event winners at this year's NCAA Indoor Championships will be on hand plus three of the winning relay teams. Two individual winners and one winning relay team from last year's Outdoor meet are also scheduled to be here. ADD TO THAT some individuals who competed for the United States and some athletes who ran for foreign countries in the 2016 Olympics, will be featured for the 50th running of the Texas Relays. The University of Kansas Jayhawks are here, along with members of 64 other college and university teams. The KU squad will be trying for its second outstanding performance in the Longhorn State within a week. Last Saturday it captured the Dallas Ruggers head to tournament The KU Rugby Club will be back in action tomorrow when the Jayhawks travel to Manhattan for the two-day Big Eight Rugby Tournament. All eight conference teams including defending champion Kansas State should be at the tournament, according to KU coach Mike Bell. All teams competed in last year's tournament. Injuries, inexperience and a lack of depth have plagued the Jayhawks so far this season. The "A" team is 0-4 and the "B" team is 2-2. Several Jiahawk starters will be playing while injured, and one, Doug Hassig, has been lost for the season because of a knee injury. Despite their problems, Kieltyka said, the Jayhawks have a chance to win the tournament although they would be considered a darkhorse. Kieltyka said that University of Oklahoma and Iowa State would have to be in the same region. "We don't really have enough people," Kieltyka said. "Everyone has been playing a lot and this has caused some of the injuries that have hurt us." Most of the teams the Jayhawks defeated at Dallas are here in Austin. They won't get a chance for revenge, however, as no team scores will be kept. AMONG THE schools KU defended were the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), Texas A&M University (TAMU) and Couch Bob Timmons doesn't take that victory lightly by any means. But he knows it's going to take an outstanding effort by his sound to do well at this meet. Last year, Kansas lost all of the relay events here and captured only one individual title—Nolan Cromwell's victory in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. "We were somewhat disappointed with our performance at Texas last year," Timmons said. "Some of our individuals performed well, but our relay effort was not up to par." In a problem almost every year at Texas—lack of time to prepare our relay units." KU WILL enter teams in four of the relays here. They won't enter a team in the mile relay, in which they won the NCAA Indoor title. "We don't have the personnel to run in all the relay's. "Timmons said. "We feel the 480 is not going." Running for the Jahyawks in that relay will be Anthony Coleman, Dave Blutcher. Kevin Newell and Cliff Wiley. The same foursons will run the 440 relay. KU will also field teams in the sprint-medley and the two-mile relay. The preliminary round of competition began this morning at 9. Finals in the long jump and sox of the running events will be held all of the other finals tomorrow afternoon. ONE OF the meet's highlights figures to be an invitational 100-meter dash, slated for tomorrow afternoon. The field will include Johnny Jones of Texas, a member of last year's U.S. Olympic team; Bill Collins of the Alabama State; the location of Arkansas State; Lake Jackson in Kansas sprinter; and Wiley. All have run the 100-dash in under 9.5 seconds. Three events which seem to have even more than the usual number of outstanding entries are the pole vault, high jump and long jump. There are eight pole vaulters who have cleared 17 feet entered, including KU's Tad Scales and former Karasaw star Terry Bergman. The defending champion is back to defend his title. IN THE high jump, 15 individuals have correct seven feet.included are national indian gymnastics champion Chang Gray Joy of UTEP, Nat Page of the championship Steve Rainbow and Jay Reardon of Kansas. There are nine long jumpers in the meet that kept落后 more than 25 feet. They include Jillian, Sara, Amy and Overstreet of Houston, Mike Pleasant of Oklahoma and Peppie Whitaker of Missouri. Mike Wilk and Reardon are entered for KU. Timmons has been selected as the referee for the meet. The honorary referee is Dustin Waller, the Texas athlete director and he also retired football coach of the Longhorns. Part of the Kansas team which didn't make the trip to Texas this weekend will be in Emporia tomorrow for the Emporia State Relays. NOW OPEN Every Sunday Admission only $2.00 Race or watch 12 Noon LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY 20 miles east of Topeka or 3 miles west of Lawrence on U.S. 40 highway Grudge Racing and E.T. Brackets KU's entries at Texas Bank of America, Brian Todd, Long jump - Mike Whee, Jay Reardon, High jump - Steve Rathbull, Reardon, Triple jump - Wheelie, Wilk Triple jump - Wheelie, Wilk Triple jump - Wheelie, Wilk 400-meter hurdles - Jimmy Hill 600-meter hurdles - Cliff Wiley, Newell Anthony Coughlin Road race - Tommy Caylor, McJay Wagle, Hutchter, Column or Newell 100-meter dash (Collarette) 100-meter dash (Collarette) 3,000-meter steeplechase - George Mann, John Ronco Two-tire relay - Wagner, Glenn Hearn, Rick Bullramand Bramble Puddle Jawal Lakshmi Tonight—The Tom Montgomery TRIO with Jim STRINGER on Guitar SATURDAY—Mike White, clarinetist (and Kansas City's highest elected official) Playing with the Gaslite Gang. Special $4.00, includes all the beer, popcorn, peanuts & soft drinks you can consume! MON., APRIL 4—Clyde McCoy for 1 night only! Internationally famous trumpet player & band leader whose Sugar Blues recording was a hit in the 1930's. All At Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. Open 8:00. Music starts at 9:00. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. [No fooling] For All Class Card Holders FREE BEER Broken Arrow Park [South on Louisiana April 1 2:30-5:30 Sponsored by Board of Class Officers Comfort for Spring 'n' Summer Slaps (Tatami Straw Sandals) only $2.00 in Denim or Velour HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan, 864-4358 AUDIOTRONICS 1000 Car stereo speakers, 8-track players cassette players, AM/FM radios. AM/FM with cassette 8-track units are on SALE CRAIG I.D.I. Toshiba Soundlite YOU MAY NOT FIND SUCH LOW PRICES ON THESE HIGH QUALITY UNITS EVER AGAIN! --- 928 Mass. Downtown --- KBEQ ATN Chi 0 present a 24 hr. 2nd Annual Dance Marathon Chi Omega, 843-5800 ATN, 843-4811 for the benefit of the Epilepsy Foundation of America. KBEQ will award a $1000 Scholarship to the living group sponsoring the winning couple. Friday, April 1, 7:00pm Saturday, April 2, 7:00pm in the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union All proceeds from beer sales donated by Miller Beer Co. Music by D.J. with a special Friday performance by Destiny. --- Friday, April 1, 1977 9 TS Mass. 4358 5800 4811 rd 00 to up the ble. Kuhlman's soul is in her feet iny. KU By ANDY RILEY She was on her way to prepare for her first outdoor track meet as a member of the Sports Writer Charmaine Kuhman grabbed her trac spikes and ran on her way to Memorial Kuhman, one of the Jayhawk's top sprinters, will run the 440-yard dash and anchor the 440 relay team for the Jayhawks' meet at Emporia State University. University Daily Kansan Preparing for a track meet is nothing new for Kuhman, a junior from Dighton, Kan. She has been running all her life and comes from a family of runners. "I would watch them and I wanted to be like them," Kuhlman said. "I'm not a hurler because I was always good in the spirits." Her coach, Tom Lionville, said, "Charlize born with God-given physical talent. She has the potential to be one of the best quarantilers in America in the university." Sprinter Charmane Kuhlman Both her father and brother ran hurdles in college, and her sister was also a hurdler. Kuhiman certainly has the credentials to back Lionvale's optimism. Last year while running for Dodge City Community College, she won the 440, the 220 and the long jump beside running a leg on the track. This year she was the junior college national championship. He has personal records of 56 l in the 44 ack, 24.8 in the 22, 11.0 in the 100-sq dash and 14.9 in the 100-dash. Lionville said that Kuhman was talented enough to be entered in four or five events per meet, but that he would use her only in the 440 relay, the open 440 and the open 220. "She's such a valuable girl," Lonvale said. "She can be overworked and overraced. I'm not going to take chances by overworking her." "Running is something I'm good at," she said. "I's fun to go out and run hard, and do that." Kuhainan will be pushing herself extra hard during the outdoor season to lower her terns to the 440 to 56.1 to quality for the AIAW national Championships in Los Angeles. me work harder. I want to win and I get excited about it." "I feel bad when I get beat but it makes "My goal is to run under 54 seconds." Kuhman said. "It will take that to place in the meet, and I couldn't be satisfied with getting there and not placing." PIZZA TWOPOK BUY ONE PIZZA AND GET NEXT SMALLER SIZE LIKE IT... The first recorded words of the Lord Jesus Christ his baptism by John Baptist were: "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeded out of the mouth of God." Matthew and Luke 4:1-2. If you are not willing to learn and live by "EVERY WORD THAT PROCEEDENT OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD ALMIGHTY" you ought to have integrity to resign and get out of His Church if in a position to do so this witness would surely refuse to serve you the Communion Elements at the Lord's Supper! John Baptist is an example of this; "swallows the wrath of God!" The Apostle Paul tells us there are some who should be "turned over to Satan" that The Spirit might be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus! "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" FREE! --- WITH THIS TWOPON Daily except Sunday through April 30 If we find out — and we will — but maybe too late, that a whipping post and gallops will blow us away. But the whipping post will fill the bill of those of whom. THE DEVIL AND EVIL MEN CAN BE CONTROLLED AND HANDED WHERE YOU LEARN HARD ON THE WHEELS. Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 God Amimhrya a Words say an evil man — not more than forty stripes — and boys, and it still uncontrolled put him on fire. Fifty or more years ago a news item told of a man who ran afoul of law in Canada. At that time Canada had a "whipping post" and a certain fellow due on that post escaped to the U.S.A. it was reported that he stated he would rather remain in this country and be tried for murder than go back home and take their medicine. The Prophet Daniel speaks. "MAN OF THEM THAT SLEEP IN THE DUST OF THE EARTH SHALL AWLHE — SOME TO ME" "AND WHEN I AM A BEGINNING I SHALL BE ABLE TO SEE" `COME UNTO ME, ALL YE THAT LABOR AND ARE YOU KNOW YOU WILL BE A MAN OF THE YOUK UPON YOU, AND LEARN OF ME: FOR I AM MEek AND LOWLY IN HEART, AND YE SHALL FIND REST UNTO WE HAVE THE GREATEST EASY. AND BURREN IS LIGHT! Matthew 11:27. If your parents do not bring you to the place where you would rather die than be late, where you prostrate poverty to the dead, or where you are held captive by a lieve, starve than steel, wear rags than be arrayed at the price of duty and duplicity. The Lord Jesus Christ will surely do so We may give our children everything that money can buy, position, popularity, influence, ease, education, pleasure. We can make it easier for them to be rather死 die than be false, where they prefer poverty to duty dishonored, where they would rather go hungry than a lie, starve than steel, wear arms to be arraised at the price of duplicity, we are only a cheap counterfeit of parenthood? BLESSED ARE THEY WHICH DO HUNGER AND THIRST AFTER RIGHTEOUSNESS; FOR THE SHALL BE FILLED BLESSED ARE THE PURE IN HEART; FOR THE SHALL SEE GOD' MAThew 5.6, 8. **BE READY WHEN HE COMES AGAIN: HE IS COMING** **AGAIN SOON** P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 ken's pizza presents NELLIE M. PARKER THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE "UNCLE VANYA" ken's Pizza 2040 W. 27th 843-7405 A career in law without law school. Anton Chekhov March 31, April 1 & 2 at 8:00 p.m. April 3 at 2:30 We will visit your campus on TUESDAY, APRIL 5 Since 1970, the Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 1600 graduates in law firms, banks and insurance companies. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 Operated by Paralog, Inc. If you are a senior of high academic standing and are assigned in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like you to: The Institute for Paralegal Training Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Contact University Placement office for an interview with our representative UNIVERSITY THEATRE - MURPHY HALL TICKET RESERVATIONS: 864-3982 K.U. Students admitted without charge upon presentation of current Certificate of Registration This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund Three months of intensive training can give you the skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered—choose the city in which you want to work. Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 GET JAZZED A GIANT JAZZ CELEBRATION FROM THE GIANTS OF JAZZ. GATO MUNDO DE CALIFORNIA 1 **GATTEI BARBIERI** "Galante" the music man in *Last Lunge in Paris* with his first on A.M. & the clubs the hits, "Fetis" and "Europa." MAGAZINE DE LA MÉTACIÓN DE LAS NUEVAS MÉTACIONES QUE SE PUEDEN APROXIMAR EL COLORE DU METAL AÑO 2014 85 95 GEORGE BENSON "The Other Side of Abbey Road" incredible George Benson evolution of classic Beauty originals. "Here Comes the Sun." QUINCY JONES BODY HEAT QUINCY JOURNAL © INFANTRY HALL AT THE specially practice double Quincy bath bathroom design of building QUINCY JONES "Body Heat" An exciting de- scription. Includes the original 1975 and this Heaven! and more. PAUL TOWNSEN | I MESSAGED HUMOR TO THE HERMANN OF CHICAGO Two Record Set CONCORDIA COOPERATIVE GENERAL BANK THE BROTHERS JOHNSON "Look for Dad!" The Brother Johnson's master dog obstet- rical. Includes "T'll Be Good To You" and many more CHICAGO MUSIC MANSION **HUCK MANGIONE** Main Squeeze™ The Grammy ward winning sound of Main the top coast southeast CELEBRATION WEEKEND KARMA "Celebration!" Karma features an genius of George Bohaneh, the inventor of Cricket and Earle Watts. Dave Berbek Quartet 2015 YEARBOOK EDITION THE DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET *20th Anniversary Reunion* *America's original crossword jazm icon* is back. As fresh and exciting as ever. PLUS OTHER GREAT JAZZ Giants ON Only Only $3^99 $399 The 2-record set is $599 UBL THORENS YAMAHA King & Olson TEAC PIONEER REVOX NAKAMICH BEVER DNAME Accuphase Papak Garrard MOTORCARS KENWOOD Uoal Cerwin Vega audio-technica PICKERING TDK KOSS SANYO SHORT SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS! GRAMOPHONE 842-1811 . . . ASK FOR STATION #6 shop 10 Friday, April 1, 1977 University Daily Kansan Gates jumbles tennis team lineup By ERIC MARTINCICH Sports Writer After KU's men's tennis team defeated Oklahoma State, 54, last weekend, coach Kirkland Gates said that he anticipated making several changes in KU's lineup. So, it came as no surprise yesterday when the Oklahoma State team and Lonnie Taylor would be in the lineup this Injury ends spring drills for OB Lillis Spring football drills ended after only two days for KU sophomore quarterback Bill Lillis as he suffered a broken left forearm in practice yesterday. Lillis, a former standout at Rockhurst High School in Karsas City, Mo., was injured shortly after 6 p.m. when sacked while attempting to pass during a practice drill. He was approximately third-string on the Jaybawk's depth chart. Commenting on Lillis' injury, Kansas football coach Bud Moore, said, "I hate that because he was just recovering from a foot injury and he was showing us that he had made some progress since his freshman year." LLIIs, 63 and 180 pounds, had his arm set last night by team surgeon Dr. John Wertz-berger. It is expected the bone will take four to six weeks to heal. Linebacker Harry Murphy was also injured yesterday. Murphy, who played strong safely last season, suffered a cut below the right eye. Dr. David Hiebert inspected Murphy's badly swollen cheek and diagnosed that the laceration would not require stitches nor keep the athlete from further practice. Road rally set for this Sunday The Lawrence chapter of the Sports Car Club has an annual Spring game. Airl Food's road rally Sunday afternoon. The rally, to begin at 1 p.m. in Centennial Park, is a "gimmick and time rally," according to Buzz Fisher, a local SCCA member, who helped organize the rally. "You're given a set of directions and questions to answer. 'Fisher said.' If you follow the directions, they'll lead you to the locations and questions are." Is it a scavenger hunt? "Hunt." Fisher said the last question led the ennants to a post-rally party paid for by the ennants. "It's very simple rally," he said, "and it will be up so people aren't forced to speech." The rally lasts about three hours, but the amount of time the cars have to finish the race is less than a hour. So he driver who finishes closest to the time allotted and has the most rvht answers will weekend when the Jayhawks travelled to Boulder to meet the Colorado Buffaloes and the Pittsburgh Pirates. Anyone can enter in any kind of car, he as long as the car has seat belt for all people. Fisher said he expected 20 to 25 cars to enter by the deadline, 1 p.m. Sunday. Entry fees are $3 for club members and $4 for nonmembers. Most of the money brought in will be spent for trophies and the party, Fisher said. "We don't plan to be nonprofit, but we usually are," he said. Softball squad sets to oppose tough pitching The Jayhawks, 4-10, will face their first competition against notably strong pitching tomorrow in a doubleheader against the University of Nebraska-Omaha in Omaha. Buller, who has played singles in just half KU's meets this year, will play the No. 3 player on Wednesday at Southern Colorado. Taylor will be making his first appearance this season. He will be Coach Bob Stainclaw said this would be the experienced pitcher. "Their starting pitcher has been at this for quite a while. She's pitched since she was in her teens and she now 30." I thought to give us an idea of what we can "It ought to give us an idea of what we can do against a nationally ranked team." NU-Omaha was fifth in the College World Series last year. ADVERTISE U teams in the Big Eight when they face Colorado. Presseason polls have predicted the Buffaloes to finish second behind Oklahoma. ADVERTISE U D K ADVERTISE GATES HAS been disappointed in the play of the lower portion of KU's lineup, particularly the No. 3, 4 and 5 positions, all season. TO BEAT Colorado, we will have to at least split our single matches, he said. "We'll need to make a lot of calls." "We haven't proven ourselves at the bottom half of the lineup," Gates said. "We must be competitive here if we are to win in the Bie Fight." KU will be facing one of the tougher Kansas, 10-6, will be led by Clark Bilek, 14, at the No. 1 singles slot, Mark Hosking, 13, will play at No. 2. Buller will be at No. 3 replacing Jeff Thomas, whose record had slipped to 5-9. Collier Chel, 8-7, will remain at No. 4 while Joe Russer, coming off an impressive showing last week against the Cowboys, will play No. 6. Women open new season A young, but talented, KU women's track team will open the outdoor season tomorrow when it travels to the Emporia State University Invitational. Women's track coach Tom Lionvale will lead his team, including 18 freshmen, into Emporia after a fourth place finish at the Big Eight Indoor. Lionville said that the indoor season had broken the monotony of training and gave the women a chance to discover their best events. "The girls have improved individually and collectively since we ended the indoor season," Lionvale said. "A lot of the girls are in the best condition of their lives." LIONVALE IS optimistic about the Jayhawk's chances in the meet and the entire outdoor season. "I think we should place very high Saturday," he said. "It wouldn't surprise me at all if every outdoor running record was broken this season." To win at Emporia, Lionville said, the Jayhawks would have to beat Big Eight counterpart Kansas State, and also Emporia State and Wichita State. He said the Jayhawks were strong in the running events with Sheila Calmese in the 400 and Lauren Seymour in the Kuhman in the 400 and the 442-yard relay. Jo McMullen in the 400, and Josena Shannon and Michelle Brown in the 1,300 shorthanded strong performers according to Liawale. The University of Kansas women's golf team will travel to Columbia, Mo. tomorrow to play in the Missouri University game against Stephen F. Austin College of Missouri and Stephen College of Columbia. Golfers compete in triangular The team seeks to improve on their 15th place finish at the Texas Invitational, where Patty Morris led the Hawks with a 264 point score in the first tournament of the year. Formerly Hair Benders Now at the HAIR SUITE 6th and Iowa 842-8600 CLINT HOLSTON REDKIN Notice Sophomores Applications for Admission to School of Social Welfare now being received for 77-78 school year Two years of study and field experience leading to Bachelor of Social Work Degree and Credentials for License to Practice Professional Social Work For information call Professor Brockmann, 864-3712, or stop by Twente Hall. Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT 917-520-3600 Patronize Kansan Advertisers 153 Nowcomes Miller time. Miller Brewing Co. M ©1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. University Daily Kansan Friday. April 1, 1977 --- KANSAN WANT ADS 11 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their gender or race. Bring ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES time times times times times 15 words or $2.00 $2.25 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word 01 02 03 04 AD DEADLINES The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. The ad can be placed in person or online through the UKB business office at 864-4358. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ANNOUNCEMENTS J. WATSONS TONIGHT. Buy, sell, trade coins. Need type coins, silver coins, old coins, silver dollars $43-1261 evens BECOME A MONTESSORI TEACHER Phase 1. Teacher Effective Training, March-12 May 30-July 5, Phase 2. Teacher Effective Training, May 30-July 20, Phase 3. Interimship, August 29-Call Montessori Plus, School 127 West Virginia State University. PARAPIERNAILA for the connoisseur Excelle Coca-Cola, 12 West Street, Boca Raton, 25010. 786-349-4444. www.parapierenala.com COLLEGE *STUDENTS—Are you considering leaving school but still looking for a future. We offer a variety of options, including an expanding small company with offices in Kansas City, D.C. and St. Louis and we need students to apply. We offer our own future. Long hours—very pleasant working conditions. $500 to start Call to 1-818-453-6454. ENTERTAINMENT Firery Furniture Co. House Hoe: Relaxed entertain- ment on Friday and Saturday nights at 9 p.m. 141 Louisiana Reserve the HALL OF FAME for your party or meeting. Over 500 rooms available. No group booking required. Kitchen and bar facilities available. Located in the news remodeled 210 W Blvd at 8th and 9th Streets, Manhattan, NY 10027. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, pn pets, 843-7567. tf 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Uli, utilities paid, parking. 845-979-07 FOR RENT Frontier Ridge—short term leases available. Residential rentals with study. Haven indoor pool + carpet tap. Hotel pool + disposal + laundry facilities. Pool furnished and unfurnished for $135. Call 842-673-0494. 3 three bedroom house for saleable, Available April 1. 864-5887. Close to Campus. 4 Subletting apartment, it has 1 bedroom. Came by 583 Fireside Drive, Apt. 10, after 5:30 p.m. **460** 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- ess, possible rent reduction for labor. 842-506 555-975 Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky now. Summer, fall contracts on all Gatehouse apartment building; council contracts on all Gatehouse apartment building. Cab 823. CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX. Rent the Pro. 267-2980 Rental hours. Call客服 5-10 Estop tenuis, post, and privacy in a M渡道 Estop tenuis, post, and privacy in a M渡道 M渡道 electrical circuit. Case 842-1-47- 1045. Cell Drive. B42-1-47- 1045. SAVE $150. Suburbia 2 bedroom apartment at 369 Southgate Suite, Suburbia runs through August. 2 Beds, 2 Baths. Mark 1- single-use modern ergonomic, stationary desk chair. Desk height 75 cm. Dual balcony. Disposal $80 per month. April booking required. Need to nabsheet immediately for summer travel? You'll fairly furnished G=1-4 walk to campus 811-6716 Need to sublease furnished two bedroom apartment for the summer call-841-639. Ask Sublease for the summer, 1-bedroom apartment. furnished. Call 841-5584. 4-5 Studio apartment Quiet, clean air conditioned, wall to wall carpet. Available April 1. Call 853-2490. Owens Liquar Store 843-1186 910 N. 2nd VISIONS has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 814-7421 Apartment for rent. Available now, furnished with large windows and large kitchen. Large window, faces East, large room, shade kitchen and bathroom. Call after 6- 4-6 to reserve a very fine degree in older historical home. 2-bedroom apartment, 2 blocks from Union. $165. mo. plus utilities. 843-708-496 4-6 Lease 2-bedroom furnished. Meadowbrook apart- ment monthly pool. Week and tennis court. Call 841-341-7500. Sublitting apartment for summer; 2-bedroom, C/A. Modern, centrally located. Call 841-1896-4-7 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes-Now on Sale! Make them your own. (Students must submit them—1) As study guide, 2. For Class preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, 4. New Anabysia vibrification* available now at Tope Citer Store. Excellent selection of new and used furniture and warehouse equipment for the Furniture and Appliance Center, Maui, Hawaii. "The Little Sterre Store" Ray Audy—we don't sell it because we don't want it to sell is better. We honestly feel that we do a good job at selling it with better quality products with better warranty. And then most of us most folks believe for the money—on top and over the collar the stock. It makes a big difference. 13 K eh off! Max Agus Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties. BELA, AUTO ELECTRIC, 843-969-5000. W 9th. Htd. ELECTRIC, 843-969-5000. W 9th. Htd. AFC APHGANS, Pell and show quality-chan- gues. APHGANS, Diane Friend 913-458- 7671, Sallan, Kau. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, microphones at Audio System, 8th floor, Rhode Island H & O b Juvenile, 15 years old. White oak finish. H & O juvenile, 18 years old. White oak finish. 20, and 10, weight cups; $25 for each. Call Curt Herring at (415) 392-7621. BY OWNER—Ranch style, shake roof on a beautiful landspaced landscape with living fireplace and frigid fireplace, glass灯高ier, screen. Extra large family room, formal living room, two baths, bathroom partially partitioned. F. 3-2 baths, bath floor partially partitioned. F. 4 baths, Oak flooring, fully carpeted. Dishwawer, GK Oak flooring, fully carpeted. Walking distance north edge of Avonville Golf Course. Must see to appreciate. Decorator touch. Washroom with ample ample and, arnd. 18x Wagon Wheel Road, Western Hills. Campanula-Sport-Virtually unreliable, excellent competitor. Campanula-564-664 meals; 512 calls; Sail Battery 841-664 meals Dodge Polara 71 full power, excellent condition, must sell. B2-8006. 4-1 1923 Capel, 42,000 miles best offer. Also Schwanen Cairns, 42,000 miles best offer. Also Bierling Vine Carter, 43,764-7840. *T-shirts:* sizes and colors. Anything printed. *Group orders, shirts* size $2 each. Contact Giggle 800-765-8149. 1975 Kawasaki motorcycle, 175 cc. FD-D enduro, very clean, must clean. 843-978-098. 4-1 Lawrence teacher must sell 1947 Fleetwood Mobile Home, bed room, fully furnished, kitchen appliances included, waher dryer, separate dinette, refrigerator, laundry basket between 4-1 m.p. Mon.-Fri., 3223 lawn, No. 152 1975 Honda 750-4. 12,000 consistently serviced and backed up. Just tuned, just loaded $160 call back put A Springtime Bug Bright Yellow Volkswagen 1976- Very well fed for runs, great #84-151 1976 Honda CB500, low mileage, 3 belts, $800, Canon super b, extra 12, $825-1260, **S** **S** Campus wilds make dry skin. We have natural skin care products like **VITAMIN PAPERLOR**, **EASIL SKIN CARE** and **VITAMIN POTION**. **EAST ISLANDS** AR amplifier, 60 watts per channel. Pioneer A-35 turntable, automatic start and stop. Call 811- 749-8322. 1972 Mustang Spirit, good condition, rear deck info; 4623-8124 for technical information 4623-8124 to 3:00 M-F 1974 Yamaha 500 DOHC 1974 Cam-Am 125 TNT 1974 in mint condition, must be well preserved. Four Electron-Voice E.T.R. 16 Speakers; $150 per Electron-Voice E.T.R. Mark T. Marker, leave a number and number 84-841. ARIAL GXC-380 Cassette player-$120, 842-1225- afer 5.0 p.m. 1-736-999-1225 76 Döse Maxiven, maxiven communication, V8-8, C3Doe Codes, good condition, 84-1652 bestseller in Europe. 10-speed, 25-credit. Monda special 3153 through all, Campi, tubularia, immaculata. 842-6183, 6-8 pm www.mondaspecial.com SAAB-96 1965, restored, new engine, new MACH-FM, mechanically perfect. 4-80 Munich's 10×14 bond. Molybdenum, good geometry, 6×4×5 Munich's 10×14 bond. Molybdenum, good geometry, 6×4×5 1971 Vega AC, AT, reasonable price. Excellent call. Call Tom 841-6618. 4-5 ARAK GXC-380 Canister player—$130. 842-1252- after 5 p.m. 1-800-769-2222 843-7685 Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Sandwich IVAN'S 66 SERVICE “Tires—Batteries—Accessories” Hart Javelin G- Skip 185, 195, cm with look/ back. Hart Javelin G- Skip 200, 210, cm with look/ back. bitten skin boots Wax bladder, an men's size B $80. Downfilled Kempa pants blue. Blank, men's size B. black/white, women's size B. black/white, brown/black, women's size B. all Items in excellent condition. Must sell Yamaha CA 400 amplifier, Teac A1-76 casetek deck. Maximus speakers. Akai 1721 with reed to reel. Kone HV1 headphones and King HV2 headphones. Elenco displayed frame. Mak-8 8601 after 8:00 p.m. **1606 Mutant (V-3, 89 Engine)** Run good, very easy to ask *Asking 215* Call **843-712-1425**, go to www.1606mutant.com Live venomous monkeys, Eagleton Cobra, Puff A bird, eating mute mice, Call B118- 738-5767, evenings, K.C. ADVENT SPEAKER SALE. We are pleased to announce the first Advent sale in 8 years. We believe this is the best selling speaker in the market. This is a power-supply RAY AUDIO, 13. E. 8th Street. 4-6 1970 Akiyu GK Sport, 25" 10-speed. condition钙, 85 or best level, 942-9431, ask for nurse. We have some great deals on Hi-FI: WYMAN T38- H360-500 hood cassette $290. S.E.S LOH Speaker $190 each. A.R. -5 speakers $150 each. Milda, complete modem system $250. Samantha 66 re- viewing center $149. Color TV $285. color TV $285. RAY AUDIO -The little store with good deals, 13 East 8th. (Jail off 1976 Fint XI 9.8 Removable top. AM-FM radio. For call info #8432-8438 or #1233- 4-6 Thorens TD IG5 turntable with cartridge $70, or best offer. Phone 814-4864. 4-5 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 0-8 5m Football Table-Champion Sports coin operated. Excellent condition 843-6256, or 841-5043-7 4-07 Men's 25" Pentagon 10-sport bicycle (60cm). It is a new, lightweight bike designed for young riders. Reserve $197 all w/ $79, firm call Toll Taylor, 842-320-1111. Lindwig drum set 6-piece, double bass, silver, good shape, must call. Shell 841-2299. 4-8 HELP WANTED 192. Chevrolet Velocette, 400 cu. ft. Power 192. AM FM stereo/radio $1,600, i-840, i-5566. PS-8 Men or women. We need 5 people immediately. Must have own transportation and willing to carry luggage. Please call or email for personal interview call by Lawon Bass, 842-3110. Lawson Kirby Co. Will lead to full time summer 170 Chevrolet Impala, 4D, PS, PB, AC, Mast all sensor 1727 Chevrolet Impala, 460 cou, in, engine, PS 1728 Chevrolet Impala, 460 cou, in, engine, PS Summer Jobs. Our RfR state-200 plus summer Master application form- only 25 $bunch jobs. Master application form- only 25 $bunch jobs. COLLEGE STUDENTS: many needed to work big keg party all night right Friday, 4 April. Easter weekend at Cheney St. near Wichita. Drive to Bank Goodman, 109-41 Lincoln, Wichita. RESEARCH ANALYST-The information and application Development and seeking of staff analysis to work on a variety of activities including production of information systems; and research on skills in quantitative methods, ability in written and verbal communication with both technical and social sciences research, understanding of information technology, and ability to relocate to Kansas City, Kansas. Salary contingent: Applicants must be interested applicants, including June graduates are offered tenured positions Building and North 71th Street, Kansas City Office Building, **FREE MEAAL + honourisation in exchange for** a 30-minute interview. Applicants to PSYCHIATIC AIDS WANTED. Applications now being taken for psychiatric aids. Apply to: W 6th Street, Phone (912) 326-4576. An application must be submitted by noon. 843-9891 Office of Instructional Resources need student help to distribute material in Strong Harbor, 3 p. Apm. 25-May 10 and 12-nom. 2 p. May 11 or May 12. Applicants must be available for Baily Application. Daytime application 4.5. Even selling can help you earn money for col- lecting Flexible hours. High & Cal. Mrs. Tellers. 8162 PROGRAMMER ANALYST. The City of Kansas staff and its working individuals must assist in a job that requires the application of computer applications. This position requires a three-year degree or degree in Computer Science or a related field Earn $250 to $500 staffing 100 envelopes Home addresses addressed stamped. Envelope to S. E. Baldwin addressed stamped. Envelope to W. Scheffler addressed stamped. Sibilby Stickleback has immediate and daytime competitor Mark McCallum, who also beats him for summer competition in all 5 events. THE FIELDS STORE AIRFRAME WATERbeds for most imported cars TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN 712 MASS ST. 842-7187 Drive-in Clinic Immediate part-time opening for sharp student who possesses bookkeeping and financial skills. 2 year period, 12 per cent pay with possibility of more hours during summer, with possibility of 84-hour period. At 844-8436. An equal opportunity employer. M-F. Dawgard's has openings for waitresses, cooks, administrators and assistants. 811-855-2000 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. 4-7 Walters-Part-time to May, full-time through August 31. Applicant in person, Almour Golf Course Part-time remainder of semester and summer. Rag Tag, 842-1059. 4-8 LOST AND FOUND Opening for GEN. OFFICER WORKSHOP, accurate work on daily job duties in work shop. April week, more quality, training. Apollo 50, spacecraft assembly. Summer work; Mute relocate; Earn $10月 Call 842-4272. 4-6 Found set of keys Fr. in/near Strong Hill. 843- 7616. 4-1 Lost Greg & White Persian female cat near 10th Ohio. Reward 841-3832 4-5 Lost-a warm, green warm-up in room 4064 of Wesco Hall If found, please call 843-862-6926. Found-Katheen T. Home call 842-6315 to claim your KU ID and bus pass 4-4 Found textbook between Oliver and Nahmish, found textbook to, for fiction, Poetry & A found textbook to, for fiction, Poetry & A Bourdau 644-869 374 Last-Address book, hlick, near Wexley, pay can. Can not replace, please. B41=1896 B5=2308 Lost-This morning by caricass person—block phone number. Wrong address. Please return Great sentiment value: 864-955 471. Please return Great sentiment value: 864-955 471. Please return Great sentiment value: 864-955 Found high school 1965 Cambridge R.S. camp, invites Moore, equipment room, Richian Gymnasium, Moorer, equipment room, Richian Gymnasium, Found a baseball belt, Call Steve, 864-1167 to identify. 4-5 MISCELLANEOUS Found an umbrella Monday in Blake. B41- 81- 76 to identify. 4-5 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Aice at the House of U魁/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. NOTICE **Shop Shop.** **620** Mass. Used furniture, dishes, clocks, television, open daily 12 PM- 622-323 Gay Services Meeting FILM — "A Woman's Place is in the House: A portrait of a Kline Noble." An up an front gay state senator from Texas, he is a prominent figure on 7.30 p.m. P公众 Invited. ROOK OF SALE! Hood & great 92k book sale! *Hundred third books* own in all books, including the Record Books and Playboy's just 92K! *National record store* own in all books, including the Record Books and Playboy's just 92K! *National record store* own in all books, including the Record Books and Playboy's just 92K! We are now overstocked 625 shelf on down and over the selection Fr. Sat. 10am-3pm at J Hood Bookstore (105 Mass. Mall; 780 West 48th Street; Fr. 10am-3pm at J Hood Bookstore (105 Mass. Mall; 780 West 48th Street) VOLKSWAGEN OWNES! Brand new BF Goodwin AR78-15 (165-15) (155-14) radial tires cut to $3 each at Ray Stonebank's 929 Mass. (Mountain) or $4 each at Mckinley's 654 steel cuts to $45 each); Mckinley's 4-12 Yard Sale-clothes, small electrical appliances, Bedside dinnerware, doorknobs, chair, and mattresses. Midcentury modern furniture. POWERFUL, SONY TC 55 TA S24 $170. Recharge. POWERFUL, Sony TC 60 TA S24 $180. (Other Sony to $10 supresses out to $10). POWERFUL, Sony TC 60 TA S34 $190. (Other Sony to $10 supresses out to $10). CHEW OWNERS & PICKUP GOWNERS! New CHEW OWNERS, at 173 W. Riverbank, Mounted included FETT, ATW, Briar Bankhouse. Floor sample $400 List 17? dug. Sunny色板 cube $200 List 8? dug. Sunny色板 cube $150 List 9? dug. *15% ding-ly grey sign. Reg $40. cut to $125. NEW SONY COMPONENT SYSTEM with AM/ FM-thumb sample to cut to $75 at Ray Storage Store. CHK, OWNERS! U | Pickup owner. Brand new $50 each. CHEAP $15 each. $60 each. FETT INcluded! $1 each, bal $1 $20 each. $40 each. BAL $50 each. Basketball team in K.C. area. Contact Mike at 371-262 or come to St. Margaret's, I-1 and II. Pier1 imports 8th & Mass. Onl & Mass. Downtown Phones: 841.7525 Phone: 841-7525 Selected Secondhand PERSONAL Goods • Vintage Clothing Gay Counselling Service. Call 843-7500. 6:18 p.m. For referrals. For socializing activities, call 843-7500. HALF AS MUCH Setting up a darkroom? Visit Zercher darkroom equipment sale. Start Timing thru Thursday and Saturday. BOGEN INLARGER ILPORD and film. BOGEN Photo. 844-1435, 11 Mass. - Euroture • Antloues ISO-2: chemical potency in a complete line of products available at Live Record. Avail. 842, 910-3258. FREE MEAL plus honorarium in exchange for your conducting Sasser Seder, 841-279. - 480 **Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo.** You name it. Departures on major airlines. Europe from $298 (round-trip China). Asia, Australia, Africa, spain. Specialists in foreign travel. Multilingual specialists in foreign travel. Multi-credit programs. ATTENTION ALL GRADUATE STUDENTS. College students for graduate students and ATA representatives for ATA representatives pick up balloons in your dept office and send us balloons to 260 Stour or your dept office until April 14. Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Inquiries Inquiries Box 306, Lawrence Kannan, Box 279 INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO EUROPE AND ISRAEL? STUDENT TRAVEL CRITERIES WITH minimum travel with maximum & minimum coil oil for more. info 4-15 FOLIRE TOLD FREE 820-325-808 $10 to $100 for easy and easy. Enter Melton Yellow Pages contest at Campus At Midshipway day 4-1 I want to get out of Kramer for a while and I will miss him. He was the best teacher after school ends Bute at Pitcher 814-3067 and we will miss him all year long. Mr. S. B. don't get me wrong. I have no particular desire to meet you. Just the other day my Siberian Hunky turned to me and said he would meet that St. Bernard. Sincerely M. Tennessee. 4-1 Interested in doing some sailing this spring? The Ft. Myers summer camp offers a destination Friday, April 14 at 3:30 p.m. on Potterts Island. Come find out more about this great club. Everyone welcome. Membership $15. - Imported Clothing Marmo to Mr. Congenitality. How does I feel to be like Marmo, like your laugh. April Poems to I as a child. Paul love Ll? Please be an April Fool! Don't deceive me. I've been through that before. Give me time to relax and be right now you are alienating me." So, if it's special with it, we will use it as we cared as keeping it private. Sarn and Trail...Congratulations. You are finalists in the BLS 10K race. Contact Rachel at 34-1 contact. Contact Rachel at 34-1 Bozo, thanks for a fine, fine time. I'll never forget 4-1 Citizens, be alert! Three Havenhanks on a combo bus, are only spot!附 4-1 surrounding community. 4-1 Happy 26 John. Cheer's to us, the mountains and the good old Kansas molehill. 4-1 Become a legally ordained member of the Uni- tionals. Receive training in emergency care from the U.S. Gov't. Legally perform all审 验 and funeral for official ULC ordination and burial. Req's Bachelor's degree or dressed, stamped envelope to P.O. Box 1155, New York, NY. Services for the late PATTY MURPHY are to be provided tomorrow. How it happened in today's UDS The Dominos - Happy 22nd! Hope we win taught. Lots of love Derek & Sherlock. 4-1 Heidi Wallace, happy 21st birthday; May all of them be authentic. Greg Hard. 4-1 FORTUNA-TOe> I hope you have a bumpy 28-kay on your back. Much more low. Much the lower. Bumgardy = 49. Darba Bajan, Can't wait to smooth and tighten Love, "Bronze Fonz Dog" 4-1 Incoming Med Students—Biuncial RICO med students, good conditions, asking $50. Call Jeff Steve and Sandy's discussion group. Tuesday weave in and Sandy we've all going to Manatee next week. We've all got to get the ball rolling. SAILING LOVERS AND NOVEL RECREATIONAL NUTS: See the latest in Landslading Vehicles. Demonstration and race. Hollow Sport Complex Lot. Behind Park 25. Saturday, 1-4 p.m. For Holdt, at Annapolis April 20th he is With, the Army Corps of Cadets, GH Mard, who gives the dive to his riggling, Gilhach Marsh wines bring their quality and sophistication. (Gilhach) Donny - call Dinah from Salina. Marie and I will go bananas! Jerry Joe and Heidi. 4-1 The Midnight Joker is my main man. No Foolin- Wild One. 4-1 Su Casa in THE MARKET PLACE 245 New Hampshire Finest in Selection of Mexican Art Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522 730B Mass. 841-7070 Onyx, wood and bone chess sets available Unity, wood and bone chest sets available HEADQUARTERS Imported Auto Parts JAMES GANG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30p.m. Vivian Unders-YouTube my one and only. I'll never look at anyone else. David, John, 1.1 Joy Clark-"You my one and only. I'll look at anyone else. Devotely, John." 4-1 Ralph—You sure foiled me. SERVICES OFFERED HATIAY YOGA Class beginning Wednesday, 6/20 at 10 a.m. for $49, weekly community Merchant Clerk's weeks for $50 and weekly Merchant Clerk's weeks for $55. Mail to: Community Merchant Clerk, 800-356-6700. TYPING Airbag! Airbag! Let's go to Daygo! I'm paying 4-1 Har Har Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 111, 114, 116, 123, 125, 127, 128, 129, 12A, 12B, 12C, 12D, 12E, 12F, Regular sessions or one time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 822-7653. J. Eye Boom Boom Villam roar some more Admiral Ahab 4-1 Ralph—You sure folled me. 4-1 Diane Holcomb "My my, one and only I'll never look at anyone else. David" John. 4 I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. t Typist editor, IBM Pixellcite. Quality work. Typewriter, digital disentertainment welcome. Email: 642-812-9128 Titze. Pokes-Heaven my one and only. Till you look at anyone else. Devotedly, John. 4 Bubba Belinda--In the end--it was you friend—Whose garden was this. 4-1 Experienced typist—term papers, maps, mike, templates, writing assignments, spelling corrections, 481-9554. Mrs. Wright Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for a quote from 841-314, days; 893-889, events and weekends. Thesis, term paper, etc. Reasonable calls. Bath, 841-6477. 4-14 Term Papers. Proread.fund. Corrected. Wolken, 1712 Alabama, M3-1222. 4-15 Wolken, 1712 Alabama, M3-1222. 4-15 - Foosball - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball Pinball P TYPING: Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6658. 4-8 9th and Iowa YFDPN - Many KU students have been pleased with your business. Call Harvary or Linda for a customize your business. WANTED Professional typing Term papers, theses, dissertations, mire: MIU Selective. New campus: 86401. Male roommate wanted for large furnished apartment on bus route - keep trying. 842-932-6 1055 Will type your paper with TCL Term papers and papers with Microsoft Word. 845-3311 841-7180 and weeks and conferences. Formals to share beautiful three bedroom bungalow our space for summer only, one for summer our space for summer only Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted MUSICIANS—Impact Productions, Entertainment Management and Booking. Always looking for new, good brand models, country, blue music, good grower Mobilier Kern Stone, 915-846-874 (collect) for auditions. Respond to share 2-bedroom apartment on saturday. All utilities paid, pool laundry room, entire house, parking space, kitchen, and bath. * Long haled Calico cat or kitten to replace mine. Call eavings, Mary, 842-6512 4-1 ● Pool ● Snooker ● Pina Pong 2 two-roommate needed for next fall at Towers. picture: Unil at 864-6782 from 2:00 p.m. DANCERS-Impact Productions needs GO-GO- bility, Flexibility, Continuity and training available. Both culturally and technologically. Giltterder Optical DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE Mellow roommate to share furnished apartment in kitchen, dishwasher, heavy commentary, roommate #414-282. Roommate needed for April and May. Call 842- 0059 after 6:00 p.m. The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." LEE T SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl! Remeindere for summer or winter to share information. Recommendation of law or grad student data 435-422-8433 www.ncsu.edu Private room with kitchen for summer school 864-8041 after 6 4-1 TYPE C LOCATION TYPE A LOCATION TYPE B LOCATION TYPE C LOCATION TYPE B LOCATION TYPE A Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday NAISMITH HALL - Bud on Tap - Pool Icelandic From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s 103 less than the youth fare you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. SUA Maupintour travel service Kansas Union 843-1211 12 Friday, April 1, 1977 University Daily Kansan Falling water table affects state according to government report 15y BARRY MASSEY Staff Reporter The water table in western Kansas declined an average of 3.5 feet last year, according to a recent report by three government agencies, continuing a tind of dwindling ground water supplies that could affect eastern Kansas as well. The report, issued earlier this month by the Kansas Geological Survey, the Division of Water Resources of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture and the U.S. Geological Survey, states that the water resources in Kansas are unusually dry weather and a continued increase in the number of irrigation wells. The result of an annual measurement of the depth of water in 1,100 western Kansas canals reflects a growing water supply problem for different parts of Kansas, some officials IN NORTHWESTERN Kansas (north of the Smoky Hill river) the water table declined an average of two feet in 1976 and increased to foot average annual decline during 1986-76. In west-central Kansas (between the Smoky Hill river and the Scott-Finney county line) the water table declined three feet in the last week, the average annual decline was two feet. The water table in southwest Kansas (south of the Scott-Finney county line) declined an average of five feet in 1976 and four feet in 1975. The average annual decline during 1986-78 was two feet. Joseph Rosenstein, district chief of the water resources division of the U.S. Geological Survey in Lawrence, said earlier this week, "It's possible that we may see some problems in water supply this summer and we don't get some substantial rainfall." Drought or near-drought conditions, combined with increased irrigation, have essentially been responsible for the water supply during the past year, Rosenbein said. And even if above normal rainfall relieves drought conditions, water table declines in western Kansas probably would continue to increase the large amount of irrigation being done. "The problem is simply that the pumpage is in excess of the recharge," Howard said. "We've done a survey in the Kansas Geological Survey in Lawrence, said last week." "Some people are pumping several times the recharge of their wells. They are in reality maring." Guy Gibson, chief engineer of the division of water resources, earlier this week said he had heard from a colleague that permits already issued this year were for irrigation purposes. He expects that more But despite the assurance of a maintained water table, the possible economic effects of an irrigation reduction are serious to the entire state. He said that as the water table declined it became more expensive to irrigate, and that at a certain point it would be profuse to continue to irrigate because glitter crop yields produced through irrigation wouldn't cover irrigation costs. John Henderson, deputy chief engineer of the Kansas Water Resources Board, said he knew of a study that indicated 25 per cent of the Kansas City metropolitan economy was directly related to the agriculture of irrigated parts of the state. Forest of signs used to advertise elections Although the long-range effects of the declining water table aren't really known, Rosenhein said it was certain the water pressure was completely exhausted by continued irrigation. In agreement, O'Connor said, "A lot of water and irrigation, so there is a resulting dependence upon irrigation for part of the economy of the state." Bv GARY BEDORE Staff Reporter A person doesn't have to be deeply involved in Lawrence city politics to know that the city has a school board April 5th. Thick patches of wooden signs with different colors and slogans have sprung up throughout the city, informing people of the election and of Barkley Clark, an incumbent commissioner and professor of law, offered one of the following positions: Three of the candidates have been involved in city election campaigns before, and they said that wooden signs have been used much more this year. According to figures given by the candidates, 578 signs are scattered throughout Lawrence. "It's a matter of keeping up with the Joneses," Clark said. "I wasn't going to use many until I saw the other candidates were." "THERE ARE TREEMOUSLY more signs being used now than when I first ran for commission six years ago," candidate Chris Perry said. "I say there are maybe 20 times as many." Another incumbent, Carl Mibke, said that the increase use of signs was a sign of the growing use of cell phones. than 5,000 permits will be issued this year as compared with 3,000 last year, 1,900 in 1972 "THE GUYS WITH MONEY are doing Mibeek with it, a bigger, tougher game." "Every sign we've got, we made," he said. "I wouldn't spend a dime on a sign." Mibec said that wood and paint were done, and that volunteers put the signs together. Mibeeck he didn't spend anything on 84 sigs, making him the only candidate who made it to the next round. THE OTHER CANDIDATES have estimated the percentage of their campaign budgets set aside for signs. Jerry Albertson and his co-founder, Jeff Clark, budget on his 220 signs. Clark said that approximately one-third of his budget was spent on 65 signs. Ed Carter说他 spent 10 per cent of his budget on 20 wooden signs. The rest of his budget on 54 signs took a large amount of his budget. Muriel Paul said that her 35 signs were an On Campus Events TODAY: There will be a CONFERENCE on CHILD ABUSE and NEGLECT all day in the Kansas Union. DOUGLAS PARKER, professor at the University of Texas and Archivist, will read "The Barge She Sat in: Plutarch, Shakespeare and Ebobarbus" at 3:30 p.m. in 4021 Wesco Hill. He will meet with the Classics Interest Group for a presentation in the Union on Jayhawk Room. There will be SAILBOAT RACE beginning at 3:30 p.m. on Potter Lake. REYNER BANHAM, professor of history of architecture at the University Man or Roadman will speak on "Universal Man or Roadman Square Hole" at 3:30 p.m. in 3140 Wesco. TONGITHE; THE CREATIVE FANTASY CABB will play Dungeons and Dragon's Tale. TOMORROW: A CONFERENCE ON MARRIAGE, love and relationships will meet from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Kansas Union. The conference is sponsored by KU-Y. The Women's Studies Advisory Committee will host a workshop on "INTERNATIONAL WOMEN THROUGH FILM," at 9:30 a.m. in the United Ministries Center, 1294 Oral St. In an effort to combat the problem of a declining water table, Rosenshein said, voluntary conservation measures are important. iexpensive form of advertising and that is mass operating her campaign on a low budget. "Signs are cheap and good in terms of recognition of a name," Paul said. "Once you've achieved that, the sings have diminished in value." Carter had similar ideas on name identification gained from using sigrs. "It's unfortunate," he said, "but sometimes people vote for a name only, not a person." THE CANDIDATES SAID that they didn't know how effective the signs were in getting votes but that the signs were a necessary part of campaign advertising. "An effective campaign takes a combination of signs, newspaper ads and other forms of communication as well," Albertson said. Several candidates said the use of signs helped citizen involvement in the campaign. Many candidates used volunteers to launch permission when using people's vards. ONE RESIDENT, Lloyd Davies, 1645 W. 19th St., has two candidates' signs in his front yard. He said that allowing candidates to put up signs was a good way to get candidates' names into the open for people to see. He said that improved methods of irrigation, more careful use of available water for irrigation, stringent restrictions on the amount of water taken in the amount of water taken from existing wells and in time, changes in crop procedures could ease water supply costs. "I have no objections to display signs if candidates want us to help them," Davies said. "It's just a chance for candidates to be popular, like advertising in newspapers." "It's going to take a considerable effort to improve conditions in western Kansas," she said. 'Last year we were just beginning to see the effect of the drought going on in western and central Kansas and there been no rainfall. We are not seeing it, unless there's an increase in rainfall, we're going to experience more problems with surface, and ground water in eastern The principal forces behind the effective use and control of ground water in western Kansas are five groundwater management districts, quasi-state agencies that have the power to establish and regulate a groundwater management program. Some of these management districts are now experimenting with various irrigation controls, Harris Mackey, senior engineer of the division of water resources, said. They are planning to run wet runoff conservation and even weather modification such as cloud seeding. But one major stumbling block in strict irrigation control, Mackey said, is the inability of state agencies to stop further drilling of irrigation wells. "Under the present law, there really isn't a way to prevent a well from being drilled, and that is why we are calling Mackey said. "But the legislature is considering a bill that would give the chief engineer of the division of water resources the authority of prior approval of all water." The chief engineer now has the authority to cut back or stop the use of a well only if it is necessary. The chief engineer may individual, he said. Although a few problems with surface water supplies are now beginning to appear, Henderson said, the surface water supply, which is still under development of the state, is not cause for much concern. "Surface water storage is not as bad as it was in the past," he said. "We have more reservoirs and stock ponds than we had during the last major drought in the '50s." However, many of these reservoirs are facing water shortages, Gibson said, and won't have any water available for irrigation purposes. EVERYBODY OUT FOR TENNIS a w wear both me. ★ Shirts ★ Shorts ★ Warm ★ Socks ★ A Full I Shoes by T Fred Perry, Adidas, Nike Pro Keds, and Tred The Athlet Foot The Athlete's Foot offers a wide selection of Tennis wear and accessories for both men and women... ★ Warm-Ups ★ A Full Line of Shoes by Tretorn, Fred Perry, Puma, Adidas, Nike, Pro Keds, Bata and Tred 2. Recognizing the impact of water shortages on both the economy and the daily lives of Kansans, Gov. Robert Bennett is calling for new development programs for water use. The Athlete's Foot Although much concerning the water situation in Kansas will depend upon the weather, government officials have become aware of the potential problems of water supply and are beginning to focus their attention on possible solutions. 919 Massachusetts Ph. 841-2995 • Lawrence "There's concern throughout state government about the decline in the water table and steps are being taken to place bamboo and reeds into the water situation," Rosenhein said. "The problem is now more serious with rural farm use, but we can't just ignore the long-term effect of this. In for some tight circumstances, nor unless we get some heavy precipitation." BankAmericard or Master Charge The average and maximum observed water-level declines during 1966-76 are County Average decline, declines, tint Cheyenne 8 25 Georgetown 8 25 Finney 11 18 Glenwood 31 15 Gray 15 23 Greersee 13 24 Hamilton 10 31 Hawksill 11 61 Kearny 9 30 Lake 15 15 Madee 15 15 Mesa 17 47 Hawkins 15 18 Seaill 5 18 Scotland 5 18 Seward 18 27 Sherman 18 27 Sherman 16 154 Smaran 17 305 Smaran 22 94 Thomas 9 30 Southall Wallace 25 32 Wichita 35 41 Gewin & Lake 8 22 Decision still up in the air on campaign gimmick A hot air balloon that rose in front of Strong Hall during Student Senate elections may be forgotten, but the conflict surrounding it remains unresolved. Feb. 15, Greg Snackne, sophomore class presidential candidate for the Avanti coalition, inflated the balloon because he said he felt it would increase voter turnout. Senate Elections Committee bad banned "political gimmicks" in the election. The balloon didn't actually carry a banner bearing the coalition name, as the candidates had originally planned. But it wasn't until a campaign rival Vanti campaigners handed out literature. Schnecke was fined $15, and received a March 24 deadline for paying the fine. "I don't intend to pay it or to appease it, he said yesterday. 'If they want to present matter, they can take it to the University Judiciary." Kevin Flynn, chairman of the Elections Committee, said the fine hadn't been enforced because the committee that had made the decision to replace the new committee hadn't been formed yet. "Any action will have to be approved by the new committee," he said, "and then it will have to be taken before the University Judicary." James Masuda, head of the University Judiciary, agreed that the Elections Committee must initiate the action to enforce the fine. Schnacke said that the coalition had had the right to inflate the balloon, and that the Elections Committee had been wrong to conclude a ruling after the campaign had started. EXPERIENCED • QUALIFIED • INNOVATIVE Muriel Johnson Paul for City Hall SHE IS CONCERNED ABOUT ★ Neighborhood Preservation and Improvement ★ Child Care Utility Rates ★ Aging We would like to hear your questions and problems. Call 842-2432 Pd. for by Citizen for Paul for City Hall TO HAVE AND TO HOLD... An Awareness Conference on Marriage, Love and Relationships Marriage Hollywood Style Wed.—The Philadelphia Story Fri.—Adam's Rib Thurs.—Father of the Bride Movies in Dyche Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Admission 25c Marriage 1977... Saturday, April 2 - Kansas Union Featuring small group presentations/discussions PINE ROOM 10:00 a.m. ESTABLISHING PERSONAL IDEN- TITY IN MARRIAGE— Peter Baldwin Lynn Moore Oane Bafour Dick Derr Bob Davis 11:00 a.m. SEX AND MARRIAGE: PROBLEMS AND REMEDIES—Diane McDermott 1:00 p.m. WHAT DOES IT MEAN WHEN YOU SAY 'I DO'?— Dr.Karlyn Campbell REGIONALIST ROOM HOW-TO CLINICS: MARRIAGE CEREMONIES AND CONTRACTS— 2:00 p.m. TO HAVE OR NOT TO HAVE CHILDREN— Nancy Berry Gary Bryant 3:00 p.m. ALTERNATIVES TO THE TRADITIONAL MARRIAGE— Casey Eike Diana Katt THE SACRED AND THE TENDER— (Marriage and Religion) Dr. Bob Shelton THE HOMOSEXUAL RELATION SHIP— Todd Van Lanningham N Sponsored by the KU-Y. a student organization partially funded by the Student Senate Activity Fee. THE LEGAL ASPECTS OF MARRIAGE— C.J. Wood Overl air line effectiv public reserva Lopat to force overbox "All a must h printed public Aerona" --- OVE means per cent The i trip bec accordi Agency Hage be flutr —Ha are two already H tc State a comr the cor becaus commi The decide salary Kansa Glove allot the much and se civil se "It than a said. STAT and an that th increases employe have la increases Bennet Voge would recomi increas Del yester alter ter coll admin Spea retreat nearference admini S1 "The If you portant Univer The more t availat howevit its 1977 "The should some t when t Va WAS predic agree' formal Secret Mosco limitat The r judgme Press! App Kansi positiv Senat men a Hall. p.m. t. board terno New rule requires airlines to publicize overbooking By DEENA KERBOW Staff Reporter Overbooking flights is a common practice among air line companies. However, a ruling that became effective yesterday will require airlines to inform the airline company of any confirmed reservations may be bumped from flights. "All air ticket counters and ticket agent counters must have signs posted about it, and it must be printed on each ticket," said Ted Lopiewicz, chief of civil aviation at CALA. Civil Aeronautics Board (C.A.B.), Washington D.C. Lopakiewicz said the board's ruling was an effort to force airlines to notify the public of the practice of overcharging. OVERBOOKING, officially called double-booking, measures that an airline may make reservations for 15 days. The idea is to ensure maximum capacity for each trip because the average no-show count is 20 per cent, according to Kitty Hagen of Sunflower Travel Agency. Hagen had four suggestions for students who would be flying home during Easter vacation: —Have a ticket before you get to the airport. There —two lines for checking it at most gates, one for a plane, one for a taxi. DON'T WATEN. Haven said a person should encase in 30 to 45 minutes before loading time and sit in a chair or wheelchair. must buy their tickets. The already-ticketed line moves much faster, she said. —Arrive in plenty of time. - Students who want to sit together on a plane should stick together in the waiting room. Don't watch too closely. Hagen said these suggestions would help but wouldn't ensure that a person would be boarded. "If you have reservations, she said," and "they are unable to board you, you have rights as an occupant." "They must get you to your destination within two hours of your appointed time (four hours if it's an afternoon)." "OTHERWISE, they must pay you a maximum of $200 on the spot in cash, right then and, and you can still keep your ticket, which is valid for another flight or a refund." A person is paid the price of his ticket up to the maximum $200, which soon will be raised to $400. On a round-trip ticket, the air line has to pay only for the flight for which the passenger is in comprenzed. And if the passenger is continuing and misses Students who live close to Lawrence and take commuter flights probably won't be bothered by the weather. another flight, all expenses must be borne by the airline. Joe Randall, manager of Lawrence Aviation Inc., said the new rule didn't affect his company. “ITS DIFFERENT here,” he said. “With our airline we can put on more than one airplane if the other is cancelled.” Randall said the new ruling applied only to the C.A.B. certificated carriers, which Lawrence Annuity owns. But, for students who live farther from Lawrence and have a job that requires them to be going to try to make the consumer mind that overbooking is a reality, and he can be bumped. In all probability, if he is a frequent traveler he will be Hagen and Randall both said airlines had begun overbooking because of the high percentage of no-shows. *PEOPLE MAKE it a point to make reservations, *DO NOT make it a point to cancel when they can't pay.* Hagen said airlines could afford to pay $200 in compensation to a person who was bumped more Randall said the new ruling really didn't change anything, it just let people know what has been easily than they could afford to fly with 20 empt seats. "I look askance at some of those rules," he said. "They fall into the category of 'Smoking is hazardous to your health.' It must be advertised that it is harmful." He added, "All it does is make people aware that it harms." Lopatkiewicz said, "Airlines have been overbooking for years, but the controversy started with the Airbus deal." NADER, A consumer advocate, filed suit against Allegheny Airlines in 1972, after being bumped from a flight which would have taken him to two consumer protection companies and sold 107 tickets although the plane had 100 seats. Nader charged the airline with fraudulent nuder payment and $25,000 in punitive damages. The citizens' group that had sponsored the rallies received in compensation and $25,000 in punitive damages. Following the final court ruling on Nader's case in June 1976, airlines began to file tariff notices with the Federal Court. The court rejected the request. "The airlines said that the tariff notice would protect them from law audit because they had notified the airlines about it." THE BOARD disagreed The rulling requires ticket notices and counter posters to read: “Our office of consumer advocates said that wasn’t sufficient notice because people didn’t even see the traffit notes that were filed,” Loatklewicz said. “So, the board in September 1976, issued a notice of proper rule making, which led to the board’s present interim rule.” "Airline flights may be overbooked, and there is a slight chance that a seat will not be available on a flight for which a person has a confirmed reservation. A person denied boarding on a flight may be entitled to mandatory payments. The rules for denied boarding compensation are available at all air ticket counters." THE ODDS against being bumped are about 2,000 to 1, according to a Time magazine article, "A Big Bump in the Air." CHILLY The article said that "given the numbers of Americans who fly each year, those odds translate into a small fraction of what we do." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87,No.118 House committee decides to cut faculty pay raise The House Ways and Means Committee decided Friday to cut a proposed faculty salary increase for the University of Kansas from 7 to 6 per cent. "It was more of a cautious reservation that a slap in the face of the faculty," he said. State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence and a committee member, said yesterday that the committee decision wouldn't be final until the commission confirms committee might restore the cut. Vogel said that the full House probably would go along with the committee's recommendation to cut the faculty pay increase from 7 to 6 per cent but that the bill Glover said the committee didn't want to allot the full 7 per cent until it knew how much money would be needed for primary schools and teachers and state civil service employees. would go to a joint conference committee because the Senate has already approved the proposal. STATE REP. John Vogel, R-Lawrence and another committee member, has said increase committee reduction faculty increase committee through the bought employees at the top of the scale should have larger pay raises than a 2.5 per cent raise recommended by Gov. Robert Bennett. Chancellor Archie Dykes has said he thinks that some classified employees deserve a larger pay raise, but that the proposed salary increase from the proposed faculty salary increase. DYKES ALSO said he hoped that the full 7 per cent increase would be restored in conference committee as well as a larger 9 percent. The new budget for the 2.5 per cent recommended by Bennett. KU budget. Glover said KU probably would move it if the items were considered separately. Bennett's recommendations include a merit pay raise of about 5 per cent for staff who are in their 40s and the top of their pay scales and a 2.5 per cent across-the-board increase for other employees. The House Ways and Means Committee also voted Friday to cut a proposed 8 per cent increase in KU's operating budget to 7 per cent. GLOVER SAID KU actually benefited from the decision. The cut in the proposed increase, he said, was caused by the removal of some library and computer funds from the operating budget and their establishment as separate items in the total Jayhawks lose Texas Relays Both Vogel and Glover said the appropriations bill containing the faculty pay proposal and the operating budget probably would go to a conference committee. If so, they said, final agreement must not be reached until the department two-or-three-day cleanup session a couple of weeks after the regular session ends sometime this week. THE SENATE Ways and Means Committee Friday approved a capital improvements appropriations bill, which will be distributed to Malott Hall and Robinson Gymnasium. See story page seven Monday, April 4, 1977 Glover said the bill seemed to be in pretty good shape right now" but it was too old. "It's been around for a while." Dykes said that he was happy that the senate committee had approved the capital investment and have to work with the full House and possibly with the conference committee to restore the full increases to faculty salaries in order to meet these increases were needed to offset inflation. Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, yesterday advised the Student Senate not to alter its budget philosophy toward inward migration of students warning the administration of the change. Sports budgeting topic of retreat Speaking to about 30 senators at a Senate retreat this weekend at Camp Allendale, near Jingo, Shankel discussed the diffe- cies and challenges of the administration's budgeting process. "The Senate is a year behind us," he said. "If you cut off funding to anything important now, it would be hard for the University to pick it up." "The University and the Student Senate should work together," Shankel said, "but some things can't be worked out, especially when they involve money." The University budget was developed more than a year ago to appropriate money available in July this year. The Senate, as well as the midst of developing its 1977-78 budget. Shankel said women's intercollegiate athletics should receive about $41,000 in funding. Steve Leben, student body president, said that Senate funding of women's internships is a priority. to get the program on its feet, and that the Senate had kept it going since. "The question is." Leben said, "whether it is the students' and the University's responsibility to bring KU under the requirements of Title IX by July 21, 1978." ★★ Stereo facilities in KJHK budget KJHK, 90-F-M, aaked a total of $9,068, which is a block allocation. Its other sources of funds are a department of radio, television and film allocation of $2,400 and a KJHK disco service and underwriting fund of $400, making a total operating budget of Radio station JKHJ last night presented its budget request to the Student Senate Communications Committee. The station's main proposed expenditure KJHK now serves about 65,000 people in laurence, emphasizing the KU student identity. Vance reports Soviet opinion to Carter Charles Hoard, station manager, said a station to stairer would increase the listening area. is for capital equipment. Now a monophonic station, KHK wants to buy the equipment WASHINGTON (AP)–President carer, predicting the Russians “will ultimately agree” to reduce nuclear arms, got his first formal, face-to-face report yesterday from Cyrus Vance on why Moscow rejected US. strategic aims limitation proposals. Applications for Kansan now available Applications for summer and fall Kansan editor and business manager positions are now available in the Student office, the offices of the dean of men's health, women and in 185 Flt Hall. Applications will be in by $ p.m. this Friday to 150 Flint. The board will interview candidates the afternoon of Tuesday, April 12. VANCE, NOTING that further talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko are to take place next month in Geneva, said arms limitation negotiations weren't for the short-winded, and added that initial failures in Moscow would be overcome. The report will enable Carter to make key judgments about the rejection. White House Press Secretary John Brennan said. "I believe the Soviets will ultimately agree with us that it is to the advantage of the American people and the Soviet people and the rest of the world to reduce our dependence upon this destructive weapon," Carter said, referring to nuclear weaponry, as he greeted Vance upon his return Saturday night. Carter said the United States remains determined "to succeed if it's humanly possible to have permanent friendship with the Soviet Union and to have drastic reductions in dependence on atomic weapons." Vance has declined to rule out U.S. miscalculations as a reason for the Soviet rejection of American strategic arms limitation proposals. The proposals Moscow rejected were: —To ratify the Vladivostok agreement between the two countries limiting nuclear arsenals without deciding whether to include the American cruise missile or the Soviet backfire bomb under the pact. —To cut the number of each country's ballistic missiles and strategic bombers from 2,400 to between 1,800 and 2,000, and to reduce missiles with multiple warheads from 1,320 to between 1,100 and 1,200. THE 2,400 AND 1,320 were agreed upon in negotiations at Vlindovistau in 1974. Polling places A list of polling places for tomorrow's election has been released by the Douglas County clerk's office. The polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Voters will select three city commissioners and three District 497 school board members, and will decide whether Lawrence should change from a city commission-manager form of government to a mayor-council form. LOCATION OF POLL Pinkney School, 51th and Monroe Street, Woodlawn School, 51th and Elm street. Princeton Roadward and Lawrence Ave. 10th and New York Streets Ninth Street and Schwartz Road West Junior High School Vale and Crestline Roads Duke County State Bank Ninhab and Kentucky Streets Illincoln School 1043 Hilltop Drive Community Woodland. 114 W. 11th St. Hallgate School. Alton Fletcher School. Alton Fletcher Street. Namathia Drive and Sunnyside Ave. Metropolitan Church. Cordray School. 19th and Vermont streets Central Lakes High School. 19th and Massachusetts streets Lawrence High School. Administration Center. 21st new law Avenue School. Schwager School, 22nd Street and Pond Ridge School. Centennial School, 2nd and Montclair School. Rusty's Grocery, 23rd and Louisiana School. Kennedy School, Davis and Inger streets. T 3 7 South Junior High School, 21th and Louisiana streets Tower for civil defense draws fire from city By DEENA KERBOW Staff Reporter City commissioners recently have expressed concern with the visual impact that a proposed 180-foot civil defense radio tower on south Park and downtown Lawrence. Commissioner Barkley Clark said it would be the tallest tree in the city. The county-proposed tower is part of a emergency Oversee the emergency EPCG in Dauphin The tower would stand on a triangular base with 15-foot legs and would taper to a 10-foot height. South Park and the new Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center on 11th street between New Hampshire and Rhode Island streets. The tower idea originated in 1975 when Douglas County applied for a federal grant from the Civil Defense Preparedness Agency to finance an EOC. THE REQUEST was approved, and the original architects made building design choices. "This has now surfaced and is creating a lot of heartburn," Travis Brass, emergency preparedness director, said Friday. "But, it isn't really all that new. The tower is part of *DBC* is where law enforcement, search and rescue, fire department, ambulance service operates. the 1785 eight or nine-page plan change that was here when I took office." "It is the development of a coordinated plan," he said, "for the local government, industry and private citizens for operating the environment to save lives and property." Brann explained the concept of emergency preparedness as the total capability of a community to help itself in a disaster. "IF WE'RE going to have a useful EOC, we must have communication. EOC must be able to communicate with all of the agencies involved in a disaster situation." volved—can all come together to see the total picture. must be able to communicate with all of the agencies involved in a disaster situation." Brann said that radio equipment was necessary for communication, and "when you need it, you have to have an antenna and a place to put it." "We want it on a tower," he said. "You can't lay it on the ground and have it work." See CIVIL DEFENSE page five 2 Monday, April 4, 1977 University Dally Kansan News Digest From our wire services IRA rallu turns into rio* PORLUAIOSE, Ireland—Hundreds of Irish Republican Army sympathizers fought pitched battles with riot police outside the Irish Republic's maximum security prison here yesterday during a rally in support of 20 IRA inmates staging a hunger strike. Police said at least 10 persons, including 10 officers, were injured in the clashes, the most violent eruption of support for the outlawed IRA's militant "Provisional" wing in more than a year. A spokesman said at least a dozen riders were arrested. More than 1,000 IRA supporters, many of them from Northern Ireland, massed outside the orignal main in gate this town 45 miles west of Dublin. The almost exclusively Roman Catholic IRA is fighting in Northern Ireland to end British rule and Protestant domination of that province. They seek to unite it More than 600 Provisionals are behind bars in the Republic as a result of a break-in on the illegal movement. African states discuss aid QUELMANE, Mozambique—Leaders of five "frontline" black African states around Rhodesia gathered yesterday to discuss military aid offered by the presidents of the Soviet Union and Cuba for the guerrilla war against the white peine in Rhodesia. The aid was offered by Nikola Podgorny of the Soviet Union and Fidel Castro of Cuba during their recently concluded tours of southern Africa. no announcement was expected yesterday from the meeting, chaired by Tanzanian President Julian Nyerere. But observers said the talks were sure to include the issue of the future. Also attending the meeting were black Rhodianese nationalist leaders Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe, whose Popular Front claims control over most of the guerrillas reportedly operating in Rhodesia from bases in neighboring Mozambique, Botswana and Zambia. Sadat. Carter begin talks WASHINGTON—Egyptian President Anwar Sadat arrived yesterday for his meeting with the president, where he is expected to set forth Arab condition in the Middle East. He made no statements but smiled broadly as he greeted a delegation of U.S. officials headed by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. Sadat's visit is the first to Washington by an Arab leader since Carter took office last January and is one of a series of aims aimed at reviving the 1973 Geneva peace talks. Carter also plans meetings in the next few weeks with King Hussein of Jordan and President Bush, who will meet last month the American president met in Washington with Israeli Prime Last month the American president met in Washington with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Crash dead flown to U.S. **OVERE, Del1 - Two planes carrying all of the 328 victims of the world's worst air disaster arrived yesterday at Dover Air Force Base, where pathology tests were performed.** A brief memorial ceremony followed the landing of the first of two Pan Am neighbors at 8:21 p.m. The victim died in the collision of two Boeing 747 jets on July 30, 2002. The second plane arrived from the Santa Cruz de Tenerife Airport at 8:37 p.m. The crash of a Pan Am jet and a KLM jet on the runway at the airport left 777 injured. Libuans execute officers CAIRO, Egypt—The regime of Libyan strongman Col. Moammar Khadifa has executed 23 army officers, the state-controlled Middle East News Agency said yesterday. Reporting from Beirut, the agency quoted travelers arriving from Libya as saving the officers were executed Saturday. The anti-Khadaby agency didn't say why or how the officers were executed, but it implied they planned or attempted to overthrow the government. TULSA (AP)—A walkway on an upper level of a wooden baseball stadium collapsed yesterday afternoon, injuring 17 persons watching an exhibition baseball game between the Houston Astros and the Texas Rangers. Walkway collapses, injuring 17 in Tulsa Three of the 17 persons were admitted to area hospitals. They suffered back injuries. Others taken to hospitals were released after being treated for cuts and bruises. The game had just been stopped in the second inning because of a rain and hail storm. Fans from the lower-level reserve and box seats were moving to a covered area when about 25 persons crowded onto a wooden walkway behind some seats. THE STRUCTURE collapsed, and some of the fans fell as far as 30 feet onto concrete. Others hit grass while remains of the 18-foot section fell around them. The baseball park, at the county fairgrounds, is a large game. The game takes place in the season. John Elsner, manager of the fairgrounds, told a news conference that "considerable maintenance work" had been done on the stands in the past two months. he said a "full and through inspection" he was under way because of the program. BILL ROLLINGS, president of the new TILLA Driller baseball club, said, "We probably had six to 10 times as many people on that section as there normally would be." Fans standing on the walkway were "fumelled down like in a chute" with boards and metal bleacher chairs, according to an online article. A grand stand when the collapse occurred. "The ones that came down on top scrambled off immediately. We couldn't tell how bad the first ones through were hurt," he said. Young and Jack Meyers, Okmulegne physician, who also was beneath the grandstand, said they rushed to administer first aid. "I DIDN'T find anybody whose life was endangered. I just don't see how more didn't come through the opening," Myers said. The victims, he said, included an elderly woman and several young boys, all of whom seemed more dazed than seated. A man in a suit moved the Drillers out of the stadium this season Rollings said he had no plans to move the Rollers out of the stadium this season due to a lack of funds. "I've been wishing I'd fallen out of the bleachers and landed right on my head rather than to have it happen to any of these people here," he said. ATTENDANCE at the game was estimated at 5,000. It was the first contest between two major league clubs in Tulsa since 1970. The Drillers is a Class AA team in the Texas League, which was organized several months ago under the Texas Rangers organization. The park previously was the home field of the American Association Tulsa Oilers, who moved to New Orleans after the end of last season. Greek hearings to resume soon Hearings on possible racial discrimination in University of Kansas living groups will resume April 21, Cinda Panhellenic president, said yesterday. The hearings, which began a week ago, were delayed so that seven KU sororities could contact their national offices for procedural instructions. Five of KU's 12 sororities have appeared at the hearings, which are being conducted by the University Senate Human Relations Committee. Twenty-two KU fraternities will appear at twinning before the semester ends. that will uporere the semester ends. The hearings stem from recent charges that a KU student wasn't asked to pledge a sorority because she was black. Gardner arraigned; trial date set Immediately after the arrangement, Gardner's attorney, James Rumley, filed a motion to have Gardner's trial moved out of Douglas County. James Gardner, 18, was arraigned Friday in Douglas County District Court in connection with the Feb. 6 knife slaying of Margaret Gaxey, 46. His trial is for June Gardner and his brother, Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, have been charged with frasel degree offenses. Rumsey said he thought there was enough prejudice against Gardiner in the county to prevent him from getting a fair trial. A hearing on the motion will be April 29. SCHOLARSHIP HALL DIRECTORS DEADLINE TODAY Apply Dean of Men or Dean of Women Office. Gardner's preliminary hearing will be Wednesday. His hearing has been post- commissioned. DURING THE younger Gardner a preliminary hearing March 2, Rumney unsuccessfully tried several times to force the younger Gardner at the time of his arrest. Following the arrangement Friday, Ramsey again filed a motion for the suppression of that confession and several others to be held in those two motions will be April 26. Rumsey filed three separations motions at the conclusion of Gardner's arrangement Friday. Vista RESTAURANTS •MONDAY •TUESDAY •WEDNESDAY BANANA SPLIT 77¢ Reg. 85¢ Survey studies housing needs A survey to estimate housing needs in Lawrence is being conducted by the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies at the University of Kansas. The $5,000 research project is funded by a community development grant awarded to the city of Lawrence by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The survey's main purpose is to estimate the housing needs in the city's community development target areas, according to project director Howard Sumika, assistant professor of urban planning in the K.U. campus. The survey defines the target areas defined by the city are the Pinkney neighborhood, North Lawrence and East Lawrence. The project is scheduled for completion this July. Sumka and his project staff will analyze such problems as physically inadequate structures, overcrowding and high housing costs relative to income. The project will also include providing care for the elderly, minority families, large families and the physically handicapped. SUA FILMS Dir. Kenji Mizoguchi. From a Kibuki drama by Chikamatzu Monzeon. Japan/subtitles. Mon., April 4, 7:30, 75c THE CRUCIFIED LOVERS Based on the opera by Giuseppe Verdi with Anna Mofo, Giove Bechli. Classical Film Series. Wed., April 6; 7:30 p.m., 75c LA TRIVIATA (1967) Dir, Nicholas Roeg and Donald Carr with Mick Jagger. Film Society Series. April 7; 1:30 and 9:30 p.m., fc 75c Thurs. 1: 7; 30 and 9:30 p.m., fc 75c PERFORMANCE (1970) THE MISSOURI BREAKS (1976) Dir. Arthur Penn. Pennis. With Marlon Brando, Jack Nicholson. Popular Favorite. April 9; 3:10, 7:00 & 9:30, p.m. $1 Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Weekenas were made for Michelob. It's an unexpected pleasure. MICHELOB BEER MICHELOB BEER 1934 C Now available at your favorite taverns and grocery stores. By ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • SINCE 1896 Th duri prop incr repo E set g will be been post- Gardner's Rumsey times to their arrest. His arrest, t Friday, or the sup- several go on the --- motions at raignment Monday. April 4. 1977 City crime rate falls; violent crimes rise The general crime rate in Lawrence during 1976 has declined along with property crimes, but violent crimes have increased, according to a recent police report. Although the over-all rate dropped 6 per cent last year, violent crimes increased 12 per cent from the previous year, and property crimes decreased 8 per cent. The greatest increase in violent crimes was in nonaggravated assaults. There were 127 more nonaggravated assaults in 1976 than in 1975, an increase of 201 per cent. Violent crimes include murder, rape, robbery and assault. Property crimes include burglary, theft, car theft, arson, vandalism. According to Maj. Darrell Stephens of the Lawrence Police Department, most nonaggrigated assaults are arguments or fist fights. The greatest decrease in violent crimes was in aggravated assault, for which there were 107 fewer cases in 1976 than in the previous year—a decrease of 56 per cent. In property crimes, grand larceny showed the greatest decrease. Grand larceny involves the dollars of $0 or more. In 1976, property crimes decreased from 35 percent than in 1975, a decrease of 38 per cent. There was one murder in 1976, compared with two in 1975. Twenty raps were reported in 1976, up 33 per cent from the 15 in 1975. On Campus CINEMAS & THEATRES TOMORROW: ROBERT WALTERS of Walters Drilling Co. will speak on "Geology of the Gorham Oil Field—Russell County, Central Kansas" at 11 a.m. in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. PETER THIESSEN, novelist, essayist and travel writer, will speak on "The Snow Leopard: An Inner and Outer Journey to the Tibetan Highlands of Nepal" at 8 p.m. in woodcraft Auditorium. HALD MAYER, an English poet and author, will speak on "Literary Translation" at 2:30 p.m. Europe, will speak on "Problems of Literary Translation" at 2:30 p.m. in the Union's International Room, and on "Czech Literature Since 1950" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's International Room. TODAY: THE NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE will have its regular meeting at noon in Alcove D of the Kansas Union. HOUSE MOTHERS will meet at 2 p.m. in the Union's Centennial Room. The SCHOOL PSYCHIOLOGY GRADUATE STUDENTS will meet at 2 p.m. in the Union's Cork Room II. A guest speaker will meet at 2 p.m. in the Yale University will speak on "The Dynamic Heavy Ion Transfer Reaction" at 4 p.m. in 132 Malot Hall as part of the physics and astronomy colloquium. Events Applications for the UNIVERSITY-COMMUNITY SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP are open to all students and will accept all students. Uni. All currently enrolled students who will return to KU in the fall are eligible. Announcement 1 TREASURE HUNT You could win $1,000.00 Hidden somewhere in the Lawrence area Listen for Clues on FM106 THE MUSIC STATION Ears Pierced Free with purchase of Ear Piercing Earrings at $7.50 • Non-Allergenic • Surgical Stainless Steel • 24 Kt. Gold Overlay • All Ear Piercing Done By Trained Specialist • Any Day of the Week! Where the Sharing Begins – Robert's Jewelry 833 Massachusetts • 843-5199 Hong Kong report says Chinese congress meeting HONG KONG (AP)—Hong Kong's South China Morning Post reported today the Chinese Communist party congress may be 'n full session in Peking. There was no confirmation of the report concerning a possible meeting of the congress, which held its last full session in January 1975—before the deaths of Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Premier Chou En-lai. that members of the ruling central committee stationed in the provinces had arrived in the Chinese capital by night flights during the past two days. The conservative daily said sources involved in Chinese affairs learned last night It quoted visitors to China as saying people in many cities and rural areas were stocking firecrackers and fireworks to anticipate announcements from Peking. Ming Pao, a respected Chinese-language daily, said Wednesday a still unidentified meeting was widely discussed by people in the southern Chinese city of Canton. CORRECTION It was incorrectly stated in last week's Kansan that applications are still being accepted for Residence Hall Directors. The deadline was MARCH 11. Campus McHawey Campus Hidawayy ITALIAN CUISINE... DU-LISH-US!! I WISH I WAS CIVILIZED. ... Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park -for civilized folks VW'S FIXED WHILE U WAIT MINT And to make the waiting easier at the new UW dealer in town, we are offering several specials. We want to give you a break on your brakes and let you know we can do something about it if you do not have the most economical engine in your UW! And don't forget, as a former student on the hill, I have an understanding of the automotive problems of students, staff, and faculty. If you have been disappointed in the past, give us a chance to show you what a reorganized, dedicated Service Department can do. AUTHORIZED --- Bd Hopkins Replacement limbs • Repair front wheel bearings • Check brake adjusters wheel cylinders • Adjust brakes, including hand brake • Fill brake fluid reservoir • Test brake warning light and stoplight switch • Test equipment test brake system Brake Special Bug $39.95 Other models higher, are for our special price BOB HOPKINS' VOLKSWAGEN INC. 2522 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843-2200 All work is done by trained VW mechanics, using genuine VW parts. You personally guarantee all work on your car for six months or 6,000 miles. Valid until: April 15th --- BankAmericard and Master Charge Accepted --- Electronic engine performance analysis • Replace plugs points • Inspect driver cap, rotor, stator and set wiring angle, adjust Valves • Replace valve cover gaskets • Check compressor • Adjust fuel pump settings • Check fuel pump fan belt tension • Change Oil • Clean strainer. Engine Performance Special $29.95 BOB HOPKINS' VOLKSWAGEN INC. 2522 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843-2200 All work is done by trained VW mechanics, using genuine VW parts. You personally guarantee all work on your car for six months or 6,000 miles. Valid until: April 15th --- 4 Monday, April 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 Vote 'no' on change Proponents call it a plan to increase the voice of the people in Lawrence city government. Opponents say it would reduce the cost of the city government while increasing its cost. Proponents say it would bring decisions out of the offices of professional planners and into full view. Opponents say it would be more important to the government to answer the city's needs. "IT'T IS A proposal on Tuesday's city election ballot to change the Lawrence government form from manager-compromission to mayor-council. In many ways, the proposal is a more basic and more serious issue than the election of city commissioners. Lawrence now has five city commissioners elected at-large throughout the city. One of the commissioners acts as mayor, and the office rotates every year. The commissioners hire a full-time secretary. Commissioners earn a nominal $100 yearly salary for their work; the city manager receives a salary in the $30,000 range. THE PROPOSAL TO change the government would eliminate the city commissioners and city manager and replace them with an eight-member city council and a mayor. Council members would be elected from four wards for two-year terms; the mayor would be elected at large for two years; the mayor would be either full or part-time; their wages would be determined later if the plan was approved. Voters are considering the proposal because of the efforts of a coalition of young people who gathered more than 3,000 votes on a petition calling for the ballot question. Many of the people who made the petition drive successful were involved in recent neighborhood organizing efforts in older areas of the city. It seems that the push to change Lawrence's government form is an outrowth of the neighborhood organizing. PROPONENTS THINK that a mayor-council government—in which the mayor is elected at-large but council members are elected by the wards in which they live—would be more responsive than the present form. The choice is between professionalism in Lawrence's city government and a faint hope that a change might produce a more responsive government. Voters should think about the efficiency and efficiency and vote "no" on the city government change question. Lawrence is simply too big to expect a part-time mayor to run its business. It is also too small to attract a qualified person every two years to become a full-time mayor. ONLY FOUR KANSAS cities with populations of more than 10,000 have a mayor-council government. Of the four, the largest—Prairie Village—is barely the size of Lawrence. That should give some indication of the wisdom of a mayor-council government in a city the size of Lawrence. In the commission-manager form of government, it is easy to spot the chief administrator of the city—he is the city manager. He is a professional who should act with a higher degree of competence than a mayor who blows into office and back out within two years. If the city manager doesn't prove competent, he can be ousted any time—not just at election time every two years. IN A MAYOR-COUNCIL form, many of the duties of running the government would fall to a city administrator working for the mayor. Even proponents of the change admit that such an administrator would be necessary. The day-to-day operation of Lawrence's government would become more vague because an unselected official, answerable only to the mayor, would be largely responsible. Proponents of the change argue that city commissioners elected at-large aren't listening to the needs of individual neighborhoods. They say council members who answer only to their wards would be more aware of the needs of individual neighborhoods. BUT THE PROPONENTS fail to say how a city council would avoid the trap of pitting ward against ward—that is, neighborhood naisten neighborhood. A council member from Ward A would have less responsive from Ward D than a city commissioner elected at-large. And proponents also say, in a campaign newsletter, that "only those able to campaign on a massive scale" can now win election as commissioners. Proponents would really see massive campaigning if they could use the mayor's "open to a city-wide vote." FINALLY, FOR those who see city matters only in terms of dollars and cents, the mayor-council form would be more expensive. The mayor and his administrator would both receive full-time salaries; backers of the plan envision a salary between $1,800 and $4,500 for the eight council members, who would be expected to devote more time to the city than commissioners now do. Increasing the responsiveness of the city government is an admirable goal. But for Lawrence, it seems to be a goal that is best reached within the present form of government. Voters should avoid making an unnecessary and potentially harmful change; they should vote "no" on the change of government question. The Miranda problem occurs from case to case WASHINGTON - Hard cases make bad law. The maxim is doubtless as old as the art of jurisprudence. It applied precisely last week in the case of Robert Anthony Williams, a lawyer who had bad law may not prove as bad as it looked at first glance. This was one more in a string of criminal cases that have come to be identified generically as "Miranda her, and dumped her body by the highway as he fled by car to Davenport, 160 miles away. Once the murderer onto Williams once. The murderer had been own carrying a large bundle of weapons on Christmas Day, police issued an all points alarm. Williams, meanwhile, had telephone calls to Desmond McKenzie and McKenzie. The lawyer advised Williams to James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. cases.” They date from the June day in 1966 when Chief Justice Warren talked a bitterly divided court into a major extension of the rights of an accused person at the time of his conviction. The case has remained bitterly divided on these issues ever since. The Miranda principle is sound. It derives from the protections of the Sharon and Sheikh Mohammed No person may be compelled in any criminal case to a witness against himself; and every accused person shall enjoy the protection of the defence of counsel for his defense. AS SOFTEN TEMHES, the trouble arises in the application of these “due process” principles to particular cases. This results in the matter of Robert Anthony before just Christmas in 1988, he escaped from a Missouri mental institution and wound up at a YMCA in Des Moines. On Christmas Eve, William Pamela Powers, year-old Pamela Powers, who had turned to the YMCA to watch a wrestling match. He abducted the child, raped and suffocated surrender, but instructed him to answer no questions until he could have counsel at his side. He would be understood with the Des Moines police. Detective Captain Cletus Learning and another detective drove to the truck to pick up the suspect. IN DAVENPORT, Williams conferred with still another lawyer, Thomas Kelly, who gave him the same advice: Answer no questions until he could confer with McKnight in court. In these several processions authorities five times-five times!—read Williams the required "Miranda warnings." THEY DROVE ON for two hours. Then Williams abruptly led them to the spot where he had discarded the child's shoes, then to the place where he had tossed away a blanket, finally to the spot where he had concealed himself as the victim for murder, the prosecution, of course, introduced this evidence of Williams' guilt. On the afternoon of December 25, as they began the three-hour drive back to Des Moines, Captain Learning made a little mistake in predicting several inches of snow for tonight, and I feel that you yourself are the only person that knows where this little girl's body is . . . and if you get a phone you may be able to learn Learning expressed his feeling that the child should be entitled to a Christian burial, and he asked Williams to "think about it." In its 5-4 decision last week, the high court found Captain Learning guilty of such conviction that he had conviction had to be reversed. In the majority's view, "the Christian burial speech" amounted to forbidden interrogation. The evidence against him was Court gave Iowa authorities 80 days to decide on a retrial. THE DECISION, in my own view, was a palpable miscarriage of justice. Williams was perfectly aware of his right to remain in service. He had been an abundant warmer under the law. His waiver of his rights impresses me as allogather voluntary. He was not "interrogated" in any rational manner; he was not coerced or hulled or beaten into a confession. On the front page of today's Kansan, there's a little box announcing that applications for the posts of Kansan editor and business manager are now available. That is the interviews will be conducted and selections will be made next week. But a close reading of the six explosive opinions persuades me that the majority made no sense in the case. The Williams case turned solely on different perceptions of the facts. If Justices Powell and Stevens, the swing men, should have different perception in another case, we would write better law. In the name of little girls, let us hope so. (Note: This is the second of two columns about the selection and duties of the Kansan editor.) The making of an editor: 1977 Such boxes appear every semester, followed about a week later by a small box announcing the new editor and the editor in chief, who is supposed to give some idea of what happens between the appearances of the two boxes. COLLEGE neapers pick their editors in an incredibly short time; the editors are elected by the staff in a simple, democratic way. Other editors are elected by the entire student body. Some are selected by a student senate, by the student body president or by the journalist school. The Kansan traditionally has thought that the first two methods, although nice in theory, were too risky in practice. The paper supposedly is sterving toward putting out a product, and an elected editor isn't a step in this direction. And having the student government or journalism faculty choose the editor doesn't seem to be the way to go if you are trying to have an independent, free student press. Both groups deserve some say in the choice of the editor because the Senate pay for the student subscriptions and the school provides the paper with reporters and valuable advice. However, neither should have anything close to dictatorial powers. THE KANSAN editor is selected by the Kansan board, a group which is the approximate equivalent of the board of directors of a newspaper corp. The editorial staff of the board are the Kansan editor and business manager, the news and business advisers, The board has no voice in the day-to-day operation of the Kansan budget and the Kansan budget and approves or disapproves the dean of the journalism school and the chairman of the Senate's Communication Committee. votes. The Kanans news and business staff are hired by the newly selected editor and business manager, with the board approving or disproving their salary schedules. Those are the mechanics. But, as in any sort of hiring procedure, there is a lot more Editor's Note Jim Bates equipment purchases. It also has the sole power to hire (or fire) the editor. Kanen to become editor. But, if you haven't, you'd better have had some outside journalism experience. Working journalism experience and an understanding of exactly how the paper works probably are the first things the board looks at. involved than simple mechanics Next Tuesday, the board will meet and interview the candidates for editor and business manager. Each candidate usually has a 10-minute interview. Then the board discusses the candidates and their qualifications and, finally, ANYONE CAN apply for editor. All one has to do is pick up an application, fill it out, turn it in, and show it to show up for the interview. But, in the end, only a few people have a serious chance of getting the job. You don't have to work on the Since, unfortunately, not that many graduate or special students with experience as professional journalists apply, he will take journalism students with Kansan experience. The board has to choose from these candidates on the basis of talent, personality and counties, personality and counties, almost undefinable, factors. TO SOME extent, these students play a game called "Kansas Politics." Just as their counterparts in the real world, ambition as well as love of what they're doing is a motivation for doing a good job. In the back rooms of Kansan parties, slightly drunk assistant campus editors will tell of their schemes and dreams. Which is more prestigious—a campus desk position or being a copy chief? Is sports a dead end? Who has been the best news adviser who thinks I'm a talent or the communications chairman I once badly misquoted? In the end, the assistant campus editor never really knows why he became—or didn't become—editor. Somehow, the board members, synthesize their likes and dislikes, the applications, the data, the tools, the GPAs and the candidates' abilities to work with people to come up with an editor. Exactly how is something I guess I'll discover next Tuesday. IT'S TRUE THAT MY RECENT VISIT TO MOSCOW WASN'T A TOTAL SUCCESS. IT'S TRUE THAT THE SOVIETS REJECTED OUR ARMS REDUCTION PROPOSAL. AND IT'S DIFFICULT TO KNOW HOW LONG IT MAY TAKE TO GET THEM BACK TO THE NEGOTIATION TABLE, BUT THE TRIP WASN'T A TOTAL FAILURE! I DID GET SOME DANDY SOUVENIR SNAPSHOTS OF THE KREMLUN. WESTPHAL MICHAEL JOHNSON A vote for status quo is best In both cases, however, with one exception, the best change is no change. Lawrence voters Tuesday will have a double-barreled chance to fight city hall. Three of the top four finishers in the city primary, Barkley Clark, Jack Rose and Carl Mibee, either are or recently have won a game. Each has a record of involvement in the community. Not only do they have the opportunity to substantially change the make-up of the city commission, but also they can vote to change the form of city government in Lawrence. and that involvement has usually been of benefit to all of Lawrence. Any of the three mission. Carter's understanding of local problems and his expertise in the Victoria Gayle would be an acceptable choice for the commission. Brent Anderson Editorial Writer THE EXCEPTION is Ed Carter, a former director of the Chamber of Commerce and the New York Stock Exchange hasn't served on the com- Not that there is any more honor in commercial advertising Hardcover best films we read about in the national news magazines are management of resources and personnel make him an outstanding candidate for city commissioner. At a time when the city's ability to manage its affairs is under constant fire, Carter's Although voters have a choice of six candidates for the city commission, they have only two choices on the proposal to change to a Mayor-Council form of government: yes or no. willingness to seek a seat on the commission is especially impressive. TO VOTE YES, in my opinion, would be a mistake that would take years to correct and would cost the people of this community thousands of dollars and hours of frustration. It is a fluke that the issue is even on the ballot. The idea of changing to a masony-council district is a handful of Lawrence residents whose hearts are in the right place but whose goal for a more responsive and democratic city government simply can't be met by their mayor-council proposal. To put the mayor-council proposal on the ballot, 10 percent of all registered voters in the city had to sign a petition supporting the proposal. There were 29,077 registered voters at the time of the last election, and 488 signatures were needed for the issue to be placed on the 1977 general city election ballot. Viewers of the seven Watkins films shown here would, I think, agree that they were all well prepared to watch these films in interest and that any of these films would have made money and impressed large audiences, if they had been produced for a formal commercial distribution. Letters Watkins' films defended To the editor: It seems urgent to take issue with two characterizations of visiting filmmaker Peter Watkins in the otherwise adverse interviews that appeared in the Kansan and the Journal-World. It might be true in some sense that Watkins is, as the Journal-world asserts a "revolutionary" concern for adequate public information on the most urgent issues of the century. His politics are the politics of truth, de-education and survival for the human race. It might also be true in some sense, as Chuck Saw wrote in the Kansan that Watkins isn't a "popular" filmmaker. But "popular" is, of course, an incomplete term; always demanding that we ask "popular with whom?" And it is in the nature of the monster called the mass media that Watkins' "unpopular" and revolutionary film have become the best television and film watchers numbering in the hundreds of millions. How many people have read a novel by William Faulkner or Patrick White, or a novel by Neruda or a Robert Frost? shown commercially in Lawrence. Edward Ruhe professor of English Candidate criticized To the editor: It distresses me to see that Paul Wolfe may be elected to the Lawrence School Board. Although his claims are impressive, his actual record leaves much to be desired. Wolfe is the coordinator of Instruction and Research Computing at KU. Wolfe claims in one of his advertisements that he has been recruited to recruit and retain an excellent faculty and staff." However, he has made the working environment at the Computation Laboratory last one, at least nine members of his own full-time professional staff (out of a total of maybe 35), counting secretaries] have resigned. I'm not referring to those dedicated, full-time professionals, some of whom had been at the Comp Center longer than Wolfe. It is well known that these people resigned because of Wolfe's management. In a recent Lawrence Journal-World article, Wolfe said if problems were coming directly to board members rather than through channels, there's a system. There again, voters should look at Wolfe's record. Several people, including myself, have found it necessary to go over Wolfe's head to Delaware Chancellor and chancellor, to get any results. In light of all the above, I find Wolfe's assertions that he wants "to get a job done more efficiently," he is "easily, experienced informed" to be a bad joke. A common complaint at the Comp Center is that Wolfe doesn't welcome suggestions about a new job, and also won't listen when people take their problems to him—quite a complaint against a man who describes himself in his book. (Comp 24) as "willing to listen." Tax bills welcome To the editor: As we approach another tax day (April 15), there are a few reasons for this. House of Representatives that will be of interest to many Some 54 million Americans are hit with an income tax penalty of up to 20 per cent because they are single, or because they are married with both partners working. The Committee of Single Taxpayers has been working for several years to accomplish this goal. Rep. Ed Koch has again introduced HR 850 in the House Ways and Means Committee. students and faculty of the University of Kansas. Also pending in Ways and Means is HR 84, introduced by Rep Herb Harris, which would make a step toward income tax for renters similar to what has been available to homeowners. Anyone interested in more information about these bills is urged to send a legal size, self-addressed stamped envelope to the Office of the Governor below, mentioning that this letter was read in the Kansas. S Three develop 37 per stitute The portun art his Acc profess instru their "No literat art an Lee Spence Macs staff profess assista Box 4428 Arlington, Virginia 22204 THE INDIVIDUALS who wanted the change to a mayor-council system in Lawrence had a difficult time getting the signatures several months. As the deadline for submitting their petition drew near, they were forced to go to the University of Kansas needed for the proposal to be on tomorrow's ballot. They Edinb spendi Stud Arkan the in Alth this is spots "W The classrexet Exeter Christ the stu The Na A strategically located table in Allen Field House gave the mayor-council proponents access to thousands of KU students, who were enrolling for the spring semester. "Would you be willing to sign a petition to change the form of Lawrence city government?" was the innocent, almost unimportant question asked of students as they were leaving the field house. Theircesssees got involved and manner got the mayor-council proponents the signatures they needed. THERE IS A serious moral question as to whether KU students should be the ones to decide how Lawrence, a town they'll probably live in only four five years, should be governed and who should govern it. It is hoped that everyone who votes will consider the candidates and issues carefully, then vote responsibly. Each candidate's voice determines the outcome of tomorrow's election. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN published at the University of Kansas daily August 14th, Saturday and Sunday. June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday August 23rd. Subscriptions by mail are $2 a semester or $4 a year outside the county. State student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor Jim Rates Business Manager Janice Clements University Daily Kansan Monday, Anril 4.1977 5 he back* parties, campus schemes is more us desk y chief? Who has who has I am we are calculations badly assistant really me—or editor members, uses and onces, theance, the people to people to ething I r next OF MUN. the right r a more static city can't be r-council o-council 1, 10 per voters in petition al. There voters at voters in municipal signatures issue to be issued by city LSs who a mayor- hood had getting deadline petition forced to of Kansas signature to be on ated table gave the apoponents of KU rolling for to sign up for the form of "armment?" almost asked of *e* leaving Their nature or councilatures they moral worse KU ne ones to e, a town n only four should be o should everyone who the can, carefully, pily. Each voice in outcome of Students to spend summer in England Three centuries of town and country development in England will be studied by 37 persons participating in a summer institute program in England and Scotland. The program gives students the opportunity to study the history, literature and art of the past. According to John Macauley, assistant professor of history, the program gives the instructors the opportunity to coordinate their subjects with other subjects. "Not only will the student be studying the literature of a period, but also its history. You'll learn about it." Macaulay will be joined on the teaching staff by Richard Eversole, assistant professor of English, and Jeanne Stump, assistant professor of art history. Students from the universities of Kansas, Arkansas, California and Illinois will attend They will study in London, Exeter, Edinburgh, York and Cambridge after their studies. The students' work will be done in a classroom atmosphere at the University of Exeter, the University of Bristol and Christ's College. but field trips will allow the students to visit Westmister Abbey and the National Museum in London Although the program is six years old, it is the first year that all the available trains are ready. "Word of mouth about the quality of the program has been most responsible for the growth in attendance this year," Macauley said. "But, I also think that students have money this year than in previous years." 2 men arrested after burglary Two men were arrested at 9:30 Friday night in connection with a $150 burglary of a KU student's residence at 1734 Tennessee St. The student, Scott Miller, Fort Thomas, Ky., senior, said he discovered the two men when he and his girlfriend arrived at the house. During the fight, Miller's girlfriend, Peggy McIntyre, Coldwater sophomore, called the Lawrence police, who caught the at the scene within one minute of the call. Miller said that he heard a noise in the bedroom, and that two black men came out of a room and tried to leave the house. Miller said he fought the two men in the house and outside, where Miller allegedly was struck over the head. Police said they could find no signs of entry into the house. LEASING NOW If you desire a pleasant place to live, and if your parents will sign the contract, then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W. 25th St. this building (the law enforcement center.)" From page one Civil defense tower . . PARK25 He said that in the case of an emergency, he wanted the equipment to survive the disaster. Electro-magnetic and acoustic batteries are the equipment against radio active material and lightning, "EMP PROTECTION is costly and elaborate and was engineered into the EOC project when it was developed," he said. "It includes a radio transmitter room, which is a steel box. And everybody knows steel is expensive. Brann said that there were physical limitations on one of the transmitter antennas and the play was played "That room has already been built. So, we're at the point where we're ready to purchase and install the radio equipment in support of EOC in this protective facility." "The facility for the transmitter is already built here," he said, referring to the law enforcement center, and that is the reason why the tower needs to be near here." The tower site is on the parking lot south of the law enforcement center, on the first parking island from Rhode Island Street. The parking area is within sight of the parking area by two parking spaces. HE ALSO SAID that conduit had been prefixed for cable from the com- Bram said he would obtain figures this week from the original architects concerned with the project, including the conduit and the steel communications room. He told county commissioners last week that this money was used to lower the tower wasn't built on the proposed site. "WESAID, 'Only from the Airport Zoning Commission,' Hewitt said, "who must say it wouldn't be in conflict with regulations and standards for approach areas to runaways at the airport." Jim Hewitt of the city planning staff said the planning office received a call about a month ago from Bram, who asked whether special permits were required before the new plan. Monday Night Special at the SIZZLER GROUND BEEF DINNER HAMBURGER $ \frac{1}{2} $ lb. Ground Beef Dinner Only $ 1.19 Includes choice of potato and toast. Monday Night Only 1516 W.23rd St. Lawrence.Ks. SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE Hewitt said the airport commission's review of the tower plan was the first time the city had reviewed a building. Lawrence, Ks. "The original plans from 1972 didn't show a tower located anywhere," Hewitt said. He said the 1975 plan changes showed the tower to be able to not illustrate its dimensions adequately. "I've seen a copy of the plan, and it just shows the tower site. On the plans, it didn't stick out as being a 180-foot tower with 15-foot legs on its base," he said. HEWITT SAID the 1975 plan pictured a small circle with about a three-foot floor. Meanwhile, the county has agreed, upon request from the city commissioners, to go through the process of getting a "use permitted upon review." A section within the zoning ordinance says a radio or television transmission tower must have a use permitted upon review from the city commission. This is a permit for cases that involve potential adverse effects—in this case, height. The city attorney previously had ruled that other governmental agencies didn't have the authority to make decisions. The city commission requested it, anyway. approve that if the city wouldn't improve the site, the county could say the city can do it. PETER D. WILSON ELECT JACK ROSE CITY COMMISSION QUALIFIED • EXPERIENCED • CONCERNED Thank you for the support you gave me in the Primary Election. I would appreciate your continued support in the General Election on April 5. My ties with the University of Kansas and Lawrence are long standing and strong. - Graduate of the University of Kansas - Business Manager of the Chemistry Department for fifteen years - Native of Lawrence, former City Commissioner and Mayor I am uniquely qualified to represent both the university and non-university communities in Lawrence. Pair p弘恤学 adV by the c公縹雇 for the elecfion of JAck ROsE Paiid p弘恤学 adV by the c公縧雇 for the elecfion of JAck ROsE Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified. K. U. Students, Come see what you paid for: THE CLIFF KEUTER DANCE GROUP Wednesday, April 6 HOCH AUDITORIUM 8:00 p.m. presented by THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CONCERT SERIES "Mr. Keuter is a fine and vivid dancer whose off-beat reflections upon the kinetic relationships between dance and drama continue to engage me." CLIVE BARNES New York Times Admission FREE with K.U.I.D. 6 Monday, April 4, 1977 University Daily Kansan Only one 'one-act' is impressive By PAUL STEPHEN LIM Guest Reviewer Since I knew that what I would be seeing of "An Evening of One-Acts" by assorted KU playwrights last night at the Inge Theatre was a final dress rehearsal rather than a formal evening tonight, and since I also know that most theatrical productions rarely "pull together" until opening night—I thought, perhaps, that it would be the better part of kindness to confine my comments to the audience rather than to their respective productions. Would that I had decided otherwise and had taken a different set of notes! Of the four one-acts on this week, I saw only three: "Sterile Lullaby" by Donna Young, "Fencers" by Stan Haehil, and "Leda and the Swan" by J. L. McClure. A fourth, "Webs Weaved" by Charlotte Dodson, was not yet ready to be seen. It is for which time it replaces "Fencers" for the duration of the run, through Saturday. WHICH IS A pity, because of the three one-eact I saw, "Fencers" was the only one that managed to hold my interest throughout its entire 30 minutes. the pay starts out with two medieval fencers in a physical as well as a verbal joust. What they finally decide is that they don't know why they are fighting, and so they part ways. Next, a clever magus tells an irisible princess four versions of a story involving two brothers and how they came to lose their inheritance. Each of these versions is marvelously enacted by the same group of players, and the last version has the two brothers fencing, as at the beginning. PLAYWRIGHT Haeli knows exactly what he is doing, but he is also very fortunate in that he has found a kindred spirit in Cathy Rogers to direct his very inventive and highly imaginative script. Spare though the production was (there was no set as such, only hand-held props), the Inge space has never been used better. The ensemble On Stage acting, too, was uniformly good, with Doug Weaver and Jim Gilcrest deserving special mention. Where "Pencers" continues to delight the imagination long after it is over. "Leda and the Swan" merely irritates by its one-dimensional retelling of a myth. In this version, Zeus is perched on top of a ladder, telescope in hand, complaining about how he is not the god once was as he spies on a made Leda reading a book (dressed in a grotesque body ZEUS FINALLY buys a swan suit from a novelty store, inimates himself into Leda's bathhit and, at the end of the play, Leda lays an egg. The moment is funny, true. But it is also vulgar and cheap. Jim Peterson directed and, of the four players, only Terri Cowick as the proprietor of the novelty store was believable. Finally, about "Sterile Lullabye," the less said the better. This is the second one of Donna Young's plays to be seen this season. And while she may say that the new work is every bit as ill-conceived in the writing and as poorly directed, acted and designed in the production, as last October's very unfortunate anyone is somebody's Mother (Sometimes). Whether the play is a cry for or against government control and bureaucracy is anyone's guess, because at least in this one particular case, neither the parents nor the doctors from the Population Center seem to know anything about how to raise children. SET SOMETIME in the future, the new play characters a low-income couple's fight to keep the government from appropriating their genetically-superior child, a six-month-old baby whose first words are "shit" and "dada." If playwright Young's only point is that parents, however incompetent, have a right to raise their own children because natural parents have "love" going for them, then to take an entire hour to give us that "message" is an act of extreme cruelty. When a parent receives the message or persevering, she says she is already hard at work completing yet another play, scheduled for a script-in-hand reading on May Day. Paul Stephen Lim is a Ph.D. candidate in English and an award-winning playwright. This Week's Highlights Theater "STERILE LULLABY," "LLEDA AND TONIGHT (through Wednesday) in Theatre. "STERILE LULLABY," "WEBS WEAVER" and "LEDA THE SWAN" 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, Inge Theatre Concerts MALCOLM SMITH, obe, with the Fine Art Trio, Chamber Music Series, 8.tonight CLIFF KEUTER DANCE COMPANY. C concert, Series 8, p.m. Wednesday, Moch 10:30 a.m. WEATHER REPORT, with special guest Al Dimeola, p.m. Tuesday, Uptown Park LEON REDBONE and MICHAEL WILSON on Tuesday, Uplown Theatre, Kentucky City, Mo. THE GREEG ALLMAN BAND. B. p.m. Wednesday, Memorial Hall, Kansas City Recitals Oboist to join concert Trio Roger Rundle, another KU graduate, will accompany Smith. Rundle also gives solo recitals, and his original compositions—both chamber and vocal music—have been performed by the Greenhouse Dance Ensemble and Westchester Chamber Players. A native of Lawrence and a KU graduate, obol Mokalm Smith will perform with the Fine Arts Trio to 8 tonight in the University Hall Ball and ends this year’s Chamber Music Series. CONCERT CHORALE, 8 p.m. Tuesday. Swarthout Recital Hall. Smith's credentials include studies with Harold Gomberg, three years as principal obist of the Jullait Opera, first obist of the Dauphin Opera since 1973, principal obist of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the Johns Hopkins University College of Music, Burler University. Wilfred Biel, violin; George Katz, piano; and John Ehrlich, cell; form the Fine Arts Trio, a group known for its contemporary repertoire as well as its classical and romantic repertoire. Ehrlich is also a KU graduate. Tonight Smith and Rundle will perform *dandel's* 'Sonata in C Minor' and Britten's 'Sonata after Ovid, Op. 49.' The Fine Arts Trile will perform 'Trio in B Major, Op. 8.' ALBERT GERKEN, carillon, 7 p.m. Wednesday. Camanoile. "PAUL HOFHAIMER: A MODEL FOR GERMAN ORGANISTS" Louise Couter, professors of Michigan, assisted by James Moore, organist; J. Bunker Clark, hardscholar and chorale led by Daniel Wischorff, p.m. Thursday. Swanwhort Rehital Hall Nightclubs CLYDE McCOY, bandleader and trumpet player, 9 to midnight tonight, Paul Gray's Jazz Place. JAZZ JAM SESION, 9 to midnight Thursday. KELLEY WADE, toksinger and pianist noon to 1 p.m. and 10 p.m to 12:30 a.m. Tuesday through Thursday, the Seventh Spirit JAM SESSION, blugrass, folk and midnight Wednesday. Off the Wall Hall LA TRAVIATA-Based on the opera by LA TRAVIATA-set to one of his most moving musicals. THE CRUCIFIED LOVERS—A touching love story drastically by a class struggle. A Japanese film that was adopted from a Kabuki drama. PERFORMANCE-Set in contemporary London, covering themes ranging from sanity to reality, love and death. Stars in the famous actor James Fox and Mick Jagger. Books THE TIME OF THE DRAGON, by Dorothy Elden (Crest, $1.95)—A new one by probably the best of the Gothic practitioners. This one is set in China during the Boxer Rebellion and into present day China. One of those massive family epics. THE GOLDEN RENDEZVOUZ, by Alistair MacLean (Creat. 1715)-Ruseis of a thriller about infringe on the sea, in involving a ship on a Caribbean cruise, mysterious coffins, a broken radio (always the book novel), and deaths all over the place. THE LYNMARA LEAGACY, by Catherine Gaskin (Crest, $1.95)—Romantic stuff about a girl, an old house and a hero. Set, of course, in England. THE RUNNING OF BEASTS, by Bill Perry. The book's subject is Rape murders, three of them. In a small New York town bring a psychiatrist on the scene, and somehow it reads as though all men are under control. **MARY WAKEFIELD**, by Mazo de la Roche (Crest, $1.50)—Another in the Whitebooks saga on the people of Jana One. It recounts how one of the earlier in chronological time. V Male Dancers Night Tuesday. April 5 Back by Popular Demand Featuring— From Kyle's Bar in Kansas City. Jumpin Goey. The Bartender. Because You Demanded It!! The Flamingo 9 till? Ladies Only The TRIP TO WESTPORT April 7th Thursday Party Hardy SCHOOL BUS Seniors Departs X-Zone 8:00 p.m. 1.00 class members 2.00 non-members SIGN UP 1138 UNION BY APRIL 4 Arts & Leisure Sculptor works for public By LEROY JOHNSTON face the fact that there are commercial aspects about art," Bott said recently. "But for the public's sake, we've got to get back to objects." Revlewei "When I left New York, I was selling $200,000 worth of work a year. I had begun to wonder if my art was just dollars, so in 1988 I moved back to Texas where I was raised." *Sculptor H. J.* Bott speaking. His work is displayed at the 767 gallery, E. Seventh St., New York. At the Gallery "I'm not saying that we artists shouldn't Since 1972, Bott's work has been based on what he calls the 'displacement of volume' concept. He limits himself to a single shape: it looks like half of a square-shaped yin-yang symbol. He has warped it, smashed it, deformed it, coated it, drawn it and built both large and small versions of the same shapes in different pieces by the hundreds. In short, there isn't much one could do to the shape that Bott hasn't done. But why? "AFTER MANY years as an artist you begin to feel a little too facile. By working with single pattern—a self-imposed constriction that sets a difficult problem for himself," she said. To Bott, this is all part of his desire to make art comprehensible to the public, a public which he has been intimidated by modern art. $4.50 "For example, in the art world we have our own jargon—artiste—and we end up intimidating those outside," he said. "We should remember that part of the reason for art is the desire to share our creative impulses and urges." Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN BOTT SAIH he called himself a post-conceptualist sculptor-assimilate because 4$3.00 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open 1 a.m. - 9 p.m. Daily "It's ironic that the conceptualists (a recent group of artists devoted to pure logic, analysis and organized behavior) started out avoiding the gallery but ended up exhibiting their notebooks and other work. Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT although his art was rigorously analytical and conceptual. He builds objects that could be appreciated by the public in a museum or outdoor setting. "But one thing we owe the conceptualists is that they made technology compatible with computers." He is involved with technology, specifically computers. His form, a non- repeating tile, has attracted the interest of mathematicians at the University of Houston. Bolt said plans were being made to program a computer to generate 3-D drawings of the form while he described them to the computer programmer. Bott's commitment to his self-imposed limitations is impressive and adds a great deal of believability to what might otherwise be mere repetition. The smaller pieces suffer a bit from a corporation-ashtray look, but the larger ones are less sloppy, but the obsessive drive that Bott brings to his art gives strength to his work as a whole. Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION An Epic Fantasy of War & Peace Every Eve.af 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.Sun.Mat.2:30 "WIZARDS" Granada (624) 789-1500 | Highway 3170 10 Academy Award Nominations "ROCKY" SILVER BAY STREAK Eve. 1:40 & 7:30 Sat. Sun, Mar. 12. 10:50 Hillcrest Stirring SYLVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7:30 & 9:40 Sat. Sun.Mat. 1:45 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are frapped, underwater. Eve. 7:30 & 9:15 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Hillcrest AIRPORT PG 77 Bee 7:30 9:45 Sat. Sun, Mat. 1:15 Hillcrest End Tuesday "Mother Jugs & Speed" - PLUS - "Vanishing Point" Show starts at 11/30 @ Sunset Kansas University in cooperation with Lawrence High School Haskell Indian Junior up with People Up with People In cooperation Lawrence High Haskell Indian Junior College Musical entertainment for the entire family Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Tickets: SUA Office, Lawrence High School, Haskell Indian Jr. College, Rusty's IGA stores $3.50 public/$2.50 students Five Good Reasons to Vote for BARKLEY CLARK For City Commissioner on Tuesday, March 8 BROTHERTON PROFESSOR OF LAW THE MOST KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATE Dedicated teacher and scholar. The only K.U. teaching faculty member or student in the race for City Commission. THE MOST EXPERIENCED CANDIDATE Seven years service in local government, including terms as Chairman of the Planning Commission and member of the Council. K Unfor couldn't AUST knew it pany he of the 7 **KNOWLEDGE OF THE CANDIDATE** The expert on government and governmental affairs articles on municipal legal problems. Consultant for the Kansas Legislature and the League of Kansas Lawyers. The 1 with wa shot pu of four! Comp of the s run with squads they fa The head of KU en in the Cliff W invitation Rainbow It w team t thei in the re defend over. AN OBJECTIVE CANDIDATE NO conflicts of interest. No axe to grind! SOLID STANDS ON THE ISSUES "I s best re all of SOLID STANDS ON THE ISSUES Neighborhood preservation. Reserve sharing funds for "People Programs." Provide local employment for K.U. students, Consumer protection advocate. Better recreational facilities in Lawrence. Good relations between "Town & Gown." But week, hurt t State, Frazier a Tex KU A REMINDER: All students locally registered to vote in the November election must register as a candidate for KU, KU. Students Exercise your franchise and VOTE FOR BARKLEY CLARKI KU champ night i their they v AUS were Satur been away Mo Texa- the Satur rear J T point Jor become Texa favor day- The class schoo bigge Paid political adv. by the committee for the election of Barklev Clark Monday, April 4, 1977 7 e PPG u v r o d w g m 97.15 KU can't keep up with the pace Sports Writer By ROB BAINS AUSTIN, Tex.—The Kansas track team knew it was going to be in some fast company here this weekend at the 50th running of the Texas Relays. Unfortunately for the Jayhawks, they couldn't keep up with the pace. Competing in their second outdoor meet of the season, the Jayhawks were unable to run with the talented and more experienced defense in State. State as they failed to win a single event THE OTHER two Jayhawks to place were The best the Jahywaks could come up with was a second by Jim Pobrebarac in the shot put, with a throw of 59-11½, and a pair of fourth place relay finishes. Sports Cliff Wiley, who managed a third in the invitational 100-meter dash, and Steve Rainbott, who took sixth in the high jump with a leap of 7-1. The relay places were in the 800, where head coach Bob Timmons had thought the KU entry might challenge for the title, and in the sprint medley. It was because of the strength of the 880 team that Timmons had elected not to run a team in the mile relay, which KU won at the recent NCAA Indoor Championships. He defended his decision after the meet was over. "I still say that our sprint areals are our rails, the Timmons said. "We can't run all day." KU MIGHT have had a chance for the 800 championship, which was decided Friday night in constant mist and heavy fog, if all of them were supposed to. And had gon' the way they were summoned to. But as Titimmens had forewarned last week, the lack of practice on the hand-offs was an issue. But after a State, anchored by U.S. Olympian Herman Fratier, won the event in a 1:21.66 KU's team of Dave Blatcher, Anthony Coleman, Kevin Newell and Wiley finished. EARLER IN THE day, KU failed to qualify its 440-roll relay team for the finals when they placed third in a preliminary heat behind Texas and Arizona State. Only the top two teams in each heat advanced to the finals. In the spint medley relay, the Jayhawks were in contention during the first three legs but a strong anchor by Randy Wilson of Oklahoma gave the Sooners the victory. Timmons had hoped KU could reach the finals, but he, said, "We had a great 440-relay team and I think we'll prove that by the end of the year." A crowd of about 5,000 turned out for the Friday night session, and many of them were on their feet during the anchor leg of the dive. We were planning for an Irishman running for Arkansas. In the 440 finals, Oklahoma, anchored by veteran spinner John Garrison, upset favored Texas to win in 39.99 seconds. The Longhorn was in 40.38. O'Shaughnessy's time for the mile was 55.4, with the last 406 split an amazing 55.7. THE IRISHMAN, Niall O'Shaughnessy, came from far behind during the mille-long anchor leg to catch Wilson Waigwa of the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) and give his squad the victory in a Relays in the third-place finisher, 0, the third-hastest time in world history. An expected rematch of the two during the anchor legs of the four-mile relay didn't develop as Waiqiwa's teammates built a 25-yard lead over the rest of the field before the second leg, which ended in final leg. O'Shaughnessy, caught well back in the pack, couldn't catch Waiqiwa. KU'S ENTRIES fared no better on Saturday than they had Friday, even though they were performing in more ideal conditions. The sky was clear, there was a slight breeze out of the north and the temperature was in the mid-80s. ★ Rainbolt was one of six jumpers who cleared 7-1, but he failed on three attempts at 7-3. Nat Page of Missouri won the event, clearing 7-3, and tying the Relay record. Uppet is defending champ Greg Joy of UTFEP, who defended but could go no higher. Johnny Jones thrills Texas Relays crowd Podrebarec's shot put, his best throw of 119.4 mph, was bright apt for the Jayhawks on Satday. AUSTIN, Tex. —The residents of Austin were electing members of the city council Saturday, and if Johnny (Lam) Jones had been on the ballot, he would have won going KU'S OTHER entry Saturday, a two-mile The weather was perfect, several world-class athletes were in the field and the host school had a chance to do well in some of the bigger events. But most of those present came to see one man run—Texas Jones. He didn't disap- More than 18,000 fans descended on Texas' sun-drenched Memorial Stadium for the final session of the Texas Rangers and there were several reasons why they came. The field for the 100 included some big names, among them Olympian Dwayne Evans of Arizona, who won the bronze medal in the 200-meters at Montreal. Jones, who as a freshman quickly is becoming the biggest track attraction Texas has had in many years, was the first starter to win the day—an invitational 100-meter dash. That's because of a rule adopted last summer by the International Track and Field Federation (ITFF), which said that all races of less than 400-meters must be timed electronically to be considered for world record status. Jones, who received a standing ovation from the partisan crowd before the start of the race, broke out of the blocks smoothly and charged to the lead at the end of 80 yards, where he shifted gears and pulled up. He ended three yards ahead of Collins with Wiley third. Others in the field included Ed Preston of Arkansas State, the American and Collegiate record holder in the event; Kansas' Cliff Wiley, who holds the American indoor record in the 100; and Bill Connolly—time Southern Western Conference champion. But Jones' time won't count as a world record. Jones' time for the race was caught on three hand-held watches. They read 9.94, 9.85 and 9.80 seconds. The world record, set by Jim Hines in 1968, is 9.95. The three-year-old Accutrack timer at Memorial Stadium broke down two races on Tuesday. which was officially recorded as 9.85 will count as a Relays and stadium record. If the timer hadn't broken down, there might not be any question of whether it was a world record. The ITTF said that electronic timers were generally about 24 tenths of a second slower than hand times. That would have given Jones a time of 10.09. Jones took the news about the malfunction of the timer right in stride. "The timer is just one of those things that happen," he said. "I'm just happy to win." Jones, who was a member of the gold-medal winner U.S. 400-meter relay team in last year's Olympics, also turned in a 400-meter second on the anchor leg of the mile relay. relay team, was scratched when load-off and seasame dll with a 104 degree temperature. Three members of the KU team—Harter, Coleman and Blutcher—became ill on the return flight from Airport Saturday night the team when the plane stepped in Dallas. Watson's APRIL 4-10 The three were taken to a Dallas hospital by Timmons, who feared they were suffering from food poisoning. A doctor at the hospital said they had a virus, and Harter and Coleman were released after treatment. Blutcher was admitted and kept overnight for observation but was released yesterday morning. M Another SPECIAL NIGHT O N Like last Monday, remember? $1 Cover - Disco Peanut Gallery: Kings vs. Indiana, 7:30 p.m. College All Stars, 10:30 p.m. W Everyone FREE (no cover charge) E D 7 foot TV screen—"Something for Joev" $1 Cover - Disco 1 CLOVER - DISC 7 TV—"People's Command Performance: '77'" Great Movie: "Bang the Drums Slowly" EXPERIENCED • QUALIFIED • INNOVATIVE Make a full day of it! TV Free: Royals vs. Detroit, and dance to FORT DODGE Saturday night - $2 cover. $2 Cover - Live music with FORT DODGE KOJAK - 10:30 p.m. Muriel Johnson Paul for City Hall SHE IS CONCERNED ABOUT Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa C. J. KNIPPLE Come see Royals vs. Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Free on our 7' TV. Child Care University Daily Kansan ELECT M. D. VAUGHN Aims Vitally interested in efficient growth and development of local school systems. Exper. 11 years President of Lawrence Savings Association School Board #497 Utility Rates 6 years teacher & coach at Ft. Scott & Pratt. Kansas ★ Aging Educ.. B.A. — Washburn University I would appreciate your support for M. D. "Arkie" Vaughn. ★ Neighborhood Preservation and Improvement Add. grad. work—Oklahoma State University We would like to hear your questions and problems.Call 842-2432 Pd. for by Citizen for Paul for City Hall TACO TICO BUY ONE TACOBURGER GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON Delicious! Extraordinary! Taco Tico tacoburgers. Served on a bun filled with savory taco meat, gar- nished with tasty cheddar cheese, crisp lettuce, tomatoes and topped with your choice of sauce. The whole family will love our tacoburgers. TACO TICO BUY ONE TACOBURGER GET ONE FREE WITH Clip this coupon and get one FREE tacoburger when you buy one. T A C O T I C O Expires April 10,1977 Limit one per customer. 2340 Iowa Always in season and seasoned to please APRIL'S FOOLE GEORGE CARLIN at Kansas University Hoch Auditorium AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas TICKETS — Reserved Seats Only $5.75, limit 10 at: SUA Box Office, KIEF'S in Lawrence 8 Monday, April 4, 1977 University Daily Kansas Scheduling problem affects KU in tourney Sports Writer The second annual Kansas State baseball tournament opens today and, much like last year, there are some potential scheduling problems. Last year, KU was slated to appear in the tournament, but coach Floyd Temple received incorrect dates from the tournament committee and inadvertently scheduled a game with Missouri the same weekend. This season, the mix-up occurred with KU Benedictine College, KU's opponent in the first round, which starts at 1 p.m. today in Manhattan. If Benedictine wins, scheduling problems will force them to drop out of the single elimination tournaments. If Emporia State-Friends (Wichita) go to move into the tournament finals without having to play a semi-final game. Coach Floyd Temple BENEDICTINE HAS a prior commitment to play at home Wednesday against Bermidji State, a team from Alabama. The date of the tournament sign-ups. The man who organized the tournament, K-State coach Phil Wilson, explained the mix-up. "We started planning the tournament right after last year's championship game," he said. "We invited every team to participate, and we believed whether they could fit the tournament into their schedule. Benedictine's coach called me in February and told me of the scheduling problems, but I told them that could at least play a first round game." WILSON SAID plans still might be changed to allow the leaping team in each semi-final game to play one another. If Benedicine beats KU, this would allow them to play at least another consolation game on Thursday. Benedictine's coach, Larry Wilcox, said that knowing they wouldn't advance takes something out of the game. "It makes it a little rough," he said. "We may not have as much incentive as The game will match the Jayhawks, 8-8-1. against Benedictine, 4-10. we normally would in a tournament, but I think we'll give KU a good game." According to Wilcox, freshman righthander Mike Vandeaasbeck, 1-1, with a 3.30 E.R.A., will pitch for Benedictine. His best outing this season was a three-hit shutout against Creighton. THE RAVENS have a 3.78 staff E.R.A. and are hitting, 268. Their lineup includes leftfielder Ted Glotzbach and Matt Rudichet, who are hitting, 357 and 283, respectively. Three players in their line are below, 200. Kansas enters the tournament after finishing a home stand in which the Hawks won three and tied one. Dave Rusch, who had a three hit against Washburn, will pitch against Benedict Season, who is 34 for the season, at a 23 E.R.A. KU's pitching generally was effective during the home stand. The KU pitchers allowed eight runs in four games, getting 14 saves. Christensen and Brian Rhodes. "OVERALL THE pitching has been good," coach Temple said recently. "We've had too many bases on balls, but we have never made better performances each time out." and Ron MacDonald both are hating, 333, and Andy Gilmore is 306. But after Vice Monson (282) and Brian Moyer (274), the Yankees' yawners' order is above or below, 314. KU's hitting has continued to be erratic. Four players are batting over 300, with Lee Ice leading the team at 14-7 and Rachel Dawson hits in his last 13 at-bats. Carl Henrich Temple said he didn't know when the bottom part of the batting order would come around. "I CAN'T predict hitting," Temple said. "If I could predict things, I'd be in another business. Sometimes it is a case that you are more likely like in the Missouri Western game." That game, which ended in a threat, made for after seven injuries but gave of darkness. "We don't know much about the teams in the tournament, but we won't be looking at them too closely." Temple said the Jayhawks would take the tournament one game at a time. The tournament begins today and runs through Thursday. Tomorrow, defending champion K-State hosts Marymount at 1 p.m., and Bethany College plays Wash- ton at 2 p.m. p.m. Semi-finals will be played on Wednesday, and the finals on Thursday at 2 p.m. K-State coach Wilson explained the purpose of the tournament. "We want to draw attention to college baseball in Kansas and show how competitive the sport is." He said that this year's tournament had expanded from last year to include first and second place trophies and an all-team team and a Most Valuable Player. Golf isn't supposed to be played in the rain and cold, with winds gushing to 55 miles an hour. However, the University of Kansas women's golf team played under those conditions during a meet with the University of Missouri and Stephen's College Saturday in Columbia, Mo. KU finished second with a score of 365. band Stephanie College with 352. Missouri band Stephen Golf team places second KU's Nancy Hools hit 85 and tied for medalist honors in the meet. Bee Booster and Pam Gotchie shot 91 for the Jayhawks. She was able to bleak the 90 mark during the day. "IT WAS almost like a tropical hurricane down there," coach Nancy Boozer said yesterday. "We knew that the scores wouldn't be very low because of the conditions." Jackie Del Long 108, Channel Hadi 101 and Patrym Norton 102 to finish the scoring Stephens College is one of the best schools in the northern area, according to coach Boozer. The Hawks were ahead of Stephens by two strokes after the front nine holes, as the women's shot was a 40 and 42 respectively, but the women slipped to second on the final nine. "Stephens' experience and the weather just overlook us on the back nine," coach Boozer said. "Their experience on the course helped them some too." The Jayhawks will play against the same two teams at the Alvarnar Hills golf course. A very special offer from G's Bar-B-Q bring in this coupon and receive your choice of chopped or roast beef with fries or tater-tots ONLY $2.00 730 W. 23rd 841-3402 G's The game was played yesterday because weather conditions on Saturday forced a postponement. Tracksters impressive at Emporia No. 1 singles player, Bill Clark defeated Bill Braver, 6:3, 4:6, 6:4, raising his record to 13-4. No. 2 Mark Hosking lost his match, which gives him a 13-4 record, also. No. 4 Chett Collier and No. 6 Joe Ryuser won their singles matches, KU's No.1 and No.3 doubles teams of Clarke and Hosking, and Collier and Ryuser also won. 309 W. 23rd 841-3402 KU's men's tennis team won its second Big Eight dual meet yesterday with a 5-4 victory over the Colorado Buffaloes in Boulder. The KU women's track team made an impressive showing in its first outdoor meet Saturday at the Emporia Kansas State College Invitational. Although the 40-degree temperature and what coach Tom Lionville called 'a hard tracj' hampered players and the Jayhawks in place and several second and third places. Netters edge Buffs No team scores were kept at the meet, but Kansas State athletes won six events to lead all teams. The Jdyhawks were weak in the heat and relied heavily on the running events. Douglas given top KU honor Sheila Calamaze finished second in both the 1980s behind Wichita State's Remona Breedlove. CHARMANE KUHLMAN was the lone winner for KU, easily winning the 400-meter dash with a time of 57.2. Jo McMillion was third in 59.8. In the 440-yard relay Kansas State edged the Jayhawks, winning with a time of 48.8, while the KU foursome of Kathy Kennedy, McMillon and McMillan cheese finished in 48.9. Forward Herb Nobles received the Bill Bridges Award as the team's leading rebounder with 230. Nobles also received Award, along with Cris Barnhouse. Third place finishes for KU came from Northwestern, 1000 meter hurdles and Laura Morby in the long jump. Michelle Brown and Connie Lane ran to second place finishes for the Jayhawks- Browning run a 4:49.2 in the 1,500, and Lane a 1:07.5 in the 400-meter hurdles. John Douglas was honored as the 1976-77 Jayhawks most outstanding performer Saturday night at the annual KU basketball awards banquet. Douglas, who led the 'Hawks this past season—his junior campaign—with a 19.2 average, received the Dr. Forrest C. Allen Award at the banquet in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. He also received the Jo Lo White Award for having compiled the most playing time--38.4 minutes per game—this season. Three prospective recruits attended the banquet. They were Vince Johnson, a 6-2 guard; Brian Johnson, a 6-7 forward, and an assistant. The national signed date is April 13. The A.C. "Dutch" Lonborg Award, honoring the most inspirational player, was presented to Domine Von Mone. Center Ken Koigsie received the Cainton's Award. THE DEAN OF BEER HAS AUTHORIZED THE FOLLOWING WAYS OF GETTING THE WORD. TOM SEE Schlitz Campus Rep. 843-3058 Personalized Schitz Stein. Beautiful 14 oz. crystal beer stein handcrafted in Europe. May be personalized with up to three initials on the side opposite the attached Schitz globe. See coupon for order- ing instructions. $7.95 each. ing instrus... $7.95 each. THE DRAW IN JEER Dean of Beer Slumber Shirt. Yellow with Dean of Beer design in full color. V-neck with side vents. Combed lounge sleepwear. Lounge sleepwear. Sizes: M, S, L, M.L $1.95. Sig. D. Siglinda Steinfuller Dean of Beer Dean of Beer T-Shirt. For those of you who really deserve the title, Jersey-style with gold %-length sleeves and Dean of Beer design in full color. 100% cotton. Sizes: S, M, L, XL. $4.50. f se A. Bikin M10-12 Schlitz Cutoffs wide belt le pockets, tr cotton, Y 34, 36. $ THE DEAN OF BEER SCALZIA THE DEAN OF BEER --- [Image of a hand resting on a surface]. Schlitk Bikinis. The word, adapter, cotton and polyester, fully lined, with tie straps for an easy to wear bikini top. separately Bikini Top, Cup, A, B, C, D, $7.50 each. Bikini Bottoms: S(6-8), M(10-12), L(14-16), $7.50 each. Shelite Curette. Jean-style with wide belt loops, front and back pockets. trays leg. Washable. Hooked. Price: 29, 30, 32, 34, 36, 45. QUAN DESCRIPTION SIZE UNIT PRICE TOTAL SCHLUTZ TOTAL $ ___ Send order with check or money order payable to: Schlitz Dean of Beer Post Office Box 9586 St. Paul, MN 55195 My order is over $25 Please send me my surprise gift worth $5.00 Indicate in boxes initials to be etched on Personalized Stein(s). 3 initials maximum for each steel ordered SHIP TO NAME this is for each initial 1st middle family initial initial CITY___STATE___ZIP. ADDRESS CITY STATE Allow 4 weeks for shipment. Void where prohibited by law. Offer expires December 31, 1977. Prices include shipping charges n The its sou its div tourn KU three-Uni Trir cham in sec Ra The again Satur coach rain KU --- Acem ment are o sex, BRIN University Daily Kansan Monday, April 4, 1977 9 Hadl 100 e scoring the const schools to coach Stephens holes, as 2 respec second on weather ," coach on the 3402 Women 10th in tennis tournament By RICK BRYANT Sports Writer The KU women's team team completed its southern tennis tour by finishing 10th in its division in the Austin Invitational tennis tournament this weekend. KU scored five points in Division II of the three-division tournament sponsored by the University. Trinity, the defending women's national champions, won Division I with host Austin Peel. The team won three NCAA titles. Rains cancel games The 'Jayhawks' scheduled doubleheader against the University of Nebraska-Omaha Saturday was canceled by the NU-Omaha and Nebraska-Omaha winds, rain and 40-degree temperatures. KU coach Bob Stanklift the games would be rescheduled for the first part of Methodist for the Division II title. Austin capped尼克斯AWM A2M 12 point to 22 Boston Celtics 13 point to 26. A TOTAL of 28 schools competed in the three-day meet, with 20 schools from Texas entered. KU coach Tom Kivisto called the team the "wonderful" team, and number of nationally ranked teams entered. KU singles player Kathy Merrion and the doubles team of Mariane Cook and Tracy Spellman scored most of KU's points with three victories each... The Jawahiers left the tournament to return to KU before the meet was over. "MOST OF the teams left the tourney if they weren't in the running for the title." Kivisto said yesterday. "The team voted to come home rather than spend another day there for just a couple of consultation matches." Kivisto had plenty of praise for his team's play during the tournament. "Merrion played with great poise and was very competitive in Division III," he said. The white team composed mostly of starters defeated the blue smud. 5-2. After a replacement for this weekend's cancelled games couldn't be found, the KU Soccer Club held an intrasquad game, where the Jayhawks to work on fundamentals. Smith, a 7-foot reserve center, then grabbed a rebound at the defensive end of the court, another at the offensive end on a bench. Smith put it in play and put it in for a 106-103 lead with 9:27 left. CLEVELAND (AP) - Elmore Smith's first basket gave Cleveland its first lead in the contest and the Cavaliers went on to a 113-107. National Basketball Association victory over the Kansas City Kings and clinched a post-season pla-y off berth. KU was scheduled to play an away game against the Wichita Soccer Club on Saturday and a home game against Kansas State yesterday. KU coach Bennie Mullin played in the first game of America Soccer League to replace Kansas State but neither team was able to play. Cleveland, which trailed throughout the game after falling behind, 7.0, at the outset, was behind, 89-77, with 10 minutes remaining. The Cavaliers chipped away at the lead with Jimmie Brere's two free throws to tie the game at 103 with 24 remaining. Soccer foes cancel He said that Cook and Spellman played very well in doubles and against some tough competition. KU's number one doubles team of Carrie Fotopolus and Mary Stephens had builerough time, losing to the nationally number-one ranked Trinity team 5-7, 8-0, 6-4. Rally dooms Kings After another Smith rebound, guard Gary Brokaw fired in a 20-footer for a four-point lead, and Smith's second basket moments later made it 109-103. Richard Washington, who led Kansas City with 30 points, and Scott Wedman then hit 107 with 34 points who trailed them 107. with 32 appears, Brokaw and Snyder each hit a pair of free throws to secure a victory. Weekend Sports Roundup Boone bounced in 25 points for the Kings, who slipped one game behind the Kings in their tense battle for a sixth and final play-off in the western conference. KU second in Big 8 After defeating Missouri, 10-4, to advance to the championship game of the Big Eight last weekend, Oklahoma had had to settle for second place as favored Oklahoma beat the Jayhawks, 10-0. In the victory over Missouri, Jim Jackson and Paul Diedrich each scored four-point tries and Bill McGillivray added the extra points. Before shutting out the Jayhawks, Oklahoma beat Oklahoma State, 10-6; and Kansas State, 1-0 in three overtimes. KU won by forfeit over Colorado in the first round. KC defeats Orioles Cowens boosted his spring runs-battled-in total to 18 in 17 games as Kansas City improved its Grapefruit League record to 16-8, with only two games remaining. FORP, MYERS, Fla., (AP) - Al Cowens and the eighth innings yesterday to break a tie and carry the Kansas City Royals to their seventh exhibition victory, 7, over the Knicks in 10-6. Cowens, who also doubled in the sixth, cleared the fence in left field off left-hander Tipp Martinez after John Maybury intentionally was walked. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment are available for the following purposes: 1. Residence; 2. Institutional care; 3. Travel; 4. Work or other paid activity; 5. Permanent employment; 6. Other employment or permanent work; 7. Retraining; 8. Social services. Mike Flanagan, giving up a home run by Fred Palat and eight other hits, pitched the ball to Jackie Robinson. CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00 exponential word .01 .02 .03 .04 AD DEADLINES 10 p.m. 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 by calling the UB office business at 864-1538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS COLLEGE STUDENTS—part time, earn $10 per hour and win $156.00 in scholarship awards as an American Youth Enterprise Dealer. Write Friede, J. N. 1701 Ellis Ave., Lafayette Springs, N.J. U 60821. L.A.-4.8 COLLEGE STUDENTS—Are you considering leaving school but still looking for opportunities? You are an expanding small company with offices in Kansas City, Denver and St Louis and we need people to support our future. Long hours—very please working on 8000+宝马 to start Call today! 1-845-930-9630 collect FOR RENT 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to union, utilities paid. Parking. 843-957-098 Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets, 843-7567. tt Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 600 sets available. No group booking required. Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in Tampa Bay. Call 843-8864 for information. 5-123 Vermont. Call 843-8864 for information. 5-123 Gatehouse Appartment - Call Becky now. Summer, cautionary contracts on all Gatehouse apartment. Call 843-271-5696. Frontier Ridge—short term lease available. Residence located in school with study. Heated Indoor pool + shag carpet + dorm room pool + disposal + pallet + laundry facilities furnished and unfurnished from $325. Call 842-691-7200. 3-bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor. 842-507-6001 Substitute apartment. It has 1 bedroom. Come by 365 Fireline Drive, Apat. 10, to 3.50 p.m. CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX Rent the Pro- Lawnver Rental locations Call us! p-10 p-15 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from Union. $165. mo. plus utilities. 843-7038. Apartment for rent. Available now, furnished apartment one room from Union Very nice for rent on the first floor with room, kitchen and bathroom. Call after 6pm. 848-3988. Keep trying for a very fine real estate. Need to sublease furnished two bedroom apart- ment, summer-call-811-6500. Amor Andy or Chuck Subkasea -- three bedroom townhouse, two baths, carport, balcony, tennis courts. You'll dread Cloak and Lace. Two bedroom unfurnished apartment for sublease. $140/month. Call after 9:00 p.m. to mqm. 834-2567. Sublease for the summer, 1-bedroom apartment, furnished. Call 841-5584. 4-5 Subletting apartment for summer. 2-bedroom, C/A, centrally centred. Call 841-1896-47. Lease 2-bedroom furnished Meadowbrook apartments for summer pool. Pool and tennis courts. 1 bedroom furnished apartment at 19 West 10th. 875. Available immediately, 842-6670 5.4- 8.48 Goldeneye Optical DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 431 WESTHAM STREET Eyelocker Optical DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 320 N. 14th Street, New York, NY 10010 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sure you are in the right place. Item=1) As study guide. Item=2) For Class preparation. 3) For Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Toys R Us Store. Excelent design of new and used furniture and warehouse equipment, furniture and appliance Center, 710-548- 3217, Furniture and Appliance Center, 710-548- 3217. "The Little Stereo Store" - Ray Audio - we don't sell it better. We honestly feel that we do a great job selling the best quality, best quality product with better warranty. At the end of our store season, most mast folks believe possible for the money—but by and visit the fokks at Ray Audio to make a big difference. 12 E. N. 8th (just off Moss Bay) Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELL AUF 120V, 450W. ELECTRIC, 843-390-2009, W. 6th; BELL AUF 120V, 450W. ELECTRIC, 843-390-2009, W. 6th; AKC AFGHANS. Pet and show quality—cham- manage R. Railings. Call Diane Fringle 911-458-6347. Railings, Inc. 260 North 1st Street New York, NY 10001 We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, lighting, at Aledo Systems, 9th, or Rhode Island. BY OWNER - Ranch style, shake roof on a beautiful landscaped acres of trees, etc. Custom cabinetry, outdoor fireplace, screen. Extra large family room, formal living room, kitchenette, 1/4 bath. full basement partially paneled. 1.3/4 bath. full basement partially paneled. Oak flooring, fully carpeted. Dishwashers. G.E. Kitchen, well equipped. Walking distance north edge of Avalon golf course, most excellent fishing lake in Western New Jersey. Buy appointment. Dr C J. Alexakis $800. By appointment 48 hours. Dr C J. Alexakis $1500. By appointment 28 hours. A Springtime Bug Bright Wolverine 1970—Very well cared for, runs great, 842-7191. AR Amplifier, 60 watts per channel. Pioneer A-35 turntable, automatic start and stop. Call 817- 249-2511. 1974 Yamaha 500 DOHC. 1974 Can-Am 125 TNT mint condition. must sell best offer 6,000 km. Four-Electro-Voice E.T.R E T. R 16 Speakers, $103 pawn and number, 843-4811 Terry, leave number, 843-4811 SAAB-96 1965, restored, new engine, New Micrah AFI AM-FM, mechanical perfect. CM-72 76 Dodge Maxivan, general transmission, V8-CB, and骚客. Good condition. 841-565 between 2003 and 2007. 10. spaced, 32. Monda special, 531 throughout, all-campus. tubularia. ambulatory. 842-6183. 8-6 p.m. Men's 10-speed Motocycle, good condition, gold price 864-3508, or leave message 864-4309 1971 Vega AC, AT, reasonable price. Excellent condition. Call Tom 841-6018 4-3 1966 Mustang V-8, 298 Engine. Runs good, very fast. Asking $125. Cars B4-1312-7322, 7292, ewells. Hart Javelin G.P. Kip 195 cm, with look, and color. Skin care and waxy vibranium cav- ball bed, bots Wax bladder, billion bits downlining Kembal mitreite, Blue Mesh downlining, black mesh, blue black, black women's large, $10. All items in excellent condition. Live venomous snakes, Egyptian Cobra, Puff live venomous snakes, eating rat, Biff 815 587-257-6029, K.C. SMITH, POINTS LIVE VENOMOUS SNAPS, K.C. SMITH We have some great deals on Hi-Fi. Fianya TB-700 Cass $200, LS-System $199, LS-System $200, $200, $200, $200, $200, $200, $100 each. A.R. - 5 speakers $100 each, Mida, complete, Rakuten $300, Samu's $100, Sony $102, T.V. $28, RAY AUTO-The little store store, with good deals. E3 North $8h. **4-6** ADVENT SPEAKER SALE. We are pleased to announce the first Advent sale in 8 years. We believe the event will be highly loved by Burberry. Come in and hear why, Harry. Limited supply. RAY AUDIO, 13 E. 8th Street. 4-6 Neechi sewing machine with buttonholer, good quality. Price: B42-842-0068 evening, more information: info@neechi.com Thorens TD 165 turntable with cartridge 70-4 oil best offer. Phone #814-4864. 1976 Ankil Gun Sport, 25, 15x equipped. 1976 condition, 85 or best service, #492-941, ask for details. Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Sandwich Shop 1976 Flat Xi.9: Removable top. AM-FM radio. 1976 Flat Xi.9: 846323 or 842-1572. 4-6 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition. 580, 591, 637, A2 Mens 35" Pegasus 10-moped bicycle (40K). AXC Road Bicycle Football Table-Champion Soccer coin operated. Excellent condition 832-656, or 841-654. 4-7 Ludwig drum set, 6-piece, double bass, silver, good shape, must sell. Call 841-2209. 4-8 170 Charvet Impaul, 4D, PS, PB, AC. Must tell Call 864-6916, 4:50, 5:00, leave 4-7 Chevrolet Impala, 400 cm³. 4psi. PR 1A AM FM stereo/radio. $1,600.鸟-851-566. PS-8 1973 Yamaha rudder 125, 200 miles, helmet, insulated cap, condition. condition. 4672, 4723 Yamaha Guitar with case; good condition, nice sound, best offer. 842-2573. 4-8 846 Illinois Motorycle 1974 Honda CL5 350 - excellent condi- tion - one-up, 460 miles. (Call 800) 261-2321. Call 800) 741-8254. 60 mm Vivat telephone techoe Mount, $60. car Ken at 841-6211. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. is bed, or kitchen. 1970 Kawasaki 500, front disc brake, electronic braking system with brake rack and handleback with luggage rack, real sacrifice at 600. Call 800-324-2878 or visit www.kawasaki.com. HELP WANTED Flat 124 coupe, new 180, headers, mag. T5 4-8, suspension, C.B., CB. 841 - 3892 4-8 Men or women. We need 5 people immediately. You will be responsible for the willing to work. No experience necessary. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-310- Lawson Kirby Cp. Will read to lead team. * 6-14 Summer Jobs. Our OUR (bk) Male-2004 plus summa Master application form* only $25. Summa Job: PSYCHIATICAL AIDES WANTED. Applications now being taken for psychiatric aides. Apply to Director of Nursing, Teokpa State Hospital, 2700 E. Teokpa Rd., N.Y. 11236) 256-478. An opportunity employer. Sirlinah Stockade has immediate and daytime departure. She also may be taking another also being taken for summer employment at a local institution. Aven selling can help you earn money for college. Flexible hours. High $ Call. Mrs. Selz叫 213-864-9500. Opening for GEN WORKER accurate opening and closing of fire doors. wake, must qualify for work; apply to GEN WORKER. Immediate part-time opening for sharp student who possesses booming and engaging teaching skills. 12 hours per week with possibility of training over summer. Contact Jacquil at 864-4638. An equal opportunity employer. 4-4 The Almighty is looking for a few good men, including notorious mobster Frank Frazier, college representative, Nic Peculian, campus representative, Nate McCormack, 6220 Tournai - B1-Martin, Stupeffis stupiditatulum etum, at University of St. Petersburg. *"Students," 15 telephone receptacles for news media, and 20 telephone receptacles for guided Good Safe, and homes. Calls 9-112. Call 670-340-8000 for information. Part-time remainder of semester and summer. Rag Tag. 842-1059. 4-8 *Local Late Delivery*, must know area well, be on time, have your call. Call 3-514-267-2-pcm. on weekdays. Summer work; Must relocate, Earn $10 monthly. Call 822-4272. 4-6 LOST AND FOUND Dagwang's has openings for waitresses, cooks, and delivery workers. M. Mass or Mr. Taylor are needed 8 a.m., 6 p.m. and 10 a.m. HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Lost Gray & White Persian woman cut near 10th and Ohio. Bwr. 841,3883. 4-5 Goods Vintage Clothing 7308 Mass. 841-707O - Imported Clothing - Furniture - Antiques Su Casa in THE MARKET PLACE 2145 New York Finest in selection of Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522 Onyx, wood and bone chess sets available Lost—a green warm-up suit in room 4064 of Hewa Hall. If you call, please call 843-862-962 Found-Kathleen T. Rom. call 842-6315 to claim your KU ID and bus pass. 4-4 Found textbook between Oliver and Naimish, upgrade March 8 to, Infection, Poetry or Thesis. Address: book, black, near Wescoe pay Photo Can not replace, please @ 843-1596 Phone: (718) 250-2020 Last Three, morning by carcass person-blank Lost-Three, morning by carcass person-blank Greatest Return, great sentimental value 864-056 Greatest Return, great sentimental value 864-056 Found high school 1969 Camden H.S. class, infants tumors in earlier years. Moore, Katherine. Robbins Gymnastics. Reborn Gymnastics. Found an umbrella Monday in Blake. Call 841-2763 to identify. 4-5 Found- One pair of prescription sunglasses in 3140 Weston. Wednesday, March 30, call 844-725-6891. Found—Wolverwick key, Memorial Drive, 3-51- 77 Call 811-361-895 4-6 Found a basshell golf. Call Steve, 864-1167 to identify. 4-5 MISCELLANEOUS LOST? $100.00 CM1! If you can find it, you can buy it for Treasure Hunt Clues on 108-6 352-779-4000! PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/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 Shops Shop. 620 Mass. Measures furniture, patio, walls, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-8. Gay Services Meeting FILM "-A Women's Place in the House" of a portrait of Elaine Nobile. Noble is an up from gay state senator from Minnesota and a public figure 4:45, 1:30 p.m. Public Invited. VOLKWAGEN OWNERS! Brand new BF Goodwin ART-185 (150-165) (155-15) tire direct cut to $26 each at Ray Stone Jackson 929 Max (Mounted) Michelin M147 (Mounted) Michelin stc cuts to $45 each!) 4-12 POWERFUL, SONY TV $5 15A $170. Recorders, TV sets to $60. up to $400. Otherwise Sony to $60. up to $250. Superstores to $60. up to $350. City, wood and sand timber construction. NEW_SONY COMPONENT SYSTEM with, AM 400-watt sample cut to $17 at Rocky Mountain $89.95 Floor sample $400 Lid 12" 12" dig. Saly corn color $800 Lid 12" 12" dig. Saly corn color 15" dig. Soybean red color Reg. $60 to cut to $12 **Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo.** You name it. Airlines depart on major airlines from $299 (round-trip) to Amsterdam, Auckland, Ayr, Africa, especially in Burkina Faso, Iraq. Specialists in foreign travel, Multilingual and English-speaking education are sought. CHEW OWNER'S Pickup owners. Brand new CHEW OWNER'S Pickup owners. Brand new PET FILM PET FILM PET included $1 doll each, but $10 doll each. Pier1 imports associate store --has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 814-7421 JEWELRY looking for the unusual ? laurie stecker by appointment 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 PERSONAL Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Inquiries, Inquiries; Box 806, McKinney, Kansas, 6094. Gay Counseling Service. Call 842-7505, 8:12 p.m. For socializing activities, call 842-7505. ISO-2 chemical potentiator in a complete line of parachlorination is available at Live, Records 15. INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO KUROPE AND ISLAND? STEAMTABLE TRAVEL CENTER can help you travel with maximum comfort. BOOK NOW! FOLLOW US: 800-252-8024 Includes: 4-5 AUX TOLLE 800-252-8024 ATTENTION ALL GRADUATE STUDENTS. College Assembly elections for graduate students must be held on the third Friday. Pick up ballots in your den office and send them to 808-256-9888 or 808-256-9744 office until April 14. Become a legally ordained member of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit from the U.S. Gov't. Legally perform all ministries and funerals. For official UDC ordination and for confirmation to dressed stamped envelopes to PO Box 1155, Washington, D.C. FOUR-TUNA-TOBs I have you have a happy FOUR-TUNA-TOBs I have you have a happy Macht much low. The Boundary 44 Macht much low. The Boundary 44 Incoming Med Students—Bincular SICO micro- studies, good condition, asking $50. Call Jerry. (212) 346-8300 or jerry@micro.edu For Holt, An Authentic Foul is fear it, with Willman in 1967. He had a hard time in the second game, gives the given play the whitewings on March 4th whileiong with Willman. In this game he has two goals. SERVICES OFFERED I can string your tennis racquet more economically than anyone in town. Call 843-605-48. *** TYPING THEISN BINDING COPYING The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with 85 Massachusetts & phone 848-3687. Thank you. Typist/editor, IBM Pica/eclipse. Quality work. Designer, thesis, dissertations welcome. Bach, 842-127-9100. Vista Vista Restaurants Open daily 11 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. 1327 W. 6th YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL PARKING 15 Mon.-Sat. 842-766 10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till on Thursday HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CARG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.,5:30 p.m. - Foosball - Pinball "A different kind of bar "a solution and quiet." TYPING: Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6558. 75c a page. f17. Experienced typist—term paper, tests, mils. Experienced typing—spelling, spelled conversation, 843-5544, Mrs. Wright Will you type your paper with TFL. Term papers and papers from Caren at 846-351-4311, 841-176-8 evening and 841-176-9 evening. A different kind of featuring seclusion and quiet." Open Barry 10am-6pm. Minimum Except Nursery YTPING - Many KU students have been pleased with the quality of our business. Call Harvey or Linda at 516-293-0174; www.ytping.com. Thesis, term paper, etc. Reasonable rates. Call Bali. 841-6477. Term Papers, Proofread, Flooded, Corrected, Wolken, 1712 Albums, 843-1522 Wolken, 1712 Albums, 843-1522 +4-15 Professional typing Term papers, theses, dissertations, misc. IBM Selective. Nurse campus #649 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl The Lounge Your paper deserves the best Calligraphy for your letter. 843-314 day, 842-888 even and weekends. Roommate needed for April and May. Call 82-4- 0959 after 6:00 p.m. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. WANTED Male roommate wanted for large furnished apartment on bus route—keep trying. 842-957-6300 - Bud on Tap VISIONS - Pool Two roommates needed for next at Towers. phone contact Gail at 864-8728 by 2:00 p.m. Roommate for summer or winter to share facilities. Accepts a Bachelor's degree. Close to Law or good student life. Families to share beautiful three bedroom house with pool and a view of the ocean. One opening for summer only, one for summer in fall. "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 10.8 & 9.3 Roommate needed now at Jayhawk Towers. Roommate needed now at Jayhawk Towers. fulfill needs. pay $845. mail us: 841-121-9600. MAISMITH HALL SCHOOL OF MARKETING & DIGITAL ENGINEERING A LABORATORY NETWORK 2015 WEEKEND Mellow roommate to shave furnished apartment that will be used as washwater, heavy合力 47 music album: MU-814-2633 MUSICIANS—Impact Productions, Entertainment Management and Booking. Always looking for new, good gums Rock, country, blue grass, blue gum, old gums Kite Stone, X18-368-704 (collect) for auditions. IVAN'S 66 SERVICE DANCERS-Impact Productions needs GO-GO- Locations, Costumes and training available and ready to begin! Tutor for Gen. 111, Mags and Mapping. Call 842- 2052 or 841- 4962 after 3 p.m. 4-7 CAMP COUNSELLOUS, Private south Michigan Michael Campbell, art teacher, waterworks, grmnstics, crafts, tennis, golf, rifle, compassure, nature, bus driver, busdriver, 1763 Magis St., Northfield, Illinois, 60053 843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. p Sun XXXXXXXXXX Home of The Chalk Hawk A CROSSING BIRD HILLCREST T BILLIARDS - Pool - Snooker TRY Ping Pong - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF DCEE 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl TE SELECTION OF BEER vm and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted Open 4 Days a Week No One Should be Attended 10 Monday, April 4, 1977 University Daily Kansan Superstars' albums costing more Staff Reporter Is your favorite rock group Queen? Do you swoon to the tunes of Eton John? Better save your pennies for a live concert. The price of superstar albums is going up. The first price rise came after Christmas, when the new Queen album on the Elektra-Asylum label was released. Albums usually cost $75-$100, but the Queen album was priced at £7.98. Since then, record dealers have received higher-priced new albums by George Benson, Fleetwood Mac, Boston, Kansas and others. "RIGHT NOW it's supersters," Wilson said. A few record companies haven't raised their prices, he said, only because superstars haven't put out new albums. Bob Wilson, manager of Better Days, 725 Massachusetts St., said that new prices and stock levels are being made. A record salesman at Gibson Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St., Ardene Schaffer, said the price increase hadn't affected most of Gibson's albums because Gibson buys its records from a major distributing company that has a high inventory of back records. However, the company, Western Merchandise, sent a notice to the record department announcing a price increase from $4.97 to $6.29. The company later decided the price was too high and lowered it to $7.58, Schaffer said. MOST RECORD dealers in Lawrence said they thought record companies were testing public reaction to the price increase by raising the prices of only a few albums. Steve Wilson, an employee at Kiefs Discount Records, 2500 Iowa St., said there was a rumor of an across-the-board price increase but this had not been confirmed. Wilson predicted that across-the-board decreases would come by the end of summer. A promotional manager for Warner-Elektra-Atlanta Records (WEA), Chuck Lackner, disputed the fears of local record stores that affect only albums by major stars. When Stevie Wonder gets $13 million and Elton John gets $20 million, said the price of their albums must go up. WEA, the largest record conglomerate in the world, doesn't want an access-the-board price increase on albums immediately. The company has sold some, somewhat selectively about it," he said. Short-term loans rescue students Getting an emergency short-term loan is like borrowing an umbrella to go out in the rain—it's a quick, temporary shelter that soon must be returned to the lender. "Loans are a source of money for students who don't have the money at the time they need it to pay school expenses, but who say they'll have it later," Jerry Rogers, director of the office of financial aid at the University of Kansas, said recently. ALTHOUGH EMERGENCY loans solve the problem of ready cash for many students, he said, students sometimes have trouble repaying them promptly. Often, when a loan is due student find they can't pay the loan because of other expenses, he said. BUT ROGERS and Jeff Weinberg, and the other, don't mind. And, don't default the test rate is that one. Larry Heeb, vice president of Kansas University Endowment Association, which provides the emergency funds, said this week that a cent of the loans weren't repaid on time. "Actually, even if a loan is paid a day late or a week late, it's considered defaulted," Rogers said, "but that doesn't mean the loan will never be repaid." Some loans come due on a weekend, or when a student is sick, or when he hasn't received an expected paycheck, Rogers said. Weinberg said the rate of loans never repaid was 3 to 4 per cent, a figure he, said, which was very small compared with default rates in other loan programs. "IF STUDENTS can't pay the loan on the due date, they come in to discuss it with us and tell us when they can repay it," Weinberg said. Students don't deal directly with the Endowment Association, as has been reported, nor are they required to make lump sum payments, he said. The loan funds have been donated by alumni and others to the Endowment Association, but the aid was approved and awarded through the Office of Financial Aid, he said, and not according to Endowment Association guidelines. Rogers said that no student was denied a loan for lack of available loan funds. He added that he hadn't made a loan to a student who says doesn't know when he can repay it. The interest rate on an outstanding loan is 6 per cent in default, the rate goes up to 14 per cent. DURING THE 1975-76 academic year, 8,653 students took on emergency loans for college. Rogers said emergency loans paid tuition, room and board and books and supplies expenses. Frequently, students can get a loan within a day, he said. "We don't make loans to students who don't have enough money to buy a plane ticket for a weekend somewhere," Rogers said, "but we have made loans to students who've had a death in the family and who need money to get home quickly." Rogers said that the emergency loan fund was a source of financial aid not available to customers. Lackner attributed the price increase to the higher contract prices and royalties that artists now demand and skyrocketing production costs. He said the cost of production had gone up 100 per cent in the past four years—from 85 cents to $1.45 an album. "Basically that's the cost of putting the album together and getting it out." Lackner said. HE SAID that he cost of promoting and selling an album also had increased, and that as the record business grew, it became complex, adding more to a record's costs. Wilson disagreed with Lackner's explanations for higher record prices, saying he felt the data was too small. "They could stay at their price," he said. "They, just want, to make more, money." "They just want to make more money." Schaffer also said that greed caused price increases, but he added that higher production costs, such as more studio time, more studio musicians, electronics and equipment, would have changed Schaffer said, "although the engineering is a bit better, the actual sound quality isn't increasing a whole lot." MARK ROBERTS, head of the record department at K-Mart, 31st and Iowa streets, said that although his store hadn't seen many new products, he thought they were justifiable. He said the reasons for price increases were better stereo equipment and better quality albums. Albums now are more durable so it would be easier for replacement is decreased, he said. Royalties have much to do with the price increase, Roberts said. Art royalties are distributed according to the projected number of times an album can be played. Roberts said, the recent industry provided jobs and enjoyment to many people. With the possibility of higher prices, record dealers have suggested ways to limit the increases. ROBERTS, WHO is a musician himself, said the public should support live music. If consumers were more aware of live performances and the work that goes into recording production, Roberts said they would learn that there is much better and be less apt to complain. Schafer said he didn't think anything could be done to stop the price increase because, "if you don't buy albums, they'll have to raise the price to make up for falling sales." Because companies will make more money and sponsor more artists for the same price." "HOWEVER, IF consumers were more critical of what they buy," Schaffer said, "and didn't买 everything he heard on the radio, it might make them (the record companies) realize that the consumers aren't as stupid as they're assumed to be." Cost increases could be kept down by the record companies if companies stopped saturating the market with albums that don't sell. Wilson said. Wilson said that Kief's had put up signs willing customers to write record compu- sions. "From our point of view, we'd like not to see a price rise," he said. "We think there will be one." Let's re-read the text carefully. "From our point of view, we'd like not to see a price rise," he said. "We think there will be one." Wait, the word after "price" is "rise". The word after "we" is "like". The word after "not" is "to". The word after "see" is "a". The word after "price" is "rise". The word after "he" is "said". The word after "we" is "like". The word after "not" is "to". The word after "see" is "a". The word after "price" is "rise". The word after "he" is "said". The word after "we" is "like". The word after "not" is "to". The word after "see" is "a". The word after "price" is "rise". The word after "he" is "said". The word after "we" is "like". The word after "not" is "to". The word after "see" is "a". The word after "price" is "rise" University-Community Service Scholarship/Award Qualifications: As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift. - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). - Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. *Scholarship financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Applications: *Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 8, 1977 in the SUa office, Kansas Union. *More information and applications available Tuesday, March 29 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. A. C. K. M. S. - Responsive - Plainspoken CARL MIBECK CITY COMMISSIONER - Lifelong Kansan **Educator:** 22 years **B.A. degree in philosophy (WSU)** **M.A. degree in history (WSU)** **education** **Chairman, Social Studies Dept.** Lawrence High School, since 1969 **Staff advisor to delegate coach—** **Champion 5** Supports open, evening commission meetings *Urges city to aid low-income house buyers - Urges city to aid in home repair * Demands 1,000 acres of land improvement - Urges city to aid in home repair - Demands improvement in city administration - Insists that developers live up to their commitments Pol. Adv, Paid for by Friends of Carl Mibbeck, Bill Lebert, Treas. nour commitments Favors thoughtfully limited growth SPRING BOOK SALE TODAY THROUGH APRIL 16 READ BOOK SHOP IN THE UNION LEVEL 3 MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00 SATURDAY 10:00-1:00 Closed Mon., April 11 Selling something? Call us. The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358. d. CLYDE McCOY uder whose Sugar Blues Recording was a hit in the 1930's. TONITE ONLY — April 4, 9-12 p.m. Admission $5.00 Don't miss this legendary star who will be playing with a 7 piece band at: 926 Mass. PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. Paul Grays COLD --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vote today Tuesday, April 5, 1977 Vol. 87, No.119 CHECK MY BACK Campaian footwork Roger Martin, instructor of English, hit the campaign trail on campus yesterday morning for his candidate for city commissioner drew varied responses from passerboy. Mohammad Ebileh Tehran, Iran, special student, responded exactly as his textual reading suggests. Faculty pay increase cut in House committee action Bv the Kansan Staff Topeka - The Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday cut a request for a 7 per cent salary increase for all Board of Regents institutions to 6 per cent. The committee also reduced Gov. Robert Bennett's recommendation for an 8 per cent increase in other operating expenses for the University of Kansas to 7 per cent. Other operating expenses comprise all University costs, than salaries and capital improvements. THE APPROPRIATIONS bill is expected to go to the House floor today. Cancellor Archie Dykes did last night he didn't know whether the cut was intended to compensate for an increase in salaries of classified employees. He also didn't know whether the governor's recommended 2.5 percent salary for classified employees had been raised. Earlier in the week Dykes had said he opposed exchanging a faculty salary increase for a classified employee increase, but he agreed to increase the increases for some classified employees. Dykes also said he was pleased that the committee had reinstated a request for $250,000 for the affiliated family practice program at the KU Medical Center. But the bill also deletes $122,900 for additional staff for the Department of Family Practice. The bill requests $150,000 for operating cost grants and $100,000 for site development. THE PROGRAM—an effort to train more family doctors and encourage them to establish medical practice in Kansas—has been supported by the governor. The committee changes affect the Med Center in several ways. The committee added $16,434 in state general funds and $343,566 in research overhead funds for purchase of a full-body scanner. But the bill deletes $35,000 for the extended preceptorship program. That program provides interim clinical internships for medical students who have completed classroom work but won't begin their residencies for several months. The committee also deleted $60,921 for primary care residences. THE REVISED BILL also eliminated a $5,000 request for installation of a second elevator in G Building. The Senate had ordered that the governor failed to order it. The committee also requests the Med Center to determine and report the annual cost for each student in undergraduate medical instruction. Reports are to be reviewed by the Legislative Coordinating Council, which is to receive them by July 1. John Conard, Regents executive officer, said State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, who introduced the first big effort to keep Kansas, Kansas, was requesting this information. Conard said, "If the mandatory service bill doesn't get passed in this bill—and it appears that it will not—he will have the information to use next year." CONARD ALSO EXPRESSED concern about an energy conservation program that employs a hybrid system. "It wasn't even discussed in the House Ways and Means Committee," he said, "much to our astonishment, because we had never, last store of information to the committee." Conard said, however, "We don't look at it as a close out on these items. We expect, on the basis of very informal statements by the House Ways and Means Committee, that some of these things will be put back in the joint conference committee meets." The Kansas Senate also voted on budget changes yesterday. The Senate, with no debate, approved a capital improvements bill that will provide $2,500,000 and $3,000,000 in 1978 for additions to Robinson gymnasium and Malot hall, respectively. Senate kills marijuana bill, 19-17 By BOSS MCII VAIN Staff Renorter TOPEKA-Pot-smokers in Kansas will have to wait at least another year. The Kansas Senate last night killed a bill to ban the sale of marijuana or possession of an ounce or less of marijuana. The bill was defeated 19 to 17. State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence and most important sponsor of the bill, said yesterday the measure was dead for this year even before it had been referred to the Senate Federal Affairs Committee by a vote of 19 to 14. THE BILL WOULD have reduced the penalty for possession of less than an ounce of firearms, but would allow the first two offenses. The third and subsequent offenses would have been class D felonies. Under current Kansas law, the penalty amount for any offense is a class D felony. "I'm disappointed, but I'll try again next year." Glover said. Glover said there wouldn't be time to reintroduce the bill to the full Senate before this year's session ended. First adjournment is expected Wednesday; the session probably will resume about two weeks later for a two-or three-day clean-up session. Opponents of the bill said that marijuana was physiologically and psychologically harmful, that marijuana use would increase if the bill were passed and that passage of the bill would be interpreted by Kansas youth as approval of marijuana smoking. Those favoring the bill told a different story. STATE SEN. JOSEPH Norveli, D-Hays, who carried the bill in the Senate, said "the penalties under the present law are vastly out of proportion with the so-called crime." Nurvell notes a report by a presidential commission that says marijuana causes no brain damage and that it doesn't lead to violent crimes and aggression, as alcohol doesn't cause them, so says that marijuana doesn't lead to use of other drugs in most cases, Norvell said. Plane explodes on Georgia highway; 71 dead NEW HOPE, Ga. (UPI)—At least 71 persons were killed yesterday when a Southern Airways DC9 crash landed on a two-lane highway. The plane, its engines flamed out in a hiatusist, plowed through the road before it disintegrated in a ball of fire. At least 27 persons were injured. Twenty-two of the injured were among the 85 persons aboard Southern's Flight 242. The plane was hit and hurried from the plane before it exploded. Pauleding County Sheriff Bob Shipp said there were 39 bodies in a makeshift morgue near Dallas, the county seat. Area hospitals are dealing dead on arrival or during treatment. The twin-jet plane was carrying 81 passengers and two of four from Hunt-Stone Airport. ONE OF THE DEAD was in a grocery store when the left wing of the plane destroyed it. Shipps said three other New Hope residents who were flying that they might be in a hospital or in the woods. Jack Barker, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration, said that at 4:16 p.m. EST (3:16 Lawrence time) the plot reported a windshield failure and one engine flamed out to the Atlanta Air Route Traffic Control Center. "And then he reported the flameout of the second engine," Barker said. "He then switched over to the Atlanta Tower and said he would try to set it down on a road." THE PLOT, Capt. William McKenzie, 40 of La Place, La., died in the crash. tore a 300-yard path down the narrow highway. It struck Newman's General store, pulverized an undetermined number of cars and cut down trees and telephone poles. Shipi said the survival of 22 passengers was due to McKenzie's efforts land the plane. Barker said he didn't know what the pilot meant by a "windshield failure." He said tapes of the final transmissions from Flight 142 would not be made public for two days. "I give all credit to the pilot," Shipp said. "It must have been the best thing he could do. He did a miraculous thing. He did all he could and lost his life doing it. He had his mind and thoughts with the people on that plane." The plane came in the New Hope elementary school, barely missing it, and Burning and exploding pieces of debris were hurled into the air like skyrockets. At least 10 of the passengers on the plane, according to government sources, were executives from the Marshall Space Flight Center and the Army's Redstone Arsenal Research and Development Command at Huntsville. The use of a publicly owned computer by the Committee to Retain Commission-Manager Government appears to be legal, despite charges by members of the Citizens for Mayor-Council Government that private use of the computer was "questionable." The computer is owned by the city, school district and county, and is operated by the Computer Service Agency, a private group hired by the city. The computer contains a list of people living within the Lawrence water district and was used by the Comprehensive Government as a mailing list for distributing a brochure last week. Computer use O.K. despite charge The brochure appealed to Lawrence voters to vote against a question on today's election ballot calling for a change to the mayor-council form of government from the commission-manager system. Mark Kaplan, a spokesman for the Committee for Mayor-Council Government, said yesterday that use of the computer by private, political groups was unfair because it is subsidizing private interests and because of arbitrary approval of use of the computer. Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said that it was legal for community groups to participate in the election. THE CITY'S policy on private use of the computer is unclear and needs to be reviewed. upon approval by the city manager or himself. Other groups, such as the Humane Society, had used information from the computer in the past, he said, but the city won't allow business groups to use the computer. Wilden said that the Committee for Municipal Government could have a vote. **RULEY BURCHAM, co-chairman for the Committee to Retain Commission-Manager Grant Procedures and through proper channels to obtain permission to use the computer's information and that it had paid the fee. He said that it had received information and didn't include personal information.** He said that in the eight states that had reduced penalties for marijuana possession, use of the drug either hadn't increased or been increased by only insignificant amounts. Norwell also said that sending marijuana offenders to jail couldn't rehabilitate them, but would only teach nonserious offenders more about crime. Several amendments to the bill were attempted. A motion to strike the enacting statute would have killed the bill, failed 18 to 14. Amendments that would have reduced the crucial amount of marijuana from one ounce to an ounce plus one tablespoon failed. Norvell opposed both amendments and said their adoptions would have sent the bill to a joint conference committee, effectively killing the bill. AN AMENDMENT to add a possible 30 days in jail to the proposal $100 fine for the first two offenses of possession of less than an ounce, left sentencing to the judge's discretion. Backers of that amendment said the case matters than those proposed were necessary. State Sen. John Vermillion, R-Independence, said, "Firm discipline is a part of correcting the individual, instead of justifying his actions. No individual was ever strengthened by justifying his actions." Norvell said, "This bill will further legalize the marijuana. It 'just reduces the penalties." said the use of marjuana wasn't in-see MARJIUANA page two Applications for Kansan now available Applications for summer and fall Kansan editor and business manager positions are now available in the Student Senate office, the offices of the dean of men and dean of women and in 105 Flint High School. Please visit www.kansan.edu/pm. this Friday to 105 Flint. The Kansan board will interview candidates the afternoon of Tuesday, April 12. The best advice on tax forms is to follow directions By JOAN McMULLEN As April 15, the deadline for income tax, approaches, the advice from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is to think your way through it. Rick Stevens asked the IRS in Wichita, said to "read the return and follow it." Staff Reporter If you can't muster up a financial wizard from among family, friends and graduate students, then you'll have to resort to directions and a toll free number. The Volunteer Income Tax Association (VITA) also offers free help to students. A listing of times and places students can get help is in the Volunteer Clearing Service. The VITA volunteers are trained by the IRS. Frulich said most college students should be able to follow the directions on the return, but emphasized that they should call the IRS information service if they feel they will fill puzzling. The toll-free number is 1-800-363-2190. 1040A year. The RHSAT forms are the 1940 (long form) 1040A (short form). Kristen Andersen, manager of H&R Block, estimated that more than 80 per cent of the students use the short form. The long form allows itemized deductions, which most students use. The long form, there is usually only one deduction—yourself. The IRS forms are sent by the government to individuals who filed previously. Forms are also available in post offices, banks and Room one of Carruth-O'Leary Hall. The two things needed for filing a return are an IRS tax form and W.2 forms from the previous year. W-2 forms are usually sent by employers. Frulch said they should be notified immediately if W-2 forms For students, the most important section of the tax law is in Publication 17, *Your Federal Income Tax*, Fax: (212) 435-8900. it reads: "You should file a federal income tax return if you had income tax withheld from pay out or received income tax return." By filing a return and claiming yourself as a personal exemption, you can get refund even if you may be disabled or have income below the poverty level. What this means is that filing an income tax return isn't required if an individual earned less than $2,450 and has no other form of income to pay taxpayer. If money has been withdrawn from paychecks of a person who earned less than $2,450, Frulich advised that he file a return. Even if a person earns more than $2,450, the dependent, he probably will set a refund, he said. Most students lead simple financial lives, Frulich said, and most of them will get refunds. He said the university is one of the few that does this. There are very few exemptions for students, he said. Scholarships and grants can be exemptions in some situations, but he recommended calling the information number to make certain. Andersen said students should be careful to enter the correct name, address and social security number on the form and to sign it. She said such errors often cause unnecessary delays of refunds. If you've delayed filing for income tax because of lack of motivation, consider this: penalties for late income tax are one half of one per cent of the unpaid amount. These rates are charged monthly. Late filers also must pay a seven per cent interest charge. The penalties can't exceed 25 per cent. If you have to pay and don't have the money, she said, file anyway. Interest will be charged on the bill. A change in the short form that is important to students is line 17. Frulch said. Students expecting a refund may file after April 15 and still get a refund, she said. The IRS will accept late files for up to three years. You may not get in touch with the money but you will get the full refund, she said. On line 17, there are two options for figuring For example if $800 in income tax is owed, the first-year fine is $13 in penalties and $2 in interest. The penalties are figured monthly, so if payments are made during that year, the fine may be less. The other option is to figure two per cent of the taxable income. The maximum allowable deduction for this option is $90 for a single return and $180 for a joint return. exemptions. The first choice is to multiply the number of dependents claimed by $35. One important thing for students to remember, Frulich said, is to ask for W-2 forms when they leave a job. Because students are transient, he said, they often lose W-2s and the employer has no way to find them. If you can't get the W-2, he said, leave an address where you will be living the next year. Andersen said it was also important to make a copy of a filed tax return. She said it might be needed for her work at the firm. Students seeking professional help on income tax can consult either a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) or a professional tax service. CPAs charge by the hour and tax services charge by the form. Andersen said the minimum charge for a short form is $8. The average cost for hiring a CPA is $12.50. 2 Tuesday, April 5, 1977 University Dally Kansan News Digest From our wire services Veto supports death penalty TOPEKA-Ag- Gob. Robert F. Bennett yesterday vetod a bill submitting a 25-year minimum sentence for a death penalty law in Kansas, and a few hours later the Senate voted to hasten the veto. Bennett urged the legislature to try again in the closing days of the session to come up with a bill reinstating capital punishment in the state, and legislative leaders indicated the effort would be made. Warnke rebuts arms error WASHINGTON—Chief disarmament negotiator Paul Warnke yesterday denied that the Carter administration miscalculated Soviet reaction in preparing its arms control proposals. control proposals. Warnike told a House subcommittee he remained genuinely optimistic about changes for all agreement. For an agreement, here is the subcommittee on international security and scientific information asked by Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., about Secretary of State Cyrus Vance's statement Sunday that "No one can say that one never makes any publications." miscalculations." "I've seen the headline," Warnke said. "I'm not aware of any. But that doesn't mean we guessed accurately every move. We hope for movement. As to concern about miscalculation, I am unaware of any." KC to dismiss 500 teachers KANSAS CITY, Mo. —The Kansas City school board took the first step of a hardlined policy toward striking teachers with the announcement yesterday that 500 teaching contracts would not be renewed. affecting children to be nontenured teachers, according to the board president, James Lyddon. Tenure, or seniority, is given teachers after five years with the district. A news conference was called after only a third of the teachers returned to work because the school's board threatened of lead action. yesterday despite the nine-foot court Robert Wheeler who said high school seniors would resume classes Wednesday at four schools to be manned by nonstriking test Nurtured teachers would be allowed to finish the current school year, but would not be re trained for the coming year. Marijuana . . . From page one jurious to the individual or to society and that a fine was sufficient penalty. An amendment to restore the current penalties to the bill, except for the first State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, said he thought young people who experimented with marijuana should be given a second chance, but not a third, as the bill originally Norvell replied that if the courts weren't awarding the full penalties, the state's laws should be changed to conform to its actions. Reilly said, "I don't think that the courts IN THE FINAL DEBATE on the amended bill, State Sen. Ed. Reilly, R-Leavenworth, said it was unfair for Norvell to call the courts enforced it into the full penalties. of Kansas or the prosecutors have acted without commission." REILLY SAID laws prohibiting driver under the influence of marijuana were especially hard to enforce because marijuana is highly addictive. He said the bill would have increased the number of people who would smoke marijuana. Thus more people would be driving under the influence of marijuana, and traffic fatalities would increase. He also said that no one knew the extent of the physiological harm caused by the drug. State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, voted for the bill. One of his aides had said earlier in the evening that Bermann's constituency was split between those who strongly opposed the bill and those who strongly favored it. LEASING NOW If you desire a pleasant place to live, and if your parents will sign the contract, then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W. 25th St. PARK 25 Vista RESTAURANTS Vista RESTAURANTS •MONDAY •TUESDAY •WEDNESDAY BANANA SPLIT 77¢ Reg. 85¢ 1527 West 9th, Lawrence 842-4311 Recruiting groups before Senate In its second night of budget hearings, the Student Senate Academic Affairs Committee debated whether to fund University programs that recruit and retain students. Staff Reporter By LINDA STEWART Some senators favored funding the organizations, saying that the groups used their recruiting trips to get scholarship funds. The Senate Finance and Auditing Committee's general budgeting philosophy states that the Senate shouldn't fund groups that recruit and retain students. OTHER SENATORS SAID that student others shouldn't be used to recruit and retain students. The committee deferred final deliberation until Wednesday night when it will vote. Three student organizations that presented requests listed as one of their goals recruitment and retainment. They are American Women Engineers (UAWE), $1,112; the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating, and Educating Black Engineers (BUEE), $4,610; and the American Law School Association (BALSA), $1,555. The committee heard requests from nine organizations that requested a total of $12,222, which is $3,570 more than the committee has to allocate. The committee will give its recommendations to the full Senate at meetings April 12 and 13. UAAWE and SCOREME said they traveled to high schools to encourage them. THE GROUPS SAID retaining students was accomplished by giving minority and women engineering students already in the school benefits, such as free tutoring and organizations that drew the students together and gave them moral support. SCORMEB requested a line item of $3,350 for travel for both in-state and outstate mileage. UAAWE requested a traveling budget of $600. Both SCOMBEME and UAAWE receive money from individual corporations, which is stipulated to be used only for scholarships, not travel. The Engineering School Council, which presented a request for $3,000 was found by TREASURE HUNT You could win $1,000.00 Hidden somewhere in the Lawrence area Listen for Clues on FM 106 THE MUSIC STATION 50 THE SMOKE SHOP PIPES AND ACCESSORIES OF ALL KINDS GLASS·WOOD·STONE· ALSO: A Large selection of papers and folders LOVE RECORDS (in the back) 15 W.9 842-3059 the committee to be in direct violation of the Senate Revenue Code. and a lot of planning. Thick, cushiony insoles, a bit more flex,and . . . presto . . . snazzy footworks with comfort even your mother could love! Who would have suspected? Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 unmistakably connie it's all done with padding . . . THE ENGINEERING School Council is ruled a class C organization in the Student Senate Revenue Code, which means that it can't disburse the money it is allocated by the Senate. The school district must submit the bill. The district will disburse money last year to subordinate engineering organizations. The Council said the money was used to sponsor an engineering exposition that is on the third weekend every April. The Council allocates most of its money to various The committee decided the Council will not be given more funds to be used in that matter. engineering groups to make exhibits for the exposition. The American Society of Civil Engineers made a request for $405, $225 of which would be used for the project. Other groups that presented requests were the Undergraduate Philosophy Club, $210; the Society of American Military Engineers, $172; and Black'teens, $718. Commission on the Status of Women invites you to apply for positions as chairpersons of the following committees: MINORITY AFFAIRS—HUMAN SEXUALITY POLITICAL ACTION—ALTERNATIVE LIVING SELF-HEALTH—WOMEN'S RECOGNITION NEWSLETTER—PUBLICITY Applications available in 222 Strong ; due Wed. (April 13th) 5:00 in 222 Strong If you have an interest beyond these topics please apply. (Partially funded by Student Activity Fee) Tuesday Night Means Steak-A-Bob at the Sizzler TACO Steak-A-Bob Dinner Only $129 Includes Choice of Potato and Toast Tuesday Night Only 1516 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Ks. SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE DISCOVER EUROPE THIS SUMMER Eiffel Tower Over 150 Low-Cost Charter Flights to Paris, London and Amsterdam. Designed for students, teachers and University staff. 100 Leave almost any day from May 30 through August 6. Stay in Europe from 4 to 12 weeks. For folders and reservations, contact your SUA/Maupintour travel agent in the Kansas Union Lobby. SUA Maupintour travel service quality travel arrangements since 1951 Telephone 843-1211/900 Mass/Hillcrest/The Malls its for the Council be used in Engineers which would requests phy Club, Military , $718. ER HOUSE alls TOWNSCAPE OnCampus TODAY: DAVID HUCCHTHAUSEN, University of Illinois instructor in glassblowing, will give a demonstration from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in KU's glass studio in the Chamney Farm barn, west of Iowa Street on the north side of 15th Street. Ms. ROSENBACH, president of Walters Stout's workshop, will speak on "Geology of the Gorham Oil Field" and "Ancient Kansai Rock Room of Nichols Hall. EWALD OSERS, British translator and specialist on East-Central European literature, will lecture on "Problems of Literary Translation" at 2:30 p.m. and on "Czech Literature Since 1960" at 7:30 p.m. in the International Museum of Contemporary Art, New York. A museum specialist, will speak at a sociological collage at 3:30 p.m. in Foster Hall. Events TONIGHT: PETER MATTHESSEN, novelist, essayist and travel writer, will speak on "The Snow Leopard: An Inner and Outer Journey to the Tibetan Highlands of Nepal" at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium. KU'S CONCERT CHORALE will perform at 6 in the University Theatre at Murphy Hall. The Free University Film Group will show FREEDRICK WISEMAN'S FILM, "HIGH SCHOOL," at 9 in the Union's Forum Room. TOMORROW: UNIVERSITY STAFF will have an open meeting at 5 a.m. in the Union's Forum Room. COLLEGE CHAPTERHOLDERS will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Centennial Room. GERMAN CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 4002 Wesleyville. BROOKLYN COUNCIL will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the feature of the German Democratic Republic" at 8 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. City to consider contract The Lawrence City Commission is to consider approval of Bowersock council meeting. The Bowersock contract, which was on the agenda last week but was deferred until tonight, deals with a lease on property east of the Massachusetts Street bridge. It was revealed last week that a Lawrence police officer was lobbying almost full-time in Topeka for the Fraternal Order of Police. The police commissioner, tighter controls on lobbying activities. The commission gave its tentative approval of the plan earlier this year, and formed the outline of a 3-year lease for part of the property and for purchase of the rest of the property in the city and for two firms now controlling the company been working on a final contract since then. The commission also is to consider police department and city staff guidelines for regulating lobbying by a police representative at the State Capitol in Topeka. G's A very special offer from Bar-B-Q bring in this coupon and receive your choice of chopped or roast beef sandwich with fries or tater-tots ONLY $2.00 530 W. 23rd Coupon Expires Thurs., April 7 841-3402 Smith and Reese were charged with two counts of burglary and two counts of grand theft in connection with a burglary of a University student's residence April 1. Michael Smith, 19, and Frank Reese, 22, both of Topka, were aigned yesterday from the University. Topeka youths arraigned on local burglary charge Both men were being held on a $3,500 bond. Smith, a student at Topeka High School, was released upon signing his own contract. The custody until he can arrange for his bond. Preliminary hearings for both men are scheduled for 2 p.m. April 13. Dance troupe performs tomorrow The Cliff Keater Dance Company, modern dance ballet troupe, will perform as part of the KU Concert Series at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium. The concert concludes the group's Kansas touring season. cellence of his group's dancing and for the provocative nature of his choreography. Keuter has been praised for the ex- Tickets are $4, $3.50 and $3 at the University Theatre box office. Students with KU DAs that have current registration stickers will be admitted free. Recreation Services Intramurals · Sports Clubs Drop-in Recreation OUTDOOR RECREATION SEMINARS Tuesday, April 12 for SMALL CRAFTS Wednesday, April 13 Tuesday, April 5, 1877 Tuesday, April 19 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 8:00 p.m. Rm. 255 Robinson Gym 8:00 p.m. Rm. 255 Robinson Gym 8:00 p.m. Rm. 255 Robinson Gym 7:00 p.m. Rm. 255 Robinson Gym 7:00 p.m. Rm. 255 Robinson Gym University Daily Kansan Admission FREE Beer & Pop Sale! Recreation Services Rm. 208 Robinson Gym 864-3546 See Mike Heaton Pepsi & Dr. Pepper $ ^{1} $1.30/6-pac (12 oz. cans) $ 20^{\circ}$ each for 10 oz. one-way bottles. Coors & Budweiser '6.80/case '1.70/6-pac Champlin Self Serve Just east of 23rd & Iowa 1802 W. 23rd 842-9578 PARKER C. R. SMITH VOTE WOLFE Paul J. Wolfe X CANDIDATE FOR SCHOOL BOARD - Committed to school system improvement * Capable, experienced, informed * Skilled in teaching TODAY, your support of Paul would be greatly appreciated. Paid for by committee to elect Paul Wolfe-School Board Ford RENT-A-CAR LEASING ADMINISTRY 2340 Alabama FALS WORLDS LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTOMOTIZED LEARNING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 K. U. Students, Come see what you paid for: THE CLIFF KEUTER DANCE GROUP Wednesday, April 6 HOCH AUDITORIUM 8:00 p.m. presented by THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CONCERT SERIES "Mr. Keuter is a fine and vivid dancer whose off-beat reflections upon the kinetic relationships between dance and drama continue to engage me." CLIVE BARNES New York Times Admission FREE with K.U.I.D. 4 Tuesday, April 5, 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 Strike state's fault It has been brought to the attention of most by now that John can't read. And I wonder if she's in school, Two weeks ago, the Kansas City (Mo). Federation of Teachers declared a general strike, which closed schools there. The strike drew immediate fire from city officials, community members and school board personnel, based primarily on the argument that strikes by teachers are illegal. They are therefore there in violation, the strikers' adversaries say, and should be fired. MOREOVER, THEY say, the strike is an extreme act of politicking. Teachers have victimized innocent children and their parents to gain "unnecessary" pay raises. The first argument might have some truth. Norman Hudson, teacher's union president, who has twice led his team away from the negotiating table, is guilty of the kind of press-hounding typical of a bus-leaguer. He has scheduled "secret" meetings with school board members to discuss the media such secret meetings were going on. Hudson has urged community support for the teachers, those poor, much-maligned victims of the school board. SCHOOL BOARD president Robert Wheeler, although not as sensationalistic as Hudson, also has asked for public pressure to force the teachers back to work. The school board, harried and tired, is the victim of a lack of state financial support. Hudson's use of the media probably has hurt the teachers' cause. And one can question why the Kansas City teachers, presumably intelligent enough to follow their own conviction, choose instead to follow Hudson. AS USUAL, the truth lies somewhere in between; in this case, in the middle of the ever-widening gap between Hudson's and Wheeler's forces. Today is the 10th day of the week when a coach or coach's work yesterday or face contempt of court, a charge carrying with it a maximum penalty that includes six months in jail. They didn't return. The two teams had better get together and play ball before the game is washed out. play ban before the game is washed out. Further calls for public pressure can be expected;another useless court order, the third, is a possibility. BUT THESE actions will serve only to protect the real victimizer—the Missouri state legislature. Teachers in the district have tried negotiating for more than five years. Their requests have ranged from the much-d disputed salary hikes to demands that class sizes be smaller and teaching supplies improved. The teachers' requests are reasonable. The school district has been forced into a position of intransigency, however, by deaf earners in Jefferson City. Higher teacher salaries and educational improvements cost more money—money the district doesn't have. THE SAME LEGISLATORS who deploy the fact that Johnny can't read, that Johnny and Jane enter colleges with lower SAT scores and flunk English 101 haven't competed in the national high educational levels requires at least adequate teaching at the elementary level. Instead, the legislators point the finger at the teachers, calling them inferior. That charge may prove self-fulfilling if state action isn't taken. The real target of public pressure should be the legislature. New forms of tax revenue are needed. The taxes need not take the form of boosting already high Missouri property taxes. Alcohol beverages, sold by the drink in Missouri bars, might be further taxed. Higher state gasoline or cigarette taxes might be other alternatives. WHATEVER SOLUTION is to be found to ease the lack of funds for public education in North America. The sad irony of it all is that the same society that proclaims itself a proud proponent of free education plans multi-million dollar tourist traps while Kansas City schools go intellectually and financially broke. Rights a hot game President Jimmy Carter is currently mating with a woman who is lately the hotest game on earth. His rôlelet isn't solely Russian, although his condemnation of Soviet policy toward dissidents stands out as one of the more gutsy moves this new president has made. The French government is scutting SALT disarmament talks between the United States and theSovietas a result. Other nations also have criticized Carter for his "meddling" in their internal affairs. Criticized for human rights violations, Brazil promptly refused any further U.S. aid. One of the most famous cases from Rhodesia, which, until lately, was selling this country most of its chromium. CARTER CAN BE only mildly credited with finally supporting the United Nations' economic sanctions against Rhodesia—in this case, better late than never. But the game gets tricky as the process of supporting the human rights agreement, part of the Helsinki package, becomes ever more selective. A recent Congressional subcommittee report—tame in comparison to a report from the Internation Human Rights Commission—reported that each of the 82 nations received its citizen's report or another violated its citizens' rights. The violations ranged from mild to severe. THREE NOTORIOUS examples: South Korea, the Philippines and, on the other side, Japan. borrow a phrase from Ronald Reagan, is ruled by a "tin-horn dictator." Each denies its citizens rights that Americans take for granted. That is precisely Carter's problem. Although it is safe to condemn Rhodesia or Brazil or, to a certain extent, the Soviet Union; South Korea, the Philippines and Iran are of great strategic military value to the United States. And here, Carter and the Congress must tread softly. Without air bases in each country, our own extended defense perimeters would be greatly weakened, the theory goes. It can be argued that without U.S. supported dictatorships in the aforementioned defense perimeter, talks with the Soviets would take a decidedly different turn—specifically, politically left, in favor of the Soviets. It also can be argued that Carter can't be an absolutist, cutting off aid from all the countries that violate human rights and are supportive but partially or substantially by the State. THUS, CARTER finds himself on his wire, deciding who is valuable and who isn't. It's not an easy job. But then, he knew that when he took it. If his talk of human rights is to be considered more than mere conservative-placeting political artistry, he should think seriously of getting to the heart of the matter—U.S.supported dickershirts—lest his political tent fold up and blow away. A RESPONSE FOR THE WHOLE DOSROUS WAR MISSING IN ACTION Kansas Republicans threatened There's no need to prove that Republicans have been losing on the national scene for several years. But it definitely is an issue that Republican leaders in the But in Kansas, a state that Gov. Robert Bennett called the "most Republican state in the Union" at the Republican National Convention in Kansas City last summer, losses to the Republicans are not surprising, just now beginning to worry state Republican leaders. Last fall, Democrats gained a majority in the state House of Representatives for the first time in 64 years. It was a victory over the "the most" Republican state in the Union" was in trouble. Schneider called the trip an effort to inform senior citizens about consumer fraud that often affected them. A TRIP TO Western Kansas by Democratic Atty. Gen. Curt Schnieder a couple of weeks ago has been referred to by some state Republicans as a headache for gubernatorial ambitions. Whether the trip was a headstart in a race for the governorship or a field trip that reflected Schneider's political ambitions, may be questioned for several years to come. state are having a hard time living with. The most bewildered of these Republican leaders seems to be State Den. Don Everett, R-Ranhattan. Everett has gone so what Republicans have been accused of in the past—letting its state leadership decide who its next candidate will be at an early date so it can begin its promotional campaign months 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. Jay Bemis Editorial Writer for as blame Gov. Bennett for rapublican failures by saying it is time Bennett 'took off the kid' and left him alone in the fellow congressions into speech. EVERETT SHOULD realize that more charismatic statements are necessary to guide his party back toward some of the successful times had before the Nixon-Watergate years. Ambiguous mouths such as "I'm not early or they will only contribute to the demise of the Kansas Republican party." Everett and other Republican members of the state legislature have said that the Democratic party is guilty of Everett used Schneider's trip as a chance to express concern about the chances of further escalation between the Union's most Republican state. before it is traditionally appropriate. EVERETT IS SO worried about the fall of the Kansas Republican party that he says: Indeed, Everett and other Republicans are using Schneider's early political moves as opportunities for open criticism upon their Democratic opponents. Most of them are because they are worried—and they have reason to be. "He (Schneider) is nominally abroad protecting the senior citizens while two million citizens wait for his opinions on marijuana and other important issues before this state These Republicans haven't realized that they have promoted Schneider's campaign rather than denounced it. Schneider has yet to declare himself as a gubernatorial candidate and other Democrats are calling for the state's top position. THESE REPUBLICANS do seem to realize that their Republican party, which has been identified with western states in recent years, is losing popularity everywhere. If the Democratic party in Kansas were to win a gubernatorial seat in 1978, and a majority in the state Senate as well as a plurality of voters be a national embarrassment to a state that prizes itself on being the most Republican in the country. Many other western conservative states have won such seats mostRepublican comrade ponents this early in the political stage and stop concentrating on wongs they say are Democrats. Democrats in recent years. For years Democrats and Republicans have blamed each other for actions that haven't proved to be beneficial in the world. It would seem that Republicans, if they want to gain a new identity, would stop cowering to Democratic op- JIMMY CARTER, a Democrat who has been accused of having Republican leanings, has initiated a campaign style that seems to work in getting votes. He talks about issues affecting voters rather than the faults of the onoosing party. If Republicans want to gain the support of Chicagoans, blacks and Hispanics, they clenched blocs, it seems they would quit criticizing their opposing party and start reflecting on voters' failure to do so has hurt them. Notice The Kansan recently has received several letters from persons whose names are not verifiable in either the KU student directory or the Lawrence telephone directory. If you wish to submit a letter to the editor and your name isn't listed in either directory, please send the letter here, there you may be reached or personally present your letter to a Kansan staff member in the Kansan newsroom, 112 Flint. Letters Reader chastises one-sided view To the editor: The one-sided attack on Paul Wolfe in a letter in Monday's Kansan is a grossly one-sided view. As a member of the staff at our management team, I would like to express a second side. I LOOK LEONID---I'M ONLY SECRETARY OF STATE! SOME THINGS ARE NOT INCLUDED IN OUR DISARMAMENT PROPOSALS! © 1977 NYT Special Features In the professional computer world, it's normal to be very mobile. During the years 1974 through 1976 we were in a state of constant specification, evaluation and acquisition of new computer systems. Our staff turnover during that time was below $50,000, making it possible to computing at KU and didn't accept other job offers (almost any staff member can make considerably more outside the University). The latest computer acquisition. Woife has an obligation to respond to increased accountability requirements from University management, our computer users and the State government. The relaxed atmospheric conditions longer get our job done. a few folks have left because they are not comfortable in a more structured environment. assistant director, KU Computation Center Programming Services Dave Nordlund Reference rebuked To the editor: I present the use of my name in an attack on one of the candidates for public office that was printed as a letter to the editor in year 1940. I have the publication of such letters at a time when it's too late for an adequate response before the election is perhaps unethical and, at least, questionable. Del Shankel executive vice chancellor Seeing eye-to-eye To the editor: I want to encourage girls, faculty members and strangers to quit avoiding eye contact on campus. Its only function is to frustrate the sensible guy who would like to say "hello," as a passing gesture of friendliness. The KU campus isn't like a hustling, bustling metropolitan city, but rather friendly friendship places in the United States. It's keep it that way. I don't want to be cynical about this topic because there are several people on campus that have never seen a great man. That's great. I feel that I have gained something when I know looks up and greets me. And to you people who continually look straight down, there are more interesting things than watching yourself walk. To those students who steal a glance of you from about I address this letter to those people whose eyes seem to drift away when an approaching child stares, a cruelest of these 'eye contact avoiders' are the young ladies who look quickly to the side as you walk by. Holy Mosei! My makes feel as if my looks are so hideous that she had to head to keep from vomiting. 29 feet away, then won't look again, you are missing out on seeing people up close, as they really are. Factual expressions say you a lot. Please don't feel inhibited to hit "hit." It can only help you. Jeff Roper Wichita sophomore O Timing criticized To the editor: I would like to indicate my concern over the lack of professional standards exhibited by the Kanan in printing a highly critical letter directed at a candidate for public office on the day before an election, "writing Valerie Wolfe on a date when a timely presentation of the "other side" of the story cannot be made is extremely unfair. This is the second letter written by Voigt and published by this paper criticizing Wolfe and the Computation Center. It is interesting to note that Voigt was dismissed from a student hourly position with the Computation Center for unsatisfactory job performance last January. It is true that a number of individuals have resigned from the Computation Center during the year. Reasons for resignations include accepting responsibility with higher pay in both private industry and with other agencies; the forming of two small businesses and pursuit of a long-planned extended period of travel. The sweeping change in these factors that these people resigned because of Wolfe's management" is simple untrue. As the situation now stands, the chance of election for a viable school board candidate has been diminished by the misleading representations of a single individual. The damage has been done. I can only hope that we will learn of your ethical duty to present all sides of an issue and that last minute attacks on candidates without chances of rebuttal will not occur in the future. Ray Kramer manager, KU Computation Center Business Services THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 21, 2015. Subscriptions are due by September 14, 2015. June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Mail to: KUPSPASS@KUPSPASS.COM 60444. Subscriptions by mail are a $1 amender or $18 charge for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $18 charge. Editor Jim Bates Business Manager Janice Clements MAIN MENU Features. d rely in the sd stop con- trols they say they will beetle years for years. For crats and alternated each that haven't infected the in- ITTER, as been ac- Republican initiated at seems to tes. issues affer than the ing party. to want to gain anos, blacks it U.S. voting would you quit posing party on voters so has hurt letters from XU student you wish to d in either you may unsan staff Credit cards deceptive ew performance Never ask of money spent Where the spender thinks it went. Nobody was ever meant to buy a car or beer or what he did with every cent. Computation Services a number of number of designated from Center during seasons for de accue- lation pay in bay in pay in and with other arming of two and pursuit of an extended period e sweeping his resigned he resigned he manage- sure is untrue. now stands, reaction for a rd candidate brassified by the documentations of a. The damage can only hope to present city to present on candidates rebuttal will future. —Robert Frost "The Hardship of Accounting" That's the paradox of credit card charge accounts. Credit is a convenient form of money, deceptively invisible, forgotten until the monthly statement arrives as a reminder of money spent and now owed. Establishing credit and a credit rating are necessary to enhance a consumer's buying power, according to recent credit card application letters sent by major companies to University of Kansas students. MOBIL OIL Corp., Sears Roebuck & Co. Trans World Airlines Inc. and other businesses have sent seniors and graduate students letters, some two and three pages long, explaining the company's philosophy of buying on credit and building a credit card and inviting applications from students. Being able to "charge it" is to have goods and services before paying for them, a factor that can raise a card holder's standard of living—and personal debt. Going into debt from charging purchases on several cards is a danger many new credit card holders aren't aware of. The biggest assistant professor of business, said recently. "THE COMPANIES are looking for people who are upwardly mobile and who need credit to sustain a high standard of living. "The salary of a new job looks big compared to what the student has been living on, but it won't support the lifestyle he prefers. Companies want people who they think have middle class aspirations, who would have a stable income and who would be able to pay for their payments on the money they owe, she said. Project funding deferred The Douglas County Commission yesterday decreed action in a county grant to the school district. Douglas County has agreed to pay five per cent of the estimated project cost, $99,200 provided that the Governor's Commission on Criminal Administration approves a matching grant. The other 90 per cent would be federally funded. "The companies hope people won't be able to pay off what they owe because the companies make money on the unpaid balance." Bentley said. Bill Arnold, associate professor of sociology at the University of Kansas, proposed the halfway house and is requesting the funding. Peter Wittenight, county commissioner, said that the commission was willing to provide funds for the project's first year but did not about what would be expected after that. THE COUNTY would be committed to provide a matching grant of about 12 per cent in the second year of the project and 30 per cent in the third year. SYLVIA PORTER, economist and newspaper columnist, advises in her "Money Book" that credit be used conveniently but cautiously. The commission also approved the county appraiser's 1987 budget of $412,000, a $124,142 increase over last year. Increased salaries for officers and staffs accounted for the rise. Hopeably, the house would be self-supporting after the first year, according to Arnold. State and county government penal institutions would contract spaces at the house and would give house officials the power they have been spent in prisons and jails. Limited commercial zoning around Clinton Lake also was discussed by the commission. Jane Cumbet, a member of the commission, said that Douglas County planning commission, Douglas County planning commission, Although they would probably pay the five per cent this year, Whitenight said the commission would request that it have the option to drop support after that. She said that card holders should use only the cards they need and want and will use fairly regularly, and that purchase receipts are sent to the store face place as a check against billing errors. proposed that the area be kept non-commercial. George Griffin, curator of the Kansas Collection at Spencer Library, told the commission that county historical documents would be donated to KU. The ability to pay for the goods before the statement due date in order to avoid finance charges is something card holders should consider before they buy, Porter said. Watson's APRIL 4-10 J. M Another SPECIAL NIGHT O Like last Monday, remember? St Cover - Disco Peanut Gallery: Kings vs. Indiana. 7:30 p.m. College All Stars, 10:30 p.m. Everyone FREE (no cover E 7 foot TV screen—"Something for Joev" $1 Cover - Disco H 7' TV—"People's Command U Performance: '77' $2 Cover - Live music with FORT DODGE F PERFORMANCE: /7/ KOJAK - 10:30 p.m. SUA Great Movie: "Bang the Drums Slowly" Make a full day of it! TT Free: Royals vs. Detroit, and dance to FORT DODGE Saturday night - $2 cover. FILMS Come see Royals vs. Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Free on our 7' TV. Lawrence's Newport 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & laws LA TRIVIATA (1967) Based on the opera by Gluseppe Verdi with Anna Mofo, Gino Bechi. Classical Film Series. Wed., April 6, 7:30 p.m., 75c (1970) SILVER INC STREAH Dir. Nicholas Roeg and Donald Cammell, with Mick Jagger. Film Society Series. Thurs., April 7, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., 75c PERFORMANCE "ROCKY" Dir. Arthur Penn. With Marlon Brando, Jack Nicholson, Popular Film Series. Fri., April 8 & Sat., April 9, 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m., $1 THE MISSOURIBREAKS (1976) Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION **Starring** IYLVELRSTALLONE Eve. 7.20 & 9.40 Sat. Sun. Mat. 1:45 10 Academy Award Nominations Hillcrest University Daily Kansan Elev. 71' 40 & 9:50 Sat. Sun. Mon. 2:05 Hillcrest Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium Granada Tuesday - Friday (9am-5pm) F083 An Epic Fantasy of War & Peace Eve. 7:30 & 9:15 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Eve. 7:40 & 9:50 Sat, Eve 8:30 "WIZARDS" Varsity 904527 ... Highland 3168 PG 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are frapped; underwater. AIRPORT FC '77 Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:55 Hillcrest EMM. Tebbey "Mother Jugs & Speed" PLUS "Vanishing Point" Sneak Starts at 17 19TH AVE. 187 "Killer" Bees, The African Honeybee In The Americas 7.30-9.OOp.m. Museum of Natural History $1.50 Tuesday, April 5, 1977 WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY "Killer" Bees April 6 god made me god doesn't make junk EVENING SERIES You have something to share with the people of the rural South and Appalachia yourself. Find how Some information about opportunities with the Guild of the Poets. Use the free 17" x 22" God Made me Poster. you can help, as a Catholic Brother, Sister, or Priest. Your request will be treated confidentially. I'd like a free copy of the poster only. Glenary Missioners Room 18 Box 46404 Cincinnati Ohio 45246 I will do my best to ensure that the information provided is accurate and correct. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me directly. CARL MIBECK - Responsive CITY COMMISSIONER - Plainspoken - Educator for 22 years - Lifelong Kansan ● B.A. degree in philosophy (WSU) ● M.A. degree in history (KU) ● M.A. degree in education Educator for 22 years B.A. degree in philosophy (WSU) - M.A. degree in education (UCLA) TICKETS — Reserved Seats Only $5.75, limit 10 at: SUA Box Office, KIEF'S in Lawrence (UCLA) * Chairman, Social Studies Dept. Chamblee, Social Studies Depr- Lawrence High School, since 1969 * Kansas' Leading debate coach— State Champions 5 times - Supports open, evening commission meetings - Urges city to aid low-income house buyers - Urges city to aid in home repair - Demands improvement in city SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas - Orges city to aid in home repair - Demands improvement in city administration - Insists that developers live up to their commitments - Favors thoughtfully limited growth Pol. Adv. Paid for by Friends of Carl Mibeck, Bill Lebert, Treas. APRIL'S FOOLE SUM... APRIL 24 Reserved Seats Only GEORGE CARLIN at Kansas University Noch Auditorium 23rd & Alabama COST CUTTERS Meat items sold as advertised no sold to dealers. Quantity Rights Reserved. Right to Limit. Please check back. NOW OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Good thru April 9 Closed Easter Sunday COST CUTTER MARTIAL Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE Qt. 7-Up & R.C. or Diet Rite. Plus Deposit OLYMPIA ... 6.12 oz $ 1'29 cans U.S.D.A. Choice BONELESS BRISKET lb. 89¢ Petite KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Kroger Sugar 5 lb. Buy 1. Get 1 FREE LIMO. With 10 purchases excluding cigarettes and beer. Sobey to applicable state and local tax. YAY! $1.50 CINNAMON ROLLS...6 for 39° C Kroger ON PROGRESS COST CUTTER COUPON Large Eggs Buy 1 Get 1 FREE. Limit 1 deal with $10.00 in other items. Special pricing cigarettes and bever- good thru April 9, 1977. Subject applicable to state and local fax. VWL 29c CORN WRIST CUTTER SPECIAL Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE Doz. Large Eggs With Coupon & $10 purchases Fresh, Crisp HEAD LETTUCE 3 Heads $1 Kroger Natural ICE CREAM...$1.99 gal. Golden Brown FRIED CHICKEN...12 pcs. $3^49 KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON Wesson Oil 24 oz. Limit 1 per coupon. Good thru April 9, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local fax. SAVE PROGRESS COST CUTTER COUPON Nu Soft Fabric Softener 4 oz. Limit 1 per coupon. Good thru April 9, 1977. Subject to ap- plicable state and local tax. SAVE: 40c 6 Tuesday, April 5, 1977 University Daily Kansan Vicendese working to stay on top By GARY VICE Sports Editor Mark Vicendese's attempts at self-induced anemia hasn't been totally successful. He still remembers last year's disastrous spring football drills. What concerns him most now is that he doesn't repeat his lackluster performance of one year ago as the KU football team was outspoken about its season in preparation for the 1977-78 season. Vicendise, 6-1 and 175 pounds, enters practice as the heir apparent for Nolan Cromwell's starting quarterback position. And he doesn't want to change head coach Sports Bud Moore's thinking on that by duplicating the errors he made last time around. "I HAD THE lousiest spring last year," Vicense said. "I try not to think about it and go out there and have the best practices I can. I want to stay established at No. 1. Vicenade, from Berkely Heights, N.J., spent meet of his sophomore year he built a team that was redissued. But after Cromwell's season-ending knee injury and the apparent ineffectiveness of Scott McMichael and Mark Lissner, he moved into the starting back roller. After his debut against Iowa State, where he came on late in the first quarter, Vicentez started the season's final two games against Colorado and Missouri on the AND IT was his performance against the Tigers, where he gained 111 yards on 23 carries while directing the Jayhawks to a 41-14 victory, that established him as the man to beat for the starting quarterback both Cromwell and McMichael have completed their four years of eligibility and Lissak has been moved to split end. His strongest challenge would appear to be Brian Bethke, a 5-10 and 195-pound transfer from San Antonio Junior College in Walnut, Calif. BETHKE, WHO possesses superb upper body strength, both ran and passed for over 90 years last season. He does have some experience with the wlashbone record: he set a school career running record at South Hills High School in Covina, Calif., where he played. "I ran the wishbone in high school," Bethke said, "but it's quite a bit different than the one here. I'm having to learn the steps all over. That's that biggest problem now—just trying to get the good footwork down and work on my timing." Quarterback coach Gary Rutledge said he was pleased with the way Vicendese and Bethke were coming along after the first weekend of practice. Besides Vicendeen and Bethke, Rutledge is working with Tim Farley, a transfer from Wisconsin, and Steve Mueller, a walk-on who was impressive in junior varsity action last year. Rutledge is optimistic about two freshmen—Jeff Hines from Arapahoe, Colo, and Steve Smith from Emporia, who will join the team this fall. "They're supposed to be some pretty good freshmen," Rutledge said. "Hines ran the team." It was true. But he wasn't sure. But Smith is ought to be able to help us really early. He can a wish in high school and he'll know what to do. But it's absolutely hard for a freshman to come in and play. KNOWING THAT strong quarterback leadership could help KU through its tough schedule this year. Moore has taken special interest in the progress of his quarterbacks. "Spring practice is always good for every player," Moore said. "But for us it's of foremost importance for our quartermacks this year as we have little experience there." "We spend all summer long evaluating the past spring dills looking at films and talking about our personnel. It makes a world of difference going into fall practice." Moore said that the greatest value in spring drills for the quarterbacks was found in a single position, 20. “IT'S TOO early now to evaluate our strength at quarterback,” Moore said. “It's extremely hard to evaluate them until they are comfortable and give them a chance to move the ball.” For now anyway, everyone's eyes are on Vicenandee and Bethke—including their own. don't know, I've got to work hard to stay ahead of them all. I just hope I come out on top. "Oh, everybody's a challenge," Viemen doubled said. "But I guaged Brian's bigest. He was a king." And Bethke adds his appraisal of the friendly adversary relationship, saying, "I've got a lot of catching up to do behind Mark, Mark's a great manger back." But when Bethke was asked what it'll take to catch Vicenteed, Vicenteed, who had just come over to his locker next to Bethke's, answered for him. "All he's got to do is look at me on last year's films. Then he'll know he's got not enough." Rain, scheduling conflicts plague Kansas tournament Kansas University's first round game against Benedictine College in the Kansas Baseball Tournament at Manhattan yesterday was postponed because of rain. The weather, along with a conflict in the Benedictine schedule, knocked the Ravens out of the tournament. KU will now play Kansas Wesleyan at 1:00 Wednesday. Benedictine had been scheduled to play Bermidji State of Minnesota Wednesday and dropped out of the tournament when they learned of the new schedule. Kansas State baseball coach Phil Wilson, who organized the tournament, replaced the old head coach. Wilson said the postponement would change the entire schedule. The semifinals will be played at noon and 2 o.m. Thursday with the finals at 4 p.m. to a result, KU coach Floyd Temple tem- rescheduled Friday's and Saturday's doubleheader at 1 p.m. Saturday at 1 p.m. Saturday and another twentieth at 1:30 p.m. on Monday "This way we'll play seven games in six days instead of four days," Temple said. Temple seemed unconcerned about the first round opponent for the Jayhawks. Our "We'll play anybody they assign us. Temple said. "We've would take a forsit if they had given it to us. It doesn't make any difference to us." There IS a difference!!! PREPARE FOR: MCAT • DAT • LSAT • SAT GRE • GMAT • OCAT • CPAT • VAT Over 38 years of experience and success. Small classes. Volunteer opportunities. Earn up to $500 per semester. Updated. Cram's open days & weekends all year. Complete supplementary material. Make-ups for missed lessons at our center. ECFMG • FLEX NAT'L MEDICAL & DENTAL BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours Our broad range of programs provides an intensive training know how that makes us to offer the best preparation available. Further info: (191) 762-0007 Missouri, Kansas, 8400 Minnesota, Kansas, 8400 Cleveland, Ohio More details below. CALL Toto Free 800-221-9840 TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS 1929 THE STINKY CHEESE SHOPPE tel. 842-7434 M-Sat. 10:30-6:00 Thurs. Eve 'til 7:30 809 1/2 W. 23rd St. Next to McDonald's An Easter basket filled with cheese can delight old and young alike. This year give that Easter basket gift a new twist . . . fill it with cheese from ... THE ATTIC 907 Mass. Painter's Pants Reg. $25___$16.90 Western Jeans Reg. $28___ $18.90 Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. "Blue Denim Special" by Rose Hips Split Skirt Reg. $22 ___ $14.90 Great Styles-Great Fit Five Good Reasons to Vote for BARKLEY CLARK For City Commissioner on Tuesday, March 8 M. W. C. PROFESSOR OF LAW Dedicated teacher and scholar. The only K.U. teaching faculty member or student in the race for City Commission. THE MOST EXPERIENCED CANDIDATE Serves as Chairman, including terms as Chairman of the Planning Commission and Mayor of Lawrence. Expert on local government Author of leading articles on municipal legal problems. Consultant for the Kansas Legislature and the League of Kansas THE MOST KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATE AN OBJECTIVE CANDIDATE AN OBJECTIVE CANDIDATE no conflicts of interest. No axe to grind! SOLID STANDS ON THE ISSUES Neighborhood preservation. Revenue sharing funds for "People Programs." Part-time local employment for K.U. students. Consumer protection advocate. Better recreational facilities in Lawrence. Good relations between "Town & Gown." A REMINDER: All students locally registered to vote in the November election will receive a booklet from K.U. students. Exercise your franchise and VOTE for BARLEY CLARK! Paid political adv. by the committee for the election of Barkley Clark. SPRING BOOK SALE TODAY THROUGH APRIL 16 READ BOOK SHOP IN THE UNION LEVEL 3 MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00 SATURDAY 10:00-1:00 BR Tavei Kirkj accol the F City base! Ta first fence who exhibit Ta Karu the I strin duri leag Closed Mon., April 11 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 5.1977 7 Royals lose to Pirates, in home-run hitting fest BRADENTON, Fla. (AP)—Frank Taveras hit a grand slam home run and Erik Kippatrick, Duffy Dyer and Omar Moreno accounted for six more runs with homers at the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the Kansas City 12-0 yesterday in exhibition baseball. Taveras, who singled and sored in the first inning, hit his homer over the left field fence in the second inning off Andy Hassler, who popped up a hit during the exhibition season. action on Taveras' 340-foot foot run erased a 5-1 Kansas City lead and helped the Pirates on the Royals' seven-game exhibition winning string. Taveras has never hit a home run during a regular season game in the major leagues. THE ROYALS scored one run in the first inning, then added four more in the second on a single, a two-base error by Candaleria, a triple and a sacrifice-five. In the Pirates' half of the third inning, Stennett singled and Dyer followed with a three-run triple. Zebb's homer in the fourth and made it 9-7 in the fifth when A Cowens hit a three-run shot. Kirkpatrick matched that hit with a home run off the scoreboard in the sixth. Dyer drove in Stemmel in the seventh and Moreno in the ninth to run in the eighth to finish out the scoring. KU tennis team tries to win 12th The KU men's tennis team will be shooting for their twelfth win of the season when they face Gustavus Adolphus, a small town on Wednesday afternoon at the Allen Field House courts. The Jayhawks, who have won their last three matches, will divide their 12-man squad in two teams to face Gustavus Adolphus A. Clemens and Luke Wilson to play start at play 1 and the A team will play at 2. Although many taverns and private clubs in Lawrence do post门来dt容 people trying to sneak out with glassware, wwwehw there are people they still find their way into people's houses. By CARLCEDER Staff Reporter Lumps, Kevin Wright, owner of Quantrill's Saloon, 715 Massachusetts St., said Tuesday that between $150 and $200 worth of glass was stolen each month from his bar. bumps clue glass thefts "If someone didn't work the door, I could lose 50 mouses. " Wright said. He said that he paid a 6-foot-8, 265-pound doorman $60 to $90 a week to check customers for stolen items, but he still had lost wall hangings and ashtrays. "I CAUGHT A guy once trying to leave with two pitchers and two or three schooloons wrapped up in his coat," Wright said, even tried to rip off any cow skull still there. As it is, Wright said, he loses about 12k mugs a month. Wright said that women were more prone to steal because it was easy for them to stick a finger in their mouth. glassware was stolen at the beginning of the school year because people used it to furnish lamps. "I've been at girls' houses and seen my stuff sitting all over the place," Wright said. The Catton Bar and Grill, 618 W. 120th S. spends about $50 at the beginning of each fall semester to replace items stolen by incoming students, a bartender there said. Seliw Signylar, manager of the 7th Spirit, e is E. Seventh Shr, agreed that breakage was not warranted. HE SAID THAT during the rest of the week, more glass was lost through chipping and splitting. "Sure, a certain amount of theft goes on, but even grandma and grandpa take a tow from me." However, she was that because the 7th Spirit was a private club, people were less likely to steal glassware and other items and bought memberships and came regularly. Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., said that in addition to the more popular items stolen, the women's toilet seat and flush handles had disappeared. "I think it's a select few people with the express purpose of collecting glassware and tools for a specific use." "One of the most amazing tricks that we ever saw was when a guy on crunches tried to limp out past the doorman with a ladder placed on the toe of his cast," Wallace said. KEN WALLACE, owner of the Jayhawk The Jayhawk Cafe employs two doormen on busy nights to look for bumps and lumps under jackets or shirts that would indicate stolen pitchers or schooners, he said. "One time the doorman stopped a girl because he thought she had two schooners stuck under her shirt, but she didn't," Wallace said. WALLACE SAID that he had contemplated charging a deposit on pitchers but that as long as customers behaved he wouldn't. Dary Housoworth, owner of Van Vleck Tavern No. 6, 1830 W. Sixth St., said that the previous manager charged a $90-cent deposit and that he had found this more unnecessary. A sign behind the bar reads "Anyone caught stealth or causing trouble will be barred, and Housworth said that the policy "People fight or steal only once in here," Worthow said. "I wanted to wrestle." I told him I wouldn't, but he liked it. Pat Williams, manager of the Stables, Seventh St., said there was a problem theft that he said he had. "I think he could estimate losses on a day-to- day basis because things often were broken." Jes Santaularia, owner of the Eldridge House Dining Room and Club and of Sheriff Jam Jones, both at Seventh and Massachusetts streets, said that by not using glass items with names on them, his club had made theft less likely. There have been instances of people trying to steal liquor from the Eibridge, Sagewood and Tulip streets prosecuted. When people are caught stealing glassware he said they usually drink before stealing it. KANSAN WANT ADS Santularia said that the amount of student was related to the amount of student in her class. Acecommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered on campus or by email, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times time times time 15 words or fewer $1.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.00 Each additional .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 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 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 843-1538. ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT COLLEGE STUDENTS—part time, earn $10 per hour and win $150.00 in bonding bonds as an American Youth Enterprise Dealer. Write Fired Story of 101 Ells Drive, L13 East, L4-8 Springs, N.J. 60921. FOR RENT COLLEGE STUDENTS—Are you considering leaving school but are unable to afford a valuable career opportunity. We are an expanding small company with offices in Kuala Lumpur, Suriya and Penang, and we need people who work hard and have an own future. Long hours—very pleasant working conditions; $250 to start? Call 1-814-625-8232. Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 500 sq. ft. no equipment. No group sizes. Includes Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in the newly remodeled Ballpark in Blug, at 6th and 11th Avenue. Call (212) 349-8000. Subleting apartment for summer. 2-bedroom, C.A. modern, centrally located. Call 841-1896-4-7 2-bedroom apartment. 2 blocks from Union. $165. mo. plus utilities. 843-7038. 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to union, utilizes parking. B35-0579. Apartment for rent. Available now, furnished apartment one block from Union. Very nice for kitchen and living room; share kitchen and bathroom. Call after 6-543-712-8790, very fine home 4-643-712-8790, more information in old historical house. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets, 843-7567. **tf** Frontier Ridge—short term leases available. Frontier Ridge offers a suite with study. Indoor hotspot oven & slag carpet. Outdoor hotspot oven, slag carpet, door pool *disposal* - patio - kitchen facilities; outdoor pool - landscaping; furnished and unfurnished from $138. Call 842-695-8100. Gatehouse Apartments - Call Becky now. Summer 公寓安排 in all Gatehouse apartments. Call Becky now. Summer 公寓安排 in all Gatehouse apartments. Call Becky now. Summer 公寓安排 in all Gatehouse apartments. 1-3 bed apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- nials; possible rent reduction for labor. 826-907-501 826-907-502 Sublease for the summer, 1-bedroom apartment, furnished. Call 841-5584. 4-5 Subletting apartment. It has 1 bedroom. Come by 503 Firewire Dice, Apr. 10 to 3 p.m. 4-12. CARFET CLEANING STEAMES. Rent the Pro. Rental rental. Locals call. 672-294-8000. 9-10 267-294-8000. Lease 2-bedroom furnished Meadowbrook apart- ment in summer months. Pool and tennis courts. 50%OFF. **Sublease—three bedroom townhouse, two baths,** **apartment, penni. tennis courts. You'll dock. Clos- 841-5055** **Cabinets:** 60+ Two bedroom unfurnished apartment for $124/month. Call after 4:00 p.m. #811-638-6188 FOR SALE 1 bedroom furnished apartment at 19 West, 14th. 2 bedroom furnished apartment at 17 West, 13th. Summer airbnb 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, with air conditioning, balcony, and crescent windows. 1971 Buick LaSacre, good condition, full power, cruise control, till wheel. N83-5279. 4-8 Directly from Petra, two alps rugs for carriage. 1970 Buick LaSacre. Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make use of them—1) As study guide, 2) For Class preparation, 3) For Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at ToP Excellent selection of new and used furniture and tools for the kitchen, bedroom and appliance Center, 7041. Manage the kitchen, bedroom and appliance Center, 7041. Manage the kitchen, bedroom and appliance Center, 7041. Manage the kitchen, bedroom and appliance Center, 7041. Manage The "Little Sterro Store" - Ray Audio - we don't sell it to us all the big guys, however, what we do is give them a lot of help with much better job of product selection. Getting in and out of our store is hard. And most of all delivering more performance in money - no stop by and visit the folks at flyers.com for great advice on buying big difference. 13 E 8th江 just off Main Ave. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialist. ALERT AEU LIFTER ELECTRIC, 843-909-2000, W.gh, 6 hrs. ELECTRIC, 843-909-2000, W.gh, 6 hrs. AKC APHGANS. Pet and show quality—champion blood lines. Call Diane F裂 911-454-8220 We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, microphones, at Audio Systems, 9th, ff Rhode Island. BY OWNER—Ranch style, shake roof on a landscaped landcrest or mires of trees, oceans, caves, waterfalls. 2-story indoor screen, Extra large family room, formal living room, 1/3 bath. 1/3 bath, full basement partially parapeted. 1-3/4 bath. full basement partially parapeted. Oak flooring, fully carpeted. Dishwasher. G.E. storage garage. Dining room. North edge of Alvamur golf course, near excellent fishing lake in Western country. Buy appointment 93-0358, Dr. C.J. Aikens $50.50 by appointment 93-0358, Dr. C.J. Aikens A Springtime Bug Bright Warp Volkwagen 1970- Well care for, runs great. 842-1791. 366-1950. 76 Dodge Mazda automatic transmission, V-8, 9-10 Mitsubishi automatic condition. 84-1625 with 8-5 ask for Gary 8-6 ask for Gary SAAB 65-14, 1965, restored, new engine, new base. SAAB 65-14, mechanically perfect, new base. 10-speed, 23" Distance special, 534 through all, Campi, tubuli special, inmunize (624-82), 6-pm. (30-40) Men's 10-speed, Mobikee, good condition, good price. 842.568, or leave message. 842.490, good price. Hart Javelin GF, SKis 5k, wc look, with coat jacket. bft boots. bft boots. bft boots. bft boots. Wax binder, app. Mona's size 8, $50. Downsizing. Knit your own jumper. yellow, black, women's large, $15 All items in excellent condition. ADVENT SPEAKER SALE. We are pleased to announce the first Advent sale in 8 years. We believe this is the best selling speaker in the world. The price is $299. Supply RAY AUDIO, 1 E. 8th Street. 4-6 Live venomous snakes, Egyptian Cobra, Puff aardvark, rat-eating mice, Baird's 182-367-671, eventuates 182-367-671 Men's 16-set Mollecornza, good condition, good fence. Men's 17-set Mollecornza, reasonable price. Excellent 19T1 Valeo AC - rate, reasonable price. 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Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1921 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1920 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1919 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1918 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1917 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1916 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1915 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1914 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1913 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1912 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1911 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1910 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1909 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1908 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1907 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1906 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1905 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1904 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1903 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1902 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1901 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1900 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1899 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1898 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1897 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1896 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1895 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1894 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1893 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1892 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1891 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1890 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1889 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1888 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1887 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1886 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1885 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1884 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1883 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1882 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1881 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1880 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1879 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1878 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1877 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1876 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1875 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1874 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1873 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1872 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1871 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1870 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1869 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1868 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1867 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1866 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1865 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1864 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1863 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1862 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1861 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1860 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1859 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1858 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1857 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1856 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1855 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1854 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1853 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1852 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1851 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1850 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1849 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1848 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1847 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1846 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1845 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1844 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1843 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1842 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1841 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1840 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1839 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1838 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1837 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1836 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1835 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1834 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1833 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1832 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1831 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1830 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1829 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1828 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1827 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1826 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1825 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1824 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1823 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1822 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1821 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1820 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1819 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1818 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1817 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1816 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1815 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1814 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1813 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1812 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1811 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1810 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1809 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1808 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1807 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1806 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1805 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1804 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1803 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1802 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1801 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1800 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1799 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1798 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1797 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1796 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1795 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1794 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1793 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1792 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1791 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1790 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1789 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1788 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1787 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1786 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1785 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1784 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1783 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1782 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1781 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1780 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1779 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1778 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1777 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1776 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1775 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1774 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1773 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1772 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1771 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1770 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1769 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1768 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1767 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1766 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1765 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1764 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1763 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1762 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1761 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1760 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1759 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1758 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1757 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1756 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1755 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1754 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1753 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1752 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1751 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1750 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1749 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1748 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1747 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1746 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1745 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1744 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1743 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1742 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1741 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1740 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1739 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1738 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1737 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1736 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1735 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1734 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1733 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1732 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1731 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1730 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1729 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1728 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1727 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1726 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1725 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1724 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1723 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1722 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1721 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1720 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1719 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1718 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1717 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1716 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1715 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1714 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1713 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1712 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1711 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1710 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1709 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1708 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1707 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1706 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1705 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1704 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1703 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1702 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1701 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1700 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1699 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1698 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1697 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1696 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1695 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1694 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1693 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1692 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1691 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1690 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1689 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1688 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1687 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1686 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1685 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1684 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1683 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1682 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1681 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1680 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1679 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1678 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1677 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1676 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1675 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1674 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1673 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1672 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1671 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1670 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1669 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1668 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1667 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1666 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1665 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1664 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1663 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1662 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1661 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1660 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1659 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1658 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1657 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1656 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1655 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1654 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1653 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1652 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1651 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1650 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1649 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1648 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1647 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1646 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1645 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1644 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1643 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1642 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1641 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1640 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1639 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1638 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1637 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1636 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1635 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1634 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1633 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1632 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1631 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1630 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1629 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1628 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1627 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1626 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1625 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1624 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1623 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1622 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1621 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1620 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1619 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1618 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1617 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1616 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1615 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1614 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1613 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1612 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1611 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1610 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1609 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1608 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1607 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1606 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1605 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1604 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1603 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1602 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1601 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1600 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1599 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1598 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1597 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1596 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1595 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1594 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1593 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1592 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1591 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1590 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1589 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1588 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1587 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1586 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1585 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1584 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1583 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1582 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1581 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1580 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1579 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1578 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1577 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1576 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1575 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1574 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1573 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1572 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1571 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1570 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1569 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1568 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1567 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1566 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1565 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1564 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1563 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1562 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1561 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1560 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1559 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1558 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1557 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1556 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1555 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1554 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1553 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1552 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1551 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1550 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1549 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1548 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1547 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1546 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1545 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1544 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1543 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1542 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1541 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1540 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1539 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1538 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1537 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1536 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1535 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1534 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1533 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1532 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1531 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1530 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1529 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1528 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1527 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1526 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1525 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1524 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1523 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1522 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1521 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1520 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1519 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1518 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1517 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1516 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1515 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1514 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1513 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1512 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1511 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1510 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1509 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1508 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1507 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1506 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1505 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1504 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1503 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1502 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1501 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1500 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1499 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1498 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1497 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1496 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1495 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1494 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1493 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1492 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1491 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1490 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1489 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1488 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1487 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1486 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1485 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1484 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1483 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1482 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1481 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1480 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1479 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1478 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1477 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1476 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn good, very 1475 Ainghong 3235 Call 8351 Runn 1971 Vega AC, AT, reasonable price. Excellent condition. Call Tom 841-6618 4-6 Thorens TD 165 turntable with cartridge $70, or best offer. Phone 841-864-456 4-5 AIRFRAME WATERbeds We have some great deals on Hi-Fi: MVMA TB-8 MVMA TB-400 headphones; CR-9020 3 head cars; $200. S.B.S. Lab II speakers $100 each. A.R. -5 speakers $150 each. Mila. com- puter modular system $250. Kaman 640 sequential display system $100. T.V. $280. RAY AUDIO — the little stereo store, with good deals. 15 Kast 8th. (Just off the road) Neev saving machine with buttonholder, good condition, low price *Call 82-2592* evening for sale. Many 25” Pouchet 10-speed bicycle (U8-6) or 14” Pouchet 10-speed bicycle (U9-10). Bargain $155 at Walmart. Call Cell Telford #424. Bargain $155 at Walmart. Call Cell Telford #424. 1976 Flat XI 19 Removable box. AM-PM FM. For info call: 862383 or 8643-1573. 4-6 FOOBSHAIL TABLE—Champion Coin, coin Excellent condition. 642-625, or 814-605. **BRANDS ONLY** 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition $225, 814-1537 4-7 AIRFRAME WATERDEGS AVAILABLE AT THE FIELDS STORE 714 MASS ST. 843-7970 Ludwig drum set, 6 piece, double bass, dulv- 良好 shum, good mic. Call 841-2529. 4-8 1728 Chevrolet Imagine 4D, PS, PB, AC. Must call 684-6916, for 5:00, leave 5:00. 4-7 1972 Chevrolet Impala, 400 cu. in. engine, PS- PB, AM FM microwave/radio: 6108-841-5266 4-856 Motorcycle - 1974 Honda CL3, 350—excellent condition. Fuel tank—up-age, 460 miles. Like new. Cost $800. Cali $810. 1973 Mandalay enclosure 125, 700 miles, helmet, helmet, excellent condition, call 841-5275. 4-7 Yamaha Guitar with case, good condition, nice sound, best offer. 845-2573. 4-8 60 mm Vivat telephon Porta Mount. 200. cell Kern at 84-1621-610. p. 19-mm a is best. beast. 1970 Kawasaki 500 front. frame and body kit, bluecockpit, windscreen, rear lights, with baggage rack real realr attacher at $600 Call 843-256-2800 www.kawasakidogs.com 124, laptop 240, headset, mug, Ta$ 50, suspension, stereo, C.B., call 811-5952. 4-8 HELP WANTED Must be women. We need 5 people immediately. Must have own transportation and be willing to travel. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-310-6, Lawrence Kirby Co. Will lead to full time number. Summer Jobs. Our HIIT plate-040 plus summer job is a paid position in New York, NY. Mature application form only. $250/month. Bronze Master application form only. $250/month. Office of Instructional Resources needs student hourly help to distribute materials in Strong Hall. Students must arrive at 3 p.m., Apr. 25, May 10 and 12 noon, p.M. May 11 through May 20. Apr. $25 per hour; May $45 per hour. Sirinlton Stocksley has immediate and deadline- able training for summer employment in all areas of the job market. Dagwaud's has opening for waitresses, cooks, and delivery drivers. Come by 643 Main or 658 Brownswood to reserve. Avon selling can help you earn money for college. Flexible hours, high $1 Call. Mellie Sells $125. LOST AND FOUND Summer work. Must relocate. Earn $10 monthly. Call 842-4723. 4-6 Information center accepting applications for April 15. Applicant should apply on April 16. 4-15 Local Lite Deliveries must know area well, with access to the nearest ADR. Daily Good daily call, Call 21-594-386-6 or 21-594-386- 188. *"Students"; 15 telephone receptacles for new telephones; 10 telephone receptacles for good guided safety, and house calls 9-12 and 12-6. found textbook between Oliver and Nalnath, upgrade from O'Neill to Flinton, Poetry a large volume. #643-8097 www.campus.edu/elc IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" Lost Gray & White Perlidan female cut near 10th Oily, Ohio. Reward: 841-3833 4-5 Found high school 1996 Camden H.S. r.t. infantils Master's equiv. in child psychiatry. Master's equiv. room, Rebehn Gymnastium, Rebehn Gymnastium. 19th & Mass. Lost-a a green warm-up, in room 404 of Wheath Hall If found, please call 834-692-5 404. Found a baseball glove. Call Steve, 864-1167 to identify. 4-5 Found an umbrella Monday in Blake. Call 841-2763 to identify. 4-5 7. Found—Wolkwagen key, Memorial Drive, 3-31- Found Call=841-3110 events. 4-6 You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That's $103 less than the youth fare you'll pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is to be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 0.8 Eur NOTICE MISCELLANEOUS LOST: $100.00 CAME If you can find it, you can use it for Treasure Hunt Clues on page 4-8 Swish Shop 629 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, cookers, clock televisions. Open daily 12- 8:30-3:37 PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Ubique/Quick Copy Center; Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Midnight. Gay Services Meeting. FILM — "A Woman's Place is in the House: A portrait of Elaine Nobile." Noble is an up from gay state senator from Texas and will be at 4:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Public Invited. Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. POWERFUL, SONY TC 55 TAPE 170, Retrocord (also other units to $60) to 60 capreos to $80) (Sony has a lot of capacitors to pay for it.) VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS! Brand new BP Goodman ARM-175 (16) - (155) radial tire cut to $80 each at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. Mountain ARM-175 (16) - (155) radial tire cuts to $45 each; (mattel) NEW SONY COMPONENT SYSTEM with AM- ulator from sample cut to 4785 at Ray Stonehomes CHEW OWNERS & *PICKUP OWNERS* New CHEW OWNERS & PICKUP OWNERS! New includes FFK in ST. Rockaway! Mounted on ST. Rockaway! CHIEV OWNEBIRD Pickup owner. Brand new CHIEV OWNEBIRD Pickup owner. Brand new cash $47 each. FTT included $12 each, but $ $5 843-9891 Floss sample $400 Lif. 12` dug. Sorry cut. Color is not available. 15` dag. Sorry cut. Reg. $400, cut to $12$. **Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo.** You name departures on major airlines. Europe from $299 and up. International rates. Roullet Passes, train schedules, catering rates. Euroline Toll. Multilingual call. Multiline Toll free: 1800-345-6780, 1800-345-6781. Pier1 imports associate store Harleu-Davidson 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 and Honda Cycles orizonS 1811 W. 64 843-3333 SUA Maupintour travel service ISO-2 chemical potentizer in a complete line of products available at Live Record 89, winter 94, 82nd Street, 30th Floor. Gauley Counseling Services. Call 842-7903, 612-911 for referrals. For socializing services. Personalized婚礼, ceremonies, Universal Life Ministry inquiries; Box 806, Lowry 24015 INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO EUROPE AND ISRAEL? STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER can help you travel with minimum cost. BOOK FREE FOR TOLL FREE 800-225-8034 4-5 TYPING I can string your tennis racket more economically than in any店. Call 843-6005-4-88. Whosever has been sending me the "survey" on April Fool Day for the past three years, don't forget to send them a note on the joke by reviewing your? Curious? 4.6 I need help with Samishn 116. If you can help me, please contact me. Incoming Med Students—Bincularne SIGCO micro- good condition, asking $500 Call Jerry Lynn SERVICES OFFERED I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf For Heima An April Fool I fear to be. With an agonistic ambition such as we, the wind and rain must be given over her. On March winds bring the give birth rebellion on March winds bring the rebellion. We need a Greek Church in KC-Saturday night. April 9. If going or interested in attending traditional Greek Easter service, please call Lea Pfeiffer. Typtist/editor, IBM Pica欣, ediQuality work typeit.dissertations.tisssilence.com Welcome 842-219-7237 THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you. 8th Manhattan or phone 412-360-7544. Thank you. Math tutoring, computerized supervised library test preparation, math preparation, math tutoring, math preparation Drive-in Clinic 411130 for most imported cars Icelandic TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUP-BOARD 10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CARG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Kansas Union 843-1211 quality travel since 195 TYPING Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6558 75e a page, tf. **TYPHING** - Many KU students have been pleased to agree that your business, Carl Harvey or Linda Lindsay, is on their list. 9th and Iowa "A different kind of bar Thesis, term paper, ce. Reasonable rates. Call Bai, 841-6477 4-14 Known for hybrid-term papers, thesis, mike. Known for hybrid-semester spelled out, mike. 843-5054, Mr. Wright. Will you type your paper with TLC. TLC papers and specialty paper from Kaven at 864-831-051 861-719-052 Professional typing. Term papers, case studies, mats. IBM Selected. Near campus. 842-769-5030. Term Payoffs. Profeed, Alma. Corrected. Term Payoffs. Alma. Corrected. Walsh, 1712 Albany. 943-1522. 4-15 Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for great typing, 843-1314 days, 842-8998 covering all areas. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." WANTED - Pinball - Foosball Roommate for summer or winter to short-term students. Must be legal resident in the country. Classes on Law or good student pro- grams are required. The Lounge 710 Mass. 843-2182 Tutor for Gee, 113, Maps and Mapping. Call 842-7052 or 841-9162 after 3 p.m. Male roommate wanted for large furnished apartment on bus route—keep clear 842-9732. Formals to share beautiful three bedroom basement and pool house on the sunny side. One opening for sunroom only, one for surgery only. Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday Two roommates needed for next fall at Towers, please contact Gail at 864-6782 after 2:00 p.m. MORRIS Lock & Key NAISMITH HALL Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Boatman needed: now at Jayhawk Towers Male freeman: required a regular价, pre- fered salary, valid # 841-1223. CAMP COUNSELORS, Private south-west Michigan camp camps swimming with students, tennis, golf, riflery, campervay, nature, bus driver, dishwashers Northfield, Illinois. 6099, Illinois Northfield, Illinois. 6099 DANCERS-Beach. Impacts Productions needs GO-GO beyond Beauty. Contours and training available. Contours and training available. DEADBOLTS INSTALLED Mollowe roommate to share furnished apartment this summer. Poor, old dishwasher, heavy coworker. NAISMITH HALL MUSICIANS—Impact Productions, Entertainment Management and Booking. Always looking for new, gold goods. Rock country, blue grass, blue gum. Books from Ken Stone, 816-849-2034 (collect) for auditions. - Bud on Tap - Pool Home of The Chalk Hawk TRY - Pool - Snooker HILLCREST BILLIARDS Pin-Ball - Pin-Ball - Air Hockev - Ping Pong - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Snake Hawk Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 days a Week - No One Under 18 Admitted 8 Tuesday, April 5,1977 University Dally Kansan S FALLEY'S Dogs $ 69^{\mathrm{c}} $ Extra Lean Ground Beef...2 lbs. or over...lb. 99ᵃ Swift Premium Bologna ...16 oz. 79ᵃ Ohse Party Assortment ...16 oz. $1 19 R. B. Rice's Chile ...16 oz. 99ᵃ 2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices Good Tuesday thru Saturday April 5 - April 9 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES U.S.D.A. Choice Rib Steaks $1 39 lb. Wilson Corn King Bacon 12 oz. 99¢ Swift Premium Brown & Serve Sausage 8 oz. 79¢ Thomas Wilson Boneless Hams halves lb. $279 Taste-O-Sea Perch Fillets 16 oz. $1 39 OPEN 7 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT (WE'RE HERE WHEN YOU NEED US) Michelob Beer 6 pack 12 oz. Cans or Bottles $159 R.C.-Diet Rite or Seven Up 8 pack 16 oz. Bottles 99 c Plus Deposit 8 pack 99c 16 oz. Bottles Plus Deposit Early California Extra Large Ripe Olives...6 oz. 49¢ Three Diamond Mandarin Oranges...16 oz. 3 for $1 Bruce's Cut Yams...16 oz. 3 for $1 Kraft Miracle Whip...32 oz. 99¢ Gala Dinner Napkins...50 ct. pkg. 49¢ Shurfine Peaches 29 oz. 49c Shurfine Peaches 29 oz. 49c Shurfine Pears 29 oz. 49c 29 oz. 49c Shurfine Pears 29 oz. 49c Stokely Fruit Cocktail 3 17 oz. $1 Cans Stokely Fruit Cocktail 3 17 oz. $1 Failey's Cottage Cheese 24 oz. 79c Ctn. 29 oz. 49c 3 17 oz. $1 Cans 24 oz. 79c Ctn. Gold Medal Flour...5 pound bag 69°c Del Monte Pineapple in natural juice ...J5¼ oz. 39°c Sun Maid Seedless Raisins ...8 oz. 59°c Big Valley Frozen Sliced Peaches...20 oz. 69°c Meadow Gold Ice Cream ...½ gallon 89°c Dad's Root Beer...1/2 gallon 69¢ Boden's Orchard Fruit Drinks...64 oz. 69¢ Van Camp Pork and Beans...16 oz. 3 for $1 Del Monte French Style Green Beans...16 oz. 4 for $1 Del Monte Golden Corn...17 oz. 4 for $1 Del Monte Sweet Peas...17 oz. 3 for $1 Del Monte Chopped Spinach...15 oz. 4 for $1 Three Diamond Chunk Light Tuna...6½ oz. 49¢ Charmin Bathroom Tissue...4 roll pkg. 79¢ Beautiful Easter Lillies $299 Regular '4" Quart Box 99c Red - Ripe California Strawberries Quart 99c Box C & H Powdered or Brown Sugar 3 1 pound $1 Boxes 99c each Angel Food Pan-O-Cakes 99c each Sugar 3 1 pound $1 Boxes Fresh Tender Asparagus lb. 79¢ Golden Sweet Potatoes lb. 25¢ Fresh Pineapple each 59¢ California Tender Snappy Celery & Carrots 3 bags for $1 Fern Hanging Baskets $6⁹⁹ Bright Red Radishes or Green Onions 3 for 49¢ Sure Roll On Deodorant reg. $2.31 2½ oz. $1⁴⁹ Head and Shoulders Shampoo reg. $2.00 4 oz. $1⁴⁹ Falley's Fresh Jelly Roll each 49¢ C & H Pure Cane Sugar 5 pound 79c Bag Limit one with $10^+ purchase 5 pound Bag 79c Cool Whip Birdseye Cool Whip 9 oz. 49c SAVE 9 oz. 49c FALLEY'S $4^{01} FALLEY'S SAVE Over Falley's Low Discount Prices $401 with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S BETTY CROCKER ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX 15½ oz. 69¢ Regular Limit 1 with coupon 95c Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S KEEBLER DELUXE GRAHAMS 13½ oz. 79¢ Regular Limit 1 with coupon 99c Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S WHEATIES 18 oz. 79¢ Regular Limit 1 with coupon 93c Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S KRAFT SOFT PA KAY MARGARINE 2-8 oz. 49¢ Regular Tubs 75c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S GLADE SOLID AIR FRESHENER 6 oz. 3 for $1 Regular Limit 3 with coupon 3 for $1.89 Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S Reynolds Wrap ALUMINUM FOIL 12" x 25" 3 for $1 Regular Limit 3 with coupon 3 for $1.23 Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S MOIST AND EASY CAKE MIX 13½ oz. 69¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S KRAFT MINIATURE MARSHMALLOWS 10 oz. 3 for $1 Regular Pkg. 3 for $1.34 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S KRAFT PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE 8 oz. 2 for $1 Regular Pkg. 2 for $1.34 Limit 2 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S WHEATIES 18 oz. 79¢ Regular Limit 1 with coupon 93c Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE 10 oz. $3.99 Regular Limit 1 with coupon 55.09 Good thru April 9 COUPOON FALLEY'S KRAFT SOFT DAK KAY MARGARINE 2-8 oz. Tubs 49c Regular 75c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPON FALLEY'S GLADE SOLID AIR FRESHENER 6 oz. 3 for $1 Regular 3 for $1.89 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPON FALLEY'S Reynolds Wrap 25 American Flat FALLEY'S MOIST AND EASY CAKE MIX 13½ oz. 69¢ Regular 79c Limt 1 with coupon Good thru April 9 COUPON C City form stays; Clark top victor By STEVE STINGLEY Staff Renorter The city of Lawrence will continue to operate under the commission-city manager form of government with two new city commissioners. In the general city elections yesterday, voters overwhelmingly turned down a question on the ballot call for a change in the form of city government from compulsory to voluntary unofficial results, 6,279 persons voted against the change and 2,654 voted for it. Barkley Clark, Ed Carter and Jack Rose won city commission seats in yesterday's election. Losing candidates were Carl Mibcek, Muriel Paul and Jerv Aberlson. CLARK, A University of Kansas professor of law, finished first in the commission race with 5,311 votes. He was named co-chair of the selection motion who will retain his commission seat. Carter, a Lawrence businessman, finished second, with 4,708 votes. Rose, business manager for the chemistry department at KU, finished third with 4,71 votes, and will serve two years. Beck, musicist for Park and Carter, will serve four-year terms. Mibuck, the only other incumbent seeking re-election, was ousted. He finished fourth in the race with 4,127 votes. Paul received 2,980 votes and Albertson received 2,281. BOTH MIBECK and Paul apparently received strong support from KU students, based on voting patterns in precincts with large numbers of students. Three elected to school board Pine, Route 4, a businessman and farmer, Pine, the field of six candidates with 5,449 seats. Rodger Pine, Robert Davis and Bill Hopkins were the unofficial winners of yesterday's school board election. None of the three now serve on the board. In second place was Davis, 1 Wib. St., a former professor who is teaching will be a teaching parent at the O'Connell Youth Ranch when it is built south of Lawrence. He received 4,384 Hopkins, 1299 W. 27th St., a professor of human development and public health. University of Denver, 4, 482 yds². Last night, it asked they looked forward to their terms in office, each spoke of his priorities. Pine, Davis and Hopkins all said the hard work of their supporters resulted in their success. "We must provide the best learning environment we can for our children," Pine said. "We need well-qualified teachers and adequate facilities." "The kids are my top priority." Davis said. "We must provide the kids an opportunity to play." Hopkins said he intended to educate himself better so he'd know what the needs of his students were. The losing candidates were M. D. (Arkle) Vaughn, 315 Homestead Dr., 3,994 votes; Paul Wolfe, 468 Homestead Dr., 3,614 votes; Crews, 206 Camden Lock, 3,243 votes. Applications for Kansan now available Applications for summer and fall Kausan editor and business manager positions are now available in the Student Senate office, the offices of the dean of men and dean of women and in 106 Fulbright programs. For more information, p.m. this Friday to 106 Fulbright. The Kausan board will interview candidates the afternoon of Tuesday, April 12. The two newly elected commissioners, Carter and Rose, will join Clark, Commissioner Marie Arngeringer and Commissioner John Murnan make up the five-member city commission. All three of the commissioners elected yesterday said they were pleased to see the change in the form of Lawrence government voted down. if the change had been approved by the voters, all of the commissioners would have CITY COMMISSION Barkley Clark 5,311 Ed Carrier 4,708 Rosemary 4,478 Carl Mibec 4,127 Muriel Paul 2,866 Albertson 2,860 SCHOOL BOARD Roger Pine 5,449 Bob Davis 4,354 Bill Hopkins 4,082 M. D. Vaughn 3,994 Paul Wolfe 3,614 Barbara Crews 3,343 CHANGE TO MAYOR-COUNCIL Yes...2,654 No...6,279 served only until the next city election, the form of government would have been made CLARK SAID he "believed in the present form of government" and had expected the question calling for the change to lose. He then asked if it would be advocated retaining the commission-city manager system, saying that it had worked well for Lawrence and that it would continue to work well. He also had predicted the change to last night's unofficial results indicated. Carter said that the results on the change of government question didn't surprise him, an officer in a government that was the problem, if there was a problem, but how that form was ROSE SAID he was pleased that the present form would be continued. During his campaign, he emphasized that the people of Lawrence had to decide whether to make the change, and said the issue could be up to only the commission candidates. Asked why he thought he won, Clark said he was well known because of his long involvement in Lawrence city government. Clark has been a commissioner the past four years and before that was on the city planning commission. Clark also attributed his victory to being perceived as a moderate and having strong support from KU students and Lawrence businessmen. CARTER SAID that he could think of no strong support from any specific group of candidates in his district to support, Carter, district manager for Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., said he was honored that voters had placed confidence in him and that he would try to "live up to the demands." Rose attributed his victory to the fact that during his campaign he talked about the issues that most interested the people of Lawrence. Carter said that he hoped to "pull the city of Lawrence together" and wanted "the people to rally around what's happening, the people to take part in what's happening and get involved," he emphasized that citizens needed to be part of decision making in the city. Clark said that two of his first actions during his second term as commissioner would be to consider having a mayor to direct the new job being done by the city manager. Rose, who was a city commissioner from 1971 to 1975, said that he would stress city services during his new term. Because city government is a large and complicated business, he said, he wants to establish "good relations" with city employees. KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Staff photo Vol. 87,No.120 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas BENEDICT MONTESQUE Barklev Clark and Jack Rose smile after city election victories Senate to vote on extra funding It was this version that the entire House approved. Wednesday April 6,1977 The House of Representatives voted yesterday for the increase, which had been requested by the University because this year's budget was underway and expected. The Senate had already passed a supplemental appropriations bill, but it was amended by the House Ways and Means Committee in KU 112. The Kansas Senate is expected to vote this morning on whether to increase supplemental appropriations for the University of Kansas from $276,800 to $364,020. If the Senate accepts the House amendments, the bill will go to Gov. Robert Ritter and be approved by the House-Senate conference committee to work out a compromise between the two THE BILL also includes an increase in the ceiling on expenditures of general fees received by the University, from $9,783,527 to 10,137,202. Additional money won't actually be given to KU, but the bill will increase the amount of money the University can spend from its general fees. A capital improvements bill that includes $17.3 million for additions to Robinson Gymnasium and Malet Hall is scheduled to be introduced Tuesday. The bill has already passed the Senate. The main appropriations bill for Kansas is scheduled to be voted on by the House bill. The bill includes appropriations for KU salaries, retirement benefits, utilities and more. the House Ways and Means Committee reported it to the House Monday. The committee recommended that a proposed 7 per cent increase in faculty salaries for all Regents schools be cut to 6 per cent and that the number of faculty positions operating expenses be cut to 7 per cent. Backers of the reduction in faculty salaries said Monday that classified employees deserved a larger increase than 2.5 per cent proposed by Bennett. They said the faculty salaries and increase classified employees' salaries. THE SENATE has approved the bill and Chancellor Archie Dykes has said he opposed exchanging a larger classified employee salary increase for a smaller faculty salary increase, even though he favored a larger pay raise for some classified employees. City okays Bowersock agreement The Lawrence City Commission last night approved a new Bowersock contract which will place control of six acres of Bowersock property east of the Massachusetts Street Kansas River Bridge in the hands of the city. The contract was approved 4-0. "This generally carries out everything that was in the agreement originally," Buford Watson, city manager, said. The contract was assigned 10. The contract, which also gives the city the option of maintaining the Bowersock dam, ants in 1872 lease which placed control of city-owned land with a private company in return for construction and maintenance of the dam. City commissioners have six months after the title closure to decide whether the Bowersock property should be the site of a new city hall. If the city hall is built on the site, the cost of acquiring the land would be $1. If not, the land will cost $2,000. The $2,000 is now being held in escrow and would go back into the city account if a new address were needed. Commissioners have hinged the city hall issue on the outcome of a foreclosure suit against Kansas Fibreboard, one of the firms involved in the Bowersock contract. Commissioners had previously considered the possibility of buying the Fibreboard property and turning it into a parking lot for the proposed court hall. Until the present litigation is settled, no action can be taken on the proposal. UNDER THE new contract, the city will have the option of maintaining the Bowerhouse. The Stephen Hill family, owners of Kansas Fibreboard and Bowersock Mills & Power Co., can maintain a utility plant on the site indefinitely. Lawrence can gain ownership of the Bowersock dam, a maintenance shop and an electricity-generating facility on the land where it is located. City wishes to buy it an appraised value of $50 million. In other business, the commission deferred for one week discussion of police department guidelines concerning regulation of lobbying by a police representative at the state capitol in Topeka. It was revealed last week that a Lawrence police officer was lobbying all-full-time staffers. Next Tuesday's meeting will be the first for newly elected commissioners Jack Rose and Ed Carter, who will join Barkley Clark, Rugger and Donald Dibbs on the commission. Dancers' budget requests axed The Student Senate Cultural Affairs Committee became the first committee to complete budget deliberations last night by creating $3,767 for five groups asking for funds. The five groups had asked for $11,800. The Academic Affairs and Service committees also met last night and heard requests from 15 organizations asking for $25,206. The Cultural Affair's Committee's largest cut was made in the Tau Dai Sigma Dance Festival, which is held annually. Pianist Tania Achot has yet to discover whether she likes it here 1986 to $1,591. The society had requested about $3,000 for a new dance floor, but the committee decided the University should provide these funds. The committee recommended that the University Dance Company not be funded at all but share part of the money allocated to the Tau Sigma Dance Society. Tau Sigma tentatively got $50 for records and tapes and $1,200 for choreography. The recommended the stipulation that this money be shared with the University Dance Company, which had requested $1,000. THE COMMITTEE also recommended that about $1,574 be cut from the society's request in such areas as printing, advertising and guest artist expenses. The request included $600 to pay a dance instructor to give a workshop. The committee said it couldn't fund this request and the students attended the workshop last year. The KU Folk Dance Club's request was cut from $735 to $285 by the committee, which said that most of the people participated. The KU Folk Dance Club, Lawrence residents and not KU students. The committee recommended that the University Dance Company receive only part of Tau Sigma's funds because of the small number of KU students participating in the group. The committee said that about eight students were in the credit course. THE COMMITTEE cut the International Club's request from $3,500 to $3,000. The committee cut the club's request of $1,560 to $1,000. The committee cuts the fund from the festival fund request of $250. The committee also recommended that Operation Friendship receive its total budget. THE ACADEMIC Affairs Committee, which can allocate $8,552, heard eight groups requesting a total of $11,568. The groups: Married pianists find tours keep them apart By PAM EKEY Staff Reporter "Piano literature is so big ... so vast, that one human life is not enough to play all the works you can get for the piano." Tania Langer internationally known pianist, said recently. Achot,牙作 Sequeira Costa, KU's first Cordella Brown Murphy Professor of Music, performed last Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall. She has reserved time in her European concert schedule to spend the past six weeks in Lawrence with her husband. Between Lawrence's annual trip plan to make Lawrence their home. Home for a concert pianist is temporary most of the year. "Since both my husband and I are pianists, I don't think we can settle anywhere, because we have to keep on traveling," Achot said. "When we're free, and when we're not giving concerts, then we'll stay in Lawrence." COSTA SPENDES more time in Lawrenne, because of his teaching job at KU nough. Achot and Costa don't tour together. Two consecutive piano performances in any country are too much, Achot said, so the couple must be away not only from home, but also from each other for long periods of time. "When we are together, we're really surrounded to see each other." Achot said. The purpose of Achoi's visit here with Caiman was to "sort of not forget we were married." See PIANISTS page three THE COUPLE, who perform works for each other to gain mutual advice and guidance. Achoit and her husband don't work on the same piano pieces at the same time. The selection of pieces is broad enough that there is no need to, although the two sometimes practice different pieces by the same composer, she said. Women in Law ( $50); Chicano Law Students Association ( $86); Student Council for Exceptional Children ( $73); School Board ( $19); School Council ($1,275); Kansas Defense Project ($4,113); Alpha Rho Gamma ($423); Association of Black Social Workers Ralph Munyan, student body vice president, was asked by an Academic Affairs Committee member for an interpretation on the status of the Engineering School Council's budget request. THE ENGINEERING School Council is ranked as a Class C organization in the Student Association code. Class C organizations can't receive funding from the Senate if they disbuse funds to other groups. At Monday's meeting, some committee members questioned whether their membership could be granted. Muyan said last night the council was eligible for funding because the groups that received funds from it weren't independent of it. "The groups that get money never see a cent," Munyan said. "The council still controls it." The Student Services committee, which can allocate $34,701, heard requests from seven groups requesting a total of $13,637. The groups: National Lawyers Guild $450); Volunteer Clearing House ($1,046); Women's Coalition $(2,505); Alpha Phi Omega $(1,057); Campus Veterans ($1,755); Commission on the Status of Women $(2,050); Native American Alliance $(2,355). The Academic Affairs and Student Services committees will conduct final deliberations on the budget proposals tonight. The Finance and Auditing committee, which also met last night to complete the review of the budget, will create a subcommittee which will meet to develop the committee's recommendations for the student activity fee. The F & A committee will make the recommendations CULTURAL AFFAIRS REQUEST RECOMMENDED International Club 8,300 3,000 University Dance Co. 7,000 800 University of Florida 500 900 Operation Friendship 500 100 Society for Social Work 100 5,400 2 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 University Dally Kansan News Digest From our wire services Free food stamps proposed WASHINGTON - President Carter asked Congress yesterday to stop charging food stamp recipients for the stamps. But about $450 million in food stamp aid to families with income above the poverty levels would be taken away under Carter's proposal. The President promised to veto any congressional changes in his proposal that would increase by more than $100 million a year the program's current projected budget. The authorizing legislation for the program, which now helps about 5.44 million families buy groceries each month, expires September 30. Two congressional committees have blocked the extension. Floods hit Avvalachians Rain-aware rivers inlandated hills in the hilly Appalachians yesterday, daytime, communications and forcing thousands to evacuate or wait for rescue. At least 10 people have been killed in the floods. "This will be the highest flood ever recorded on the upper Cumberland," a National Weather Service spokesman said. The worst flooding was in southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky, where the Cumberland, Big Sandy and Kentucky rivers topwalt flood-walls to build to protect "I'd say it's the worst in 40 years," Lou Bondurant, a Red Cross spokesman in Ontario, said. "Hundreds of people are being taken to shelters. Thousands of families are." Cyclone death toll nears 1.000 DACCA, Bangladesh—The death toll in cyclones that lashed southeastern Bangla was last weeked was expected to reach 1,000 with an estimated 55,000 people dead. A government spokesman said the official toll was 682. However, more than 400 persons were listed as missing, including 200 crewmen of fishing boats which went down in the Bay of Bengal and 200 passengers aboard a ferry which capsized in the Padma River near Dagca, the spokesman said. The cyclones struck Friday, Saturday and Sunday in a 300-square-mile area extending from the Rav of Renge洽 coast to about 50 miles north of Dacca. e emergency aid for dogs Medical teams and rescue parties set out Monday on foot for the hardest-hit area. Moscow taxicabs boycotted MGCSW—Anny over sharp fare increases, Muscovites are deserting the city's taxis in the first major consumer covetit in memory in the Soviet capital. Tax driver, who once cruised the streets bestowing rides on customers who begged and bribed for lifts, now升上 line by the score at tax stations hoping for (present) A state-controlled taxi monopoly said the increases, which went into effect April 1, were justified by better service. Western-style inflation is supposed to be * It now costs the equivalent of 41 cents to travel a mile, double the old rate. The basic fee for starting a trip also has risen, from 13 to 26 cents. KC will get 'Screw' trial WICHITA—A federal judge yesterday moved the obscurity trial of Screw magazine publisher Alvin Goldstein to Kansas City, Kan., because he said a local antipomography crusade led by Sedgwick County Attorney Vern Miller prejudiced the case. U. S. District Judge Frank Theis, who will continue to hear the case when it resumes April 18, accepted Kanata's plea to attend a hearing before the trial be moved to his native New York. Goldstein has charged that federal officials maneuvered to have him tried in Wichita, where public opinion of allegedly pornographic materials would be more antagonistic than in the East. He had been trying to get the trial moved from Wichita since his indictment by a federal grand jury in Wichita in 1974. Eveglass cost protested WASHINGTON (AP)—You may have paid an inflated price for your last pair of eyeglasses because of state regulations that restrict competition among opticians and optometrists, optical retailers tested yesterday. Almost all state regulations affecting eyeglasses *came out of smoke-filled air*, and the number of individual opticians and optometrists to keep the larger, more efficient operator out of their states. William Schwartz, vice president of Ochs, an East Coast optical retailer, said Herbert Haft, president of Dart Drug, which sells glasses in Virginia and Maryland, said the profit markup on a pair of glasses might be as much as 400 to 500 per pair. "The reason the profits are so high is that the field is tightly restricted and the public has no opportunity to get price information for a role. Senate subcommittee on small business. Schwartz said state boards and state societies of optometrists and opticians existed for one reason: "to artificially upgrade the business of selling eyeglasses into a professional status so one can hang a mirror on the wall and charge more for eyewearers." "These self-serving state boards are controlled by the very interests they are interested in." In Connecticut, for example, there is a four-year apprenticeship requirement, he said. Schwartz contended this requirement was insufficient, although of opticians and keep optical prices up. In New York, he said, "It's easier to become a doctor than to appear as an app." Haid said that in Virginia board regulation, employers must be "so onerous and almost can't advertise." "The public is interested in whether it pays $130 or $50 for a pair of glasses. But it is very difficult to get this price information out." Haft said. Vance gains support of Senate committee despite talk deadlock Asked by reporters after a two-hour briefing by the committee if he had the panel's support despite the stalemate in his walks, Vance replied, "Yes, I feel we do." WASHINGTON (UPI)—Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said yesterday he believed the Carter Administration had won the support of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in its strategic arms negotiating stance with the Soviet Union. Seen, Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., said, "Not one word of criticism was said about the way Secretary Vance comported himself. There were no complaints." And there was full support of the committee." Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., a hardliner on U.S.-Soviet strategic negotiations, said the Carter position was "fundamentally right." and SKIPDEVOL, WORLD'S GREATEST BANJO PLAYER FRIDAY & SATURDAY, APRIL 8 & 9 AT PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. and CLAUDE "FIDDLER" WILLIAMS Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION Meanwhile, in Washington State, 25 candidates competed in the first round of the race for the congressional seat left vacant by formeriams became Secretary of Transportation. Every Eve, a17:30 & 9:30 Sat, Sun Mon, Tue intelligent, Engaging, 1st-Class Entertainment ART CARNE LILY TOLLIN Granada 10 (644) 789-2000 / Suspensión 11 (644) 789-2300 In Georgia, Wyche Fowler Jr., a member of the Atlanta council since 1969, got 62 per cent of the vote in the runoff election against John Lewis. Lewis, who has been active in the Black Belt movement decade, resigned as head of the Black Voter Education project to make the race. A HOTLY CONTESTED STATE for mayor in Overland Park, the state's fourth largest city. The president of Atlanta's city council was elected to Congress yesterday to fill the seat vacated by United Nations' Ambassador Andrew Young, and two incumbent mayors took leads in their bids for reelection. President to sign reorganization bill An Epic Fantasy of War & Peace "THE LATE SHOW N.W. 7 JUNE 8 TO Sat.Sun Hill 10:30 PC Hillcrest Ends Thursday 10 Academy Award Nominations IN MADISON, Wis., Mayor Paul Soglin, a liberal Democrat, had a lead over Alderman Anthony Amato, a conservative Republican. Amato had led in the first election, but didn't get the more than 50 per cent necessary for an outright victory. Democrat Ben Sykes slipped past republican George Fryer in a battle that could have been a near victory. In Los Angeles, Mayor Thomas Bradley, first black mayor of the nation's third largest city, was getting 35 per cent of the vote over a field of 11 challengers. Bradley needed more than 50 per cent to avoid a runoff. "ROCKY" "THE Starring LVESTLE STALLONE Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. 1:45 By The Associated Press Hillcrest Young's seat filled; mayor of L.A.leading in election Epic Fantasy in War & Peace Ends norway "WIZARDS" Eve. 7:30 & 9:15 Sat.Sun.Mat. 2:30 Variety 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped underwater. AIRPORT JZZ 747 Eve. 7:30 & 10:00 Eve. 7:30 & 10:00 Hillcrest Ends Tuesday MOTHER. JZZ & SPEED —Plus—— "VANISHING POINT" Show starts at 7:15 Sunset WASHINGTON (UPF) - President Jimmy Carter will sign a bill that authorizes government reorganization and he is expected to make his own office the first target. The bill will give Carter authority to transfer, consolidate or abolish many—but not all—agencies subject to veto by either house of Congress. It was learned that Carter's staff already has been hard at work on making the training sessions more efficient. The Office of Management and Budget has been conducting a "zero-base" review of the about 15 offices and councils in the White House to see how many should be The Office of Management and Budget and the County of Economic Advisers are required to report to the State Commission. building industry in the expanding Kansas City suburb. TAX LEVIES, bond issues and various municipal proposals were on ballots in the House. Sykes, who supported controls on the builders, got 6,400 votes to 6,388 for Fryer. He was also the most popular in other mayoral elections, Sylvester Powell Jr. won election in Mission, Eugene Alt was victorious in Leawood, Alfred Winslow was victorious in Shawnee and Thomas A. Seewart sent in Shawnee. Voters in Emporia rejected a bond issue a new police position but they approve the bond issue. A fancy restaurant dinner, without the price favor. 290 W. Lawrence Lawrence, MA Open 11 a.m.-9 p.M. Daily In Riley County, a 1-cent sales tax went down to defeat, while residents in Ottawa voted not to sell the Franklin County Nursing Home. Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN $4.50 Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT ADVENT SPEAKER SALE LAST WEEK - LAY-A-WAY NOW! BOSS The little stereo store RAY AUDIO 125.3th, 04-07 The speakers at Ray Audio are selected to sound as good in every respect, including frequency, noise, as any speaker of any price. Hi-Fi & Sterro Review magazine agree that their response & overall performance will be noteworthy in speaker, regardless of size or cos1. 13 E. 8th 842-2047 To hear just how much better our speakers sound, come in and hear the Advent. At Ray Audio, the little store that offers a big difference. THURS. EVENING TILL 8:00 LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE & 7th Spirit balcony present the Billy SPEARS BAND Friday & Saturday—April 8th & 9th $3.00 cover—Showtime 9:00 p.m. - SPECIAL - GORDON CLEVELAND BAND In the balcony Sat., 12 to 3:30 a.m. 7th & Mass. 842-6930 up with People in cooperation Lawrence High Haskell Indian Junior College Up with People Musical entertainment for the entire family Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Tickets: SUA Office, Lawrence High School, Haskell Indian Jr. College, Rusty's IGA stores $3.50 public/$2.50 students Get There with famolare Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street MID-CROSS STYLE SHOE WITH WEDGE AND BACK BACK STRAP. STANLEY Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop FAIRDLAKE FAIRDLAKE 3 9th ND Students sail on land in 'trikes' AWAY FROM THE MARKET Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Randy Schlitter leads Sailtrikes on 25th street ZERCHER PHOTO ZERCHER PHOTO SAVE • SAVE • SAVE • $1.00 ON PROCESSING OF ANY ROLL OF FILM Easter Sale! this coupon good for $1.00 TOWARD THE PROCESSING OF A ROLL OF FILM GOOD AT ANY ZERCHER PHOTO DEALER AUTHORIZED BY ZERCHER PHOTO EXPIRATION MAY 15, 1977 look at paper. For a good look at the times of your life. ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Washington Square, Kansas this coupon good for $1.00 TOWARD THE PROCESSING OF A ROLL OF FILM GOOD BY ANY ZERCHER PHOTO SALEHIR AUTHORIZED BY ZERCHER PHOTO EXPIRATION MAY 15, 1977 By RICK THAEMERT They sail on dry land. Their ship, called a sailfreer, resembles a large, long tricycle on a paddleboard. ALTHOUGH A knowledge of sailing is helpful, it's not necessary for learning to use a headboard or a board to tack, or control headboard to reach, or control crosswinds; and to anticipate gusts. A rope, called the mainsheet, extends from side to side, to control the wind's effect. "It's not something that has a big motor in it to get around in," Gerry Pferfe, Hays senior, said. "It doesn't take much talent to start an engine and drive around, but it's an art to sail. It's a thing of beauty in itself, and you're using nature to do it." Although trikes are designed to get between two and three times the speed of the wind, he said. It wasn't advisable to sail in such conditions, because the speed between 20 and 30 miles an hour are the best. Kansas gusts are ideal for sailors like the Sea Wolf he has reached sailing speeds near 50 mph. Q Staff Reporter HOWEVER, Earl Budke, Hays freshman and owner of one of two Sailiriks in Lawrence, said he often couldn't resist the challenge of sailing in high winds. Most Kansas sailing buffs worship large reservoirs and spirited wings. But three University of Kansas roommates have found a way to sail without getting wet. double paper for a good look at the times of your life. ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas "Sometimes, we get crazy and go out when it's ready to storm and there are 40 men in line." Wednesday, April 6. 197 But, there's not much danger of tipping over a trike, he said. It's common among sailors to see who can come closest to tipboard on the water and ride on two wheels—called "hiking out." Fleeter said, "We've had some fun wreckers, but it's nothing dangerous like it." Saltriker also have races and take group excursions to other towns. "I LOOKS kind of strange when we all come pulling into a small town." Pfeifer Saltirrites are legally classified as bicycles, but, Pfeifer said he rarely crushed on streets because "the traffic in Lawrence is kind of mean." A driver must be able to control his trip. Widow is about as wide as a Volkswagen, kid is about half the height of a car. But the sail can be taken off a trike or not be used when the wind isn't favorable. Then the sailors resort to foot power. Three meters tall must that make the trike versatile. Pfefer said. Pfeifer started toying with the idea of sailing trikes in the sixth grade, when he and a friend built a wooden go-cart with a shower curtain sail. HSI FRIEND, Randy Schlitter, has since become a manufacturer of Saltflakes and Nitrate. Schlitter said he had tried for three years and finally had managed to perfect a sail-equipped vehicle that could buck, or oppose, Kansas winds. Schlitter is now producing two types of Sailkrikes: a basic, steel-framed trike costing $497 and a professional, fiberglass-framed trike costing $686. When Pfetler gets the time and money, he plans to do more cross-country travel. He said spring and summer were the best times to take long trips. Rans Co. has distributed many models in the Midwest and California. The Budkes and Pfifer sail a few hours a week, usually in the parking lot behind their buildings. "YOU CAN almost bank on a strong south-southwestern wind in the spring." Peifer said. "That means good sailing to the north, east or west." Pfeiffer said he was convinced that the sailors he knew would continue the sport the crew had been using. The seriousness of that commitment is exemplified by Schlitter, who, at his wedding last summer, used Saltrikes to sail away from the church. He guided a two-seater and his attendants, including Pfeifer, guided a one-seater. 'Killer' bee myths, facts to be explored at lecture Larid movies of "killer" bees attacking on command and are deplorable representatives of the African honeybee who lives Charles Michener, professor of entomology. Michener and Orley R. Taylor Jr., associate professor of entomology, will lecture from 7:30 to 9 tonight in the Museum of Natural History on the characteristics of the African honeybee and its spread in South America. The lecture, which will cost $15.00 is en- abled by the "Killer" Bees: the African Honey bee*. "There is a certain justification for that reputation, but on the other hand, beekeepers in South America are saying it is the best bee they've ever had." Michael said. Michener said yesterday that even though African bees were more aggressive than the European variety, he didn't think they had caused any more deaths. The African honeybee was introduced to South America in 1956. Since then it has become popular, partly because it has been made more gentle through hybridization. Tonight's program, which will include slides of the files, will consider why the African honeybee is more successful in the tropics than other varieties of bees. Pianists . . . From nose one "You can feel envy at first for another performer. But if you feel any more than that, you're not confident in yourself," she said. they don't become jealous of each other's performances. Acha said. Costa has taught at KU two years, but this is Achoft's first visit to Lawrence. She says Lawrence is a big change from Lisbon, the Costa's former home. People have been friendly to her in the Midwest, she said, but not certain whether she will enjoy living here. "IDON'T KNOW if it's going to be better or if it's going to be worse. Only the ex- cellence is what matters." Achot will perform in France, Italy and Portugal before returning to Kansas in August with the Costas' two children. After her return, Achot plans to tour only twice a year, because of the distance and travel expenses. Pancakes or Warries Buy one and get one free! Pancakes or Waffles Village Inn Pancake House at the Buy one and get one free with this meal certificate This coupon entitles the bearer to any pancake or waffle item on the menu—free of charge—when a meal of Village Inn BANK OF ORDERS RESTAURANT equal or greater price is purchased. Good anytime except 6:00 a.m.-5 p.m. Sundays Expires May 30, 1977 Village Inn 321 Iowa 842-3251 University Daily Kansan Some garden plots left Space-cramped Lawrence residents who desire garden plots for the summer and fall months now can rent a 20-by-20-foot plot from the city in time to get early vegetables planted. About 12 plots are left in the 800 block of Pennsylvania Street, according to Mike Wilden, assistant city manager. For a $15费, the plots are available immediately, from now through fall harvest. The plots are marked. No water is available at the sites. Those interested should contact the city "It's another ___ sunrise" Fill in the blank at MEISNER MILSTEAD Retail Liquors Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 842-4499 Apartment Hunting? Special Summer Rates Reduced Security Deposit Call or come by. 841-3800 842-2348 WEST HILLS • AVALON • HARVARD SQUARE PIZZA THE GREEN PEPPER PIZZA THE GREEN PEPPER SUPER CHEESE PIZZA ORIGINAL CRUST or WHOLE WHEAT 9" ... 1.60 (satisfies 1-2 people) 12" ... 2.60 (satisfies 2-4 people) 16" ... 3.90 (satisfies 4 or more) DEEP PAN PIZZA "super thick and super delicious" 9" ... 2.80 (stuffs two) 12" ... 4.20 (makes 4 or more very happy) Embellishments 9" ... 30c ca. 12" ... 50c ca. 16" ... 80c ca. Double Cheese Double Sausage Italian Sausage Beef Genoa Salami Pepperoni Saurekraut Shrimp Anchovy Fresh Tomato Wedges Green Pepper Black Olive Jalapeño Mushroom Canadian Bacon Green Olive Plumapple Onion SALAD BAR "INCREDIBLE" ALL ONE PERSON CAN EAT $1.25 SALAD BAR "INCREDIBLE!" ALL ONE PERSON CAN EAT----1.25 Sunday Night Free Delivery Campus Only Call 842-9003 544 W. 23rd 2 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 News Digest From our wire services Free food stamps proposed WASHINGTON — President Carter asked Congress yesterday to stop charging food stamp recipients for the stamps. But about $450 million in food stamp aid to families with incomes above the poverty lines would be taken away under Carter's proposal. The President promised to veto any congressional changes in his proposal that would increase the budget by $100 million a year the program's current projected cost. The authorizing legislation for the program, which now helps about 5.4 million families buy groceries each month, expires Sept. 30. Two congressional committees are working to expand it. Floods hit Avvalachians non-swouthern rivers imnated towns in the hilly Appalachians yesterday, cutting communications and forcing thousands to evacuate or wait for rescue. At least one man died while attempting to cross a river. "This will be the highest flood ever recorded on the upper Cumberland," a National Weather Service moleskman said. The worst flooding was in southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky, where the Cumberland, Big Sandy and Kentucky rivers topped flood-walls built to protect "I'm any it's the worst in 40 years," Lou Bondurant, a Red Cross spokesman in Louisville, said. "Hundreds of people are being taken to shelters. Thousands of Cuclone death toll nears 1,000 DACCA, Bangladesh—The death toll in cyclones that lashed southeastern Bangladesh last weekend was expected to reach 1,000 with an estimated 50,000 injuries. A government spokesman said the official toll was 682. However, more than 400 persons were listed as missing, including 200 crewmen of fishing boats which went down in the Bay of Bengal and 200 passengers aboard a ferry which capsized in the Padma River near Dacca. The spokesman said. The cyclones struck Friday, Saturday and Sunday in a 300-square-mile area extending from the Rue of Renal coast to about 50 miles north of Dacca. Medical teams and rescue parties set out Monday on foot for the hardest-hit jungle areas. Moscow taxicabs boycotted MOSCOW —Angry over sharp fare increases, Muscovites are deserting the city's tracibles in the first major consumer boxcar in memory in the Soviet capital. Taxi drivers, who once cruised the streets bestowing rides on customers who begged and bribed for lifes, now lift up by the score at taxi stands hoping for The state-controlled taxi monopoly increased the increases, which went into effect April 1, were justified by better service. Western-style inflation is supposed to be It now comes the equivalent of 41 cents to travel a mile, double the old rate. The basic fee for starting a trollea also has risen, from 13 to 26 cents. KC will get 'Screw' trial WICHTHA—A federal judge yesterday moved the obscurity trial of Screw magazine publisher Alvin Goldstein to Karsaw City, Kan., because he said a local pornography crusade led by Sedgwick Attorney Vern Miller prejudiced the case. U. S. District Judge Frank Theis, who will continue to hear the case when it resumes April 18, accepted Kansas City, Kan., as the new site for the trial, rejecting Goldstein's first request that the trial be moved to his native New York. Goldstein has charged that federal judge Michael M. Gaynor had been illegally permacognitive materials would be more antagonistic than in the East. He had been trying to get the trial moved from Wichita since his indictment by a federal grand jury in Wichita in 1974. Eveglass cost protested WASHINGTON (AP)—You may have paid an inflated price for your last pair of eyeglasses because of state regulations that restrict competition among opticians and optometrists, optical retailers testified yesterday. Almost all state regulations affecting eyeglasses *jump* out of smoke-filled rooms and are blasted attempts by industry executives. With the larger, more efficient operator out of their states, William Schwartz, vice president at Ochs, an East Coast retail warfare unit, has been Herbert Haft, president of Dart Drug, which sells glasses in Virginia and Maryland, said the profit markup on a pair of glasses might be as much as 400 to 500 per pair. "The reason the profits are so high is that the field is tightly restricted and the public has no opportunity to get price injections," said the fellow. Senate sub-committee on small business. Schwartz said state boards and state societies of optometrists and opticians existed for one reason: "to artificially upgrade the business of selling eyeglasses on national status so one can hang a license on the wall and charge more for eyelashes." "These self-serving board boards are controlled by the very interests they are represented." In Connecticut, for example, there is a four-year apprenticeship requirement, be said. Schwartz contended this requirement is not necessary of opticians and keep optical prices up." Haft said that in Virginia board regulations advertised were "so onerous and frivolous." In New York, he said, "it's easier to become a partner or than to an app-op partner." "The public is interested in whether it pays $130 or $50 for a pair of glasses. But it is very difficult to get this price information out." Haft said. Vance gains support of Senate committee despite talk deadlock WASHINGTON (UPI)—Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said yesterday he believed the Carter Administration had won the support of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in its strategic arms negotiation stance with the Soviet Union. Asked by reporters after a two-hour briefing by the committee if he had the panel's support despite the stalemate in talks, Vance replied, "Yes, I feel we do." Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., said, "Not one word of criticism was said about the way Secretary Vance comported himself. There was no criticism." And when there was full support of the committee," and SKIPDEVOL, WORLD'S GREATEST BANJO PLAYER FRIDAY & SATURDAY, APRIL 8 & 9 AT PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., a hardliner on U.S.-Soviet strategic negotiations, said the Carter position was "fundamentally right." Meanwhile, in Washington State, 25 candidates competed in the first round of the race for the congressional seat left behind by the former Illinois became Secretary of Transportation. In Los Angeles, Mayor Thomas Bradley, first black mayor of the nation's third largest city, was getting 53 per cent of the vote over a field of 11 challengers. Bradley needed more than 50 per cent to avoid a runoff. The president of Atlanta's city council was elected to Congress yesterday to fill the seat vacated by United Nations' Ambassador Andrew Young, and two incumbent mayors took leads in their bids for reelection. IN MADISON, Wis., Mayor Paul Soglin, a liberal Democrat, had a lead over Alderman Anthony Amato, a conservative Republican. Amato had led in the first election, but didn't get the more than 50 per cent necessary for an outright victory. A HOTLY CONTESTED race for mayor in Overland Park, the state's fourth largest city. CLAUDE "FIDDLER" WILLIAMS In Georgia, Wyche Fowler Jr., a member of the Atlanta council since 1969, got 62 per cent of the vote in the runoff election against John Lewis. Lewis, who has been active in politics for decades, decades as head of the Black Voter Education project to make the race. President to sign reorganization bill Democrat Ben Sykes slipped past popular gobbery fryer in a battle that was won by Mr. Trump. Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION Every Eve at 7:10 & 9:30 Marside Beach Granada An Epic Fantasy of War & Peace Ends Tuesday "WIZARDS" Eve. 7:30 & 9:15 Sat.-Sun.Ma1.2:30 Intelligent, Engaging, 13Class Entertainment ART CARNEY LILY TOMLIN "The LATE SHOW Eve. 7:10 & 9:30 15Class Entertainment Sat.-Sun.Ma1.2:30 18 Academy Award Nominalists "ROCKY" PG Starring SYLVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7:10 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun.Ma1.2:30 Hillcrest 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are frapped underwater. AIRPORT PG Eve. 7:10 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun.Ma1.2:55 Ends Tuesday MOTHER, JUCKS & SPEED —Plus— "VANISHING POINT" Show starts at 7:15 Sunset Hillcrest Granada 94041-811 - Squamish, WA 98567 By The Associated Press Ends Thursday WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Jimmy Carter will sign a bill that authorizes government reorganization and he is ex-committed to make his own office the first target. Young's seat filled; mayor of L.A.leading in election The bill will give Carter authority to transfer, consolidate or abolish many—but not all—agencies subject to veto by either house of Congress. AIRPORT PG 77 It was learned that Carter's staff already has been hard at work on making the Executive Office of the President more efficient. The Office of Management and Budget has been conducting a "zero-base" review of the about 15 offices and councils in the White House to see how many should be retained. The Office of Management and Budget the Council of Economic Advisers are exposed to. A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. Lawrence, KS. 10 a.m. 11 p.m. 9 p.m. Daily $4.50 building industry in the expanding Kansas City suburb. Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN Sykes, who supported controls on the builders, got 6,400 votes to 6,388 for Fryer. He was unanimous in his vote. In other mayoral elections, Sylvester Powell Jr. won election in Mission, Eugene All were victorious in Leawood, Alfred Todd was victorious in Stoughton, and Thomas A. Secterton was in Shawnee. In Riley County, a 1-cent sales tax went down to defeat, while residents in Ottawa voted not to sell the Franklin County Nursing Home. TAX LEVIES, bond issues and various municipal proposals were on ballots in the general election. Voters in Emporia rejected a bond issue to a new police station but they approved a bond to the city. Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT The little stereo store RAY AUDIO 10.5.20.34 08:07 ADVENT SPEAKER SALE LAST WEEK — LAY-A-WAY NOW! MARQUEE MEDIA 13 E. 8th 842-2047 The speakers at Ray Audio are selected to sound as good in every respect, including frequency, as any speaker of any price. To hear just how much better our speakers sound, come in and hear them at RAI Audio, the little stereo store that offers a big difference. Hi-Fi & Sterre Review magazines agree that their response & overall performance would be noteworthy in the speaker, regardless of size or color. THURS, EVENING TILL 8:00 The Remodeled LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE & 7th Spirit balcony present the Billy SPEARS BAND Friday & Saturday—April 8th & 9th $3.00 cover—Showtime 9:00 p.m. - SPECIAL - GORDON CLEVELAND BAND In the balcony Sat., 12 to 3:30 a.m. 7th & Mass. 842-6930 up with People in cooperation w. Lawrence High Haskell Indian Junior College Up with People Musical entertainment for the entire family Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Tickets: SUA Office, Lawrence High School, Haskell Indian Jr. College, Rusty's IGA stores $3.50 public/$2.50 students Get There with famolare Get There with famolare Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street MARCOLO MILTON Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop FAMSLARE FAMSLARE 3 School Shor College family ool, stores Students sail on land in 'trikes' h Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Randy Schlitter leads Sailtrikes on 25th street ZERCHER PHOTO ZERCHER PHOTO SAVE • SAVE • SAVE $1.00 ON PROCESSING OF ANY ROLL OF FILM Easter Sale! this coupon good for $1.00 TOWARD THE PROCESSING OF A ROLL OF FILM GOOD AT ANY ZERCHER PHOTO DEALER AUTHORIZED BY ZERCHER PHOTO EXPIRATION MAY 15, 1977 kraft paper For a good look at the times of your life ZERCHER PHOTO $1.00 ON PROCESSING OF ANY ROLL OF FILM Easter Sale! By RICK THAEMERT “It’s not something that has a big motor in it to get around in,” Gerry Pfeffer, Hays senior, said. “It doesn’t take much talent to start an engine and drive around, but it’s an art to sail. It’s a thing of beauty in itself, and you’re using nature to do it.” They sailed on dry land. Their ship, called a sailorlike resembles a large, long tricycle company that uses tractors. ALTHOUGH A knowledge of sailing is helpful, it's not necessary for learning to know the wind; control beginners must learn to tack, or control beginners reach, or control crosswinds; and to anticipate guts. A rope, called the mainstay, guides a ship from side to side, to control the wind's effect. Staff Reporter Although trikes are designed to get between two and three times the speed of the wind, he said, it was不适宜 to sail in such conditions because of the distance between 20 and 30 miles an hour are the best. Kansas guards are ideal for sailors like the big game, he has reached sailing speeds near sea. HOWEVER, Earl Budke, Hays freshman and owner of one of two Sailtrucks in Lawrence, said he often can't resist the challenge of sailing in high winds. Most Kansas sailing buffs worship large reservoirs and spirited winds. But three University of Kansas roommates have found a way to sail without getting wet. O "Sometimes, we get crazy and go out when it's ready to storm and there are 40 men in the town." Double paper For a good look at the times of your life. ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas But, there isn't much danger of tipping over a trike, he said. It's common among sailors to see who can come closest to tippee in the water, balancing on two wheels—called "hiking up," he said. Sailrikers also have races and take group excursions to other towns. Pfeiffer said, "We've had some fun weeks, but it's nothing dangerous like cars." ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas "IT LOOKS kind of strange when we come pulling into a small town." Pfeffer Saltiretts are legally classified as bicycles, but, Pfeifer said he rarely cruised on streets because "the traffic in Lawrence is kind of mean." A driver must be able to control his trip, which is as about as wide as a Volkswagen, and can also be able to stop. But the sail can be taken off a trik or not be used when the wind isn't favorable. The sailors resort to foot power. Three men will then venture that make the trik versatile. Pfeifer said. Pfefer started toying with the idea of sailing trikes in the sixth grade, when he and a friend built a wooden go-cart with a shower curtain sail. HIS FREND, Randy Schitter, has since made a manufacturer of Saltirrises and operates a brewery. Schlitter said he had tried for three years and finally had managed to pertect a sail-equipped vehicle that could buck, or oppose, Kangas winds. Schitter is now producing two types of Sailrikers: a basic, steel-framed trike costing $497 and a professional, fiberglass-framed trike costing $686. When Pfeffer gets the time and money, he plans to do more cross-country travel. He said spring and summer were the best times to take long trips. The Budkes and Pfeiffer a few hours a week, usually in the parking lot behind their Rans Co. has distributed many models in the Midwest and California. "YOU CAN almost bank on a strong south-southwest wind in the spring," Pfefer said. "That means good sailing to the north, east or west." Pfeifer said he was convinced that the sailors he knew would continue the sport the team had been using. The seriousness of that commitment is exemplified by Schitter, who, at his wednesday morning visit to the away from the church. He guided a two-wester and his attendants, including Pfefer, 'Killer' bee myths, facts to be explored at lecture Lurid movies of "killer" bees attacking on command are depolarize presentations of the African honeybee to Charles Micheler, professor of entomology. Michener and Orley R. Taylor Jr., Jr., whose career spanned a lecture from 7:30 to 9:00 tonight in the Museum of Natural History on the characteristics of the bee honeybee and its spread in South Australia. Wednesday, April 6, 1977 The lecture, which will cost $1.50, is endangered by the "Killer Bees: the African honey bee." Michener said yesterday day that even though African bees were more aggressive than the European variety, he didn't think they had caused any more deaths. "There is a certain justification for that reputation, but on the other hand, beekeepers in South America are saying he never beees 'the bee they've ever had.'" Michener said. The African honeybee was introduced to South America in 1966. Since then it has become popular, partly because it has been made more gentle through hybridization. Tonight's program, which will include slides of the bees, will consider why the African honeybee are more successful in the tropics than other varieties of bees. Pianists . . . From nave one they don't become jealous of each other's performances. Achoa said. "You can feel envy at first for another performer. But if you feel any more than that, you're not confident in yourself," she said. Costa has taught at KU two years, but this is Achoft's first visit to Lefaye. She says Lawrence is a big change from Lisbon, the Costa* former home. People have been friendly to her in the Midwest, she said, but not certain whether she will enjoy living here. "I DON'T KNOW if it's going to be better it's going to be better the experience that will help well with it." Achot will perform in France, Italy and Portugal before returning to Kansas in August with the Costas' two children. After her return, Achot plans to tour only twice a year, because of the distance and travel expenses. Pancakes Buy one and get one free! Pancakes or Waffles Village Inn Pancake House Buy one and get one free with this meal certificate This coupon entitles the bearer to any pancake or waffle item on the menu—free of charge—when a meal of Village Inn PARK ARE HOUSE AND PALACE equal or greater price is purchased. Good anytime except 6:00 a.m.-5 p.m. Sundays Expires May 30, 1977 ... Village Inn 321 Iowa • 842-3251 University Daily Kansan Some garden plots left Space-cramped Lawrence residents who desire garden plots for the summer and fall months now can rent a 20-by-20-foot plot from the city in time to get early vegetables planted. Pennsylvania Street, according to Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager. About 12 plots are left in the 800 block of For a $5 fee, the plots are available immanent from now through fall harvest. They have free access to the marked. No water is available at the sites. Those interested should contact the city clerk. "It's another ___ sunrise" Fill in the blank at MEISNER MILSTEAD Retail Liquors Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 842-4499 Apartment Hunting? Special Summer Rates Reduced Security Deposit Call or come by. 841-3800 842-2348 WEST HILLS • AVALON • HARVARD SQUARE PIZZA THE GREEN PEPPER PIZZA THE GREEN PEPPER SUPER CHEESE PIZZA ORIGINAL CRUST or WHOLE WHEAT 9" ... 1.60 (satisfies 1.2 people) 12" ... 2.60 (satisfies 2.4 people) 16" ... 3.90 (satisfies 4 or more) DEEP PAN PIZZA "super thick and super delicious" 9" ... 2.80 (stuffs two) 12" ... 4.20 (makes 4 or more very happy) Embellishments 9" ... 30c ca. 12" ... 50c ca. 16" ... 80c ca. Double Cheese Double Sauce Italian Sausage Beef Genoa Salami Pepperoni Sanerkrust Shrimp Anchovy Fresh Tomato Wedge Green Pepper Black Olive Jalapeño Mushroom Canadian Bacon Green Olve Pineapple Onion SALAD BAR "INCREDIBLE!" ALL ONE PERSON CAN EAT... $1.25 SALAD BAR "INCREDIBLE" ALL ONE PERSON CAN EAT— 1.25 Sunday Night Free Delivery Campus Only Call 842-9003 544 W. 23rd 4 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the view of the University of Kansas or the School of Law Pot bill dead for now It came as no shock Monday night when the Kansas Senate rejected a bill reducing the criminal penalties for possession of one ounce or less of marijuana. After all, passing such a bill might have hurt the state's conservative image. No diehard Bible Belter of Kansas would want that. There is a rays of hope, however, in looking at the closeness of the Senate vote. The upper chamber of the Senate voted 17-19 to reject the bill and referred it a second time to the State and Federal Affairs Committee, which voted against Senate for a vote after 1½ hours of debate. A motion to kill the bill altogether failed on a voice vote and allowed it to be sent back to the State and Federal Affairs Committee. The committee, in fact, technically insures its death for this session. There was an effort yesterday to bring the bill back to life, but to no avail. Decriminalization will just have to wait till next year. IF ONE DISSENTING senator had instead voted for the bill, it might still have had a chance. If two senators had changed their minds, the bill would be going before the full Senate for final consideration. But instead Kansas refuses to add its name to the list of eight states that have reduced criminal penalties for possession. This means the state's current law will continue to allow the punishment of occasional smokers and those who are asserting an armed arrest for possession a smoker faces a maximum penalty of one year in jail and a $2,500 fine. DEATH COMES TO a bill that never had much of a hanvie life anywav. Even before the Senate rejected the bill, an amendment cutting into its effectiveness was approved in committee debate. That amendment, proposed by Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, provided a maximum penalty (a one-year sentence and a $2,500 fine) upon a user's second conviction instead of upon the third conviction as the bill originally provided. Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenworth and chairman of the State and Federal Affairs Committee, said he was appalled at the lack of intelligent debate by members of his committee. Reilly understated the situation. Consider the absurdity of other amendments that were proposed and that fortunately failed; —SEN. JOHN Crofoot, R-Cedar Point, proposed that the amount of marijuana in possession be reduced from one ounce to a level tablespoon. Senators were intelligent enough to reject that idea on a voice vote. —Sen. Bill Morris, R-Wichita, attempted to have the amount reduced to one-eighth of an ounce. That lost on a 9-16 vote. —Sen. Robert Talkington, R-Iola, tried to make the penalty for possession a possible 30 days in jail, in addition to a $100 fine, at the discretion of the judge. That, too, voiced justice. The killing of the marijuana bill adds another mark to a series of unsuccessful attempts of Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, minimize刺 marijuana possession in Kansas. This time Glover came much closer to getting a compromise concerning decriminalization. One can only wonder what the Senate vote would have been had Glover not confessed to a Kansas City Star reporter last month. He was accusing his remarks made several legislators reconsider their position on the law. No doubt Glover will be back next session trying to win support of his bill. Maybe next time he can succeed before tablespoons turn into teapacks in the minds of state senators. Ideologies don't dictate results The use of political party labels to generalize about an individual's personal political beliefs has always been suspect. For example, the huge number of Democrats who have rejected former President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal legislation resent the frequently circulated idea that the New Deal was a result of Democrat ideology. Republicans have a similar resentment of the notion that the GOP is supportive of or subject to the whims of so-called Big Business. To Republicans, that notion is as dangerous as it is wrong. Political rhetoric has always born the brunt of public skepticism, but rarely does that skepticism accurately reflect the political philosophy of one party or ALTHOUGH SUCH SKEPTICISM is sometimes directed to one party or another, to the extent that it applies to one, it applies to another. To the extent that the president controls control Democrats in Congress, for example, they control Republicans. But political rhetoric usually isn't related to the harsh political realities that face Congressmen in the day-to-day decisions they make. Besides the ever-present worry about being reelected, Congressmen consider how special interests will react to a position that would likely nightly vote on a certain issue or bill. Brent Anderson Editorial Writer as also difficult. For whatever the reason, Congressmen usually are expected to follow the directives of the leaders of their party rather than the interests of the people they supposedly represent. "IT IS EASY to put party labels on what politicians do," said Gov. Robert Bennett last week at a meeting of Kansas College Republicans. "It is difficult to try to understand the reasons they make certain decisions." The danger of taking a position that a Congressman knows will stimulate division among his own political party decisions. As President of the Kansas Senate, he was responsible for giving state senators the opportunity to make decisions. As governor, he is responsible for the implementation of those decisions. Partisan politics are often the reason public officials take a certain stand or make certain statements to the public. Members of both parties are guilty of actions motivated primarily by their political interest. Some of both parties in the same bag with unimportant squabbles is, in my opinion, a mistake. THERE ARE distinct differences between the Republican Party and the Democrat Party, and these differences may be influenced by politicians seem to spew forth so often. Why are they always saying one thing in their speeches to the social clubs in their hometowns, then doing another thing to vote on specific legislative proposals? One of the most blatant examples of this amazing phenomenon, especially applicable to Congressmen, involves the phrase, "Bie Government." An election doesn't go by unless every candidate for the House of Representatives or the Senate says he is against big government. If all are against big government, why does the government continue to get so big? ANOTHER EXAMPLE involves the orphan phrase, "balanced budget." Why do voters continue to allow certain politicians to say they are working towards balancing the federal budget when politicians have no interest in such a concept? Everyone hates the federal bureaucracy. But no one seems to hate the bureaucracy more than a person who wants to be elected to a seat in the House or to a president of the country, now, every bureaucrat in Washington would have been shipped to a concentration camp in Western Kansas. TWO IMPORTANT reasons seem to strike me as perennial ones. One, a Congressman's constituents never seem to be interested in trivialities such as his voting record, and, two, the Congressman's party affiliation usually means that he is not an expert on specific political trends such as big government, the national debt and the growth bureaucracy. To say that a flower is a member of the rose family doesn't mean that it will always smell good. Taxpayers funding ERA lobby WASHINGTON — President Carter Monday reconstituted the National Commission on the Observance of International Women's Year, and named Bella Abzug as his chairwoman. Speaking simultaneously as one tax officer, she asked what in the world goes on. The commission is to include 42 public members plus two from the Senate and two from the House. It is Birch Bay of Indiana, whose modest claim is to have written more of the U.S. Constitution than he has. He is the constitutional expert. But if there is any constitutional On April Fool's Day, a fictitious story in the Kansan attempted to parody the college bureaucracy. In a tongue-in-cheek way, it tried to poke fun at administrators while pointing some of the absurdists of the foe of campus committees. Committees a swampland And so the list goes, on up to number 1,175, Josh Califano, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, was surprised to find that he alone had 300 of the pests to deal with. Califano's Just a few days later, the Wall Street Journal published a story dealing with a similar subject, *The Mistake*, that wasn't a parody, and it certainly wasn't fictitious. It was the sad but true saga of the 1,175 advisory committees that keep democracy recruacy rolling and growing. responsible for sopping up the overflow. THEN THERE'S the National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice. That's an obscure committee formed 74 years ago because Congress decided it would be a good way to produce a nation of sharpshooting soldiers. The mission was to help the troops away long ago, but its budget certainly isn't; the board shoots up $385,000 of taxpayers' money every year. Republicans, a celebrity or two. Most of the commission members will attend only three conferences and attend none at all. The work will be done by a carefully rigged staff under the supervision of a chairman whose views are as solid as the vernal equinox. There are committees in Washington to please just about all those who need the Journal story points out, there is the Conor Advisory Committee to advises them about conorders, anangered species. Worst of all, Congress has made sure that the number of committees—necessary and otherwise—will continue to President Carter has his A. A. committees explore everything from gastrointestinal drugs to sunburn treatments. Each of the committees is eating up tax money. And, in some cases, they are in it private. Congressional investigators have found that many of the Pentagon's committees for instance, meet secretly. grow nearly every time a move is made in the capital. Those righteous Congressmen who have criticized everyone are saying the federal lamb will have to take the blame for this one. And they're going to have to be doing something about it. Jerry Seib Editorial Writer A 1972 law stipulates that any time a government agency puts one private citizen on a committee that offers advice, that committee can elect the committee committee. Instant red tape—just add a citizen. authority for this exercise in public expenditures, it eludes ready identification. JIMMY CARTER has discovered all of this, and he his staff are still acutely aware of his campaign pledge to whittle down the bureaucracy. That isn't of his own making. Carter, it turns out, can singlehanded, kill only of the ones he has created. Those 16 are the only ones created by executive order. The rest are mandated, created or not. They must ultimately be held The gentlewoman from New York, as chairwoman of this outfit, has been handed a $5 million kitty to stroke. It is immaterial that in a budget of $460 billion, an item of $5 million THE LAW WAS made in an attempt to make committees more open, but committees are more open as a result, but there are so many of them that decisions can be lost behind locked doors. It will be phenomenon if Bell's dooblegge follows any other course. Nothing will be learned from this expenditure of public funds that couldn't be gleaned from the women's magazines or from the consistories of the League of Women Voters. The same speakers will make their presentations have been making for months. The commission's 38 employees will draw their pay and will process travel vouchers. We will have press releases, agendas. butcher knife poised to start slicing. What he needs now is the go-ahead from Congress. programs, statements. The only excitement will come, as it came in Mexico City in the summer of 1975, when some of the participants get to howling and pulling hair. James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. A good place to start would be Califano's department. It is a hallway of lush green grass, guzzler that has grown so large it has trouble functioning. Califano would get to rid of it only someone would let him of. Persons who oppose the Equal Rights Amendment would be well advised to mount a counter-offensive. With vigorous effort on their part, stacked conferences can be organized and scheduled of witnesses can be unrigged. Abzug tends to overwhalm opposition, but the gentlewoman is not invincible. As head of a public body, spending public funds, she is in a position of public trust. The case of Katrina was tolerated. As these conferences proceed, perhaps the local press will seek to keep the lady in line. The study commission then is appointed, according to demographic rules as immutable as the laws of physics; members with Spanish American surnames, so many from the South, the West, and the East, a smattering of It will be interesting to see what develops. In the normal pattern of such ventures, study commissions follow a classic outline. First is the lofty statement of purpose—in this case, an executive order by former President Ford. This is important, enabling legislation, approved by a Congress that finds it politically inexpedient to challenge so noble an undertaking. Abzug promised that "some who are opposed to the ERA" would be represented. is not even pocket change. The five million has been taken from the people under the compass of taxation. For what purpose? Congress is giving Carter the power to reorganize the executive branch; it should do the same with the advisory committees that are spreading like crassgrab. The ostensible purpose, spelled out in the authorizing legislation in 1975, is to assess the impact between men and women in all aspects of life in the United States," and to identify the barriers that prevent women from participating in the aspects of national life. Jimanday. The commission also is charged with setting up a series of workshops followed by a national whois-todo in Houston in November. AS THE REPUBLICANS were telling us all summer, it was a Democratic Congress member of the bureaucratic slop in Washington. There is now a Democratic President willing to cooperate in cleaning up the water and don't hold much water now. The anterior purpose, unless I am vastly mistaken, is something else: giving money to the spending our money in a desperate, last-ditch lobbying effort for the pending Equal Rights Amendment. Any such diversion of public funds is unlawful, and probably unlawful as well. Perhaps my speculations are unjust. Back in December 1975, as a member of the House of Commons, I gave colleagues. The commission's conferences, she said, would afford an opportunity "for even greater insight into everything we viewpoint", to make her concerns known. --- Sheri McCalifano: Now that you got your own cook, thought you might like to have this recipe which we enjoy daily: One large leaf bone Bowl with water and a vegetable if you want one Season to taste Hope you like it. Malka and Rudy Hargson Social Security 261-76-5000 + 017-32-3707 © 1977 NYT Special Follwers Computers a blessing, curse One unchallenged fact of life nowadays is the dominance of computers in our lives. When dealing with a growing number of people, in any situation, computers speed up MACNEILY REPRESENTATIVE REAL ESTATE (2017) BY DAVID ROBINSON REBATE COMPANY COMFORT the natural order, or disorder, of things by their efficiency. At the University of Kansas, the days of an impersonal enrollment process on campus are fortunately drawing near, thus eliminating the high personal, sometimes antagonistic and involuntary procedures in Allen Field House. COMPUTERS ARE ubiquitous. They are in the supermarkets and stores, where minicomputers have replaced the suddenly old-fashioned cash register. Some of these minicomputers are even equipped with a fingerprint, computers, data banks and financial institutions that can both credit and debit accounts from afar. The unconscious and self-gravity feeling of money being doloed out and received is a thing of the past. The computer's main assessors or feelings, which allow it to perform its duties with unimpeded efficiency. OF COURSE, the computer can solve a myriad of problems, but is impersonal treatment of people-turned-in-number. And there's no reason to that than computers on computers won't increase. The bypassing of human contact is both the blessing and the curse of computers. The blessing is that the high probability of human error is eliminated, especially when dealing with large numbers. When it makes sense that if the computer makes a mistake its inherently unable to correct itself and keeps merrily HOWEVER, whether man or machine is at fault it's still up to the customer to straighten out his bill. For those caught on the bus, it can be difficult for nervous breakdown, this advice should be followed: 1) Keep M. BALDUR churning out misinformation— until a human being steps in and stops it. Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer ANYONE WHO has dealt in credit of any kind is familiar with the fallacy of blindly trusting a machine. Recently, a man in Washington who thought he had only 67 cents in his bank account was computer-credited with the sum of $4.5 million. When he went to the bank to check it out, he found that it was a computer, whose records were fed by human operators. After the matter was cleared up, the bank threatened to close his account, but rebelled and asked for an extra $50 with interest, if there was any. Computer billing foul-ups are far less common now than when credit completion was well past Stone Age. But there's still plenty of room for error, the most common being simple errors. your cool. Remember that a computer is just a very fast moron, incapable of the malicious attributes you give it. If your computer won't help you get human attention to the problem, and may in fact prolong matters if no one can read your account number. Don't worry about the IDR card. 2) Be nice to the human beings in the billing system and give them a fair chance of rectifying their mistakes. 3) Holler for help. COMPUTERS ARE also notorious for spelling out form letters, especially the personalized ones in varying degrees of informality, hard sell, and downright irritation. A Chicago woman found it almost impossible to choke out a stream of letters churned out by the computer of her credit card company. The letters threatened her with legal action if she didn’t pay the sum of $0.00 immediately. It is these letters, and impersonality and familiarity, that breed contempt. There are some battles with a computer that you can expect to win, and some battles, if you don't follow the right channels, that are doomed from the start. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 17, 2018 June and July are expected except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday is on Monday. Subscribers by mail are $ a semester or $15 annually. A year outside the county. Student subscribers are $40 annually. 66344 Subscriptions by mail are $ a semester or $15 annually. A year outside the county. Student subscribers are $40 annually. Editor Jim Bates Managing Editor Greg Hack Editorial Editor Stewart Brann Business Manager Janice Clements S 5 ainst big government federal is to hate a person in the heat in Washington a con-Kansas seems to be possible ex-terest in such cities such two, the usually untutility such as big and the solves the budget." w certain working al budget interest in member of that it will . ents. The only come, as it City in the when some of set to howling oppose the Amendment issued to mount issuative. With it in their part,aces can be ridged leses can be seses can be g tends to w g tendsto not invincible, public body, she is in public trust. ing can't be ing cannot in the local press be lady in line 07 CVT Special Features ve them a fair actifying theiriller for help. S ARE also showing out form the perms in varying normality, hard right irritation. woman found it to choke on a churned out her credit card The letters with legal action the sum of $0.00 is likely a personality and at breed con- he battles with a you can expect to battles, if you right channels, am from the Staff Reporter By RENEE TACKETT August Bolls- art. or $8 art. or $20 art. fee. Editor Brann Women in engineering increase Carrying pocket computers now instead of slide rules, the number of women in engineering has greatly increased since 1920, when Julia Carmen became the first woman to graduate from KU with a degree in engineering. The recent emphasis on women in professional careers—even male-oriented professionals—has pushed the Engineering and the Society of Women Engineers, a student organization, may have caused the increase, according to the U.S. Institute professor of space engineering. In fall 1972, six women majored in engineering; by fall 1973, 24 women were in engineering; in fall 1974, there were 42; and the enrollment more than doubled by fall 1975, when 96 women majored in engineering. Fall semester of this year the number of women graduated in December with engineering degrees and six more will graduate in May. "I'M VERY interested in women in engineering," Smith said. "My theory is that brains can very well be packaged in female bodies." According to Smith, 20 per cent of the engineers in the Soviet Union are women. In the United States, women have shied away from engineering until recently. Women with a good mathematics background were once hired as engineering assistants, because women with engineering degrees couldn't be found. "I thought the mental block wasn't in the young ladies, but in their parents," Smith "IM INTERESTED in getting the youngster and parents to take a good look at it, not a stereotyped view," he said. "I think that the counseling of students is a sophisticated procedure—more so in women than men because women are stereotyped. They supposedly can do only certain things." "If a young lady has talents in math and physics, or is interested in mechanical engineering and drawing, she should be encouraged to use these talents. But how can a high school counselor tell a kid what chemical engineering is?" "ONE IMAGE I'd like to destroy is that you have to be a 4.0 student or even a 3.0 student," Smith said. "A young lady graduating with even a B average with a degree in engineering from KU would make a starting salary of $12,000 to $14,000." To help solve the problem, a movie about women in engineering was loaded by the School of Engineering to high school students to be shown to interested students. Engineering majors complete a 134-hour program, specializing in airspace, aeronautics, aviation and space. Calculus and mathematics, chemistry, physics, English, nouns and certain words. electrical, mechanical engineering or engineering physics. TO HELP FEMALE engineering students Advancement of Women Engineers (UAAWE) was formed in 1974, and a charter of the Society of Women Engineers The UAWAE helps women engineering students with financial problems and a lack of male peer support, according to Pam M. Kelley, president of E. Hogan, associate dean of engineering. Financial contributions to the UAAW from the Continental Oil Company, Bell Systems, Mobile Oil Corporation and other industrial corporations help fund women in engineering. By next year, UAAW hopes to add 10 students for one academic year. UAAWE has cosponsored an annual symposium, "The Participation of Minorities and Women in Engineering and the Non-Traditional Sciences," at Crown University City Mo., which attracted high school students and industrial representatives. "THEERE WERE no women on the faculty at that time, so three of us (men) helped get the society started on campus." Smith said. "We had a big group of students, KU, she made us all honorary women." Future activities for the two women's groups include high school and sometimes college experience and career awareness to increase the current trend of women in the field. Combined meetings of the UAWE and the Society of Women Engineers attract speakers and sponsor activities—such as the International conference—to encourage women in engineering. "THERE'S NOT really any difference in how we're treated by the professors, and we had good rapport with our fellow students," she said. Women in the School of Engineering think about being "Tamara Griffith, Dodge City, Colorado." Griffith said she was interested in engineering because her father and two uncles were engineers but she said there also were other attractions to the field. The KU chapter of the Society of Women Engineers was chartered in February 1974. Naomi McAfee, national president, spoke at the chartering ceremony. "Most women know that there are good opportunities right now in the field of engineering," she said. "If you're career-oriented, it's a good career." Madonna Narvaez, Topika senior, said that many interested in engineering for a unique application. "HERBERT Hoover was my favorite president and he was a mining engineer," she said. "I read all his biographies and thought it sounded fascinating." Wednesdav. Anril 6.1977 The Douglas County unemployment rate dropped to 3.5 per cent this month from 4.4 per cent in February, Ed Mills, manager of Jobs Information Job Center, said yesterday. more and more women seem to be finding that engineering can be an interesting field. Smith said, "As resources go down, the need for engineering goes up, up, up; and there's no reason why women can't succeed in the field." Mills said that the unemployment rate would probably drop as low as 3 per cent The February rate was an increase of almost 1 per cent since December. A total of 1,275 residents were unemployed from December to February, according to a report issued by the Kansas Division of Employment. The report, which includes only the nongovernmental work force, states that the statewide rate in February was 4.8 per cent and the national employment nationwide was 7.3 per cent. weather. There were fewer jobs in the industry this February than in February 1976. The report predicts that 225 construction jobs will be gained during the next three months, but said there would be a "lesser percentage" of those requiring major building projects are scheduled." "The weather was bad in December and January," Mills said, "which accounted for the rise. But it has straightened out now." The employment division report attributes the uplift in joblessness for February to construction layoffs caused by Murray Hodge, manager of the Kansas Construction Co., 201 Perry St., said he couldn't predict whether the number of construction jobs would increase. "There just aren't any jobs coming up right now." Hodge said. "There has been some bidding, but nothing major has come up." Unemployment insurance payments also increased, from a total of 445 claims in December to 629 in February. There was a rise in unemployment in industry, and 127 from manufacturing jobs. The employment division report forecasts that employment in Douglas County will increase by 425 jobs in the next three months. C Easter Disco Dance April 9th 8:00 p.m. University Dally Kansan Admission $1.75 Ballroom Beer sold with I.D. No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. Sponsored by Gay Services Construction on new women's locker rooms in Allen Field House is expected to be completed about April 15. The construction, which began Oct. 15, has cost the department of buildings and grounds $38,000 in labor and materials. Lockers almost done The locker rooms are being installed in the southeast corner of the ground floor. and grounds personnel to delay construction more than two weeks. Delay Cisco, connection Electricians, plumbers, carpenters and masons are working together to finish "We're putting the floor tile down and some plumbing must be completed," he said. "The wash basins in the showers must also be installed." Commission on the Status of Women invites you to apply for positions as chairpersons of the following committees: MINORITY AFFAIRS—HUMAN SEXUALITY POLITICAL ACTION—ALTERNATIVE LIVING SELF-HEALTH—WOMEN'S RECOGNITION NEWSLETTER—PUBLICITY If you have an interest beyond these topics please apply. Applications available in 222 Strong; due Wed. (April 13th) 5:00 in 222 Strong (Partially funded by Student Activity Fee) --kansas union BOOKSTORE BUY TWO TACOS at regular price GET ONE FREE with this COUPON 1 Expiration date 4-15-77 Taco Grande 9th & Indiana • 1720 W. 23rd Watch the want ads in the Kansan. - SENIORS - - SENIORS - - SENIORS - - SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS Senior Announcements will be delivered in Kansas Union Bookstore beginning . . . Thur. & Fri., April 7 & 8 (Manu. Rep. present) Extras will be available for those who were unable to order earlier. Pick up Early to avoid the crowds. KU 9 HORSES Boarding, Training, Riding English Western Rock Chalk Ranch Under New Ownership and New Management 2 Miles West on Highway 40 843-4646 Instruction in English Riding Jumping and Western Riding Riding - By the Dr. or Semester Pass Archery - By the Dr. or Semester Pass Horse Board - Full Feed Care or Just Feed Horses for Hire Watch for Billy Spears at the ... Grand Opening! d 6 University Dally Kansan KUAC board approves budget rejects four Tasheff amendments By DAVE JOHNSON By DAVE JOHNSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) board yesterday unanimously approved a budget of $2,658,700 for fiscal year 1978. Although the board voted to close its meeting during discussion of the budget, a summary of the budget was released after the meeting by Doug Messer, assistant athletic director in charge of business affairs. Messer said some clerical and wording changes needed to be made before the complete budget could be released. When asked whether any figures would be changed, he said, "None of any consequence." According to the approved budget, KUAC expects to make $2,658,700 in income next year. EXPECTED NET revenues from football and basketball totaled $1,845,900 representing 61.8 per cent of all KUAC income. Other anticipated sources of revenue include $295,000 from the Big Eight Conference; $820,000 in scholarship contributions; $24,800 from the Kansas Rangers; $175,000 from the Cleveland National College Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball tournament. The money from the conference, derived from bowl game receipts and television contracts, is distributed even among the conference committee. The ACC received $29,000 from the conference. UNDER EXPECTED expenses, the budget summary listed $737,570, or 32.7 percent of all expenses, for salaries, wages, Social Security payments and benefits. For other expenses, at least the athlete corporation spent $779,632, or 38 per cent of total expenditures. On Campus Events TODAY: COLLEGE CHARIPERSONS will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Kansas University GERMAN BMET will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 002 Wescoe Hall. TONIGHT: A Lawrence City Commissioner will speak on "The State of the City, the Future of Lawrence" at the KU p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. EWALD OERS, British translator and specialist on East-Central European literature, will speak on "Literature of the German Union" at 8 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. TOMORROW; FRENCH AND ITALIAN DEPARTMENTS will sponsor a colloquy at 2:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room, UNIVERSITY COUNCIL meets at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall. LOUISE CYLER, will speak on "Paul Hofhainer: A Model for German Organists" at 8 p.m. in Swarbat recital Hall in Murphy Park. Gardner to get hearing today Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, will appear at a preliminary hearing in Douglas County Court this morning on a charge of first degree murder. The hearing's purpose is to determine whether Gardner will be bound over to Douglas County District Court for a degree on a first degree murder charge. Mike Ewell, associate district judge, will preside over the hearing, expected to last County attorney, 18 witnesses are scheduled to testify for the prosecution at the hearing. Gardner and his brother, James, 18, have been charged with murder and mutilation of Maraert Maxes, 46. The younger Gardner was arranged April 1 in Douglas County District Court and is being tried for the murder. Jack Maxwell, a lawrence lawyer, will serve as attorney at darden at his preliminary hearing today. The elder Gardner's preliminary hearing has been delayed three times, once by the court, once by Maxwell and once by the prosecution. The Gardeners are being held without bond in Douglas County Jail. WEDNESDAY "Killer" Bees. The African Honeybee In The Americas 7.30-9.OOp.m. Museum of Natural History $1.50 Honeybee cas p.m. EVENTING SERIES April 6 Operational expenses, which include the six sports funded by KUAC, the sports radio network and information office, the spirit squad and the Kansas Relays, are expected to total $930,120, or 34.8 per cent of total expenditures. Scholarship and training table expenses were predicted to reach $700,130, or 28.2 per cent of total expenditures in the 1975-76 period. The overall spending spent $693,330 for those expenses. A BIG CHUNK of the increase can be credited to three sports that didn't receive scholarships in 1975-76 but do now. They are basketball, women's athletics, $4,100, and women's athletics, $45,000. The baseball team also received 13 battles that lasted seven more than late. KUAC expects to spend $154,880, or 6.3 per cent of total expenses, to help retire outstanding debts and pay for equipment, renovations and improvements. After the changes are made, the complete budget will be added into the University budget, which will be sent to the Board of Regents in Topeka for final approval. IN EARLIER business, the board voted Two of the defeated amendments would have compelled the athletic director to commit to a new contract with the KUAC executive committee before hiring or firing a head coach or assistant manager. down four of five amendments to the bylaw proposed by Tadee Tashef, former president of the Equal Rights Association. The two other defeated amendments would have made the Executive Committee responsible for long-range planning for the board. In opposing these two amendments, Gerhard Zuber, professor of English and board member, said after the meeting that long-range planning should be conducted by the group raising the funds for the projects. The committee also planned to alumni members not on the committee. Zuther said the Executive Committee was designed for short-term emergencies when the entire board couldn't meet and wasn't prepared. The best group to make long-range plans. The amendment that passed gave the chairman of the Board, J. Hammond McNish, professor of business, the power to appoint any ad hoc committees to assist the athletic director in the search for new head coaches or directors. Attempt to revive pot bill thwarted by Senate vote An attempt to revive a bill that would reduce the penalties for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana to a maximum of two, the senate failed yesterday in the Kansas Senate. State Sen. Joe Norvell, D-Hays, who carried the bill in the Senate, said last night. "We gave it our best shot. I don't know how you can do that," he said, but they just wryd, i read it, for it, yet." Explaining his latest attempt to save the bill, Norvell said that Monday the Senate had referred it to the Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee, and that yesterday he made a motion to the Senate to reconsider Monday's action. NORVELL SAID 21 Senate votes on yesterday's motion would have returned the vote to the floor. But the vote was four short of the 21. The Associated Press reported that the first vote However, a second vote was taken, and the final count showed that some senators had changed their votes. The recorded votes of 41 and of 25 opposed to reschedule the bill. State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, vote to reconsider the bill. Norvell said yesterday the Senate's rejection of the bill Monday was not in doubt. "I don't think it will be." State Sen. Ed Reilly, R-Leavenworth and chairman of the State and Federal Affairs Committee, said the bill wouldn't move the state into the second session but it might be recommended for interim study before next year's session. Reilly had strongly opposed the bifl Norwell said it was ironic that Reilly could oppose the marijuana bill while supporting a bill that would allow Kansas restaurants to serve wine and liquor. Reilly had strongly opposed the bill during floor debate Monday. "Last year, 1,000 people overdosed on alcohol," Norvell said, "but there is no evidence that any person ever did on marijuana." OPONENTS of the bill have said present laws on marijuana possession were lenient enough and passage of the bill would be Kansas youth as condoning marijuana use. Kansas law now states that possession of any amount of marijuanis is a class D felony for any offense, carrying a maximum penalty of a year in prison and a $2,500 fine. If convicted in a court of floor debate, would have retained the current penalties for any offense after the first. State Rep. Mike Glover, D-D Lawrence and sponsor of the bill, said Monday that the bill was dead for this year. Glover said he would try again next year to get the bill passed. To get bikes in shape for spring, local bike retailers have some suggestions for tune-ups but stress caution in greasing, oiling and making adjustments on the bikes. Spring is now more than two weeks old, bicycles are gradually reappearing along the streets. Springtime means bike tune-up time Although most bikes don't come with maintenance manuals, instruction books are sold and many local retailers do bike tune-ups. The following are suggestions for tune uns: The bearings and wheels should be greased. To check whether the bike should be greased, spin the bearings. If they sound dry, grease them. Oil the gear-changing mechanism, chain and sprockets. Be sure to use a light oil, which should not the mechanisms too excessive. Tighten the wheel nuts and handlebars. Tighten the cables on the brakes. (This will help maintain traction.) Check the air pressure in the tires. The correct pressure should be written on the side of the tire. Keep the pressure correct so that it does not leak. And check for knots and splits in the tires. Keep the bike clean so gears don't jam. Set up a preventative maintenance schedule for the bike, checking it weekly or monthly, depending on how much it is used. Adjust the spokes; if there is a loose or broken one, see a qualified bike repairman. Questions about Student Sonate? Ask Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan during a call-in interview on KJHK FM91 Thursday, April 7, 7 to 8 PM - 864-4746 THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE KJHKFM91 BUY TWO SANCHOS at regular price GET ONE FREE with this 9 COUPON Expiration date 4.15. Expiration date 4-15-77 Taco Grande 9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd PLAIN TALK FROM ARMCO ON FINDING A JOB: Environmentalism —will it muddy the job pool? Some people think America will have to spend a trillion dollars by the mid-1980s on more pollution control. Could this hurt your chance of getting a job you want? We hope not—but it's a possibility. America simply doesn't have a trillion dollars to spare. Shifting so vast an amount from other uses will disrupt nearly every other national goal. Adding costly environmental equipment doesn't increase industrial production. So once the equipment is in place, the handful of new jobs created for pollution control is more than offset by production jobs that don't appear. Spending large sacks on pollution control means companies can't spend that money on something else - like new jobs. We're going to need another 18,000 jobs in this country by 1985. These days the average job costs $42,168 to create. So a trillion dollars is more than the total current cost of creating 18,000 jobs. Even if we had a trillion dollars, America couldn't satisfy its most extreme environmental demands already on the books. Air quality rules now lock important areas of the country out of any new industrial development. And water quality standards being applied to all bodies of water, no matter how they're used, will stymie adaptation growth in many parts of the U.S. TREE STACKS getter cleaner lately. We've obviously still got a lot to do. But as we do it, we need to study carefully the costs and needs of our life from tying America up in knots. We all want clean air and water. We've been sensitized to pollution's dangers for years. But the fact is: America's air and water have been We've got a free booklet to help you get a job. Use it to set your apart, above the crowd. We answer 50 key questions you'll need to know. Like why you should bone up on companies like what. What to do after the first interview. Hints to make you a more aggressive, attractive job candidate. All prepared for Armeo by a consulting firm specializing in business recruiting, with help from the placement staff of a leading university. Free—Armco's plain talk on how to get a job Send for your free copy of How to Get a Job, Wear Armoe Steel Corporation, Educational Relations Dept., General Offices, U4-4, Middletown, Ohio 45043. Our supply is limited, so write now. ARMCO Plain talk about POLLUTION CONTROL So far, Armco has spent $260,000,000 for pollution control systems. Running that equipment costs us another $26,000,000 a year. We've slashed our air emissions 95%. But now we've passed the point of diminishing returns. We've started moving more—and waste more electrical energy—than it took to stop the entire 95%. What's worse, generating the electricity to reduce industrial emissions further often creates more pollution at power plants than industry removes. As a nation, we need to carefully examine environmental factors influence them against their social, as well as economic consequences. Next time somebody says industry ought to start cleaning up its act, you might like to point out that the cleanup is well on its way. The more extra environmental costs pile on, the fewer new jobs there may be. Pencil Armco wants your plain talk on environmentalism and jobs Does our message make sense? Wed like to know what you think. Your personal experiences. Facts you've found to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We'll send you a more detailed report on the relationship between you and our jobs and how of How To Get a Job, above, tells you how to write. Let us hear from you. We've all got a stake in more American jobs. JAZZ WEEK presented by the Lawrence Opera House & 7th Spirit balcony Wednesday April 13 JAM SESSION with the River City Jazz Band. Bring your own AXE and join in with the fun. 9:00 p.m.'till ?? 50' cover Thursday April 14 KU JAZZ BENEFIT Benfit for KU School of Fine Arts Jazz Scholarships The Tuesday/Thursday Band, The 12:30 Band & Tommy Johnson Experiment 9:00 p.m. 'till ??? $1.00 cover Friday April 15 LAWRENCE JAZZ COMBOS Fast Eddie Quartet River City Jazz Nairobi Trio with Johnny Moore on drums Tom Montgomery Quartet with Jim Stringer on guitar 8:00 p.m. 'til 3:00 a.m. $1.00 cover Saturday April 16 KANU JAZZ IN THE NIGHT Concert Presents The Ralph Towner and JohnAmbecrombe Band with special guests THE NAIROBI TRIO with Johnny Moore on drums Two Big Shows 7:00 and 10:00 Admission $4.00 7th Spirit Members will purchase $6.00 Tickets for the entire night. Listen to KANU and KJHK for further info. - Wednesday, April 6, 1977 7 ZK City ing and e fun ?? school of charlsers thursday D Band son NCE ABOS artet jazzlio on drums enery on guitar 00 a.m. HHT ents phh and vombe quests OBI my currums news 0:00 4.00 ars will kickets night. Snorts Writer If Hosking is psyched... look out EU and Arthera By ERIC MARTINCICH Until two weeks ago, Mark Hosking didn't believe in a sophomore hit. Now, he's Hosking started this year's tennis season by winning 11 of his first 12 matches in the No. 2 singles position for KU. Since then however, the 6-4 sophomore from Kansas City, Kan., has gone into a slump, winning only three of his last six matches. NEITHER HOSKING nor his coach. "I'm not at all satisfied with the way I’ve been playing," Hosking said yesterday. "I'm in a slump." I've lost to guys that I just shouldn't have lost to." Sports Kirkland Gates, seem too worried about Hoskine's skid. "His only problem is that he can't get psyched for all of his matches, and consequently, he has lost to some inferior plavers." Gates said. When Hokking is in form, be prepared for some good tennis. As a freshman last season, he won the conference's No. 3 doubles title, and will play in the season with an impressive 23-6 record. At No. 2 position this season, sophomore Hosking has put together a 144 record and BESIDES BEING' ONE of the strongest singles players at KU. Hosking has teamed up with Bill Clarke, No. 1 singles player, to the area of one doubles team in 'the area is the favorite to win the Big Eight No. 2 singles championship. "We've lost a couple, but if we can beat Oklahoma I really think that we can win the court." Hooking came to KU after winning the championship in 1974. He had just one other scholarship offer besides the KU offered—from Northwestern Missouri State "I was naive about recruiting," Hosking readily adduits, "I didn't write a lot of letters or visit any campuses, so I didn't get many offers. "AT FIRST I was skeptical about coming to KU, but now I love it. I think we have a good program and a team that is capable of winning." With two years ahead of him Hooking probably will inherit the No. 1 spot from Clarke, who is leaving at the end of the season at the position won't be weakened by the change. "Bill and Mark play on the same par," Gates said of his No. 1 and No. 2 players. ("The only reason Bill is playing No. 1 now because he has more experience than Mark. I feel as these are two of the best players KU has ever had." Wichita swim coach to succeed Reamon The six-week search for a new men's swimming coach at the University of Kansas ended yesterday with Athletic Department主任 Dust Roulqn had been appointed. Spain, who has coached the Wichita Swim Club for the past five years, succeeds Dick Reason, who resigned from the Wichita Swim Club. Reason will enter private business. Reason will enter private business. "There were many outstanding applicants from throughout the country," Walker said. "Bill Spahn, however, clearly showed experience and knowledge we are looking for." "He is well respected by his peers throughout the country and has coached some of our current swimmers. I am very pleased he has accepted the position." Spahn, a 35-year old Austin, Minn.. native, was graduated from Texas Tech University in 1964 where he received a bachelor's degree in physical education. He was captain of the swim team there as a He coached eight years at the club level in New Mexico before moving to Wichita. "I'm really thrilled and excited about the opportunities at KU," Spahn said. "KU is an outstanding academic institution with a sound athletic program. I feel I can continue the fine swimming program Dick Reamon has built." At Wichita, Spahn's teams have won four straight Missouri Valley AAU indoor and outdoor championships. The Wichita Swim Club also has won four titles in the nation's outdoor titles under him. Many of Spahn's swimmers have placed in national meets. Jayhawks start play in Kansas tournament The Kansas Jayhawks are scheduled to play Kansas Wesleyan at 1:00 p.m. today in the Kansas Baseball Tournament at Manhattan. Kansas Wesleyan replaced the Ravens as a conflict in the Ravens' schedule forced them to drop out of the tournament. The Kansas Wesleyan Coyotes, coached by Dan Flanagan, enter the tournament with 22 record. They have split wholehearted University College and Friends University. Kansas Wesleyan's top hitter is Terry Bott, with a 500 average for the four games. "Terry is really pounding the ball," Flanagan said. "In fact, we have four or five guys who are hitting well, but the rest of the team isn't hitting its weight." KU coach Floyd Temple can sympathize with Flanagan. The Jayhawks have four muters with averages above .300, paced by third baseman Lee Ice's .373. But the 'Hawks also have three starters hitting below .180. Dave Rusch (3-1) will pitch for KU. Rush, a left-hander from Fargo, N.D., has posted a 2.25 A earned Run Average in four complete games. The Coyotes will counter with Dave Brown, who shut out Sterling in his only appearance this season. Last year Brown was their top pitcher with an 8-40 record. The winner of the KU-Kansas Wesleyan game will play the winner of the Emporia game. In yesterday's first round action, Marymount defeated Kansas State, 64, and Washburn extended its winning streak to seven games with a 6-3 win over Bethany. ARLINGTON, Tex. (UPI)—The Texas Rangers extended infielder Lennie Randle's suspension to April 27 and penalized him $23,407.90 yesterday for his "reprehensible, unjustified" assault of manager Frank Lucchesi last month in Orlando, Fla. "The Rangers" officials knew exactly what had happened. Neuheimer said from Phoenix. "I ammy already had apologized to Lucien and his teammates. They had all done it." Randle suspended, fined Lucchee wasn't present at the hearing not at yesterday's new conference when the doctor insisted that it be delayed. Randle wasn't present or represented at a hearing Monday at Arlington Stadium. Richard Neubeisel, Randle's attorney, said that if the six-year veteran was dissatisfied with Rangers' decision he would right to appeal. Friday before an arbitrator in Baltimore. BROOKLYN Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER BUNNY TREE We will be open Easter morning until 12 noon for your shopping convenience. If loved ones are close by . . Make a personal appearance with a fresh bouquet! Easter . . . Flowers! If you can't visit that special someone this Easter send them flowers in your place. Mark Hosking—worried about a sophomore jinx Nye's Flowers 939 Massachusetts 843-3255 The Flower Shop in the center of downtown Lawrence Royals outfielder to undergo tests KANSAST CITY (AP)—Tom Pouquette, the all outfielder who was a rookie star for the Kansas City Royals last season, returned to Kansas City from spring training camp yesterday for examination by the team's physician. Pouquette was sidelined in Fort Meyers, Fla., last week with what was diagnosed as a brain tumor. (AP) 939 Massachusetts 843-3255 THE FILM Tests are scheduled today to determine the problem. Quoette batted .301 for the Royals last year as a rookie. The Royals sought to put him on the 18-day disabled list, but he saged again and ended his stint with a sidelined him for 21 days, until April 30. 100 FREE KEGS CHENEY STATE LAKE (15 miles west of Wichita) THIS FRIDAY NIGHT April 8th MR. BOOGIE & THE DISCO FACTORY Live on Stage CAMP OUT IF YOU WISH!! Starts at Sundown At the Gate . . . $3.00 Advance Tickets . . . $2.00 At the Gate . . . $3.00 Get Advance Tickets at Kiefs in Lawrence --with the purchase of any FREE "Flying Scot" Frisbee (while supply lasts) medium or large Sundae, from our Dairy Bar Sports Roundup Tennis team wins Hot fudge, chocolate, strawberry, pineapple and many more toppings. The KU men's tennis team picked up its 26 win of the season yesterday by defeating Colorado. Sandy's 9th & Iowa --bring in this coupon and receive your choice of chopped or roast beef sandwich with fries All 12 members of KU's team participated in yesterday's meat because the squad was divided into A and B teams. The A team, consisting of regular starters, defeated its opponents 7-2. KU was led by Mark Haskin who played in the 1. No position for the first time this season. He replaced Bill Clark who sat out and helped his batting rankings defeated him in Spring 4, 6-2, 6-3. The KU team now has an 12-8 record as the 'Hawks won their fourth straight meet. The Jayhawks leave for Oklahoma City this afternoon to participate in the Oklahoma City University tournament which begins tomorrow. Greg Buller lest at the No. 2 position for KU, 6-3, 6-4. Buller's record siped to 2-8. No. 3 Jeff Thomas got back on the winning side. No. 4 Jeff Thomas 5-7, 5-7, 6-7. Thomas' record is now 5-9 In first round action, KU will face Oklahoma State, the team it beat 5-4 earlier this season. The winner of that meet will be a member of the Big Ten University-North Texas match Friday. Jayhawks at KSU The KU softball team is scheduled to play a doubleheader today against Kansas State in Manhattan at 3 and 4:30 p.m. The games may, however, be postponed because of wet playing fields and a decision is expected this morning. The Jayhawks are 4-0 for the season and K-State is 5-3. They have had only one common opponent in each game against NWMs and K-State split a doubleheader with them. Golf team to Wichita The University of Kansas men's golf team will be competing today through Friday in the Great Plains Invitational on the Wichita State University golf course in Wichita. The Jayhawks placed 20th in their first meet of the year at the William Morris Invitational in Austin. Craig Palmer had the low score for KU with a 147 for 36 holes. Royals top White Sox FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) - The Kansas City Royals hit four home runs yesterday to wind up their most successful spring training season yet with an 11-6 exhibition baseball victory over the Chicago White Sox. The American League West champions finished their Grapefruit League season with a 17-record. Outfielder A Cowlens hit his fifth home run of the spring, a two-run shot in the first inning off looser Steve Stone, and his total of runs batted in to 23 in 19 games. Dave Nelson, John Mayberry and Buck Dixon had a total of 13 hits. Who had a total of 13 hits. Cookie Jajrej doubled and singled twice and Freddie Patek got a three-run double for Kansas Kings lose. 87-82 The White Woman, who ended their exhibition season with an 11-20 record, joined Kansas City in hitting him runs during the windy Halston Hairton each had homers for Chicago. The Kansas City Kings lost a game they had to win last night. They lost to the Indiana Pacers. The Kings are now two games out of a play-off bet with three games remaining. Boone led Kansas City with 19 points but the Kings led only once during the game. Ali fight planned NEW YORK (AP)—A fight for Muhammad Ali is scheduled to be announced today, and the opponent will be Alfredo Evangelista of Sojain. Promoter Don King, who scheduled the news conference for 10-30 a.m., CDT, in New York, would say only that the world heavyweight champion's opponent wouldn't be Alfio Righetti of Italy and that the fight "will be held in the near future." King said last month that he had an agreement of a Rightti fight. "But the World Boxing Association has not agreed on the (Rightti) and Zanon to fight, so I got someone else." G's A very special offer from Bar-B-Q or tater-tots 530 W. 23rd Coupon Expires Thurs., April 7 841-3402 ONLY $2.00 The Airowisp By THANE THE WARNACO GROUP a beautiful assortment of solids and strips in Thanes Airowisp fabric. Cool and comfortable ... It's a shirt you'll love to live in. Solids - $14.00 Stripes - $16.00 Campbell's Men's Wear 841 Massachusetts 843-2828 见 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 University Daily Kansan Open law market slowly tightens Bv PEGGY SPENCER Staff Renorter A tight and highly competitive job market for law school graduates is a problem of increasing importance. Webster Golden, faculty chair of the School of Law, School of Law, said Commission, said recently. Every year, there is an increase in the size of the law school population nationwide, making it tougher for the graduate to be placed in a law-related profession, he said. However, the stintation at KU isn't bad as the Department of Labor predictions of a recession are in force. "EACH YEAR ANY KU student can be placed, though the individual may have to make a more concerted effort to go out and learn." Rubber than leaves. "Golden said. Golden said that small firms generally were more open-minded and concerned about the young lawyer than large firms were. "Some of the best opportunities are in smaller firms." Golden said. Immediate responsibilities, satisfying emotional experiences and the possibility of becoming a partner are some of the advantages of going with a small firm, Golden FOR THE STUDENT WHO graduates in the class of their class, finding a job in the problem. Many big firms and prestigious branches of government are reluctant to hire students who aren't in the top 25 per cent of their classes, be said. masses, he said. Golden said that his committee was trying to inform employers about the in- suring ability and credentials of all KU graduat- "Given KU's admission standards, all our students are capable people." Golden said. However, it is still difficult for the medium-range student to be placed in a course. In the May 1976 graduating class, 96 of 141 students, or 11 per cent, had found jobs by THIRTY-FIVE STUDENTS still hadn't found a position by late summer. According to a survey of May graduates at Washburn University School of Law in Topeka, 106 of 197 students had found jobs by Feb. 1, 1977. Seven students were still looking for jobs and four either hadn't taken or missed the Kansas Bar exam. One hundred and twenty-three of Washburn's graduates found jobs in the Plains states, Richard Boeckman, Washburn bachelor, and John Greenberg, member, 110 graduates are working in Kansas. More than two-thirds of the KU class that responded are employed in Kansas and the Midwest. Boeckman said that many Kansas firms held job interviews on the Washburn campus. Missouri and Oklahoma firms list opportunities regularly at Washburn, he said. Golden said recruiters regularly interviewed at KU from time to time in Phoenix, Arizona. He served with D.C. DC. "Once a firm interviews here, they keep coming back," he said. coming soon. he said GOLDEN SAID THAT it was also important to keep the Kansas bar coming to KU to conduct interviews in areas of private interest. He said that 57 per cent of the 1978 class had gone directly into private practice. Many other students went into judicial or government firms and government positions, he said. After working in positions like these for a short time, lawyers usually move on to practice law. A GRADUATE PLACED with a large earn $16,000 and possibly more. Golden Within four to eight years, a student placed with a large firm could be made a partner, earning a share of the revenue that he generates. Golden said. WHEN A FIRM TAKES on a recent graduate, his salary usually is more than the graduate will bring in for the firm. The firm is losing money educating the new lawyer, expecting some future contribution, Golden said. "It is an accepted wisdom that you never get wealth from the practice of law," "Money doesn't matter if you want to be a lawyer badly enough," Golden said. "If you want to be a lawyer well enough." LAST CHANCE! The deadline to sign up for the K.U. SAILING CLUB-SUA BAHAMAS TRIP is Thursday, April 7! If you are interested in seven days of sailing in the Bahamas, come to the Sailing Club meeting Thursday evening at 7:30 in Parlors A & B in the Kansas Union or leave your name and phone number at the SUA office. The average salary of employed KU graduates in the 1978 class was $14,000. Forum to be on funds for women's athletics KP&L breaks ground for Sunpower House An open forum designed to alleviate misunderstandings about the Student Senate role in funding women's intercollegiate athletics will be at 8:15 tonight in the International Room of the Kansas Union. "The forum will let the women's program know what we are discussing and will allow us to receive information on their program so that we can be better prepared, student body president, said yesterday. Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, last week told a group of senators that the University's academic budget is $1 million to the women's program for the 1977 academic year because its budget exceeds the university's average. Groundbreaking ceremonies were held yesterday morning at the construction site for SumpPower House, the Kansas Power and Light (KP & L) Company's stored cooling and solar research and development project. During last week's Student Senate budget hearings, many Senate members said that intercollegiate athletics should no longer be funded by the student activity fee. “AS SOLAR heating becomes more and more popular, you’ll be able to purchase much of the system in a kit,” he said. “Right now, however, you have to go to several different places to get all of the parts you need.” The collectors, fitted on the roof of SunPower House, will help supplement a two ton heat-pump heating system. An additional 126 square feet of solar collectors will provide domestic water heating assistance. KP & L officials said. DURING WINTER, the same water tank will be used to store solar heat energy collected by 546 square feet of solar collectors. The student activity fee now provides $54,000 to women's intercollegiate athletics, which is approximately one-third of the program's budget. Actual construction on the house, estimated to cost KP & I. more than $70,000, should be under way by the end of April, the builder of Sunpower House, said. Griffin said he foresees few problems in construction of the house. However, he said he expected some problems in obtaining all necessary equipment to build the heating and cooling system. Rv RI7TH RENIEN Complete drawings for the house's construction were scheduled to be turned over to Griffin today by Robert Gould, architect for Design Build Architects of Lawrence and an assistant professor of architecture and urban design at KU. Griffin, who has helped construct two other solar houses around Lawrence, is The architectural plans call for the house to have 2,110 square feet of space and to use both solar energy and design to take advantage of the energy conservation opportunities. The senators said it was the responsibility of the University and the state of Kansas, The University budgeted $120,000 for women's athletics for 1977-78. KP & L officials say Sunpower House is the first research facility to be built in the country. It provides comprehensive study of house materials, construction phases, the use of stored cooling for summer load control and the energy savings from solar installation. "SUNPOWER HOUSE will be the first time a house has been constructed with all of the components: the air conditioning, the orientation of the lot, the right trees and the landscaping," she said in one package. "L. R. Nicholson, senior vice president for KP & L, said yesterday." Staff Reporter Leben; Mike Harper, StudEx chairman; members of the women's athletics advisory board; and senators will be among those attending the forum. One special feature of Sunpower House will be a coolant storage system. Plans call for the coolant to be produced during nighttime hours in a 2,000-gallon water tank in the house's basement for use during daytime hours, Nicholson said. "A major part of the reason for the Sunpower House project is testing the feasibility of the average homeowner being able to build such a system if he wants." he attempting to purchase locally most of the materials he needs. not the students, to fund intercollegiate athletics. KP & L officials say they are interested in the development of the Sumpower House for several reasons. First, they say they hope to electrically eventually help curb the energy shortage. SECOND, THE project offers potential for reducing the impact of air conditioning during KP & L's peak electrical demand period in the summer. Nicholson said, "We know that such a house can be built feasibly. What we don't know is whether or not such a house can be made to construct from a cost standpoint." TEST METERING also will record the time of usage of major appliances to determine the feasibility of that type of metering of residential consumption. When the research is completed, KP & L will sell the 3-bedroom house and publish the study's results, which will be available to the public, Nicholson said. To determine the cost-effectiveness of such a project, KP A & L will install an extensive test metering system in the house. The system will measure the BTUs required by the home for kilowatthours of electricity used by all the house's major energy-consuming devices. Occupancy in the house, by a family selected by KP & L, is scheduled for July 15, although Griffin said he expected the completion date to run a little late. According to Nicholson, research at Sunpower House will last about two years to allow the company to analyze the results of studies for two winters and two summers. About $2,100 in property reportedly was taken from the residence of Thomas Mitchell, Lawrence senior, at 1316 Iowa Street between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Sunday. Student loses articles in theft The items taken included a color television set, a stereo receiver, turntable and speakers, a camera and several lenses and a turquoise necklace and ring. The front door possibly was prized open with a screwdriver to gain entry. Lawrence pointed at it. Dennis Mercer, 646 Ohio St., discovered Thomas' residence to let Thomas live. Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. APPLICATIONS Now Available for the Positions of EDITOR & BUSINESS MANAGER 1978 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK JAYHAWKER OFFICE 117-B KANSAS UNION 864-3728 sisterkettlecafe --to get involved in SUA? Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 Coffee House Fri. & Sat. with live entertainment 9 pm-Midnight Did you ever want DEADLINE FOR INTERVIEW APRIL 13th Call SUA office for more info 864-3477 --quality travel arrangements since 1951 THIS SUMMER DISCOVER EUROPE SUA Travel Directors Needed This is your chance: Over 150 Low-Cost Charter Flights to Paris, London and Amsterdam. Designed for students, teachers and University staff. PARK AVENUE Leave almost any day from May 30 through August 6. Stay in Europe from 4 to 12 weeks. For folders and reservations, contact your SUA/Maupintour travel agent in the Kansas Union Lobby. SUA Maupintour travel service Telephone 843-1211/900 Mass/Hillcrest/The Malls [Image of a man with a beard and long hair, wearing a white shirt and a necklace with purple flowers.] Create an Ideal Society The progress of society is founded upon the growth of consciousness each individual. Milhami Mahsh Yoel The Transcendental Meditation Program Free Introductory Lecture TODAY Wednesday 8 p.m. Kansas Union Governor's Room 4th Level For information call 842-1225 © 1979 World Plan Executive Council — U.S. All rights reserved Transgendered assistance is a mission of WPCU — a nonprofit educational organization I will do my best to answer this question accurately. The image shows a person standing with their hands on their hips and smiling. They are wearing a striped jacket with horizontal black, white, and gray stripes. The background is dark. Spring . . . Bright, fresh day . . . Bright, new looks yours at the VILLAGE SET Open Thurs. till 8:30 922 Mass. Wednesday, April 6, 1977 9 fe & Mass. Operated 0-2:00 ent --looks ntal Variety of legal aid is offered, but is it adequate? Staff Reporter hurs. lll 8:30 By JOHN WHITESIDES In the past several years many students have become increasingly involved in legal matters that can be complex and costly. Some students have copied in Lawrence to help ease the burden The Douglas County Legal Aid Society, 846% Indiana St., offers legal advice on matters of special interest to residents who meet certain financial guidelines. The program does not handle cases in which statutes provide for an attorney's fee or money is recovered from the estate of a deceased person. The program is staffed by 25 interns and three student directors, all third year law students, and an administrative assistant who two faculty directors from the law school. A POTENTIAL CLIENT must pay a $1 interview fee before talking to one of the interns. If the legal aid society accepts the person's case, an additional $$ handling fee is charged. All court costs are paid by the client. "We take care of the paperwork, the labor "and getting everything filed and organized for the client. They pay the service fees, the students, student director, said last week. The legal aid program here is funded by the Student Senate. Uline Way and county and city schools. Sanders saw no conflict in being funded by the Student Senate and charging students for the interview and legal handling. "WE'RE TOTALLY FUNDED from the outside so we have to make some charges," he said. "If we didn't make charges we'd have to go back to the Senate and ask for more funds, which would make it more interesting, the students who don't use the program." Statistics show that between October 1969 and December 1975, contacts between potential clients and the legal aid society grew from 750 to 1,767. Sanders said that people were more litigious by the times. "I think it may be a general trend since There have been recent signs of interest among University of Kansas students in a legal aid program at KU. A questionnaire distributed by Steve Leben and Ralph Kuehl asked students who were president, during February's student elections' campaign asked whether students would like to see a legal aid program begun at KU. Of the 1,185 responses to the questionnaire, 35 per cent answered no and 9 per cent had no opinion. "LEGAL AID SOCIETIES throughout the country have become more established and people are more aware of them", he added. "can look us up in the phone book now." The Special Services Committee of the state Senate to investigate the issue at meeting. "WE ALREADY PROVIDE funds for Douglas County Legal Aid, the National Lawyers Guild and the Consumer Affairs Association," Tarabuco said. "All of those agencies provide legal aid and support." We need to find out if a new program is really needed." the 1960s that more people are conscious of the fact that they have rights and that there are things they can do to protect those rights." Sandes said. Taraboulis said another possibility was an administrative assistant in the University general counsel's office who would deal strictly with student cases. Taraboubes said that the committee recommended a legal aid program be adopted at KU, it could be a separate office or limited-time law school or a full-time lawyer. He said a system similar to the one at Kansas State University would be considered. The K-State system provides a full-time lawyer who gives free legal advice to all K-State students, though most court cases are handled by an outside lawyer. Leben said he would favor a legal aid system at KU unless a more representative survey than his questionnaire showed that students were against it. "IT WOULDN'T WORK" Davis said. "Any time students have difficulties with University-related matters, this office has a phone number you can call for any particular function here, just as they do." Mike Tarabulos, committee chairman, said the first thing the committee would do He said that if the Special Services Committee recommended a legal aid system, he would have the Communications Committee survey a wide sample of his clients. The survey agrees with his earlier findings, he said he would approve the system. ANY LEGAL AID PROGRAM at KU would be funded by student activity fees. Because the new satellite union is partially funded by the student activity fee, Leben said, it would be at least 1978 before a legal aid program could be started. "Unless after the Student Senate budget hearings we find surplus funds," he said. program for a complete year, we should consider it for the fall." The Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) in the Kansas Union is another organization that provides help for people with legal problems. would be to discuss any possible duplication of services JUDY KROEGER, administrative director for CAA, said the program had no legal authority but could mediate and advise during disputes. "We try to investigate the complaints and bring the parties to an understanding," she said. KANSAN WANT ADS If a settlement between the parties can't be reached, CAA will refer the person with the complaint to small claims court, the legal aid society or a full-time lawyer. Sanders said all the legal aid programs provided benefits for everyone in the country. SMALL CLAIMS COURT handles disputes from within Douglas County that involve less than $300. There is a $5 fee, and both parties will be summoned to court within 21 days of the complaint. Each person represents himself. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaanan are offered on campus or at other locations, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALT CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times times .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 time 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 10 pm 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. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UR business office at 800-724-6500. ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT COLLEGE STUDENTS—part time, earn $10 per hour and win $150.00 in bonding bonds as an American Youth Enterprise Dealer, Write Free Response Questions to 1011 Ella St. Springs, N.J. J. 88211. L-4-8 Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special offers include a 4-hour ride for $26 per person. Other trips require a 4-hour ride for $19 per person. Available write or phone Ride Routes from north on highway 101 Tableshall, Oklahoma 74448 (931) 544-2000. 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 843-9579. Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 500 guests. Extra large dance floor, Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in Warmley remote suburb. Blag at B1-13 Warmley room 6443 for intl meetings. FOR RENT Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no. ucts, 843-5767 tf 846 Illinois 843-7685 Frontier Ridges—short term lease available. Mountain home with study. Heated indoor pool + shag carpet + water closet. Heated outdoor pool + disposal + laundry facilities + furnished and unfurnished from $135. Call 842-796-0188 furnished and unfurnished from $135. Call 842-796-0188 Gatehouse Apartments - Call Becky now. Summer, fall, winter contracts on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 843-705-6010. www.gatehouseapartments.com Apartment for rent. Available now. furnished apartment one bed room, very nice nursery room, double bedroom, five easts. Eat, room, share kitchen and bathroom. Call after 6 p.m. p84-838-600. Keep trying for a very fine room. Subletting apartment for summer. 2-bedroom, C/A modern, centrally located. Call 841-1896-4-7 Lease 2-bedroom furnished. Meadowbrook apart- ment, centrally located. Pool,床和客厅校 841-2418. CARPET CLEANING STEAMX. Rent the Pro. 272-296. Rental rental. Call集信 5-10 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- age; rentable reduction for labor. 482-506 482-506 Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Soudaidan Shops Sulletin room apartment: It has 1 bedroom. Come by 385 Fireplace Dent. Ant. 1:50 a.m. Come by 432 Fireplace Dent. Ant. 1:50 a.m. & Sandwich Skool HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Selected Secondhand Goods Used Clothing Goods • Vintage Clothing 2-bedroom apartment, 2 blocks from Union. $155- mo. plus utilities. 843-7038 730B Mass. 841-707O - Imported Clothing Sublease—three bedroom townhouse, two baths, cabinet, tennis, pools. You'll dwell in it. (Note: A floor plan is not available.) Two bedroom unfurnished apartment for nationale. $140/month. Call after 4 p.m. @ nationale. 1 bedroom furnished apartment at 19 Wet 10th. 723. Available immediately, 842-687-10 for 5-8 weeks. Summer sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apart- ment in Lakewood, CA $175/month. Call 841-1832-4 1234. 1967 Buck LaSabre, good condition, full power, control tilt, lift tilt. 843-525-489 4-8 Directly from Peru, two Alpaca rugs for sale. Contact Ana. 843-1101. Sublease — summer/furnished 2-bedroom/AC close to campus and downtown $150/mo/call Sublease for summer + bedroom houseware at Cotton Mill 1200 West 65th Street, with option to renew lease. Call 843-3134 today. (212) 933-3267. www.cottonmill.com Furnished, efficiency office $30 mo. utilities and maintenance incl. cleaning & janitorial $16 mo. to 1542 Tortouses. Apartment 1 (upstairs): 1 bedroom, 1 bath, 140 sq ft. Sleeping room upstairs. Share bath. $45/mo. Inquire 706 Illinois, evenings. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make use of them—1) As study guide, 2) For Class preparation, 3) For Exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at TopTorch Excellent selection of new and used furniture and the Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041 Madison Ave. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELL AUF 1804-6924-3500. BELL AUF 1804- ELECTRIC, 8300-3500, W. 6th. (Bell AUF) 8300-3500, W. 7th. (Bell AUF) We are the only Full Line Franchised Crowd dealer in Kanas, Nebraka, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crowd companies, speakers, and facilitators at Audio Systems, 9th fl., Rhode Island. BY OWNER—Ranch style, shake roof on a beautiful landscaped property. Two brick fireplaces, burning fireplace, gas log lighter, screen. Extra large family room, formal living room. 1/3 bath. Half bathroom partially partitioned. I. 3/4 baths. Master bedroom. Oak flooring. fully carpeted. Dishwashers. G.E. door. double bedroom. North edge of Alvarmor golf course, near excellent golf courses. Desk corner north edge of Alvarmor golf course. Decorator touch $2,900 by appointment $4,280. C. Dr. J. Ackerman $3,650 by appointment. A Springtime Bug Bright Yellow Volkwagen 1970—W very well cared, runs great. 842, 171-9. 166 Mustang V (~2,98 Engine) Rome good, easy to stay in Ahinga 5223 Calling Rome good, 4-49 easy to stay in Ahinga 5223 Hart Javelin G. P. Skip 185. cm, with look, back zipper. Jacket waistband. $240. billion album lot. Waxland blender. app. men's size $8. Down-detailed Kemah mitten. Blue. Men's size. Large. black. big. $110. billion album lot. ADVENT SPEAKER SALE. We are pleased to announce the first Advent sale in 8 years. We believe this is the best selling speaker in the world and we are proud of our supply RAY AUDIO, 13 E. 8th Street. 4-6 We have some great deals on Hi-Fi Yamaha TB- 700 Cass $200. B $100. Ski-Doo $499. E-Ski Dome $100 each. A R.H.-5 speakers $150 each. Milda, complete system system $280. Samurai 600 $399. Ski-Doo 500. Ski-Doo T-200. T·V $288. RAY·AUDIO -The little stereo store, with good deals. 13 East 8h. (Just 4-6) Live venomous snakes. Egyptian Cobra, Puff Adders, Burmese python. Moles. Call 819-265- 4300. Killer snake. K.C.A. Snake. Necichi sewing machine with buttonholer, good low price. Call 812-2630; evening for more information. YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 10:5 Mon.-Till on Thursday 1976 Fiat X19. 9 Removable top. AM-FM radio. For info call: 843238 or 842-1573. 4-6 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition $225. 864-1537 4-7 FOOSBALL TABLE - Champion Soccer, olin operated. Excellent condition. 433-8265, or llin equiv. 170 Chevrolet Impala 4D, PS. PB, AC. Must sell. Call 864-6916, after 5:00, leave message 4-7 May 25" Purdue 10-speed bicycle (U-58). It is $49,900. Bentley 10-speed bicycle (U-6 Ludwig drum set 6-piece, double bass, silver, glove, good shape, must listen. Call 814-2591. 4-8 172 Chevrolet Impala, 460 cu. ft., FBS, PB. AM FM stereo/radio; $1,600, i41-8256, FS 1972 Yanashiro enduro 175, 2000 miles, helmet, elixer, tire excellent, condition 841-375 - 472 Motorcycle 1974 Honda CL350 - excellent condi- tion, time-on-up, 460 miles, ask for Col. 801. Call 841-223-8488. Yamaha Guitar with case, good condition, nice sound, best offer. 842-2573. 4-8 1570 Kawasaki W200 40 front brake disc, electroplating 1570 Kawasaki W200 35 front brake disc, electroplating with baggage rack, real sacrifice at $600. Call 843-569-0700. (www.kawasaki.com) 124 flat cup, new 180, headers, mags. T5s. sunension, stereo. C.B. call 841-3952. 4-8 INFINITI $80 B Spokane 1 year warranty $250 Chevron $250 Huntington $250 $250 $150 Must sell both Call Jim $14-$64-mon $750 HIFLE-22 cal Glenforce w/scope. Excellent condition. HIFLE-98 802-508. Keep trying. 4-8 Would like to trade a Yamaha 400 Endure in excellent shape for a VW Call after 5.90.88 - $769.99 For Sale - Dynalease P4-1atre pre-camp. Recently cleaned and, returposed. $75,841-325,4-8 Mobile home, 1975, Champion Chapel, 12 x 40. front kitchen, 2 bedrooms, partially carpeted, located on the right of the main entrance, central aisle conditioning. Very clean, central aisle conditioning. Reasonable call: 841-319-389 or 846-846-288. reasonable call: 841-319-389 or 846-846-288. 1972 Opt GT, blue, low mileage, air conditioning, automatic, luggage rack, good tiger plus tires, excellent condition, 22-50 mpg highway with/without stereo, $250, firm. Call: 4-144 4. sale, Nice Datasn, need money soon. Call 842-1 0858 only Iraq). 64 Chevy Impala-good, inexpensive transportation, runned good, call John 143-5367 4-15 Ludwig Pro-Bat演奏 w set w/case, excellent condition. Call 843-3687 days, 842-9168 nights, 4-13 Guitar G40-200 Steel string guitar. Sizes 200, 600 guitars. Fits G40-180 steel string guitars. Two JW, DL, DL-Blaster with Pulsatrol, Pulsonic and Tremolo attachments. Two JW, DL, DL-Blaster with Pulsatrol, Pulsonic and Tremolo attachments. 10-speed excellent condition. Call 842-3013. 4-8 HELP WANTED Fender Steel Lap guitar with case, $50, Mitch 843-854-6 4-13 Men or women. We need $ 5 people immediately. We need a person willing to work with experience necessary. We need For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 845-310-7191. Lawson Kirby Co. Will lead your time for 4-12 minutes. Summer Jobs Our fifty state slate plus number Marijuana Master application will cost $25. Sundew Jobs: Master application will cost $25. Sundew Jobs: - "Students," 15 telephone receptions for new students, all with guarded good status, and bonuses. Call 9-21-20 and referral number to the department. Flexible sain can help you earn money for college. Flexible hours. High $1 Call. Mine $29.99. Vista Eyelid doctor Optical DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE RC Medical Corp. Fri, & Sat. 'til 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th Restaurants PRACTICE QUESTIONS 1. PLEASE WRITE THE NAME OF YOUR SCHOOL IN THE BOTTOM OF THE BOOK. 2. PLEASE WRITE THE MARKER NUMBER OF THE BOOK. COMPUTATION QUESTIONS 1. PLEASE WRITE THE MARKER NUMBER OF THE BOOK. 2. PLEASE WRITE THE MARKER NUMBER OF THE BOOK. TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS ● Pool ● Pin-Ball ● Snooker ● Air Hockey ● Ping Pong ● Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 days a week One No Under 18 Admitted Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted *Local Life Delivery* must know area well, be able to make calls and give proper Good daily call Call 8-12 and 3-6 pm, ect. Dawnday's has openings for waitresses, cooks, bakers and cleaning staff. 614 Main or 614-583-6032 between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. or 7 p.m. at 614-583-6032. Summer work: Must relocate, Earn $10 monthly. Call 842-4272. 4-6 Information center accepting applications for information center applications April 15 Apply 10k Strong. Full time summer work: $240 wk. Looking for a few hard working independent students who are to be relocate for the summer. Call between 8:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Today only For 845-864-554 4-6 Office of Information Systems, Univ. of K. Sarasota, FL. Computer operator for half-time employment during Spring and Fall semester--full-time during summer at Sat, 7/10-2800-Mon, through Thurs., and rom- nial Sat, 7/10-2800-Mon, through Thurs., and rom- nial Sat, 7/10-2800-Mon, through Thurs. experience as computer operator; knowledge of operation, adjustment and care of ece- rimental equipment; working methods; ability to read and understand code; tape and club handling procedures, and code of tape and club handling procedures, and programming assistance; and experience in operating system. For appointment call Larry Jones (352) 946-2800 or submit resume to Mr. Gus of Computer Oper- eration Summerfield HILL CAMPUS. Application de- pendent on EMPLOYEE: WOMEN: MINORITIES AND PERSON WITH DISABILITYS ENCOURAGED TO USE COMPUTER. Office of Information Systems, Univ. of KS (Lawrence Campus) is seeking Assistant Inventory Assistants and full time during summer. Requirements: physically able to lift and transport heavy loads; ability to work in an office environment periods; have a current driver license; possess instructional and to maintain records. Prefer work schedule flexibility to accommodate 24-hour time block for appointment contact Larry Beecher. Resume to admissions department, submit resume to Merge of Computer Operations, Portunity University, Univ. of KS CAMPUS. Applicant must have mertall Hall, Univ. of KS CAMPUS. Applicant PORTUNITY EMPLOYEE-WOMEN. MINIMUM BECOME WITH DISABILITIES KEPT TO MEET OVERNIGHT RULES. LOST AND FOUND Avon open territory in Lawrence. Even if you don't know the world, their profits are world-famous. Avon's founder, Bill Gates, is an avid reader. SUMMER JOBS: Forest service. Where how, Mountain JOBS: Forest service. Where how, MO. P.O. Box 727, Foilton, Mont. 59600. Summer job for married couples. Must have a car. Time; jum 1 to start of KU in August, or Champlain, New York $300 wi for couple Type maintenance work etc. living Quarterly? Your time is written in writing to Hayward Cerf, 100 Sunset Avenue, Hayward, CA 94756 information. NO TELEPHONE CALLS PLEASE. Found-One pair of prescription sunglasses in 3140 Wheat Street, Wednesday, March 30 call 644-275-7000. LOST: 1000.000 CAISM! If you can find it, you can listen to Itinerary Hunt Cuses on 108 @ 9:45 a.m. Blue last 1977 pocket calendar containing infor- mation about to return it. Memorapiece #4-13 M443-3578 Last—a green warm-up, in room 4064 of Wreckle Hall. If found, call 843-7602. -Mary Found...BoldWagen KM. Memorial Drive, 3-112 Call: 841-3161.急救时间 4-6 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 19th & 8th B 843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8:9 Sun Pier1 imports associate store 8th & Mass. MISCELLANEOUS Phone: 841-7525 Downtown PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alicia at the House of Ubiqui Quick Copy Center. Alcia is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. NOTICE **Wash Shop**, 620 Mass. Used furniture dishes, tables, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12:30pm. 849-377-371 NEW SONY COMPONENT SYSTEM WITH AM- PNEW sample test to $175 at Ray Stonehill VOLKSWACEN OWNERS! Brand new BP Good- AFT815 - 15 (15-15) (15-15) tire radiates to $3 each at Ray Stonebanks' $29 Mounte- tal. (Montecito) $29 Mounte- tal. (Montecito) steel cuts to $45 each); CHEY OWNERS! Pickup owners. Brand new $100 cash, $200 cash included ($1 each), bill $60 each, PIPE included ($4 each), bill $30 each. CONTACT LENS WEARER Save on your hard drive. Contact Lenx Camera Center, 341 Canine Center, Los Angeles, CA 90025. Athers, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo ... You name it. Employers can choose between departures on airplanes or Europe from $299 per flight. Employers can choose a rate. Formal Passes, train schedules, etc. Specialists in foreign travel. Multilingual and bilingual training. Want to ask, Nate Leisen and Ralph Munyany want to speak with you about their case. They at 8 p.m. and their answers on KHHC e-mail us at khc@kshc.com. PERSONAL The sound way to answer your questions about Microsoft that Thursday, by calling Microsoft at 1-800-345-2727 or by calling Microsoft's toll-free number. Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Life Ministry Inquiries Box 3002, Lawrence Jewish Community Center Gay Counselling Service. Call 842-705-612, 6-1 p.m. for referral. For socializing calls, call 842-705-612. ISO-2: chemical potentiator in a complete line of paralysis is available at Love Records, 180 West 46th Street, New York, NY 10017. Become a legally ordained officer of the United States Army. Prior to enlistment from the U.S. Army, Legally perform all miltions and funerals. For official U.C.D. ordination and further training, complete dressed envelope to P.O. Box 115, Washington, D.C. Need ride to Greek Church in RC=Saturday (10am) at the Greek Easter service, call Leah (805) 472-2344 or leah@greekchurch.org Whenever has been sending me the "surveys" on April Fool Day for the past three years, don't forget to write a message. Give your mom the on joke by revealing youres! Curious? 4-6 I need help with Spanish. 116 If you can ****** I need help with Spanish 116. If you can help me call my 81-6500 4-6 Tat- Happy 20th birthday! Thanks for 31%! Thank you for a day. Thank you for a good day. Thank you for a great VISIONS has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 JEWELRY Unusual? laurie stetzler 8413883 9th and Iowa "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." The Lounge - Pool - Pinball Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Open Daily 10 a.m. - Midnight Except Sunday - Bud on Tap SERVICES OFFERED TYPING I can string your tennis game more economically than anyone in town. Call 843-6695-4-10 math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 600, 102, 105, 114, 121, 121, 122, 123, 142, 500, 558, Regular class, Regular class, regular class, preparation 'examinate rates' B4: 782-868 I do darned good typing. Peggy, 412-4476. Typed edition. IBM Price-file. Quality work. Reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome. Call Joan, 812-9127 tt THEISH BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you need $88 Massachusetts or phone #24-3257. Thank you. Experienced typist—term papers, tests, mice, kills. 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Courte, 841-3522 - Overs, wood and one inch sets available * HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CANG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. NAISMITH HALL 10 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 University Daily Kansan Publisher discusses commercial, scholarly careers BY KIMBRE HUGHES Staff Reporter On July 4, 1947, after four months of desperate job hunting, John Langley lay siege to the publishing house reading the New York Times classified ads. When he spotted an advertisement for a business book editor for Prentice Hall, he fled to Europe, where he lived for his life would revolve around books. Nicolas Vallayer Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL After spending 20 years with Prentice-Hall, Langley moved away from the commercial publishing center and into scholarly publishing as assistant director of the Duke University Press and then in 1970 directed for the Regents Press of Kansas. "I WOULD LOVE to think that I'm a rogue, a pirate or a bandit," Langley said, but actually I have very little opportunity to pursue this because there isn't enough money involved." Langley said that the change from commercial publishing to scholarly research is not only desirable. "In commercial publishing the end product is to make a profit," Langley said. "You publish the books you think are going to sell." In scholarly publishing the product is a scholarly book that is well done, complete, accurate and properly annotated—sales on the book are a secondary consideration. Langeley said. "Sul was forced to switch my academic profit motive to the scholarly motive." According to Langley, his most rewarding years were spent in sales and distribution. "Fifty per cent of selling is gossip," Langley said. "Everyone wants the latest news of their colleagues and their competition. You get a large order from him and he gets some conversation and a free steak dinner." Book publisher DURING HIS 20 YEARS at Prentice-Hall, Langley collected many memories, some of which he shares with students in his book Course offered in the School of Journalism. Since 1970, John Langley has been director of the Regents Press of Kansas, which publishes scholarly works. Langley says his most rewarding years were spent with the Princeton-Lake Publishing Company, where he worked 20 years. One story deals with a very tired and discouraged young woman who came into the Prentice-Hall office one Friday afternoon with a manuscript that had been turned down by nearly every publishing company in New York City. No one, it seemed, wanted to publish it by a Brooklyn school teacher because there were several on the market already. "We didn't think we particularly wanted another book by a Brooklyn school teacher, either." Langley said. "But Mr. Eastman, he read it with me and read it take home and read it over the weekend. Well, he read it and wasn't too interested, but he gave it to Mrs. Eastman to read. She stayed up half the night reading it and told me that she had a wonderful book and must be published." According to Langley, the manuscript was then passed on to the editor of the trade book department with the same results—he wasn't interested but his wife was. "With all this enthusiasm on the part of the ladies," Langley said, "we decided to go ahead and publish it. It was very fortunate that we did because the book, which was written by Belle Kaufman, was Up the Down Staircase, and turned out to be a very interesting book." The book, 750,000 copies of the book, plus we received a very fine fee for the movie rights." ALTHOUGH THE PROCUREMENT and selection of books are usually done by an acquisition editor, it is the publisher who takes the risk, Langley said. "It is very important that both the editor and the publisher have highly developed instincts about what the public wants and not what they think the public should read." Langley said. "You never know until a book hits the streets whether you have a hit." much less speculative but more specialized, Langley said. By contrast, scholarly publication is "Scholarly publishing is very specialized and has a very definite printing order and market. Our markets range from 1,500 to 2,000 copies for each book, and our markets between 800 and 1,500 copies to books. It's pretty cut and dry," Langley said. WHEN A MANUSCRIPT has been chosen by Langley and his staff at the Regents Press, it is read by specialists for scholarly review. If the manuscript receives a favorable review it is presented to the editorial board for the Regents Press of Kansas, which represents the six state supported colleges and universities. The editorial board meets three times a year and consists of Langley and two After a manuscript has been accepted by the board, it is printed by the University of Kansas Printing Service. The number of books accepted and printed is determined by the complexity of their make-up. Langley said. Usually, the Regents Press accepts and prints 10 to 12 manuscripts a year. members from each of the six state schools. Publication rights are decided upon by the board after each scholarly review of the book has been read and discussed by the board. The major speculative interest in scholarly publishing deals with the sales for these books. "WE CAN MAKE only very calculated guesses in each discipline," Langley said. "We know that American literature sells better than Russian history and we know that history sells better than Russian literature. We rely on patterns of experience." Unlike commercial publishers whose speculative interests are far more complex and spend more on the selling price of a book, scholarly publishing doesn't rely on price. SUA SUA FILMS LA TRIVIATA (1967) Based on the opera by Giuseppe Verdi with Anna Mofo, Gino Bechi. Classical Film Series. Wed., April 6, 7:30 p.m., 75c PERFORMANCE (1970) Dir. Nicholas Roeg and Donate Carrmell, with Mick Jagger. Film Girl. L.D.'s CHECKED AT THE DOOR. CHECKED AT THE DOOR. Thurs., April 17; 7:30 or 9:30 p.m. THE MISSOURI BREAKS (1976) Dir. Arthur Penn, With Marlon Brando, Jack Nicholson, Popular Fri., April 1 & Sat., April 9; 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30, p.m.) $1 Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union promotional techniques. Lists are made of all potential buyers, including those public libraries and schools that may benefit. This is especially effective if the material deals with Kansas or mid-America, Langley said. Langley enjoys his job at the Regents Permanent Library, where he pressures resulting from the difficult decisions in selecting manuscripts. "I enjoy the small town, the people, my job. When someone asks me if I would go back to the big time, I say, 'Not for any amount of money.'" Because of limited funds, the Regents Press of Kansas relies only on scholarly journal reviews and mail promotion. Most university presses rely on promoting their target markets, but some pick their targets, Langley said, and it is the most efficient and least expensive of all LEASING NOW Although the most crucial part of publishing is editorial selection, Langley said his most rewarding years were spent in sales and distribution with Prentice-Hall, a position that required sales ability and a desire to travel. If you desire a pleasant place to live and if your parents will sign the contract, then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W. 25th St. PARK 25 CLASSIFIED BIRTHDAY SPECIAL Wish them a happy birthday in the Kansan personal column. One insertion of 15 words for only $1.50. Offer good March 28 to April 15.Bring to 111 Flint Hall. Admissions work seldom ceases The admission of new undergraduate students to the University of Kansas is a艰难 process. HAPPY BIRTHDAY! "We've received 5,000 to 6,000 undergraduate applications for the coming fall semester," John Myers, director of admissions, said recently. MYERS SAID that most applications in during the winter and that most applications in the spring. "As the applications come in we deal with them," theyMers said. He said this process of screening by his staff was called rolling admission. Myers said that the largest number of applicants were incoming freshmen from Kansas and that two-thirds of the applicants were from Kansas. "The vast majority of undergraduate BACKGAMMON Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union J. Watson's APRIL 4-10 Come see Royals vs. Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Free on our 7' TV. Another SPECIAL NIGHT Like last Monday, remember? $2 Cover - Live music with FORT DODGE Great Movie: "Bang the Drums Slowly" s1 Cover - Disco Peanut Gallery: Kings vs. Indiana, 7:30 p.m. MON Myers said 2,300 to 2,500 foreign students applied to the University each year and only 15% of these were enrolled. Make a full day of it! TTV Free: Royals vs. Detroit, and dance to FORT DODGE Saturday night - $2 cover. 1 Cover - Disco 2 TV—"People's Command Performance: "77" 3 KOJAK Mysers said scores on standard tests, such as ACT and SAT, were considered when evaluating students. has limitations on the number of students they can admit. MYERS SAID THAT for an out-of-state student to be admitted to the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences they must be in good physical condition, must be capable of doing successful work, Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Peanut Gallery: Kings vs. Indiana, 7:30 p.m. All Stars All Towers, 10:30 p.m. Everyone FREE (no cover charge) 7 foot TV screen.""Something for Joey" Nuclear Power Management Navy Information Team 2420 Broadway Kansas City, Mo. 64108 "We don't have hard admission criteria," Myers said. "Any student who graduates from an accredited Kansas university is admitted for the freshman year." students who apply here are admitted," Myers said. He said that the quality of applicants was very high and that the quality of students is different from those who weren't admissible. 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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Arraignment set for murder case Vol. 87, No.121 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 7. 1977 See page eight Sport fee raise, student group cuts to go to Senate Recreation would cost students, faculty A $1.50 increase in the student activity fee will be recommended to the Student Senate next week by an ad hoc committee on recreational facilities. The committee also will recommend that $80,000 in unallocated Senate funds be allocated to the Recreation Advisory Board for capital improvements projects and that $25,000 will be charged to faculty and staff members who use the facilities at Robinson Gymnasium. Faculty members on the committee agreed to the proposal, provided that an oversight committee on recreation services be set up to include at least one student member and one faculty member not in the department of health, physical education or recreation, who will have with administration-appointed members in deciding the use of recreational facilities. The committee had sent a questionnaire to 200 faculty and staff members who now have lockers in the gymnasium. Of 100 students, it would be willing to pay the $10 users fee. The three additional revenues for recreation services would total about $120,000 and would allow the advisory board to maintain Robinson Gyim's open hours next year and finance planned improvements in recreational facilities. The University currently provides $16,350 for the super vision of recreational facilities. Tom Willerson, director of recreation services, is expected by this weekend to make a list of capital improvements needed in the recreational program. boring. A survey of 1,185 students by Stevie Mullen, student body president, and Ralph Munyane, student body vice president, during February's election campaign found that 55 per cent of the students surveyed would be attending school in improved improvements in recreational facilities. The improvements suggestions will include lights for some campus tennis courts, softball backstores on the fields at the corners of 23rd and Iowa streets and 19th and Naismith streets and new sod for all intramural fields. Leben said yesterday that necessary improvements in recreational facilities had been funded last year by an emergency appropriation by the University of Kansas, and that it would be hard to duplicate that appropriation this year. To keep the number of free hours open to students at Robinson Gynn next year comparable with the number of hours open this year would take $16,000 that isn't available without the additional revenues, Leben said. The committee was formed a month ago by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and Leben to investigate possible ways to improve the maintenance and capital improvements. The Student Senate must approve the student activity fee increase and the $60,000 allocation of unallocated funds. If the Senate approves the fee increase, it will be approved by the Senate. The recommendation for the $10 users fee will be submitted to FacEx for approval. BY LINDA STEWART and JOHN WHITESIDES Committees drop $35,586 from requests Staff Reporters Two Student Senate committees ended their budget deliberations last night by cutting $35,886 from the budgets of 41 student groups requesting $79,939. The Student Senate Services Committee cut $15,646 from the budgets of 14 groups. The groups had requested $50,285, but the committee had only $43,701 to allocate. All committee recommendations must be approved by the full Senate to take effect. The Academic Affairs Committee ended allocating its $8,652 to 25 of 27 groups The Campus Veterans budget received the second largest cut, from $1,757 to $2,703. THE LARGEST CUT made by the Services Committee was in the Environmental Services request of $10,943. The committee recommended that the group not be funded at all. The Kansas Environmental Service, also called the KU Weather Service, was formed in 1926 to serve as the state's weather office. formation service, which people could telephone to get specific weather forecasts. Some senators said they didn't want to be the service until they knew whether student teachers were ready. Another group that received no money was the Counseling Student Organization, which had requested $460. The group received funds last year from the Graduate Student Council, which receives a block of funds. The committee recommended that the Counseling Student Organization try to receive funds from the council again this year. THE COMMITTEE recommended that Hilltop Child Development Center not be funded by the committee but that a bill be introduced on the Senate floor next week requesting money for the group from unallocated funds. The committee had never dealt with Hilltop because the center's funds had previously come directly drown the Senate operating budget. Mike Tareboulos, committee chairman, said that Hilltop's past record probably would assure it Senate funds. The group requested $1,075. MECHA, a student service group for Chicano and Latino students, requested $1,360 its $2,680 for a symposium next fall. The group also asked making the group's total allocation $2,000. ALPHA PHI OMEGA'S request was cut $321, making the group's total allocation $736. Funds were cut from such areas as advertising and office supplies. The committee also cut $175 from the Native American Alliance's budget in the areas of advertising and office supplies, but funded a $175 request for the group's annual powwow. The group's total allocation was $2,280. The budget of the Commission on the Status of Women was cut by $199, making its budget $1,851. The group said its goal was to raise the consciousness of women. See COMMITTEES page three Other cuts made by the committee were Women's Coalition, $335; Douglas County Council, $280. AUSTIN, MARY LENNARD Molten alass David Huchtenhaus, an instructor in glass blowing at the University of Illinois, demonstrated Tuesday the creation of his "fantasy vessel" to about 50 persons in Chamney Barn. The demonstration was a part of a series of programs sponsored by the KU department of design. Normally, the glass blower works about five hours to complete one of his "fantasy vessels," which are vases containing many colors of glass sandwiched between several layers of transparent crystal. But Hutchhausen did a "smaller, quickier version" to demonstrate the techniques he uses to make one of the vases. Hutchhausen, who has been glass blowing about 26 years, recently completed a one-man show of his works in New York before coming to KU. One of his works will be displayed in the Kansas Union during the annual Nuclear Show. It will be part of a show entitled, "The Son of Glass Gems," which will feature the work of 15 to 20 glass blowers. Study requested of Indian death The chairman of the Navaho Tribe in Arizona has written a letter to a South Dakota student requesting an investigation into allegations that Haskell Indian Junior College student. The letter was sent to Sen. James Aboreux, D-S.D., by navaho Chairman Peter McDonald. Neither McDonald nornor McDonald could be reached for comment last night. The report of the letter was released by Donald Peaches, Haskellrell who, said he and other regents were dissatisfied with the results of a local investigation. Wallace Gallucci, Haskell president, said last night he knew nothing of the letter and that the company had not responded. The letter from the Navaho leader asks for an investigation by the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division into the shooting death of Larry Piccote, 22. Picotee was fatally shot March 5 at the Long Branch Saloon, 1099 Massachusetts St., by three Lawrence policemen after he reportedly drew a pistol on them. It later was discovered that Picotee's gun wasn't loaded. The policemen were attempting to question Picotte about an armed robbery the week before of the Site Service Station, 946 E. 23rd St. The Douglas County attorney ruled March 19 that the three policemen had not acted with felonious intent in the shooting. The court said the being suspended during the investigation. Peaches said the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) also received a copy of the letter and had been asked to help in the new investigation. Although Picotee was a Sioux, McDonald reportedly wrote the letter out of a concern that his former employer had been fired. KU budget compromise sought By ROSS MCILVAIN Staff Reporter A conference committee of the Kansas Legislature met last night to forge an agreement between the Senate and the House on the main appropriations bill for the University of Kansas. The conference committee, which includes three members from each house, planned to report last night's decision on the bill to the legislature this morning, according to State Rep. Fred Weaver, D-Baxter Springs, a member of the conference and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. As it now计划, the bill would give KU about $45.4 million for next year. The House passed the bill yesterday, leaving cuts in faculty raises and operating expenses made by the House Ways and Means Committee unaltered. The Senate had already passed the bill to allow students to yesterday to reject the Haitian mandates. THE HOUSE Ways and Means Committee amended the bill to reduce Gov. Rick Scott's budget cuts. faculty salary increase at all Regents schools to 6 per cent—except at Fort Hays State, which would get the full 7 per cent as a catch-up provision. The committee also cut the recommended increase in other operating expenses from 8 to 7 per cent—except for the University of Maryland Medical Center and Fort Hays State. A supplemental appropriations bill that includes $364,020 for KU also went to the budget conference committee yesterday. The amount of money needed mainly to cover increases in utility Women's sports funding criticized The Student Senate has more responsibility to fund University of Kansas recreation programs than KU women's intercollegiate athletics, Steve Leben, student body president, told a group of about 25 students last night. Applications for Kansan now available Applications for summer and fall Kansan editor and business manager positions are now available in the Student Senate office, the offices of the dean of Women's affairs and in 105 Fll. Hall Applicants must be turned in by 5 p.m. this Friday to the Kansan board will interview candidates the afternoon of Tuesday, April 12. At a meeting called by Leben to discuss the Senate's role in funding women's sports, Leben reiterated the Senate's plans to fund the women's program this year but said a resolution would be sent to the Senate to approve the Senate not fund the women's program again. Leben said that the Senate's decision to recommend funding of the women's program came about because there weren't any other sources of revenue available to the Senate to fund the conflicts in the timing and procedures of the Senate's and the University's budgeting. NONETHELESS, Leben said that a proposed $1.50 student activity fee increase per student each semester would fund improvements in KU's recreational program without cutting funds for the women's program. The Senate's general funding policy states that inter-collegial activities should not be funded. activity fee to the women's program and $1.05 to recreational services. LEBEN SAID THAT about half of the KU student population used the intramural facilities, while only one or two 250 students in the women's intercollegiate program. Each semester, students pay $1.50 of their A resolution to stop funding the women's program after this year would indicate the Senate's funding philosophy to the state of Kansas, Leben said. The Senate currently provides about $36,000 for the intramural program and $54,405 for the women's athletic program. He said that with the right timing, the University or state would be forced to pick up the funding for the women's program in order to comply with Title IX. However, Marian Washington, director of the Women's Intercollegiate Athletic program, said it would be difficult for the school to hire an administrator money that would be cut by the Senate. costs, which were much greater than expected. Weaver said the committee would consider the supplemental bill last night "as soon as we can get something to eat," and would report it to the legislature this morning along with the main appropriations bill. A CAPITAL improvements bill that includes $17.3 million for additions to Malott Hall and Robinson Gymnasium has passed the Senate but is still in the House Ways and Means Committee, although it was ordered to be voted on yesterday morning. Weaver, chairman of the committee, said the bill probably wouldn't be reported to the full House or voted on until the legislature reconvened in about 10 days. Today is presumed to be the last day of the regular session. Appropriations bills usually are passed before first adjournment, so when a legislative session has closed, a clean session will have a week or two later, legislators will have the chance to override the governor if BUT WEAVER said the committee generally agreed with Bennett's recommendations on the capital improvements so they weren't worried about a possible veto. The legislature adjourned about 8 last night and many of the members paused briefly to eat before meeting in committees that were the most important bills before the session ends. The legislature will convene at 10 this morning for what is expected to be the last day of the regular session, and may work into the night. It isn't yet known when the customary two- or three-day clean up session. House OK's pay raise for classified emploves By DEENA KERBOW Staff Repeater Staff Reporter The Kansas House of Representatives is expected to send to the Senate today a bill that gives wage increases to all classified employees, even those at the top of their pay scale. The House voted yesterday, 116-5, in favor of the bill after amending the original Senate version. If made law, the bill will affect about 1,450 University of Kansas employees, Phil Rankin, associate director of central personnel, said last night. About 375 of those employees have reached the top of their pay range, he said. STATE REP. Wendell Lady, R-Overland park, amended the Lady to include the following: Under Lady's amendment, an employee receiving more than $10,000 a year would receive the $25-a-month pay increase and, if at the top of his pay scale, an additional 2 per cent raise upon the approval of the appointing authority. At KU the appointing authority would be ATKU architec Arch Dykes, but he has designated the responsibility to Russell Mills university director for support services. Under the bill, an employee earning less than $10,000 a year will receive a pay increase of 3 per cent or $25 a month, whichever is smaller. An employee also will receive a higher step increases and longevity pay increases, which are usually about 5 per cent. thought chances of a Senate concurrence on the House amendments were good. The original Senate bill proposed only a 2.5 per cent pay increase for classified personnel (civil service employees) earning less than $10,000 a year. But Rankin said he "THEE SEEMS TO be a pretty strong feeling that the classified people should receive something more than what the warrior originally recommended," he said. Rankin said he thought Gov. Robert Bennett had been thinking that the proposed 2.5 per cent pay increase would be added to the 5 per cent step increases to meet this year's approximate 7 per cent cost of living increase. "But all that does is roughly keep you sane." Rankin said. He explained that classified employees who had reached the top of their pay scale steps weren't eligible for the 5 per cent step increases. Therefore, without Lady's support, the managers would face a 7 per cent higher cost of living with only a 2.5 per cent pay increase. JIM FOLDTENE, director of central personnel services, told about 50 classified employees at a meeting yesterday that the threat of a disease would 'affect longevity pay raises. Gvil service employees, Rankin said, follow a program of seven steps, A through F, and as an employee is promoted, one step requires 3 per cent pay increase for each step. He said the longevity program began at step F to provide additional 5 per cent pay increases, similar to step raises. But, he said, longevity applies only to employees who are expected to work in the program for 1970. The program was eliminated for classified employers after that date. RANKIN SAID, "There has been a lot of pressure since longevity was established." 2 Thursday, April 7, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Prison plan seems ill-fated TOPPER-A-The Kansas Senate debate Gov. Robert Bennett a severe blow yesterday, vowing to scuttle his proposal for a new minimum security law. The Senate deleted $125,000 in preliminary planning money which the House had granted, and they instead recommended that the whole matter be referred to in the Senate. Immediately after adjournment last night, Bennett called key legislative leaders to his office in an effort to salvage his prison program. The vote to pass the bill without the prison funding was 37-3. State Rep. Fred Weaver, D-Bart Springs and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said there was a chance the funding could be reinserted, but he said that the fate of the facility was bleak this session. Liauor bu drink bill fails TOPEKA - The Kansas Senate yesterday killed a bill that would have legalized sale of beer by the drink in restaurants, maintaining the state constitution's ban The measure failed on a voice vote and was stricken from the Senate debate calendar. An attempt to refer it to the Federal and State Affairs Committee failed. The bill would have allowed sale of mixed drinks by restaurants that make 50 per cent of their sales of food. In addition, it provided for licensing and taxing of such establishments. 3 strikers taken to court KANAS CITY, Mo.—Three striking teachers yesterday were served citations to counsel or violation of a judge's temporary restraining order against the teacher. they were the first teachers in the illegal strike to appear in court on a citation. Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Lewis Clymer, who issued the temporary restraining order against the teachers' strike, granted a continuance until 130 days after the court's decision. James Glassow and Edward Wills, asked for more time to prepare for the hearing. The hearing was to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court by ignoring the restraining order. The strike had kept 51,000 students away from classes for 17 days, but 3,000 graduating seniors yesterday returned to four consolidated teaching centers. Several disturbances were reported at the four schools where picketing teachers gathered to watch the seniors and non-striking teachers return to class. At least one stricting teacher was arrested. Police said Jan Walker, 30, was charged with disorderly conduct after she and several other picketing teachers attempted to block non-striking teacher from entering the driveway at Central High School. She was released after posting $25 bond. 2 quilty in obscenity trial WICHTA—Two theater employees were convicted of promoting obscurity in the first trial resulting from a campaign against pornography by Vern Miller, the former Kansas attorney general who now is Swedwick County district attorney. Bertram Ross and Gary Kirk were ordered to return to Swedwick County District Court on April 21 for sentencing, in case their motions for a new trial are denied. College name changes pass TOPEKA—A bill to change the official name of the Kanaansas Board of Regents institutions at Pittsburgh, Emporia and Hays from college to university was sent to the state legislature. The official names of the institutions would become Pittsburgh State University, Emporia State University and Fort Hays State University. The House originally had voted to make the name of the Pittsburgh institution Southeast Kansas State University at Pittsburg, but the Senate changed his to Baylor. The Senate also changed its name. House OK's report on open meeting law TOPEKA (AP) $-\frac{A}{b}$ to strengthen the Kansas open meetings law approached final legislative approval yesterday when the governor issued a conference committee report. 10-11. Senate approval of the report is needed to forward the bill to Gov. Robert Bennett - Define the term "meeting" as any prearranged gathering or assembly by a majority of the quorum of the membership of a body or agency subject to the open meetings law for the purpose of discussing the business of the body or agency. - —Provide that exceptions could be established only by state or federal law and not by city or county ordinance or school board action. - Make it the duty of the presiding officer or the person calling the meeting to furnish notice of date, time and place of any regular or special meeting to any person requesting the information, with the provision that notice to an executive officer of an eminent attorney shall be deemed to be notice to the entire membership of the organization -Allow use of photographic lights in addition to cameras and recording devices —Require any motion to recess to an executive meeting to include a statement of reasons for being recessed the meeting; the subjects to be disbanded from the executive meeting; and the time and place that the open meeting will resume, with the subject to be reinstated in executive meeting limited to the stated subject. in all public meetings subject to reasonable rules. - Bar consideration of any subject at any closed or executive meeting except for: personnel matters; pending litigation and consultation with an attorney for the body or agency that would be deemed privileged by statute; a person appointed by the employee-employee negotiations; confidential data relating to financial and other affairs of corporations; and matters relating to actions adversely or favorably affecting a person such as a student, inmate, patient or resident of a public institution, except the person who is a right to a public bearing月oon request. —Provide a civil penalty of not more than $500 for a knowing violation. Any binding action taken at a meeting not in substantial compliance would be voidable in accordance with the Code. Copilot discusses disaster Robert Bragg, 39, escaped from the worst air disaster in history with a broken ankle suffered when he jumped to the ground as cockpit was sheared from the rest of the plane. BOOTHBAY HARBOR, Maine (UPI)—The copilot of the Pan Am charter jet that collided with a KLM jumbo jet at Tenerife in the Canary Islands last month said at a news conference yesterday the KLM pilot took off without clearance. He told reporters at the news conference in his hometown that he didn't blame anyone for the accident that killed 577 people. Bragg said he heard the traffic controller give the KLM plane clearance to go from Tenerife to Las Palmas, but the controller didn't give it clearance to take off. But he said he could understand why she the M pilot had taken off without clearance. He said the traffic controller then asked his olane. "Are you off the runway?" "Negative, we are still on the runway," the coplot quoted himself as having said. Drug arrest made in Green Hall A Topeka a man was arrested in Green Hall yesterday morning on charges of possession of drugs with intent to sell, according to KU police. The man, Thomas Troughton III, and two other suspects were discovered in the basement of Green about 1 a.m. by an officer making a routine check of the building. The two other suspects were asked to leave the scene and weren't chared. allegedly found two small bottles of oil in the lining of Troughton's jacket. Allegedly, Troughton told the officer that the bottles were full and later said he intended to sell it. Trouthron is being held in the Douglas County Jail on $2,500 bond. While frisking Troughton, the officer Green Hall closes at midnight. Troughton's presence in the building after closing is unclear. April 7, 7 to 8 PM - 864-4746 Questions about Student Senate? Ask Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan during a call-in interview on KJHK FM91 Thursday, KJHIKFM91 THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE ADVENT SPEAKER SALE LAST WEEK — LAY-A-WAY NOW! SAMSUNG The little stereo store RAY AUDIO 13 E. 8th 842-2047 The speakers at Ray Audio are selected to sound as good in every respect, including frequency, as any speaker of any price. Hi-Fi & Sterne Review magazines agree that their response & overall performance would be noteworthy in any speaker, regardless of site or To hear just how much better our speakers sound, come in and hear the Advents. Al Ray Audio, the little store that offers a big difference. THURS. EVENING TILL 8:00 10 Daisies or Daffodils $1.50 Cash and Carry Thursday, Friday & Saturday Owens FLOWER SHOP th & Indiana Indictment says truckers forced to pay pensions DETROIT (UPI)—A federal grunt jury yesterday indicted reputed Mafia leader Vincent Meli and three other men on extortion charges for allegedly forcing drivers to pay employer contributions to various Teamsters Union pension funds. Among those indicted was Roby Smith, the former business agent for Teamsters who had been arrested by Frank Fitzsimons and James Hofa before him, as a stepping stone to the union's international presidency. Hofa has been missing and presumed dead since July 19. The indictments charged that Mell, Smith and J & J Cartage Co. owners James Russo and Joseph Cusmano forced J & J drivers to cover its pension fund contributions. The drivers were threatened with loss of their jobs, loss of equity in their equipment, lighter loads and a "little rough stuff" if they failed to agree to the scheme in writing, U.S. Atty. Philip Van Dam said recently. Federal sources said government investigators believed such practices were unlawful. BUY TWO SANCHOS at regular price GET ONE FREE Ex with this COUPON Expiration date 4-15-77 Taco Grande 9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd ♩ ♫ d. ♪ ♫ d. ♪ ♫ d. ♪ ♫ d. ♪ للسنة السبعين الماضية عاد إلى الرياض في السنة الثامنة والثماني Fri. & Sat.: Claude "Fiddler" Williams and SKIP DEVOL, world's greatest banjo player TONIGHT: Jam Session with the River City Jazz Band all at Paul Gray's PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. upstairs all 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations Campus Veterans Attention General Elections will be held for Campus Veterans President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer on April 14, at 4:30 in the Meadowlark Room, 3rd floor cafeteria in the Kansas Union. LET'S NOT BE APATHETIC THIS YEAR-CAMPUS VETERANS IS YOUR ORGANIZATION-KEEP IT THAT WAY-VOTE! Pd. in part by Student Activity Fund. SIRIANA & BALADEY knit shirts from Polo exclusively at Mister Guy . . . classics in solids and stripes open thurs. nights till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. Thursday, April 7, 1977 hurring rderday, SOUND RNATIVE 3 udio are in every frequency of any magazine overall worthy in size or tter our and hear the little big dit- _ 8:00 ins- SHOP iana --- Committees end hearings From page one Association, $250; and Volunteer Clearing House, $175. THE FRIENDS OF Headquarters budget of $8,064 remained, unchanged. The Academic Affairs Committee made preliminary cuts in its organizations' requests, but found that it had allocated approximately $3,500 more than it had. After further debate, the committee found it had still funded $433 more than its allocation. It then voted to equally cut all the requests to meet its allocation level. requests by the Association for Black Social Workers ($2 received for a $3,275 request); Kansas Defender Project ($50 of $4,113); SORMEBER $2,470 of $4,610); and the Engineering School Council ($1,551 of $2,000). THE LARGEST CUTS were made in The committee made two recommendations. One was that Versuch, a German journal, use its allocation to fund publication this year, during which it can make itself self-supporting by charging for the book. THE SECOND RECOMMENDATION was made to the Women Engineer and is now in-state. State weighs doctor plan The bill passed the House floor yesterday with committee amendments, which Fred Weaver, D-Baxter Springs, termed only technical. The Kansas Senate is expected today to consider House amendments to a bill that would establish four affiliated family residency programs for doctors in Kansas. "They did not change the substance of the bail he said just night, "and the Senate should." Bennett for approval or veto; if the Senate disagrees with the amendments, the bill will be sent to a conference committee, committees, or the number of House and Senate members. The legislation proposes that KU Medical Center students spend their first year of residency in Kansas City or Wichita. Then, resident doctors would be sent in their communities to do small Kansas communities where family practice centers would be established. If the Senate agrees with the amendments, the bill will be sent to Gov. Robert KU would be authorized to establish four affiliated health care centers in counties where KU has a presence. University Daily Kansan LAST CHANCE! is Thursday. April 7! The deadline to sign up for the K.U. SAILING CLUB-SUA BAHAMAS TRIP © Easter Disco Dance April 9th 8:00 p.m. mileage budget from $500 to $100, but suggested the group come before the full Senate later and document the donations gained by out-of-state trips, after which the group could apply for further funding. Admission $1.75 Ballroom Beer sold with I.D. No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. The Senate record which was to be distributed this morning, was expected to report all the committee's findings to the Senate. The Senate will review student body president and vice president, Sponsored by Gay Services STUDENT SERVICES REQUEST RECEIAMS Alpha Phi Omega 8,105.07 $1,037 Campus Veterans 4,177 3,793 Campus Veterans Health 4,177 3,793 Legal Aid 3,064 2,004 Legal Aid 3,064 2,004 MECCA 2,380 2,000 The American Alliance 2,380 2,000 Volunteer Cleaning House 1,024 980 Women's Coalition 3,825 3,179 Women's Coalition 3,825 3,179 National Lawyers Group 450 608 National Lawyers Group 450 608 and Mike Harper, StudEx chairman, were to meet last night to review the committees' ACADEMIC AFFAIRS REQUEST RECOMMENDED ABBSW $2,375 MEMBER AIA $443 Alpha Rho Gamma Swimming School 413 Alpha Rho Gamma Engineering School 305 Engineers University Associate Annatee 305 BALSA 1,585 Engineer Student Council 1,585 Black teeth Club 718 Cheeky Club 718 Chaney Club 331 Engineering Society Association 311 Engineering Society Project 3,000 Engineering Society Project 3,000 SACRS 796 SACRS 2,200 Undergraduate Philosophy Club 4,100 Undergraduate Philosophy Club 4,100 Women in Law 1,121 Women in Law 1,121 Appreciation Center 735 Art Education School 337 Students in Asian Studies 300 Students in International Communication 300 Data 984 Data 984 German School 179 German School 179 Military Engineers School 267 Military Engineers School 267 YARLS 38,744 As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift. University-Community Service Scholarship/Award - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). Qualifications: *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. *Scholarship financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. *More information and applications available Tuesday, March 29 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. *Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 8, 1977 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Applications: It was incorrectly stated in last week's Kansan that applications for assistant hall directors and resident assistants were still being accepted. THE DEADLINE WAS MARCH 11. Let Litwin's help you look your best for Easter, job interviews, graduation or any other important 100 110 CORRECTION event. We feature the latest contemporary styles in 3 and 4 piece vested suits priced from 89.75 to 115.00. To complement your suits, we suggest our Career Club shirts and our fine neckwear. master charge the interbank club Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union $1 Tickets available at SUA Office. 3:30 Matinee each day LITWIN'S Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here SUA 831 Mass. FRIDAY, APRIL 8 & SATURDAY, APRIL 9 POPULAR FILMS Free parking in rear 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. ONE STEALS. ONE KILLS. ONE DIES. MARLON JACK BRANDO NICHOLSON "THE MISSOURI BREAKS" ELLOTTY KATTNER presents MARLON BRANDO and JACK NICHOLSON in ARTHUR PENN for "THE MISSOURI BREAKS" featuring ARTHUR PENN ELLOTTY KATTERSON PRODUCED BY HERMAN When do you say Budweiser? □ When I think about pizza. □ When my wallet says I can't afford pizza. [ ] When the delivery guy leaves three large pizzas (with everything) at my door by mistake. Actually, anytime's the right time to say Budweiser. And when you do, you've really said it all! Actually, anytime's the right time to say Budweiser. And when you do, you've really said it all! KING OF BEERS® • ANNEUSER-BUSH INC. • ST. LOUIS 4 Thursday, April 7, 1977 University Daily Kansan Focus on Western Europe Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism Allies in political flux There is, needless to say, a lot more to Western Europe than postcards and travel brochures. From the Norwegian Sea to the Mediterranean Sea, from the White Cliffs of Dover to the Austrian Alps, the nations of Scandinavia and Denmark have a period of considerable instability and change. EURO-COMUNISTS attack Moscow as much as Washington and get more and more power. The Common Market tries to become more like a United States of Europe without losing Britain. So many things are happening that this page can only be a superfuture glimpse of the site. Don't expect it to be very detailed. The roots of our culture are thoroughly Western European. They have been our traditional allies. What is happening to them may indicate what will happen to us. Something is going wrong in Western Europe and no one is quite sure how to stop it. In French elections two weeks ago, 60 important towns fell to the side of the alliance, giving the alliance two-thirds of the larger urban centers in the country of parity, equality and fraternity. Economics, politics shake Europe If the current voting trend continues, the Socialist-Communist coalition will win a parliamentary majority in the 1978 national elections. French president Valéry Giscard d'Erménon will be forced to resign or to call for new elections. THE COMMUNISTS also are facing a crisis in Italy. Not only are they losing ground with students and far-far radicals, but if the party supports the government in breaking a Italy has been troubled by a series of riots by students who are over completing their studies. The government has taken such drastic measures as terminating demonstrations in Rome. wage-price agreement, it will lose control of Italy's trade unions. If the Communists don't break the agreement, Italy will lose a $83 million International Monetary Fund loan, which the country sorely needs. Without the loan, Italy faces economic month. Tindemans had failed to come up with a parliamentary majority in what would have been the eighth government reshuffle. Only Spain gives a glimmer of hope to the political climate of Western Europe. The country continued its shift toward* in attempts to gain a majority in elections. Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer BELGIUM'S PRIME minister, Leo Tindemans, dissolved his parliament and called for new elections this Even quieter nations on the European continent are having the right to govern in the Netherlands broke up two weeks ago in a dispute over a minor part of the cabinet's reform measures. ruin the country could be plunged into revolution. The European Democratic Union (EDU) is to be set up in Brussels or Strasbourg. EDU will embrace right-wing parties both in the European Economic Council (EU) and elsewhere in Europe. democracy by announcing it would hold its first democratic elections in a few months. The right to vote gave workers the right to strike and to form unions and parlay them into the Spain's 170 political prisoners. WHILE WESTERN Europe continues its slow shift toward the political left, parties on both sides of the ideological spectrum are trying to establish transnational political parties The Eurocommunists also are trying to form some agreement. They support a new brand of communism combining socialism and Western-style democracy. HOWEVER, IDEOLOGY isn't the problem; it is merely a symptom of Western Europe's fears. The prevailing trends are a reaction against the mediciate leaders who now govern Western Europe and an effort to deal with the economic crisis in Europe just can't snap out of. Pooer countries, such as Portugal, aren't the only ones having troubles balancing their payments. France simply cash on the prices and stagnating world trade. Germany and Switzerland regard inflation as their principle problem. Germany—with Europe's strongest economy—is plagued with a high rate of unemployment and a decrease in trade exports. IN VIEW OF the current leaders' inability to solve Western Europe's economic challenges, leadership might be refreshing, However, to assume that politics alone can cure economic ills is naive. The current recession is tided to some extent over which European politicians have little or no control. Europe is powerless to dictate the price of petroleum—which the EU has been makingcent in the past four years. Nor can ideology determine ecological constraints or the scope of limited natural resources. She can only hope that the new trend in Western European politics embraces not only a political shift but also preemption of why Europe is "going wrong." New insight is needed, mere rhetoric is not. Callaghan losing influence Last month it looked as if it might be the end of the line for Great Britain's Prime Minister James Caghan. After all, Callaghan's own Labor party voted against a Labor-proposed motion to cut government spending by one per cent. The Laborites' vote, when combined with the vote of the opposing Conservative party and other political factions, resulted in a 293-0 defeat for Callaghan's government. The Conservative party's contention in opposing the cut was that it was too small and unpleasant. It was also an sluggish economy any good. And who would have been Callaghan's successor had he failed to muster a majority? MOST LIKELY it would have been Thatatcher, who many regard as the first potential woman prime minister in Britain's long parliamentary history. But Callaghan was saved moments before the no-confidence vote came up in Maryland. Steel. Steel promised Callaghan the liberal vote of 13 members in return for a Liberal voice in government. Callaghan was insulted by the governor's, his 322 to 298, as a result. Indeed, if the Liberal votes had gone to the other side he would have been the lead of their pencils in anticipation of a national election. Thatcher did for education what Attila the Hun did for Western Civilization. Thatcher is hated by many MARGARET Thatcher, leader of the Conservatives, concluded that "we have no confidence to vote before the House of Commons. If such a vote had been successful, Callaghan would have had no suffered." Elizabeth to call new election. NEVERTHELESS, there are enough Britons who like Thatatcher that Conservatives are a strong 16 points ahead of Labour in polls. The reason for Conservative popularity undoubtedly is Britain's sagging economy. Jay Bemis Editorial Writer Britons who regarded her policies as Secretary of State for Education and Science from 1970 to 1974 as being too elitist. There are several reasons for their thinking so, but perhaps the more important ones are the following: - $She strived for more governmental control of student unions in an attempt to depoliticize them. ● Thatcher increased the price of school lunches by one-third and eliminated free milk rations for 3.5 million children. She also raised her reasons for doing so, that milk had nothing to do with education and that the $2.7 million savings could be used to upgrade the political system; to fund funds for higher education; and to These policies seemed so elitist that one Laborite said The pound declined sharply in value last year; dropping as low as $1.66 in value last fall from $2.03 in January, 1978. Britain lured the euro away to loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), but it had to do so by promising to cut down on government spending and raising its tax revenues. This provision strayed from Labour's usual philosophy of being an insurer guaranteeing full employment. At the end of last year, the country's rate of inflation stood at 2.5%, up from the Chancellor of the Exchequer Dennis Healy has said that it probably won't get much lower than 10 per cent this year, and the government will continue to hover around its present 15 per cent mark. Despite Thatcher's spending policies during her days as education secretary, Britons seem to respect her attitude toward reviving the economy in what she describes as a "tough budget," and goals for recovery are to reduce the amount of government expenditures, balance the budget and adopt sound monetary policies. These goals are similar to the provisions of the original 1974 budget. Thatcher seems to have had in mind for several years now. Thus, the time seemed to be ripe for Thatatcher to challenge the government of Callaghan and London. London books were actually 5 to 10s that Callaghan would be leaving as prime minister. But the Conservatives failed to gain support of Steel's small liberal faction and Callaghan is being inducted after only a year in office. he was able to survive what he called "the moment of truth." OBVIOUSLY HIS HOLINESS HAS SPOTTED SOME COMMUNISTS IN THE CROWD! The travel posters show a soft, green, beautiful land where the talking never stops and the pups never close. Wrong, right split two Irelands But that is only the stereotype of Ireland. The European community, which has seldom experienced prolonged periods of calm, still is upset by the constant Irish sectarian battles. There are two Irelands, really. There is a "right" Ireland and a "wrong" Ireland. THE "RIGHT" Ireland is Finns' freedom battle laudable The balance of Americans know very little about the world more than 100 miles from home. They should know more. A lot more. The freedom and independence as much as the United States does should recognize and give tribute to those countries whose rival its own. Finland is one such country. Finland is half the size of Texas, with a population about equal that of Mississippi. The climate is mild; only 13 per cent of its land is suitable for agriculture and because of its extremely high productivity is quite low. Most of the remaining area is wasteland. BY ANDY WARREN Guest Writer Despite those natural encumbrances, Finland has the 10th highest standard of living in the world. Social welfare is advanced. THE FIINNS ARE among the world's most educated people. For a country with such a small population, Finland has produced a truly amazing number of outstanding architects, artisans, musicians, designers. Of this fact there can be no exaggeration or over emphasis. EUROPE POPY U.S. PRESTIGE If the Soviets could have had it their way, Finland too would be a satellite feature. Feeling the need for a buffer zone from Nazi Germany, Russian forces invaded Finland in December 1899. Planners in Moscow and Berlin demanded their forces to breeze past what Finnish defenses there might be and occupy the smaller nation in a few days' time. They paid dearly for their errors. LOGISTICALLY the Soviet Army had it made. In war, as in everything else, however, the Finnns proved themselves capable of dealing with the best and promptly astonished the Reds. For three months an army from Finland, a nation of barely more than 4 million people, waged war with its titan neigh- Southern Ireland, more properly known as the Republic of Ireland. It is a relatively bar of 100 million. Highly mobile and courageous in battle, the Finnns outmatched the Soviets from the beginning. Gliding silently on skis through the snowy forests, the Finnns isolated Russian columns and then up them nicely time after time. Other negative build-up of Soviet arms and personnel and favorable weather gave Russia a partial victory. WHEN HOSTILITIES broke out between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, Finland found itself allied with Germany in hopes of regaining lost territory. The Finns cooperated in none of Hitler's nastility disputes with Soviets and quickly re-established the pre-1939 borders where they then held fast. The Soviets, perhaps remembering their experiences with the determined Finnis in 1939 and their monumental victory, still have fortitude in continuing battle this feisty neighbor. The Soviets agreed to negotiate, albeit from a clear position of superiority. With the disintegration of Noran Germany, Finland found itself in a position of facing a well-survived persecuted and even larger Red fury. Seeking the futility of further negociated for peace. The people who have suffered the most from the IRA are those the IRA supposedly is trying to PEACE WAS expensive to the Finnns. It cost them 10 per cent of their land and seven per cent of their people were dead or crippled. Though not so badly damaged as many other national schools, industrial capability was gone. Reparations to the Soviets have been estimated to equal as much as $800,000,000 at the 1948 To prevent such a thing from happening, and to maintain the considerable freedoms that many countries allow, we delicate, please peerless, in their handling of their precarious position. What may at times appear to be slavish subservience to the Soviet Union is in fact the desire to Finnish independence. After nearly 800 years of foreign domination (Swedish and Russian), after suffering the crushing effects of World War I, Finland burgessed aftermath, Finland thrives with life, freedom and prosperity. rate. They also were saddled with reparations to the western allies, and to their credit, Finland is the only country in the world that is paying its reparations to the United States on schedule. Finland was forced to sign a treaty guaranteeing its neutrality and friendship between France and preventing it from joining any alliances against Moscow, which the Russians interpret as including the European Economic Community. TODAY FINNISH leaders walk a tightrope between the Soviet Union and Finland's own independence. Moscow takes every action to see that Finland remains as subservient as before, and Nearly everything short of direct intervention has been used to influence domestic Finnish politics. Finns know that active resistance to Soviet demands is probably equivalent as anything less than another Grand Duchest of Moscow. Andy Warren is a sophomore majoring in political science and geography. The "wrong" Ireland, in Northern Ireland, there have been more than 1,500 people killed during the sectarian strife, which has plagued the country and shows no signs of letting up. It is more outstanding, albeit grim, facts about the northland. peaceful country, especially compared with the North. The people, mostly Catholic, have a moderate standard of living. THE PEOPLE in Northern Ireland are known for their endurance, and they work at a variety of jobs. However, the jobs are mostly held by clerics, who appear reluctant to hire the Catholics, whom they outnumber three to one. The standard of living in the North is much lower because of the high, mostly Catholic, unemployment. It was for this purpose that, in 1968—to protest job discrimination against Catholics. From these demonstrations, which soon turned ugly, has grown the scourge of Northern Ireland, the Irish Republican Army. The Irish Republic, on the other hand, is less of the naster various of religious bigotry in Ireland and are too numerous to feel insecure. There are 2.7 million Protestants and only 130,000 Protestants. THE IRA was supposedly intended to liberate the Catholics from oppression by the Protestant majority. It hasn't happened yet. In fact, no war of liberation has ever been fought with so little support that it could be liberated. The IRA seems to have lost sight of its goals, if it ever had any, and now functions mostly as an organization of terrorists-at-large. Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer They have suffered from the reprisals organized by the extremists, the searches and seizures by British troops looking for IRA members in Afghanistan, and the IRA itself whenever the terrorists stop to violence or otherwise have defied IRA tactics. IRONICALLY, the Catholics initially welcomed both the IRA and the Greyhounds north, thinking that both would surely protect them from Protestant extremists. Now Catholics chief antagonists. protect from the Proestant extremists: the Catholic minority. The presence of the British troops is another thorn in Irishmen's sides, north and south. But the Ulster government, which is mostly Protestant, disagrees with the Dublin Ulster council and the Ulster politicians like the current division. They think that a united Ireland would be a Catholic state, and they might be systematically excluded. They have to agree in order for the unification to occur. For the time being, unification efforts will fail, and there will continue to be two Irelands. The right one is easy to know; the wrong one is painful to believe. Efforts are begun every year to try to legislate the unification of both Irelands, to try to remedy their individual economic and social issues in 1973, and in 1975, said in the Declaration of Sunningdale that she wouldn't oppose unification efforts. They see their sectarian strife as a purely domestic matter, and the British troops, sent there to keep order and to protect, wind up on the growing list of victims. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kaiser Wallaby Autumn 2013, http://www.uku.edu/college/academics/journal/english/June and July ebook except Saturday, Sunday and Holly Jelly. Subscribes by mail are a $2 member or $15 member. Subscriptions by call are a $1 member or a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $1 fee. Editor Jerry Rates Managing Editor Greg Hack Campus Editor Alison Gwinn Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Louisa South Jerry Seth Bathara Rowever Copy Chiefs Bernall Jenkins Tim Pellor Sports Editor Courtney Wier Associate Sports Editors Din Browne Photo Editor Photographers Mike Campbell Make-up Editor Jay Koehler Supper Appley, Jim Cohn Wire Editors Larry Bouriau Jac Boleman Entertainment Editors Business Manager Janice Clements Advertising Manager Tim O'Nean Advertising Manager Larry Sanders Classified Manager Jared Patterson Promotional Manager Pat Theurton National Advertising Manager Darin Burke National Advertising Manager Bob Gruhn ope infiltration as if invasion em. Germany— 's's strongest aligned with a employment and grade exports. OF the current utility to solve坡ope's economic change of hill, assume that we can cure can be naive. it is naked. The in is tied to which European little or no to dictate the petroleum -which must be used for four years. Nor y determine strains or the limited natural hope that the eastern European aces not only so a vast com- why Europe is New insight is rhetoric is not. NY SPECIAL FEATURES NYT SPECIAL FEATURES ds sectarian strife matter, moist h troops, sent order and to on the growing ugun every year the unification of duds, to try to individual social 1973, to unite in Declaration of it she wouldn't on efforts. or government, protestant, the Dibulin and the Iranian ians like the n. They think land would be a and they might really excluded. nists have to defer to the occur. time it will be, being to fail, and to be no two night one is easy wrong one is ave. 9 'Shea arsilic digbee connorender strand Aerosols are handv, hazardous By RENEE TACKETT Staff Reporter You can exterminate bugs, paint your bicycle and polish furniture with them. You can use them to lather your face, spray your hair or kill weeds. In this age of convenience packaging, acerosols dispense everything from breath sweeteners, buttery powder and cheese cream. They cleaners and whipped cream absorbers. Aerosol products, lavishly advertised and imaginatively marketed, have gained wide acceptance among consumers since their introduction and are now used for more than 300 purposes. Before the cheap, lightweight aerosol sprays were put on the market, cumbersome and expensive steel containers held spray products. CHEMIST A T E. I. d'Apont de Neumours & Co. discovered the propellant that was evaporized the spray can industry in the '60s - aerosol fluorocarburants, that could be confined in tin or aluminium cans under low pressure. Next, a plastic and metal valve that could be mass produced was invented, making materials dispensable at the touch of a fingertip. The popularity of pressure packaging soared. By 1954, the number of aerosol cans manufactured had reached nearly 180 million. About 100 million of the cans produced that year contained either insecticides or shaving lathers. HAIR SPRAY was the leading aerosol product in 1958, when aerosol production passed the 500 million mark. In 1968, when 2.3 billion aerosols were produced, the total hairstray alone almost equalled the total aerosol production of the previous decade. By the '70s, practically every product that conceivably could be sprayed was being considered for pressure packaging if it wasn't already available in aerosol form. Two products that failed as aerosols were chocolate syrup and toothpaste. Aerosols have grown to a $1 billion-a-year industry, producing more than three billion gallons of air per year. Aerosol is a key for every city of the United States about 45 aerosol containers in every U.S. household. Of these, 50 per cent are per person. About 60 per cent, shaving cream and deodorant. UNTIL THE EARLY '70s, the safety of aerosol sprays was taken for granted, although some consumer groups and researchers have called for reservations about them. In 1974, it was discovered that the propellant most commonly used in aerosol sprays might seriously threaten the environment and the health of millions of people using the products. The dangerous ingredients were fluorocarbons—the mixture of gases that produce the aerosol boom more than 20 years earlier. Fluorocarbons had been considered harmless since Du Pont introduced them as materials called Freno more than 40 years ago. F. SHIERWOOD ROWLAND, professor of chemistry at the University of California at Santa Barbara. from Mexico City, began to investigate the presence of fluorocarbons in the tropisphere, the layer of the earth's atmosphere that protects the earth from the sun's rays. Rowland and Molina found that when fluorocarbons in the atmosphere decomposed, they released atoms of chlorine. When these atoms reacted with an extremely molecule of ozone, an extremely unstable substance. Each molecule of ozone that was affected started a chain reaction that could affect as many as 100,000 other ozone molecules from the atmosphere within a year or so. ROWLAND and MOLLON calculated that if fluorocarbon production continued to increase at 10 per cent a year until 1990 and oxygen production continued to increase at the ozone layer would be destroyed by 1995 and between 30 and 50 per cent by 2050. With even a 5 per cent depletion of the ozone layer, the number of causes of skin cancer will rise by two-fold, resulting exposure to ultraviolet radiation Greater losses of ozone could cause biological damage such as genetic mutation and crop damage and could even cause temperatures in the stratosphere to shift enough to change the earth's weather patterns. IN NOVEMBER 1974, a petition to ban aerosol sprays was filed with the federal Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) by the Natural Resources Defense Council, an organization that has won many law caseworks involving environmental issues. Alarmed by the Rowland-Molina studies, the National Academy of Sciences launched an investigation of the fluorocarbon hazard and confirmed the pair's findings. Spokesmen for Du Pont said that the calculations in the petition were hypothetical and that there was no real proof that the gases were harmful. Despite drops of aerosols dropped 7 per cent when results of the studies were publicized. Recent aerosol-related deaths and accidents and results of experiments on animals have indicated that aerosol sprays are more immediately hazardous to the health of the millions of consumers who have been inhaling them on earth. The fluorocarbons are rapidly absorbed into the bloodstream when inhaled because they're given off in mists of millions of tiny droplets. They have caused abnormal heart rhythms and death in experimental animals. In 1974, it was disclosed that vinyl chloride, used for 25 years in the manufacturing of plastics, also had been used for at least 10 years in dozens of aerosol spray. In Japan, the government contained vinyl chloride in aqueous acetos containing vinyl chloride after it was found to be a carcinogen, or cancer-causing substance. FOR MORE THAN a decade it has been known that fluorocarbons in high concentrations can cause cardiac arrest. Even aerosol proponents agree that fluorocarbon propellants may be fatal when inhaled deliberately for hallucinatory effects. U. S. Food and Drug Administration—asked only that aerosol manufactures stop using vinyl chloride as a propellant. Millions of aerosols containing the known cancer-producing agent remained in stores and homes. IN THE UNITED States, the agencies dealing with the problem—the CSCP, the CACS, and the GSA. Even with normal use in a room—to exterminate a fly or spray hair—concentration levels could be reached that were 400 times the amount judged to be an unsafe level of exposure for workers by national Safety and Health Administration. HAIR-CARE products, especially hair-sprays, have plastic resins that can cause a lung disease and as well as abnormal lung cells that may be the precursors of lung cancer, but they also have an association to a statute for Occupational Safety and Health. Exposure to hair spray can temporarily alter lung functions, causing tightness in the chest and irritation to results of research at Yale University. Besides being health hazards, aerosol spray canes are potentially dangerous explosives. When aerosol containers get too warm, the increased internal pressure may cause the air to explode, scattering metal fragments at high speeds. ALTHOUGH FEDERAL regulations require labels warning against burning, puncturing or exposing the can to high temperatures, thousands of accidents occur when using these labels, according to statistics from the CPSC. As of March, the state of Oregon banned the sale of aerosol sprays. FOR MOST aerosol products, substitutes are available. In place of an aerosol anti-perspirant, a roll-on or stick deodorant can be used, or a new pump container. A can of oil can also be used by a brush and a can of paint. Oven cleaner can be brushed on instead of sprayed on. Instead of the flea and tick killer spray for dogs, powder can be used. Furniture wax is as easily poured out of a container as sprayed in. The powder is hexachlorophene, an antibacterial ingredient, was banned from feminine hygiene sprays, the sprays consist mainly of perfume and a propellant. These sprays are no more effective than soap and a washcloth. Aerosols are easily replaced for most purposes, although the substitutions might not always be as convenient as the spray. Those who choose aerosols should spray in a face and area, keep the spray away from the face and leave the area as quickly as possible. KU women to be honored for service, scholarship Two groups of women, one comprised of initiates to the University of Kansas Women's Hall for Fame and another of KU activities, will be honored 18 at KU. An awards program, Dimensions of Excellence, will be sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women and the Office of the Dean of Women. This year's program has two purposes, Kris Balloun, Olathe senior and chairman of the Women's Recognition Committee, said recently. "We want to recognize women who have made outstanding achievements," she said, "and to raise the awareness of the University and Lawrence communities to The Women's Recognition Committee expects to complete the selection of those to be honored by the end of this week, accords with the University's graduate student and committee adviser. USUALLY, THREE or four women are hall of Fame, which was started in 1978 Balloon said that to qualify, a woman must be a graduate of KU or be a member of the faculty or staff who has provided a role model for students. In addition to those named to the Hall of Fame, other University women will be honored for outstanding woman teacher, outstanding woman staff member, outstanding international woman student and outstanding nontraditional woman student. munity services, contributions to a minority culture and politics. Women also will be recognized for achievements in athletics, women's rights and health. The recognition committee will make its selections from nominations submitted by individuals and KU livings groups like residence, residence halls and scholarship halls. This is the first year that each of KU's campuses and schools was asked to open. "We've had a really good response so she said. We think that this will help improve our team." The committee also will decide this week whether monetary awards will accompany the public recognition of the women. Small gifts have been made in the past. Boved said. The featured speaker for the Dimensions in Excellence program will be Dean Stevens. Nominations for KU Women's Hall of Fame closed March 28, and all other nominees will be announced later. Names of those women elected to Lambda Sigma, a sophomore honor society, and names of those elected to Mortar Board, a junior college, also will be announced during the program. --with the purchase of any The program is to begin at 7:30 p.m. April 18 in the B 8 Room of the Kansas Union. FREE "Flying Scot" Frisbee (while supply lasts) Hot fudge, chocolate, strawberry, pineapple and many more toppings. e purchase of any medium or large Sundae, from our Dairy Bar 9th & Iowa Sandy's Sights, sounds of the Beatles to be presented University Daily Kansan "The Beatles: Away with Words" a multimedia show sponsored by SUA, will be presented at 4, 6, 8 and 10 p.m. and midnight April 15 in Hoch Auditorium. --of Advance tickets are $2.50 for students and $3.50 for others at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. Tickets at the door will be $ 3 for students and $4 for others. Scenes and music from the 1976 American tour of Paul McCartney's Wings group will be presented at Lincoln Center. Thursday, April 7, 1977 The presentation will trace the growth and decline of the Beatles and will include information about and music by the influential members since the group split in 1971. The 90-minute show will feature 6,000 slides and films on the musical group—including films from Beatles' concerts and films from other artists. The show also features sound show—and a 360-degree sound system. HOTLINE NUMBER HEADS SIGNATURE FEED THE SEVEN-PER-CENT PG SOLUTION Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud Granada THEATRE ... Bisphrey P. Yumby "THE LATE SHOW Sat Sat May 18 PG Hillerock 10 Academy Award Nominations FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, BOOTS, HATS, JEANS RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDGE SHOP Lakefront & Waterfront 800 6813 (212) 574-9700 An Epic Fantasy of War & Peace "ROCKY" Eve. 7:30 & 9:15 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Varsity WELCOME TO VARSITY STUDIO 214-765-8030 Starring SILVESTER STALLONE Eve. 703 & 9:45 Saf. Sun. 1:45 Hillcrest "WIZARDS" Ends Tuesday MOTHER, JUGS & SPEED +Plus "VANISHING POINT" Show starts at 7:15 Sunday 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped underwater. AIRPORT 77 Elev. 1:40 & 9:50 Sat. Sun. 1:55 Hillcrest E Organic Chemistry by Dr. Carlson 7:30 Rm.332 Malott & Now Available for the Positions EDITOR Sponsored by ProMed Club 13 REVIEW TONIGHT BUSINESS MANAGER 1978 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK 3 Denim Lee Jean Sale! Reg. $1450 Now $1250 Big selection of long sleeve shirts also See our new location 25th & Iowa North of Gibson's FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, BOOTS, HATS, JEANS RAASCH SADDLE & BRIEDLE SHOP BankAmericard Mastercharge APPLICATIONS MCAT JAYHAWKER OFFICE 117-B KANSAS UNION 864-3728 DeadlineMonday, April 18 - SENIORS - - SENIORS - - SENIORS - - SENIORS - SENIORS - SENIORS - SENIORS SENIORS . Senior Announcements will be delivered in Kansas Union Bookstore beginning . . . Thur. & Fri., April 7 & 8 (Manu. Rep.present) Extras will be available for those who were unable to order earlier. Pick up Early to avoid the crowds. kansas union BOOKSTORE KU 6 Thursday, April 7, 1977 University Dally Kansan Toronto Blue Jays make debut By The Associated Press Major league baseball debuts in Toronto today and just so the brand new Blue Jays don't feel cheated, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and American League President Lee MacPhail will make an all-night flight to be on hand for the historic occasion. Kuhn and MacPhaul were scheduled to be in Seattle for the night opener of the expansion Mariners yesterday and they were to head to Toronto to join an anticipated crowd of 45,000 fans in welcoming Canada's second big league franchise. Toronto Manager Roy Hartfield is going with veteran Bill Singer as his opening day pitcher against the Chicago White Sox, who will counter with Ken Brett. THE TORONTO-Chicago game is one of the most competitive games in the American League games, Lakers City were be at Detroit, Texas at Baltimore, Milwaukee at New York, and Cleveland at Atlanta. In the National League, St. Louis opens at Pittsburgh, New York is at Chicago and San Francisco at Los Angeles. The season officially opened yesterday at Cincinnati where the defending world champion Bucks beat the San Diego Padres, and the Panthers' Antonio Domingo's two-run homer before 11.937 fans. LAST NIGHT, California and Seattle over the American League chase in Seattle. Singer, 32, is the leader of a veteran Toronto pitching staff. The rest of the Blue Jay lineup is decidedly younger with rookies like catcher Rick Cereno, first pitcher and outfielders Steve Bowling, Gary Woods and John Scott counted on heavily. The Blue Jays will play in Exhibition Stadium, home of the Canadian Football League Toronto Argonauts. The ball park was refurbished for baseball at a cost of $10 million. CHICAGO ALSO has a new manager with Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Lebon in charge 'Hawks go to semi-finals Jayhawks win 2 at KSU A three-run third inning carried the Kansas Jayhawks to a 3-1 victory over Kansas Wesleyan yesterday in the first game of Kansas Baseball Tournament in Manhattan. Spring and softball are supposed to go together, but until yesterday the Jayhawk softball team had seen little evidence of that. Playing their first games in warm, sunny weather, the Jayhawks won a doubleheader from Kansas State, 2-0 and 8-1, in Manhattan. The team's record is now 6-0. The Jayhawks continue to get strong pitching from their two starters, Gloria Graves, Topeka junior, and Shelley Sinclair, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore. In the first game, Graves pitched a no-hitter and struck out 11, as KU got two runs on seven hits. K-State No. 1 pitcher left the ball in the middle of inning after a line drive split her hand. In other first round action, Emporia Kansas State College defeated Friends University and continues today with the Jayhawks meeting Emporia State at noon, and Marymont playing Washburn at p. 12 in the semi-round games of those games will meet p. 10. Blue to return; may be traded of the White Sox this season. The Sox also will have some new faces in their lineup including outfielder Oscar Gamble, acquired from the New York Yankees Tuesday in the deal for shortstop Bucky Dent. CHICAGO (UPI) - Oakland A's owner Charles O. Firelin said pitcher Vida Blue, who walked on out on the Oakland A's Monday, is scheduled to rejoin the team tomorrow, but will be $2,000 poorer for his unauthorized vacation. KU STARTED its rally against Kansas wesleyan with two outs in the third inning and scored on a triple by Monson Vowl, who was singled home by Ron MacDonald to give the Jayhawks a 2-4 lead. MacDonald stole second and scored on two passed balls. Nancy Stout, Newton junior, hit a home run to drive in one of the Jayhawks' two runs and went three for three in the first game. Finley said yesterday he had been promised Blue would rejoin the team tomorrow by the left-handed pitcher's agent, Chris Daniels. Meanwhile, Texas owner Brad Corbett said in Arlington, Tex., there was a 50-50 chance of the Rangers getting Blue in a trade. Corbett and club Executive Vice President Eddie Robinson spent much of Tuesday in Chicago talking with Finley. KU starter Rick Bogdan struck out four in picking up his second win. Bogdan was relieved in the seventh inning by Terry Cunningham, who picked up his first save of the season. KU returned to its impressive hitting form in the second game by getting eight on 11 hits. Sinclair pitched for KU and allowed only three hits while striking out Following those talks Corbett indicated he was trying to put together a package that would send $1.3 million and six players to Oakland in exchange for Blue. Kansas Wesleyan out hit the 'Hawks, 6-3, but could score only one run, that in turn led to a four-point loss. Donna Sullivan, Kansas City, Kan, junior, who was hitting .600 going into yesterday's games, went two for three, and hit four in five. Donna Sullivan, Kan, junior, was three for three. Finley said, "I notified his agent he (Blue) was going to be suspended for 30 days, which would cost him $30,000 in cash. If there were 1000 if he doesn't come back immediately." "His agent called back two hours later and said Vida would be back Friday. He told me he had traded and then I traded him to the Yankees. His agent said he was going to sue me. I told him to go ahead and sue me. I also told him Blue was being fired $600 for the theft of his phone." BLUE WAS scheduled to start in the A's season opener against the Minnesota Twins Saturday in Oakland, where Billy Carter was to throw out the first ball. But the former Cy Young award winner left the A's he had been winning for. He was "fed up with the man (Finkel)." "I'm not going to put up with any neeman吉ans this season," Finley said. Beer & Pop Sale! Pepsi & Dr. Pepper $ ^1.30/6-pac (12 oz. cans) 20' each for 10 oz. one-way bottles. Coors & Budweiser '6.80/case '1.70/6-pac Champlin Self Serve Just east of 23rd & Iowa 1802 W. 23rd 842-9578 NOW OPEN Every Sunday 12 Noon Grudge Racing and E.T. Brackets Admission only $2.00 Race or watch LA The Yankees had sought Dent for most of the winter and he is expected to be at shortstop when New York opens against Milwaukee. * LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY 20 miles east of Topeka or 3 miles west of Lawrence on U.S. 40 highway FANFARES Feel the buttery leather uppers .. mmm, soft, Squeeze those creep soles .. mmm, cushiony. Bend those trendy soils .. mmm, flexy. Then sink into those ultra-padded insoles .. mmm, plush, Fanfares Soft Touch .. mmmmmmmmmmmm, nice rust. Mmm, Fanfares Soft Touch McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes The Yankees, defending their first pennant in 12 years, will open with Caffish Hunter on the mount against the Brewers' second crowd of 40,000 on hand at Yankee Stadium. McCall's Put Yourself on our Store Downtown Lawrence BOTH TEAMS will have expensive free agents in their lineup with $2.9 million Reggie Babbard patrolling right field for the Rockies and Paul Salbant at binder base for the Brewers. Kansas City, hoping to repeat as American League West champions, opens with Paul Splittorr against the Tigers' Dave Roberts with an expected 54,000 on-base percentage. The same sold with fans anticipating Rookie of the Year Mark Fidrich pitching for Detroit. Thursday's Probable Pitchers (Last year's won-lost record in parthenees) Lin. (John Drake) 11 at Pittbush (Jerry Reus- new York (John Beaver 14 at Cleveland (Bury 18) Ray Burkes New York (Tom Seamer 14-12) at Chicago May Hurry 15- San Francisco (Jon Monteforte 16-14) at Los Angeles April 20-23. San Francisco (Jon Montefante 16-4) at Los Angeles (Dan Sutton 31-10). American Kansas City (Paul Stierman) 18 at Detroit (Dave Rohde) 18 at Tampa Bay (Terry Johnson) 10 to 12 at Toronto (Billy Singleton) 13 at Texas (Riley Blevens) 14 at Baltimore (Jaimin Palmer) 18 at Milwaukee (Travis Brewer) 15 at New York (Jim Hunter) 19 at Cleveland (Daniel Eckersley) 13 at Boston (Peregrine California) (Nathan Ryan) 17 at Seattle (Carole Romero) Recreation Services Intramurals · Sports Clubs Drop-in Recreation OUTDOOR RECREATION SEMINARS Tuesday, April 12 WATERSAFETY Rain/Wall CREATES Wednesday, April 13 CANOE SAFETY Tuesday, April 19 BICYCLE MAINTENANCE AND SAFETY Wednesday, April 20 BACKPACKING Admission FREE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: 8:00 p.m. Rpm .258 Robinson Gym 8:00 p.m. Rpm .258 Robinson Gym 7:00 p.m. Rpm .258 Robinson Gym 7:00 p.m. Rpm .258 Robinson Gym Recreation Services Rm. 208 Robinson Gym 864-3546 See Mike Heaston G's A very special offer from G'S Bar-B-Q G's bring in this coupon and receive your choice of chopped or roast beef sandwich with fries or tater-tots ONLY $2.00 530 W. 23rd Coupon Expires Thurs., April 7 530 W. 23rd Coupon Expires Thurs., April 7 841-3402 PLAN ON LIVING? Let Us HELP YOU! MALAYSIA Julio C. Meade District Manager 901 Massachusetts 841-3644 If you plan to live beyond 20 years, as 95 out of 100 your age will, then you should have a college student. The lowest insurance rates are possible because as a college student, you are young, in excellent health, and will statistically lead a longer life. You should live your life if the benefits of a talk with a long-term American General Campus rep 12 Raymond Poteet 901 Tennessee 841-3464 1234567890 Wille Amison 901 Tennessee 841-3464 Bill Spers 901 Tennessee 841-3644 CHINA American General LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY How 'bout some Jeans for $699?! Today thru Saturday only, King of Jeans will sell everything off its back table for a lousy $6""! Those jeans are a collection of denims, painters pants, cords, pre-washed, etc. from Levis, Lee Big Smith, A-smile, Kenleon, etc. Come on in and see what bargain you can find! KING of Jeans LEVI'S 740 Mass. Stevens 2015 Thursday, April 7, 1977 7 n. Rm, 205 Jenson Gym n. Rm, 205 Jenson Gym n. Rm, 205 Jenson Gym n. Rm, 205 Jenson Gym --fer oice fries n 864-3546 -3402 U! when you program). college lead a of a talk When major league baseball returned to Kansas City in 1969, the Royals' management promised they'd bring the team up, perhaps permanently to Kansas Cities within five years. Royals will win AL West,but However, after eight seasons it's obvious to baseball fans there's no such pennant swaying in the breeze over Royals Stadium. So, when the 1977 season gets under way for the Royals today in Detroit, it's time for them to put up or shut up. To the Royals' credit, this season looks to be their best yet. Their divisional championship club of last year is mostly intact, and they've just come off their best record ever in spring play, posting a 17-9 Grapefruit League record. But ITLL take more than a fast start to make everyone believe the Royals are of pennant-winning calibre. Last season's win over the Arizona suns dive after the all-star break and the Oakland and Minnesota get back in the race. Oakland finished three games behind CINCINNATI (UP) - Cicerone Geronimo Naomi nomiomer offi off San Diego ace Randy Jones to win the NCAA Championship. Cincinnati Reds to a 5-3 victory over the Padres yesterday in the 1977 National League opening game, played only after the Nets defeated patches of snow off the Riverfront stadium in Miami. Cincy wins opener Geronimo's line shot over the right field wall in the fourth innings broke a 2-2 tie and sent the Reds off to a flying start in pursuit of their third straight world championship, something no other National League team has accomplished. A freak April snowstorm a few hours before game time dumped two inches of snow on the artificial turf, but ground-turned snowshields and warden harbors to cart the snow. The last huge pile of snow was removed only 30 minutes before the game started. this summer Full Time Summer Work make $2,500 this summer Need a few hardworking independent students, who are able to relocate for the summer to make good money. If interested, come to an interview Thursday, April 7, at 3:30 or 6:00 or 8:30 in Rm. 206 Fraser. Dress casual, but be on time. A MEDICAL EXAMINATION THURSDAY IS LADIES NIGHT Ladies Free Admission dance to the Royals, who were 90-72 in their second- round battle, and Minnesota was five hit. Sports Editor Maybe the Royals learned something from the experience and won't clutch so badly again. Because if they do, a vastly improved team of California Angels could easily ride off with the title in the saddlebags of owner Gene Aitry, who as a Cat Gary Vice Wild Cat Wild 7th Spirit balcony Showtime 9:00 p.m. Gentleman's Cover $1* $1^{10}$ pitchers of Michelok 8:00-9:00 p.m. The Lawrence Opera House & Although their weaknesses aren't numerous, they become glaring once they're compared with the other divisional teams in New York, Cincinnati and Philadelphia. motion picture cowboy always rode a horse named Champion. KANSAS CITY T'S strength lies in its solid force, bulldoors, speed and apparent team unity. But the Royals lack power hitters and a provoker stoned in their starting rotation. Daagwud's Special The Angels, with recently acquired free agents Joe Rudi, Don Baylor and Bobby Gritch, will finish a close second to the Nets in the pro-optostractors have given the Angels the chance to imagine that a team that was ten games under 500 and had a leading hitter with only 2 Subs for price of 1 Fifth Quarter Special for Ladies from the Opera House 图 solation prize and forget about pemmants and World Series rings. Larry Gura, Andy Hassler and Tom Poumette might be household words in this area but not to fans across the country. Sure, the Royals also have George Brett, Amos Otis, Al Cowens, Hal McRae, John Mayberry and others, but the area press told me that they would reepition. Nowhere will a phishing Paul Splitter, Al Fitzornz, Doug Bair, Hassler and Gura as be respected by fans as it is here. PETER LANE THE YANKEE'S roster lists Cafish Hunter, Greg Jackson and Thurman Munson; the Reds have Kren Griffey, Pete Rose and Joe Morgan; and the Phillies have Greg Luzinski, Greg Schmidt and Steve Carlton. a .265 average last year could be that improved. But with either Frank Tannan or Nolan Ryan on the mound for the Angels every other day, the Royals won't be able to so, although the Royals will probably wind up in Western Division Champions again, they won't. AFTER KANSAS CITY AND California, league at all there is to the American League. Minnesota, which surprised everyone last season with its upper-division finish, should follow in third. The Twins' Gene Mauch will have to do something phenomenal—which he did not —to do it. However, his club doesn't look like it needs a 7-3 reliever Bill Campbell to the Red Sox. Oakland's self-destruction is almost complete now, and a fifth-place finish in 1977 is in the A's future. Owner Charlie Dinkle did help bolster his also-ran club when he acquired catcher Manny Altavilla. "We don't expect Bay Area fans to compete in any numbers to watch the three-time world champions play. University Daily Kansan THE TEXAS Rangers, who are fast turning into the oldest ballcub around, are solid bots to repeat their disappointing season of a year ago and finish fourth. Bucky will regret let shortstop Bucky Dent get away to the Yankees. So for Billy Sox—Sox's the igorable honor of finishing sixth—but for the first time, not last in the Wrangler thinks Americans should get what they pay for This is an expansion season in the American League and sixth place is no longer the cellar. Seventh place has been created specially for the Seattle Mariners. thinks Americans should get what they pay for (and we're doing something about it) Wrangler has a flair for tagging spring's newest fashions at low prices. Two-tone long sleeve spring western shirt. Machine washable poly- ester and cotton floral print. Long sleeve front zip aviator jacket. Sizes P-S- M-L. Gaucho pant or shirt to match. Sizes 7/8 to 15/16. Machine washable polyester and cotton poplin that comes out of the dryer neat as new. Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Wrangler Sportswear LITWIN'S AMERICAN LEAGUE Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Wrangler Sportswear 831 Mass. WEST 1. Kansas City 2. Minnesota 3. Texas 4. Oakland 5. Georgia 6. Seattle Free parking in rear EAST NATIONAL LEAGUE 1. New York 2. Boston 3. Cleveland 4. Baltimore 5. Milwaukee 6. Toronto WEST 1. Cincinnati 2. Los Angeles 3. Houston 4. San Diego 5. San Francisco EAST 1. Philadelphia 2. Pittsburgh 3. New York 4. Seattle 5. Chicago 6. Montreal Alexander's Flowers Wookond Special CARNATION BUNCH $2.50 Cash and Carry 826 Iowa 842-1320 RUGBY KU vs. KSU Sat., April 9 - 1:30 P.M. At 23rd and Iowa St. Commission on the Status of Women invites you to apply for positions as chairpersons of the following committees: NEWSLETTER—PUBLICITY MINORITY AFFAIRS—HUMAN SEXUALITY POLITICAL ACTION—ALTERNATIVE LIVING SELF HEALTH—WOMEN'S RECOGNITION LETTERER—PUBLICITY If you have an interest beyond these topics please apply. Applications available in 222 Strong; due Wed.(April 13th) 5:00 in 222 Strong Selling something? Call us SUN Enjoy This Summer at Jayhawker Towers By taking advantage of our SPECIAL SUMMER RATES. $380.00-June 6 (or earlier) to Aug.16 with a 12 month lease. OR $197.50 a month for the summer only. WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING FOR A MORE ENJOYABLE LIFE. - FREE UTILITIES - HEATED SWIMMING POOL - ON CAMPUS LIVING - LAUNDRY FACILITIES - WALL TO WALL CARPETING - FURNISHED APARTMENTS Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 apartments 1603 W. 15th Office Hours: 8:30-5:00 M-F 10:00-4:00 Sat. 8 Thursday, April 7, 1977 University Daily Kansan FacEx suggests changes for sabbatical policy FacEx tried yesterday to clarify the University of Kansas sabbatical policy before sending the issue to the University Council for further discussion today. The heart of the problem, according to Eldon Fields, FacEx chairman, is whether a sabbatical should be granted on the basis of a faculty member's comparative merit or on the length of time he has taught. Under the current system, a primary County construction starts down almost $877 million Almost $1.5 million worth of construction has been started in Douglas County since Jan. 1, an almost $877 million drop from the same last time year, Wayne Kelham, county zoning administrator, said yesterday at the Douglas County Commission meeting. A first quarter figure of $1,454,000 was far below the $782,200,000 that was recorded to have been spent in construction in the first quarter of last year, Kellum said. He said the drop was probably due to bad weather this year. According to a report Kelum presented to the commission, 41 building permits were sold for $1,429,000 worth of new houses and additions to houses, three permits were sold for $22,000 worth of mobile homes and three permits were sold for the height of commercial construction this year. The county collected $835 by selling the permits. In other action, Kyle Ward, a representative of Blue Cross-Blue Shield, told the commission that insurance rates for county employees would have to be raised because of an increased number of claims paid out to county employees. The commission will decide on the increase at next Thursday's meeting. The commission also heard three bids for the remodeling and restoration of the east entrance of the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St. Kansas Construction offered the lowest bid, $15,599, but Art Townsend, museum director, said the bid was higher than his estimate of the construction's cost. "We have sufficient money," he said, "but we were hoping to do other things also. Some things may have to be deleted in this project." The commission will take the lowest bid under advisement with the architect who planned the remodeling before it decides whether to accept it. The commission also approved the purchase of $1,031 worth of playground equipment. Kansas Region of Sports Car Club of America is sponsoring the "EASTER BEAGLE KHANA" April 10th at Gibson's Parking Lot Lawrence, Ks. Member $3.50 Non-members $4.00 PARKING LOCATION PROPOSED CHANGES in that policy, outlined in a report issued by the Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee, would make the primary criteria be "merit of the application and academic accomplishment of the candidate." consideration in reviewing an applicant for a sabbatical is the length of time the application lasts. SenEx, of which FacEx is a part, also discussed establishing a committee to direct the operation of computer services and researchers and the University administration. The proposed change will come before the university Council today for further consideration. SenEx wants to establish a temporary committee that would guide the Computation Center in the immediate future and enhance its on the feasibility of a permanent committee. PAUL WOLF, coordinator of the Computation Center, told SenEx there was a lack of long-term planning and continuity in the project. SenEx would provide direction for the Computation Center. He said a committee that had clearly defined charges to follow could help expand Wife gave SenEx a list of potential committee members. SenEx will examine the confidential list in the next week and recommend it to the committee's recommen-dations at its next meeting. Wolfe wired SemEx to act as quickly as possible in drawing up charges for a client. the use of the computer by the administration, faculty and students. SENEX ALSO endorses a letter from Cincinnati College Dykes and Dr. Skelman, co-chair of the board, to the Board of Regents policy on discrimination by maternal and campus-related grievance. The policy states that the Regents prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex, race, religion or national origin at Regents institutions. In the letter, Dykes and Shankel said they "joined other members of the University administration to support and endorse this policy without reservation." The letter was distributed to all campus organizations last week as a result of allegations of discrimination in KU living groups. THE BARBER'S HOUSE The University Senate Human Relations Committee began an investigation into the ROOMS FOR RENT Sigma Nu House —Air conditioned —Close to campus —Tennis courts Basketball courts —Large sudeck Plenty of parking space -Kitchen available -Huge living —Recreation area Two acres of grassy lawn Quiet study areas —Coed living; Girls top floor; Guys first floor Two month lease—June = August —'75/month Weight room —Charcoal grill FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Call Mrs. Mastin 843-5673 between 12:30-5:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00 p.m. VEGETABLE BROCHETTE $3.50 HARVEST Broiled Rainbow Trout $4.25 Teriyaki Beef $3.95 PLUS OUR NEW SPRING MENU SANDWICHES 8th & New Hampshire at the Marketplace Up with People in cooperation with Lawrence High School Haskell Indian Junior College Musical entertainment for the entire family Musical entertainment for the entire family Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Tickets: SUA Office, Lawrence High School, Haskell Indian Jr. College, Rusty's IGA stores $3.50 public/$2.50 students Nina Exciting, casual Feel the difference at Arensberg's =Shoes 819 Mass.843-3470 Where Styles Happen W Seniors: TRIP TO WESTPORT Tonight, April 7 Meet at X-Zone by 7:30 P.M. (northwest of Union) SCHOOL BUS Seniors Party Hardy Departs X-Zone 8:00 p.m. $1.00 class members $2.00 non-members Thursday, April 7, 1977 University Daily Kansan blaco S 9 place SO School nior College family cool, stores RT LEASING NOW If you desire a pleasant place to live and if your parents will sign the contract, then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W.25th St. PARK25 FALS WORLDS LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTOMORED LEASING SYSTEM RENT-A-CAR AUMEAL LEASING 2340 Alabama KANSAN WANT ADS Ford Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students to register for classes. Students are required to BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILM HALL Ford PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 CLASSIFIED RATES the two three fourth four five time times time times time 15 words or $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 Each additional 01 02 03 04 AD DEADLINES to run Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. 'OUND 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 UX business office at 864-353-1920. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS COLLEGE STUDENTS—part time, earn $10 per hour and win $190,000 to scholarship an American Youth Enterprise Dealer. Write Fred Lester, 181 Ellis Ave. Lake Springs, N.J. (N802) 1-4-8 Persons interested in joining a campus futures research club call 841-6940 or 841-2171 during business hours. ENTERTAINMENT Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special offers include a half day trip or 4-hour trip, $36 per person. Other trips available. Write, or phone for free brochure details. Inquire at bowhillway.com/bowhillway 10, Tableauhill, Oklahoma 74484. (954) 272-8900. www.bowhillway.com FOR RENT 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 835-979. Reserve the HALL OF FAME won for your party or meeting. Over 600 on site, available. No group limits. Free parking. Kitchen and bar facilities available. Located in the beautiful remodeled W Bigg, at 8th and Vermont Avenue, 419-725-3450. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets, 843-7567. tf Frontier Ridge—short term lease available. Frontier Ridge has a suite with study. Heddon indoor pool + draig carpet + window pool + disposal + laundry facilities + furnished apartment with furnished and unfurnished from $125. Call 842-730-6966. Gallhouse Appliances - Call Becky new, Summer Gallhouse Appliances - Call Becky new, Summer contract on all Gallhouse appliances. Call Bob Goldsmith new, Summer contract on all Gallhouse appliances. Call Bob Goldsmith new, Summer contract on all Gallouse 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- elledage, rentable rent reduction for labor. 842-505-9600 842-506-9600 Sublease --- summer furnished/2-bedroom (AC) campus and campus downtown $150 AC/ 843-9605 CARPET CLEANSING STEAMEX Rent the Pro. 365-2890 Rental calls. Call 5-10 265-2890 Submitting department. It has 1 bedroom. Came by 563 Fireline Drive, Aprt. 10, to 3:30 p.m. Subletting apartment for summer. 2-bedroom. U/A, centrally located. Call 811-1869-47 --- Summer sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartement, with air conditioning, balcony, and carpet. Rates include 50% discount on room rentals. Sublease for summer -3 bedroom (ownsate at winter) in the 21st floor. Call 843-3154 with option to renew lease. Call 843-3154 tha Lease 2-bedroom furnished Meadowbrook apart- ment monthly fee, pool and tennis court. Call 841-2418 Call 841-2418 Sublease--three bedroom townhouse, two baths, two bedrooms, tennis courts. You'll droll. Gay 811-305-6848 * 1 bedroom furnished fitted room at 19 Worth 10th 758. Available immediately, 842-6670 plus 5. 4-88 Pursued, efficiency apartment, $70.00, utilities and utilities, $30.00, to 15424 Tennessee, (update), to 15424 Tennessee, (update). Two bedroom, unfurnished apartment for sublease. $140 monthly. Call after 4:00 p.m. to (866) 255-2232. Owens Liquor Store 843-1186 910 N. 2nd Sleeping room upstairs. Share bath. $45 mo. Inquire 708 Illinois, evenings. 4-13 Married, upperclassman. Quint attentive, a graduate nurse. 1403 Tennessee--Ask for advance education. 1403 Tennessee--Ask for advance education. Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center, Furnished and furnished, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open 10 days a week for rent. Call either 913-262-9800 or 913-362-7421. Call either 913-262-9800 or 913-362-7421. Sublube studio apartment for summer. Quit for a winter stay, central air, alt. 4100, call 847-2603. Need to submit 2 bedrooms lowbrow house at Trinity and Trinity Court, reasonable rate. Call Chuck or Meghan (718) 560-4233. Subtitling furnished studio apartment, all utilized for summer months $158 Cabrillo 6064 6063 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense from—Western Civilization! Makes sense to learn about the Western Civilization, and its formation. 3. For Exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Towson Cater Store. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. ELECTRIC, 830-290-8000, W 6th. BEL AUT, ELECTRIC, 830-290-8000, W 6th. We are the only Full Line Franchise Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, monitors at Audio System, 8th, or Rhode Island. Directly from Peru, two Alpaca rugs for sale. Contact Ana. 833-1101. BY OWNER - Ranch style, shake roof on a beautiful landscape capped—i.e. trees of else, etc. Custom built screen. Extra large family room, formal living area. 1.2-3 baths, full hallway partially partitioned. 1.2-3 baths, full hallway partially partitioned. Oak flooring, fully carpeted. Dishwawer, G.E. Walking distance north edge of Avlarna golf Hills. Must to be appropriate. Decorator touch desk. Bth & Wheel Road, Western Hills A Springtime Bug Bright Warp, Volkwagen 1970- Very well covered for, runs great. 842-1791. Necchi saving machine with buttonhole, good for low price. Call 612-895-2069 evening for more information. 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition $225. 814-1357 4-12 FOOBSALL TABLE-CLAIMMENT Soccer, oil- formed. Excellent condition. #835-861, or 845-876 Mavis 257 Pouget 16-speed bicycle (U-86). It uses a 3.0" frame, 45mm wheels, £150 Bargain! £150 firm. Cllr Firm Taylor, B424. Ludwig drum set, 6-piece, double bass, silver, good shape, must sell. Call 841-2099. 4-8 170 Chevrolet Impreza 4D, PS, PB. AC. Must wait Call 864-6916, 2:00, allow 5.00 replay. 1.720 Chevrolet Impala, 400 cu. ft., engines, PB. AM/FM stereo (radio) $1,600, $18-5266, FS **PLEASE READ ADVERTISING INFO ON THE BACK PAGE.** 1973 Yamaha enduro 175, 2000 miles, helmet, el- gave, tire excellent, condition call 841-5725. -C8 M6A7748 Motorcycle - 1974 Moka CL35 - excellent condi- tion. Motorcycle base-up, 360 miles, 700 to £90. Call 800-351-6251. Yamaha Guitar with case, good condition, nice best offer, bass 842-2573. 4-8 INFINITY 3000 B Speakers. 2 year warranty. Id le insurance. New in box. $150 must be both self- call. Battery 811-646-6566. 1970 Kawaii 500 front disk brakes, obterbateronic brake hydraulic piston, with lumber rack real surfacit for $680. Call 800-423-3210 or www.faultyauto.com. 1987 Buick LaSabre, good condition, full power, cruise control, tilt wheel. Cup 843-7529. 4-8 Would like to trade a Yamaha 400 Enduro in excellent shape for a VW. Call after 500, 842- 7529. 124 flat cup, 280 heads, tags, Ta 50s, suspension, stereo, C.B. call 841-3552. 4-8 RIFLE -21 cal. Ginfee w/ scape. Excellent condition, call 842-0588. Keep trying. 4-8 1972 Open GTY, blue low mileage, air condition- ment. 30'4" long. Continental transition, 52.48 ft highwave, 62.48 ft midwave. For Sale - Dyna-yne P4-statree pre-amp. Recently cleaned and rejuvenated the 75, $81-129, 4-8 kitchen home. 1975 60 watt 4-8 speaker, kitchen microwave, carpeted, located on corner lot, fitted approved the dome down, storners, microwave, microwave oven, excellent condition. Must see to appreciate. Very reasonable! Call 841-389-159 after 5 p.m. or 864-186-801 HEADQUARTERS JAMES CANG Foreign Auto Parts Imported Auto Parts 4. tale, Nice Datsun, need money soon. Call 863- 858 only) Ira. 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 41 Chevy Impala - impal, inexpensive transportation runneds, run good, call John 814-5267 4-13 Guilds FX40 Steelworking gunnar 58mm Gullor gunnar 72mm Gullor 63mm Gullor 62mm Gullor Fx40 Steelworking gunnar 58mm Gullor gunnar 72mm Gullor 63mm Gullor 62mm Gullor Fx40 Steelworking gunnar 58mm Gullor gunnar 72mm Gullor 63mm Gullor 62mm Gullor oungw Pre-Bat Beat set w/ useau, excellent call. Call 841-3567 day 8, 724-1789 night 4-13 10-speed excellent condition. Call 842-3012 4-8 1940 clothing and furnishings, including Pendleton and Huntington shirts, wool carpets, wool carpet pillows, overstuffed chairs, pictures, syrracuse chair covers, upholstered chairs, cotton aprons, midwest apron, April 9 only 10-5, nine mile east of Chicago. Fender steel Lap guitar with case, $50, Mitch 843-854 4-12 1975 Bellevue Frontier, "600" Better Forks w/WK Bullettee pinniput, real fish, 1901, Tensiun Church, 4:34 ARP 2000 Synthesizer, 15 months old. Also U.S. dieser tank sediment and tank, Call Rekl. 836- 7109. Piano for sale, call 843-1272. 4-12 1974 Snark Maxiflower Salish, 11 feet hub, 26.5 inches, 95 Negotiable call, cell 814-608-4680 **PLEASE CONTACT US FOR A QUOTE** **MOTORHOME REMOVALS AND MAINTENANCE** 805-637-6000 1972 Suzuki 386T needs work. $150 firm. BUM 861-6395 4-13 HELP WANTED Honda 500P (super sport) 1825, 6,000 miles, metallic orange, padded stair bed with rack high-panee weather pep, fanning (913) 821-5288, 24 hours. 4-14 1974 Gold Division PS-D, DE, AM-FM-8. 4 1974 Gold Duster-PR, DB, DE, AM-FM 8, trakc makespace, radix apply, index write, exc. write, exc. Men or women. We need 5 people immediately, have transportation and we willing to work. Have a car. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-310-6, Lawrence Kirk Cy. Will lead to full summer time. Summer Jobs! Join our elite 200-plus class summer jobs! Our job titles include Master application form—only $2.50 Boxmats. Submit a resume to: Apply@boxmats.com. Avon selling can help you earn money for colleges. Flexible hours. High $1. Mgmt. M.S. Retail 824-730-6955. - "Students," 10 telephone receptions for new students. * "Guild Good salary, and benefits." Cally 6.12 & 7.15. * "Guild Good salary, and benefits." Cally 6.12 & 7.15.* Daudwig's has openings for waitresses and delivery drivers. Come by 644 Mass or call 516-738-2200. Office of Information Systems, Univ. of Ks- tawnii student computer operator for half-time, Spring and Fall semesters. Live during summer parties. Mon-Thurs, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Satu- day, 1700-2000. Mon through Thurs, and rote- r to Sun Information center accepting applications for part time jobs Application deadline 09/13 Applicant to apply 10.99 Avon open territories in Lawrence. Even if you don't have a large farm, Avon probably profitable worlds familiar Avon. That's what makes it possible. IVAN'S 86 SERVICE Pier1 imports Downtown Phone: 841-7525 "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" Office of Information Systems, Univ. of KS (Lawrence campus) is seeking Inventory Assistants to perform inventory and full time during summer. Requirements: physically able to lift and transport heavy loads; ability to elevate and transport equipment periods; have a current driver license; provide instruction and to maintain records Prefer job duties including work schedule flexibility to accommodate 24-hour time block. For appointment contact Larry Sawyer, UNIV of KS Campus, resume to resume at Mr. Computer Operations, Portion Hall, Univ. of KS CAMPUS, Appliance Portion Hall, Univ. of KS CAMPUS. PORTION HALL - EMPLOYER-WOMEN MINORITIES, AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITY ENTERTAINMENT. Summer job for married couples: Must have a ear time. Join us to start in August, or augment, at Champaign, New York $125 for two couples. Type maintenance work, etc. Living Quarters: Your company will apply in writing to Raymond Cert, 1000 Sunset Drive, Suite A, Brooklyn, NY 11234 for information NO TELEPHONE CALLS PLEASE SUMMER JUMP! Forest service How where Mountain Climbing Mountain CO, PQ 727, Fallen Ridge Mount. 39000 Fairview Mountain CO, PQ 727, Fairview Ridge Mount. 39000 19th & Mass. Sellhamn Group One Bid-line position for 8.40 USD from April 29 to May 1, 2016 at April 29 (7:30 PM) to May 1, 2016 at May 1, 2016 at 7:30 PM. LOST AND FOUND 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8.8 Sun LOST $1000.00 CASH! If you can find it, it you can purchase for Turtle Hunt Clubs on Ipso The Movie Store. - Last-Glasses in flowered case. Brown plastic frames, bluchi of Claire Calhoun, 8215-431 or 8215-603. L蓝黑 1977 pocket calendar containing inter- iors for a baby or a note. Return appreciation. 842.343-376 842.343-376 TEACHERS WANTED West and other states Agency, Box 4230, Morgantown, M. 87106, Agency, Box 4230, N.Morgantown, M. 87106. Least-White grey skirt with brown stains, size 10.188 Wheeler at 3.30 on 59. Call # 412-676-5128 MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uberi/Quick Copper Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday- saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. Found - Verden, Ketterl. I found your billfold Call Dave Corme. 864-2500. 4-12 843-9891 VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS! Brand new BE Good ARMAT-175 (16mm) (155-15) radial tires cut to $30 each at Hay Stainback's 929 Mason. (Mounted) or $40 each at Mackinac's 165cm. (Made in USA) cut to $40 each at Mackinac's 165cm. 4-12 AiRFRAME WATERbEds THE FIELDS STORE AIRFRAME WATERbeds AVAILABLE AT THE FIELDS STORE 721-498-3100 JEWELRY looking for the unusual? by administrator 8413883 NEW SONY SAMPLE COMPONENT SYSTEM with AM-1 Adapter to cut to $175 at Haystack St. 929 Mass Market CHIEK OWNERSHIP! Pickupers brand New, brand new condition. Cash Only. $50 each. $60 each. FFH included. $75 each. Includes 1 year of warranty. Cash only. Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo You name it. The airport is the world’s busiest, departures on major airlines Europe from $299 to $499, Africa, special rates Eurasian Fare Sectors Multilingual and multinational Call TFS toll the same The sound way to answer your questions about the movie is by calling the man in front of TWIRL! THURSDAY, JULY 15th, by calling the man on the phone at (800) 327-4900. CONTACT LENS WREATHERS Save on your lens contact lenses. Contact Lenses Simple Center 314 California 708-256-3966. Contact Lenses Simple Center 314 California 708-256-3966. Ward to ask Steve Lebenah and Bob Mulroney to attend to his needs at 8 p.m. to 9 p.o. and their meetings on KJHL Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. PERSONAL Gay Counselling Services. Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. For referral. For慈姑性的 activities, call 842-7505. Personalized knitwear, ceremonies, universities Inspired, impatience, Box 306, Lawrence Kamura, Kansas, 6041M ISO-2. chemical potentiator in a complete line, mixtures are available at Love Records, 15 Ellington Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11204. Become a legally ordained member of the University Board. Receive a Bachelor's degree from the U.S. Gov't. Legally perform all duties and functions for official U.C.D. ordination and funerals. For official U.C.D. ordination and funerals, please send stamped envelope to P.O. Box (113) 907-4856. Need help to Greek Churches in RC-Saturday Wednesday, July 23 at 8:00 a.m. traditional Greek Easteer service call Las Vegas, NV 857-496-1585. KU RELAYS ATTENTION!! BEN WILL BE IN THE RACES! B-14 To attractive English Phd major students in英语 study, you should like to contact us. We would like to meet you face each day at 4 123 4567. You can use the following form: Email: phd@usm.edu Subject: PhD Admission HAPPY BIRTHDAY THOPE. I never could get the day straight. From your full roommate. SERVICES OFFERED I can strike your tennis racquet more economically than anyone in town. Call 843-605-8 4-8 Restaurants YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 10:50 Mon.-Sat. Till 6 on Thursday DEADBOLTS INSTALLED MORRIS Lock & Key 710 Mass. • 843-2182 TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. THESIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Ushers' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us guide you to the 85% Manhattanisus or phone 842-2601. Thank you. Patti R. Woolery, PhD, Poly-482, 176-196 Tinley editor, IBM Threat Response Group Tinley editor, IBM Threat Response Group disrupts web services welcome to www.pattiwoolery.com TYPING. Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6658. 75c a page, tf. Term Papers, Proreadt, Preload. Corrected. Wiley, 1712 Alabama, M4-1222. 4-15 Wiley, 1712 Alabama, M4-1222. Experienced Tydell-term papers, mkts, mule. Signed copies at 841-9524, Mrs. Wright. Thesis, term paper, etc. reasonable rates. Call Beth, 841-6777 4-14 9th and Iowa TYPING--Many KU students have been pleased by your business. Call Harvary at Linda Kubrick: 617-453-9080 or harvary@kudun.edu. Will type your paper with TCL Term papers and paper clips. Call Carver at 844-821-1011, 841-728 events. - Foosball 9th and Iowa WANTED DANCEERS- Impact Productions needs GO-GO-exec, etc. to work through the midwest and locally. Contours and training available. Top Wages. Call 913-862-3031 (collect) after 4-7pm. Your paper deserves the best. Call Calpog伊. Two roommates needed for next at Towers please contact Gall at 846-6728 by 2:00 p.m. MUSICIANS—Impact Productions. Entertainment Management and Booking. Always looking for new, good group Rock, country, blue grass, top band. Songwriter, Kean Stone, 913-857-467 (for collection) for auditions. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. [1] Professional typing Term papers, theses, diss- tributions; rule INTL. Intellec State campus. 862; 203-471-5990. Roommate needed now at Jayhawk Towers. Male female, 42-60 regular age, 45-64 phone: 811-1234, 811-1235 Mellow rottemore to share furnished apartment room. Pooled toilet, dishwasher, heavy co- version, 18x90. Sunny 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday NAISMITH HALL CAMP COUNSELLESS, Private southwest Michigan Coed Camp needs swimming (W.S.L.) and water activities. Campground is campcourt, nature, bus driver, dishwashers, campcourt, skier, 165 Maple Street Northfield, Illinois. Elkhorn Tern- speed, frame = .26" Name price Call 811 4820 between 1.8-m ft. 4-10 and Honda Cycles The Lounge SCORE NO. 4 A SCORE NO. 3 B SCORE NO. 2 C SCORE NO. 1 D SCORE NO. 0 - Foosball Male or female reunion needed for summer women $5 plus 1 ultra-violet call anytime men $4 plus 2 ultra-violet call anytime 1811 W. 644 843-3333 orizqus "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Harley-Davidson - Bud on Tap Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Home of The Chalk Hawk - Pinball - Pool The Chalk Hawk --- TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS ● Pool ● Snooker ● Blank Ping Pong Pin-Ball Air Hockey - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Open / Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted 10 Thursday, April 7, 1977 University Daily Kansan 64 Spring fever provokes odd behavior By DONALD WILSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter "Spring rips my dermal senses from profins secrecy and thrusts them wide again." These aren't the words of an early 19th century Romantic poet. They came from Greg Hurd, Overland Park graduate who wrote about his experiences on spring, he turned and walked away. Spring fever has a way of provoking strange statements and behaviors from many people at the University of Kansas. Rob Strand, Poerin, III, special student, *Sarf'ing Spring off my seeley side. I just know it's good.* "It's also about the time of year when I start rubbing my antlers against the bark WINTER DREAMS of quiet picnics at Lone Star Lake often turn into beer blasts. February promises to sunny hard air in spring to make up for derelict nights spent at a town tavern vanish like the beer in a best. friend's glass. Couples going to Perry Lake for romance find the stars preferable to ceilings. "What the heck," they say, "we can get up early in the morning and drive to class." "WHAT THE HECK," they say, "we can to class tomorrow." But when the dawn comes, they can't resist taking on more stroll. Before they meet the man they haven't seen. Still other students, it is rumored, go to a Arraignment set in murder case BY CHUCK WILSON Stell Reporter At the conclusion of a laborious preliminary hearing yesterday in Douglas County Court, Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, was bound over by an investment agreement for first degree murder. Gardner will be arraigned in Douglas County District Court May 2 in connection with the Feb. 6 slapping of Margaret Maxey, 48, whose nudge, lleqless body was found on a hillside north of Seventh and Connecticut streets near the Santa Fe Railway tracks. Thirteen witnesses were called by the prosecution during the preliminary hearing by Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, who said that the state had a case against Gardner. The state has accused garden of killing Maxey in his apartment at 740 Rhode Island Sr. with the assistance of his younger James, 18, who is awaiting trial June 10. In the morning session, Malone called 11 witnesses to the test to testify. A NEIGHBOR of Gardner's, Danny Ramirez, an employee for the University of Kansas department of building and grounds, said he saw two men standing in the alley behind the apartment the night of the murder. Ramirez said that the two fled when a car drove down the alley, and that he checked the spot with a flashlight and found a grocery cart and a large trash bag. The prosecution has said the two brothers used the grocery cart to move Maexy's body from their apartment to the hillside where it was found. Wayne Schmile, Lawrence police detective, testified that he responded Feb. 7 to a found-body call south of the Santa Fe Shooting Center in 300 feet west of the New York St. crossing. Schmille and Tie Crossfield, Lawrence police detective, testified that they followed a trail of blood spots leading from the body to Gardner's apartment. Crossfield said that when they reached the apartment, both Gardner brothers came outside. The detectives testified that they got a search warrant and that in the resulting evidence, all of it was true. CROSSFIELD SAID he spotted some blood on the elder Saidiner's left cowboy boot, causing the two detectives to more carefully inspect the area. Among those pieces of evidence were a pair of blue jeans and a partially burned T-shirt. Kevin Wright, owner of Quantrill's Saloon, 715 Massachusetts St., told the court that he had been told on the night of Feb. 5 that one of the people sitting at the bar was Gardner. Wright tended bar from 9 p.m. midnight on the night of the murder. He wasn't able yesterday to identify Gardner in the courtroom. On Campus Events TODAY: VISITING PROFESSOR BARBARA BOWEN will speak at a French and Italian department colloquy at 2:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY COUNCIL meets at 1:30 p.m. BLUCER will DISGRADE ADJULTATE IN ANthropology ASSOCIATION will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 617 Fraser Hall. TONIGHT: There will be a SEX SEMINAR at 7 in McColum Residence Hall LOUISI CULYER, University of Michigan professor emeritus, will speak on the topic. Model for German Organists" at 8 in Swartzboro Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. He said that when Gardner left on the night of the murder, Wright was helping someone who had passed out. Wright said he thought Maxev staved behind. WRIGHT'S BROTHER, Brian, said Gardner came into the bar several times that night, but during that time he was with another person, not Maxey. He said Gardner sat at the bur next to Maxey he was there. Maxey's purse was later found at the saloon where she had left it. The purse was identified by a welfare check with her name on it, which was found in the purse. At the police station, a further search of the purse turned up a date book with the last entry reading "Joe Gardner" 740 Rhode Island by Steven Reyes. Lawrence policeman Jack Todd, another of Gardner's neighbors, said he saw the Gardners early Sunday morning when he picked them up at Shorty's Cafe, 717 Massachusetts St., and drove them to Sambo's Restaurant, 1511 West 23rd St., a 5 a.m. stains on a mattress and blood and flesh in the kitchen sink drain. HE SAID THAT later that day he saw both brothers cleaning their apartment. At that time, the elder Gardner borrowed a can of Glade air freshener from him, he said. The gardner also paid the court that when she went to the Gardner's residence at 740 Rhode Island St., The blood was identified as human blood type O, she said, and couldn't have come from that. During cross examination by Gardner's attorney, Jack Maxwell, Bernau said the only animal blood that would have a result in her test was that of the great Ape. Ken Knight, another forensic chemist from the KBI laboratory, said hair found at Gardner's house seemed to match Maxey's hair. AT 2:55 P.M., the prosecution rested its case and requested that Gardner be bound over for arraignment on a charge of first degree murder. Maxwell argued that Gardner should be released from the grounds that the state government protects his rights. "There is nothing in all of this evidence there," he said. "Joe Gardner committed behind him," he added. Malone said in his closing statements that the court must look at the totality of the evidence. Mike Elwell, associate district judge, rejected the defense's contention that the state had failed to prove that a crime had been committed. Both Gardner brothers are being held without bond in Douglas County jail. Most students react in far more traditional waves, however. Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. sisterkettlecafe Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 mud bathing lake west of Lawrence to "watch the bodies," only to wind up buffing Coffee House Fri. & Sat. with live entertainment SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL 9 pm-Midnight - SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL POSITIONS AVAILABLE: SPORTS SPORTS CHRISTMAS SKI TRIP SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP PADRE ISLAND TRIP CANOE TRIP AND MANY OTHERS . . . They study less, go to class less and party more. Sign up at SUA office Deadline for interview April 13th SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL Come see Royals vs. Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Free on our 7' TV. Another SPECIAL NIGHT Like last Monday, remember? Make a full day of it! TTV Free- Royals vs. Detroit, and dance to FORT DODGE Saturday night - $2 cover. Great Movie: "Bang the Drums Slowly" $1 Cover - Disco 7 "TV" - "People's Command" Performance: "77" KOJAN, 12:30 a.m. APRIL 4-10 $2 Cover - Live music with FORT DODGE KOJAK - 10:30 p.m. J. Watson's SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVEL • SUA TRAVE Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa $1 Cover - Disco Peanut Gallery: Kings vs. Indiana College All Stars, 10:30 p.m. **NEW** FREE (no cover charge) **YOU** TV screen—"Something for Joey" Teachers react much the same way as students do to spring fever. Robert Shelton, professor of religion, said no one wanted to be inside a bright spring Can psychology provide insights into spring fever? BUY TWO TACOS at regular price GET ONE FREE with this COUPON "The people feel a great release when it becomes light, he said. It is an amazing experience." "THERE'S a little bit of a tendency toward more absences, but I don't know whether it's caused by the nice weather or just the fact that students get tired toward the end of the year," he said. "The absences zu on at the first of semester, too." not really, according to Maynard Shelly, professor of psychology "The strongest case of spring fever occurs in the arctic. There, when spring frosts occur, blood is clotted." "I know my wife is running an experiment, and she's trying to get it done before too much of the nice weather comes." he said. F "To one, spring fever seems like a release from the world. Sunlight makes people eel better." Taco Grande 9th & Indiana • 1720 W. 23rd Expiration date 4-15-77 Better and weirder SUA PERFORMANCE Dir. Nicholas Roeg and Donald Cammell, with Mick Jagger. Film Society Series. (1970) FILMS Thurs., April 7, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., 75c THE MISSOURI BREAKS (1976) Dir, Arthur Penn. With Marlon Brando, Jack Nicholson. Popular Film Series. Fri., April 8 & Sat., April 9, 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m., $1 MOSES AND AARON (1975) Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Dir. Jean-Marie Straub. A top-drawer production of Schonberg's opera; a radical film experiment. Classical Film Series. Wed., April 13, 7:30 p.m., $1 --- RECORDS TAPES JEWELRY PIPES AND PARAPHERNALIA In Lawrence at 15 West 9th (between Mass. and Vermont) open from 11:00 a.m. to 6 p.m. RECORDS TAPES JEWELRY PIPES AND PARAPHERNALIA In Lawrence at 15 West 9th (between Mass, and Vermont) open from 11:00 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Lowest Prices in Town 842-3050 ALL USED MERCHANDISE GUARANTEED LP's $1.88 Doubles 2.66 Triples 3.86 Tapes 2.00 WE BUY LP's $1.00 Triples $2.20 Doubles 1.50 Tapes 1.00 --- Celebrate the Easter holidays with a basket of fresh, fragrant flowers Stop in or call. Bird in nest We deliver EASTER in beautiful bouquets. FTD FLOWER SHOP Owens 9th and Indiana 843-6111 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX SPRING T-TOP CROP Take your pick of this year's T-shirt harvest . . . we've planted a big and beautiful bunch in the Carousel. The snappiest looks about town! Top off summer jeans, shorts, slacks and skirts with your favorites. Cap sleeves, hoods, chop sleeves, embroidery, top stitching, lights, darks, bolds and super stripes, too! $10 $13 $14 $12 NEW STORE HOURS 10:OO-8:30 Mon.-Thurs. 10:OO-6:00 Fri. & Sat. Malls Shopping Center | car Usel BANKAMERICAN CAROUSEL CHARGE PRIVATE CHARGE St p The Comm prelim appro Univer KJHK J F The FBI vesti surro accor the f BEER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87,No.122 Friday, April 8, 1977 KU brings home baseball trophy See story page 8 Student Senate completes preliminary fund hearings Staff Reporter By JOHN WHITESIDES The Student Senate Communications Committee completed the Senate's proposal to approve blocking allocations to the University Daily Kanran for $72,340, and to approve reducing the budget. After making the allocations, the committee had $236 left from a total of $814,814 it had to allocate. The committee recommended that the remaining money go into unallocated funds, which will be available to student organizations that request money from the full Senate in November. The committee also recommended mendments before they can go into effect. A bill was drafted Wednesday night recommending additional allocations of $475 to three groups under the jurisdiction of the Senate Academic Affairs Committee. It will be presented to the Senate at its meeting next week. THE BILL would provide additional allocations of $75 to the Undergraduate Philosophy Club, making their total allocation $165; $250 to the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) for a total of $321; and $150 to Blacks in Communication for a total of $350 The bill was prepared by Steve Leben and Ralph Manyan, student body president and vice president; Mike Harper, StudEx chairman; and Katie Rhonds, Senate executive secretary, after a meeting to budget decisions of the Senate committees. LEBEN SAID the review group recommended allocating the full request because Premise was the foundation of the club's activities and two printings were necessary. AIAA would receive an additional $250 for Leben said the review group decided to allocate the full travel request because the AIAA's travel funds also were cut in committee last year, but the full Senate had eventually allocated additional funds during the year. The travel funds would be used to purchase two Hughes Corporation plant in St. Louis and the Boeing Company plant in Wichita. Justice official says FBI studying slaying Blacks in communication would be issued an additional $150 for procurement of resources. LEBEN SAID additional cuts in the Student Services Committee's allocations would be investigated before the Senate met next week. By CHUCK WILSON Staff Reporter A Justice Department official confirmed yesterday that the FBI is investigating the March 5 shooting death of a former Haskell Indian Junior College student. It began about the same time that the Douglas County attorney's office investigated the shooting, he said, and should be completed in a few weeks. Schermerhorn said yesterday the investigation was being conducted to determine whether any federal laws had been violated. The Justice Department has asked the FBI to do a routine preliminary investigation to determine the facts surrounding the death of Larry Picote, 22, according to Jim Schermhorn, director of the Office of Indian Rights. SCHERMHEROHN SAID the current investigation didn't result from a letter recently sent to Sen. James Aboreux, chairman of the Navajo tribe in Arizona. The Office of Indian Rights is part of the Rights Division of the department. Scharmerhorn said he hadn't seen any such letter. The report of the letter was released to Dolan Pleches, a member of Haskell's legal team. Abourekz last night in a telephone interview to Havana, Cuba, that he hadn't seen the letter earlier. He has been in Cuba with the South Dakota basketball team this travel expenses. The group originally requested $300 for travel expenses, but the group also charged $250. PICOTTE WAS fatal shot in the Long Branch Saloon, 1009 Massachusetts St., by three Lawrence policemen after he reported drew a pistol on them. It later was discovered that Picotte's gun wasn't loaded. The letter, dated March 16, requests the Abourezk begin a Justice Department investigation into Pictoe's death and expresses McDonald's concern about the safety of Navaho students attending Haskell. The Douglas County attorney's office ruled March 19 that the three policemen hadn't acted with felonious intent in the shooting. The judge also being suspended during the investigation The policemen were attempting to question Picotte about an armed robbery a week before at the Site Service Station, 946 E. 23rd St. Peaches said he thought the investigation conducted by Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, had been unsuccessful. IF THE JUSTICE Department doesn't act on McDonald's request, he said, the Board of Regents might form a task force to investigate Picotte's death. Peaches said yesterday in Phoenix, Ariz. the regents wanted the investigation to be complete and impartial and thought that the county could not provide that kind of probe. Hackell school officials put too much The Student Rights Committee met Wednesday night and passed amendments on three attendance policies. The first amendment stated that if student representatives to SenEx miss six classes, the institution automatically removed from the committee. Applications for Kansan are due today Applications for summer and fall Kansan editor and business manager positions are now available in the Student Senate office, the offices of the dean of honn and dean of women and in 105 Flint High School, on Friday, p.m. this Friday to 105 Flint. The Kansan board will interview candidates the afternoon of Tuesday, April 12. faith in the local investigation," Peaches said. "They should have been suspicious." He said he understood that Wallace Gallucci, Haskell president, should have received a copy of the letter, but Galluzi said yesterday that he hadn't. Torn Wilson, a member of the Lawrence chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, said last night that the organization had received circumstances surrounding Picotte's death. He said that the ACLIU's probe was still in a factive stage and that he couldn't say whether action would be taken until more information was obtained. There will be no appeals procedure for the representatives, but StudEx can return the students to their previous positions if it finds the students have acceptable reasons. The second amendment said if student members of the University Council had either two unexcused absences or four absences of any kind, they would be suspended. The suspended member will have one week to appeal the suspension to StudEx. Those amendments will go to the Senate for approval next week. If they are approved, the Student Rights Committee will approve the University Council to amend the Code Senate. The third amendment states that StudEx members will be removed from the committee after four absences. There will be no appeals procedure. Mayor-council debate likely to be renewed One of the leading proponents of the mayor-council form of government in Lawrence says he hopes to have the issue on the city election ballot again in two years. There are now no attendance policies for student members of the affected community. Mark Kaplan, 1032 New York St., who was instrumental in getting the mayor-council question on Tuesday a ballot, said he wasn't surprised by the change of government question. "I'm a realist about it," Kaplan said, reflecting on the 6,279-2,644 vote in favor of retaining the current commission-manager form of government in Lawrence. A mayor-council form of government, Kaplan said, will be more responsive to local issues. The system he advocated would have replaced commissioners elected at-large and an appointed city manager with council members elected by districts and an elected board. A petition campaign, started last November, ended with the signatures of more than 3,000 registered voters in Lawrence and forced the issue on the ballot in the city commission-school board election Kaplan said the present commission-manager form allowed candidates who had been elected to serve on a base to be elected. Winning commission candidates in Tuesday's election "bought the election," he said, by spending more money on advertising as the losing candidates. KAPLAI SAID he would distribute more information during the next two years to prepare voters for the question again in 1979. "It will be on the ballot every time there is an election in this town," Kaplan said. "The mayor has to be elected." “It’s a funny kind of issue,” he said. “People don’t understand they can actually alter their government structure. Eventually it has to go through though.” THE LOSS was expected, he said, because few politically powerful people publicly supported the mayor-council proposal. Partly contributing to the loss was a lack of information, Kaplan said, because of the HE SAID THE campaign experiences, although resulting in a loss, had been good. Supporters of the change to mayor-council form of government spent about $1,000 on advertising during their campaign. But many that money came from small contributions. "A lot of people got experience in campaigning and politics on a local level," heaping "Every source of power in the community was against it." he said. More people understand and are aware of the mayor-council issue now, he said, predicting that it would fare better in future elections because of more information posted on the issue and increased voter turnouts. The plans of the group desiring the change to a council government will be to "effectively educate the people," Kaplan said, and to give them a chance to study the topic in a fully. He said he would continue to raise questions about how the city operates. "Our only future is in self-government," be said. "I'm optimistic, people will come to know me." MUSIC IS MY SUNSHINE Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Downtown living Living above downtown on Massachusetts street isn't so bad as one might think. Mike Wallace, topright freshman; Roland Wheeler, a senior; and James Brambletti all worked in the city. Ohio, junior; and Go Tom Geering, Topeka sopharmore, with one other comateer, share in a 14-seat complete apartment with two bedrooms. Downtown is way of life By JEWELL WILLHITE Staff Reporter They look down on speeding skateboards, strolling shoppers, noisy bar patrons, passing parades and get their kicks out of the way. University of Kansas students who live above downtown Lawrence businesses have found not only a great view, but spacious and economical housing for themselves, if not for their cars. One of the largest downtown apartments is at 81% Massachusetts ST. It covers the entire top floor above Madsen's Warehouse. Pete Baird, Columbus, Ohio, junior; Roland Garner, Karaas City, Mo., freshman; Mike Wallace, Topeka freshman; Tomas Goering, Topeka freshman; and Don Rosen, Topeka junior, share its 14 rooms. Baird, who has lived in the apartment two and one-half years, said he thought the $254-a-month rent was cheaper than apartments at his house. The group found the apartment, Baird said, "when we went into Mason's to get change to call classified for apartments." THE STUDENTS have done much of their own decorating, including painting and plastering. Baid said, and have added some of the details. Baird said he liked the apartment because it was close to stores and near the bus stop. Because of parking difficulties, he Ellen Wright, Lawrence senior, lives at 721 Jacksonville, al. above Hisor's studio with her husband, Robert. She has a master's degree in computer science from Rutgers University. permit from the city. It allows the couple to park in parking lots on the Vermont Street and the east side of New Hampshire Street. `permits cct 4 $a month and must be purchased quarterly,` but they don't always help—parking space next to impossible buildings. ANOTHER DISADVANTAGE of living downtown, she said, is the bars. There are five bars in the same block as their apartment, Wright said, and bar patrons sometimes make a lot of noise. Mike Aubirch, Wichita graduate student, who lives alone at 9315 Massachusetts St. above Harma's Appliance, said, "A lot of the people I meet are really good people." Skateboarders during the day are also noisy, he said, but he likes his apartment, which has 700 square feet of space and a skylight, because it is economical. He has repainted it and built a closet. AURBACH HANDLES his parking problem by trying to outwit the meter maids. He can park behind the building, he said, but must check every two hours to see whether the meter maid has marked his car. If not, his car can remain another two During the winter, he can afford to be less vigilant. "In real cold weather they (meter mats) get lay," he said. Other downtown apartment dwellers may park their cars several blocks away or risk getting a ticket by parking closer to home. But in spite of meter maids and parking tickets, students living downtown seem happy with their housing. Many have lived there several years. When a student does move out, he may recommend his downtown apartment to a friend. House passes civil service raise By DEENA KERBOW Staff Reporter TOPEKA—The Kansas House of Representatives passed in final action yesterday a bill that would provide a cost of $20 million increase for state classified employees. It would give a 3 per cent or $25 a month, whichever is smaller, pay increase to employees in every step of the civil service pay program. The bill will now be sent to Gov. Robert Bennett for approval. The 2 per cent addition was made in a House amendment by State Rep. Wendell Lady, House minority leader, who said the amendment was intended to compensate In addition, the bill would grant a pay increase of 2 per cent to those classified employees whose assigned salary range is below $40,000 and also eligible for a longevity nasce. employees at the top of their pay range other classified employees would receive, or other classified employees would receive, Civil service employees work through a promotion system of steps, A through F. As classified employees move up to each new level, they are eligible for pay increases of about 5 per cent. Those who have reached step F are eligible for merit pay increases, only if they began their civil service work on or before Oct. 31, 1970. Lady's amendment would provide pay those these who are ineligible, either merit or other benefit those who have advanced to step F but who began their civil service employment after Oct. 31, The Senate made a technical amendment to the bill yesterday, rewarding Lady's amendment. The House wording would allow some employees to receive the 2 per State legislature adjourns without deciding KU bills The Kansas Legislature adjourned last night right before how much money to UUU the university would pay for it. Three important appropriations bills affect them: will have to be decided when they are passed. The main appropriations bill, which would grant KU about $45.4 million for salaries, utilities and other operating expenses, is still in a conference committee. A supplemental appropriations bill granting KU $64,620 this year for utility increases, which were higher than expected, is also in the conference committee. Both bills have passed each house, but in different versions. a capital improvements bill, including $17.3 million for additions to Malott Hall and Robinson Gymnasium, remains in the budget of Means Committee. It has passed the Senate. The Senate version of the main appropriations bill contained a 7 per cent faculty pay raise and an 8 per cent increase in other operating expenses. But the House committee approved the appropriations increases to 6 per cent for faculty pay and 7 per cent for operating expenses. When the bill was returned to the House for approval of the amendment, Lady told other representatives that he agreed with the change. cent pay increase just one month after receiving their five $ per step step in- The House occurred, voting 121 to 2 to pass the bill as amended. had intended that an employee would be eligible for the 2 per cent merit increase on his anniversary (of his last step pay increase)," Lady said. He said the Senate would make him make the bill comply with his intentions. Opening game winds blow victory to K.C. DETROIT—The Royals opened their defense of the West Division title yesterday by beating the Tigers, 74. Five Royal runs were driven in by John Mayberry, who had a home run, and Amos Otis, who homered and had three other hits. Paul Splitter picked up the win but needed help from three relief pitchers. Otis later doubled in the fifth before he came into the upper deck in right field. Dave Roberts started for the Tigers because Mark "The Bird" Fidrych was on the disabled list after having undergone knee surgery. Roberts didn't fare very well, giving up nine hits and six runs in five innings. George Brett, the 1978 American League batting champ, opened the game where he left off last season, with a base hit, and one out later Olsen pitched a home run into the right field. Olsen singled home Brett, who had walked, and went to third on a single by Hl McRaue. Splittorf started weakly but pitched well through the middle innings. In the first, Tito Fuentes doubled home Ron LeFlore for the Tigers and on a single by Rusty Wallace. Splittorf walked the first two batters in the seventh, and the Royals ended up surrendering two runs in the inning. Rusty was just behind him deep to right, field with two rusen on篮. The managers agreed the wind had helped Mayberry's home run and had kept her steady. "I honestly, thought Staub's ball was out," Whitey Herzog, Royals' manager said. "It was a great game." The Tigers' manager, Ralph Houk, said, "The one Maybery hit looked like a can of corn and the one Rusty hit was tagged and it staved in that." Sarts of the game, I guess. Mayberry, on whom the Royals are counting for power hitting this year, said he to do well in Detroit, his home town. He also loved friends and relatives were in the stands. "I don't know if it was a hard slider or a fast ball," Mayberry said of his home-run pitch. "It was kind of on in me a little bit. Fortunately, I got the bait around." 10 Friday, April 8, 1977 University Dally Kansan Residency bill fails Senate; to go before conference committee TOPEKA-The Kansas Senate failed yesterday to request with the House's amendments to concession of a family practice program, prompting it to a Senate-House conference committee. The House of Representatives amended the bill to include an accreditation team that would occasionally visit and review the training programs. Because the legislature called its first Faculty Council rehashes policy takes no action Faculty Council yesterday rehashed the fine points of a proposed change in the University's sabbatical leave policy, but took no action. The council debated almost two hours the criteria for determining who should receive sabbaticals. The main points of discussion were whether the criteria should be based on the applicant or the application and whether it is pertinent to consider an application's merit or the applicant's length of time in a teaching position. Bill Westebeke, associate professor of law and council secretary, presented to the Council a revision of part of a University Faculty Rights, Privileges and Response Committee. After discussion, substantial leaves. After discussion, no action was taken on the revision. Westerbeke also moved that the FRPR report and the revision be sent to the Organization and Administration (O & A) communications and the proposed comments could be clarified. This motion met with opposition from several members of the council, who said the report's general principles should be discussed and voted on before the report was passed. Carl Leben, associate professor of East Asian studies, said that sending the report to O & A would only delay the council's decision on the report. Further discussion on the issue and possible action is planned by the Faculty of Medicine. Because of the Easter holiday, there won't be classes at KU Monday. There will be changes in operating hours of some campus buildings. Western Library will be open normal hours today and tomorrow, closed Sunday and open normal hours Monday. The Kansas Union will be open regular hours today and tomorrow and will be closed Sunday and Monday. Easter holiday cancels classes In honor of Good Friday, Gov. Robert Bennett has declared this afternoon a holiday for state employees. Bennett requested, however, that state offices remain open with skeletal crews. Most KU offices will be open all day. Employees who remain at work today will receive a half-day's paid holiday later, Jim Feldstein, KU director of personnel services, said yesterday. Feldstein said all KU staff members would be allowed to take the afternoon off. But he said most campus offices would remain open with a reduced work force. KU offices that are normally open on saturdays will be open tomorrow, he said. THE BEATLES: AWAY WITH WORDS N N M U.S. Acoustical Performance NOUCH AUDITORIUM MARCH 10TH, APRIL 9TH at 4 p.m., 6 p.m., 8 p.m., and 12 p.m. Fri., April 15 N N O STUDENT ADVANCE TICKETS ONLY $2.50 Available at 54th St. Rose Office ALL N N STUDENT TICKETS $3.00 AT THE DOOR The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is a global organization that sets standards for products and services. ISO provides guidelines for how these standards should be implemented, including what materials are used, how they should be tested, and how they should be manufactured. ISO also offers training programs to help users understand how to implement its standards effectively. In addition to providing guidelines, ISO also offers other resources such as documentation, reference materials, and user guides that provide additional information on how to use the standards. These resources are designed to help users understand how to use the standards and how to use them effectively. It is important to note that ISO standards are not meant to replace traditional manual testing methods. Instead, ISO standards provide a standardized way to test products and services, which can lead to increased efficiency and cost savings. However, it is also important to remember that manual testing is still an effective method of ensuring the quality of products and services. Manual testing is more labor-intensive than automated testing, but it can be done with greater precision and accuracy. Therefore, it is recommended to use both manual testing and automated testing when testing products and services. THE BEATLES AWAY WITH WORDS THE BEST HISTORY OF THE RUSSIA OF WORLD WHERE GERMANY RELEASED ITS NEW POLITICAL DIVISION FROM TOMORROW, IN 1938. THIS DAY IS THE DATE WHICH German Empire GOT THEM RELEASED FROM TOMORROW, AT THE END OF THE NEGATIVE ERA OF ITS EXISTENCE. A FILM BY KATHARINE MELUNCH, DIRECTED BY JASON BURRINGTON AND ROBERT H. SMITH, AUGUST 20, 2014. PRODUCED BY KATHARINE MELUNCH AND ROBERT H. SMITH, WITH EDITIONS BY LOUIS TROVATI, MARCIA DAVIDSON, JASON BURRINGTON AND ROBERT H. SMITH. adjournment last night, the issue can't be resolved for at least two weeks. Both houses will recover at 10 a.m. April 27. The family practice program, if passed, would establish agreements between the University of Kansas School of Medicine and qualified medical care facilities or nonprofit community organizations. Financial assistance programs for state, state, through appropriations to the University's School of Medicine, and from communities. with the client and the software are approved by the company before being installed on the server of the system. The client must have a valid certificate from the client administrator or the server administrator. The assessment is based on the performance of the system. The performance of the system is measured by measuring the response time of the application. The response time of the application is measured by measuring the response time of the application. SOLAR ENERGY The amount of solar energy a system receives is dependent on the amount of sunlight that falls on it. The amount of solar energy that a system receives is affected by three factors: 1. **Temperature**: The temperature of the sky affects the amount of solar radiation that reaches the ground. As the temperature increases, more heat is transferred to the ground from the atmosphere. 2. **Observation Time**: The length of time that sunlight strikes the ground affects the amount of solar energy that is received. During daytime, more sunlight hits the ground than at night, so the amount of solar energy received is higher during the day. 3. **Cloud Cover**: The amount of clouds covering the ground affects the amount of solar energy that is received. When there are fewer clouds, more sunlight is reflected back into the atmosphere, reducing the amount of solar energy received. By considering these factors, we can better understand how the amount of solar energy a system receives affects its efficiency and performance. State Rep. Jim Schwartz, D-Junction City, also to amend the bill yesterday, saying it would make more sense for a tax The bill would allow the KU Medical Center to establish four family practice residency training centers in Kansas counties having populations of less than 200,000. His motion was to delete one section from the bill, which State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, said was an attempt at local autonomy. Hayden said, "He didn't want close review by the University." Haydon said the bill currently kept the University in control. University, "If you're going to put state dollars into it, somebody's got to have control," he said. "That's basic politics." Apartment Hunting? Special Summer Rates Reduced Security Deposit Call or come by. 841-3800 842-2348 WEST HILLS • AVALON • HARVARD SQUARE APPLICATIONS Now Available for the Positions of EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER 1978 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK JAYHAWKER OFFICE 117-B KANSAS UNION 864-3728 Deadline Monday, August 10th Deadline - Monday, April 18 CAROLINA'S BUNNY April 9th 8:00 p.m. Easter Disco Dance Beer sold with I.D. No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. Another SPECIAL NIGHT Like last Monday, remember? J. Watson's APRIL 4-10 Sponsored by Gay Services Admission $1.75 Ballroom $1 Cover - Disco Peanut Gallery: Kings vs. Indiana, 7:30 p.m. College All Stars, 10:30 p.m. Everyone FREE (no cover charge) 7 foot TV screen—"Something for Joey" BUY 51 Cover - Disco 7" TV—"People's Command Performance: "77" HONDA 18.20 $2 Cover - Live music with FORT DODGE Great Movie: "Bang the Drums Slowly" Make a full day of it! TV Free: Royals vs. Royals, and dance to FORT DODGE Saturday night - $2 cover. Come see Royals vs. Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Free on our 7' TV. awrence's Newest 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & lower BUY TWO SANCHOS at regular price GET ONE FREE with this COUPON Expiration date 4-15-77 Taco Grande 9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd 9th & iowa with this COUPON Expiration date 4-15-77 Taco Grande 9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd 9v I'll put it on my shirt. I'll put it on my jacket. I'll put it on my pants. I'll put it on my skirt. I'll put it on my top. I'll put it on my waist. I'll put it on my hip. I'll put it on my arm. I'll put it on my foot. I'll put it on my knee. I'll put it on my ankle. I'll put it on my toe. I'll put it on my heel. I'll put it on my shin. I'll put it on my toes. I'll put it on my heels Mister Guy introduces the ultimate in pants . . . the fishing pant with the legs that zip off! to make a great hiking short exclusively at Mister Guy. open thurs. nite till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. and All Star Jazz Violinist just returned from a European tour and Bee Midwife Drake entire with Claude "Fiddler" Williams White team vitati comp 7 Th Timr meet Tonite and Saturday night, special Admission $5.00 Includes ALL THE BEER, peanuts, popcorn & soft drinks you can consume! SKIP DEVOL, world's Greatest Banjo Player, playing with Gaslite Gang ALL AT "T enter meet comp there cont Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. Open 8:00.Music starts at 9:00. 3rd Trackmen in invitational When the University of Kansas track team competes in the Arkansas State Invitational tomorrow, it will be the last team competition for nearly a month. Because of the remaining two legs on the Midwest relays circuit, the Kansas and Drake Relays, the Jayhawks won't field an opponent in the second dual with Kansas State University May 7. Friday, April 8, 1977 That's one reason head track coach Bob Howell is looking forward to tomorrow's pic in Jersey City. "This meet will be our last chance to enter a team as we would at the conference meet." Timmons said. "It's my kind of competition. We'll have the whole team there and every guy has an opportunity to contribute to the team effort." ANOTHER REASON Timmons is looking forward to the meet is the quality of the competition. Notre Dame, Florida, Wisconsin, Memphis State, Air Force, Louisiana Tech and host Arkansas State University will make up the opposition. In addition, the best performer in each event from the University of Arkansas has The host school, Arkansas State, is led by Pastor Paul Pendleton in the pave vault and Pastor David Prenton in the spring. Three Jayhawks who were bothered by a virus during last weekend's Texas Relays—Glen Harter, Anthony Coleman and Dave Bentley—will be recovered and are scheduled to run. for the NCAA Outdoor Championships, June 2-4 in Champaign, III. They are Cliff Wiley in the 100-meters, George Mason in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, Steve Rainbolt in the high jump and Jim Podrebarke in the shot put. Four KU athletes have already qualified KC Kings eliminated PHOENIX (UPI)-(PA) Westpalm scored 30 points for the Phoenix Suns as they eliminated Kansas City from a playoff spot in 121-110 victory over the Kings last night. Jayhawks to invitational The KU softball team begins play today in the two-day Southwest Missouri State Invitational. The Jayhawks, with a 6-0 record, play Illinois State, Central Missouri State and Missouri today in round robin pairings. Their opponent for tomorrow's first game isn't scheduled yet. The winner of that game will advance to the finals. The Jayhawks' next regular game is a double-header against Northwest Missouri on Saturday. Thank you for your support in Tuesday's General Election. I appreciated the opportunity to be one of the final six candidates for the Board of Education. PAUL J. WOLFE --served on a giant English Bun with avacado, tomato, and Daggy's own special sauce, your choice of cheese RECORDS TAPES JEWELRY PIPES AND PARAPHERNALIA In Lawrence at 15 West 9th (between Mass. and Vermont!) open from 11:00 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. C M P R E N T A L O W E D LOVE Lowest Prices in Town Lowest Prices in Town OLUISSED MERCHANDISE GUARANTEED ALL USED MERCHANDISE GUARANTEED LP's $1.88 Doubles 2.66 Triples 3.86 Tapes 2.00 WE BUY LP's $1.00 Triples $2.20 Doubles 1.50 Tapes 1.00 --served on a giant English Bun with avacado, tomato, and Daggy's own special sauce, your choice of cheese Halloween TACO TICO BUY ONE TACOBURGER GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON Delicious! Extraordinary! Taco Tico tacoburgers. Served on a bun filled with savory taco meat, gar- nished with tasty cheddar cheese, crisp lettuce, and a generous choice of sauce. The TACO TICO BUY ONE TACOBURGER GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON Delicious! Extraordinary! Taco Tico tacoburgers. Served on a bun filled with savory taco meat, garnished with tasty cheddar cheese, crisp lettuce, tomatoes and topped with your choice of sauce. The whole family will love our tacoburgers. University Daily Kansan Clip this coupon and get one FREE lacoburger when you buy one. Expires April 10,1977 Limit one per customer. TACO TICO 2340 Iowa Always in season and seasoned to please Watch the want ads in the Kansan. 花朵乐园 Easter ... Flowers! If you can't visit that special someone this Easter... send them flowers in your place. If loved ones are close by. Make a personal appearance with a fresh bouquet! PUBLIC SERVICE SECURITY DEPT. We will be open Easter morning until 12 noon for your shopping convenience. Nye's Flowers 939 Massachusetts 843-3255 The Flower Shop in the center of downtown Lawrence Here's your gruel, Org. Junior and I are dining at Campus Hideaway! Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park—For civilized folks If You Liked Daagwud's Original Sandwich Line . . . TRY THE NEW ONES!! THE IGOR LARGEST HAMBURGER IN TOWN DAAGY'S RUEBEN NEW YORK CITY UNIVERSITY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES THESE SANDWICHES SERVED WITH YOUR CHOICE OF BREAD CHEESE & SALAD 1930 Pastrami Corn Beef Smoked Turkey Smoked Ham CHEESE CHOICES Cheddar, Swiss, Baby Swiss, Munster, Smoked Cheese, American Cheese THAT FAMOUS RUEBEN made Daagwud's special way ...just the way you like it Roast Beef Hot Polish Sausage City-wide DELIVERY till 2:30 a.m. 841-5635 All New Sandwiches Available on Delivery Bagel, Onion Roll, Frisco Rye, Egg Roll, Motown Rye BREAD CHOICES Salami Egg Salad Ham Salad Summer Sal SALAD CHOICES Cole Slaw, Potato Salad, Bean Salad, Cucumber Salad V Open 'till 2:30 a.m. For the Late Night Munchies Hours: Mon.-Sat.: 11 a.m.-2:30 a.m. Sunday: 2 p.m.-10:00 p.m. 644 Massachusetts 841-5635 Home of Famous Sandwiches DAAGWUD'S 644 Mass. Original Line SUBMARINES 2 for the Price of 1 Special SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 6-10 P.M. THE FOOD OF THE GODS PLATTER FOR TWO includes a plenitious platter of blocks of summer sausage, hot polish sausage, smoked baby swiss and muster cheese with a bowl of fruit from the Garden of the Gods, also a loaf of bread and butter BEGGAR'S CHEESE BOARD a delightful munchy constructed like the Food of the Gods, but we hold the meat and fruit We CATER PARTIES Serving 6 ft. & 8 ft. Subs Call the Sub-Hotline 841-5635 Ask for Gary 10 Friday, April 8, 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. Winn's bill a loser Among the paper to be cast on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives this week is the CIA Disclosure Bill whose intent is to punish those flies who tell the other bad guys who our bad guys are. Corsponseed by Rep. Larry Winn Jr., R-Kan, the bill would "reduce the grave danger already faced by our intelligence agents" and "take assertive action to protect the lives of our intelligence personnel." NOT A bad idea, really. Intelligence gathering, provided it is at least halfway legal, is a legitimate governmental activity. It's self defense. The problems arise out of the penalties to be imposed on any would-be big mouth who ratted on his buddies at the CIA or other intelligence-gathering agencies. The particulars of the bill, as stated in one of Winn's numerous press released, say: "This bill will provide up to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine for any person who has the identity of any person who at anytime has been engaged in intelligence activities. "in the case of any agency employee or ex-employee who has pledged secrecy, the bill stipulates the prosecutors must prove only that the disclosure was made 'willingly.' "... For all other persons, the prosecutor must prove that the identification was made with the awareness that the consequences may threaten the safety of the particular agent . . ." WE RUN into legal trouble immediately How does a prosecutor prove that identification was made? What constitutes a "hint"—a wink? Perhaps a nod. Three knocks on the door: Or is it four? Similarly, how can a prosecutor prove that disclosure was made willingly, with full awareness of the consequences to the agent, or both? If one is of a psychological bent, one could fairly claim that human actions—all human actions—are intentional; we act the way we want to, harmful or not. If that premise is correct, any disclosure is then必然会 willingly, so the entire point becomes meaningless. And unless one claims claimovacy, or has proven such, full awareness is a mental and mathematical impossibility. WINN FURTHER contends that his bill imposes no prior restraint—preventing the media from publishing in advance, a violation of the First Amendment—but adds that, similar to libel law, publishers or broadcasters can be held responsible for their actions after publication or broadcast. As some news editor knows, known punishment after-the-fact often is more than enough to discourage publication before. Winn has made a serious attempt to prevent the sort of identification that led to the death of CIA agent Richard Welch in Athens last year. His bill is an attempt to inject a bit of legal aphrodisiac into an already impotent CIA. But if such a law is to be passed, it must be made clear, definitive and positive instead of fuzzy, inconclusive, neutral and probably impossible to enforce. Baseball fans prepare Rrrrhm-ryn-rrrem! Rr-rhn-ryn-rr-en! Ryh -rh t-rhsn -ryh -thr -rrtsn -rrhm! Rrrrhm! ROYALS! That, or something similar, is what a large group of uniformed service station operators are going to be chanting on Kansas City television commercials any day now. (The translation is something like 'Pound 'em Royals, pound 'em.') Anyway, what we're getting at in a rather roundabout way is that baseball season has begun. And on Monday, the Royals open the home season against the hated New York Yankees. Damn Yankees. Baseball has been having some troubles lately. To the continuing problems of competition from allegedly more exciting (and definitely more violent) sports such as football and hockey, astronomical salaries and a bad image problem of greediness have been added. But the game survives. And while it survives, a tradition lives on, and loyal fans persevere. Until September or so, games instead of money will dominate the sports pages. And, until then, baseball will be fun again. RRR-RRmH-ROYALS! College voters misunderstood "Oh my God! They've given the students the right to vote." Those were the words at the top of a flier that arrived on my doorstep Monday afternoon, less than 12 hours before the polls in Lawrence city election were to open. The flier, which primarily emphasized the need to vote for the proposed change in the law, said that Judge Garland talked to a jackass that was wearing a suit. The words were displayed so they were easy to be attributed to Miss Garland. THE LEAFTET obviously was designed to inflame student voters enough to vote in Tuesday's election. Unfortunately, it wasn't too effective. But even if it had been, it wouldn't have altered the results of the election. There are two distinct groups in this community that have conflicting ideas about whether the students who are registered in Douglas County should vote. One group, we will call BOTH ARE wrong about the student vote. Neither are den of drugs, dirty jeans and economic iniquity. the "power to the people" group, thinks the students should take an active part in the problem of climate change in Lawrence. By taking an active role, the students could change the social and economic framework of this community, power to the people group think. The other group, which we will call the "damm college kids," is active in damm college kids are active in local politics, the city will be Brent Anderson Editorial Writer cognizant of the collective wisdom of the students at the University of Kansas, especially of those students who Barkley Clark, professor of law and leader in the city commission race, represents a community general, had an unfounded fear of the potential college voters. Students should take a more active roll, Clark said, and if they understand a community would benefit. Clark calls the relationship between the University and the rest of the community the town-gown relationship. There has been a good relationship between town and university, and the students have made a positive contribution to that relationship. THAT CONTRIBUTION isn't what the power to the people or the damn college kids groups think it is. It is a contribution that demonstrates a unique interest in Lawrence, in Tuesday's election, for example, those precincts thought to have a majority of college students were reflective of the final election results. The filer, which probably hurt more than helped the cause of those persons who passed it out, insisted that the law's attitude of the Lawrence business community toward students voters. There is very little evidence that those interests are afraid of the student vote, and if they are, they needn't be. "There is nothing the Lawrence real estate, banking and business interests fear the student vote. Our students read the fly read." The students who voted in the local elections are interested in the future of Lawrence, I think, and vote accordingly. The students who don't vote in the local elections are interested in their business, which in some cases it isn't, or really aren't interested. Were student interest to increase, as Clark thinks it should, I think the power to the people and the damn couple was increased. We should be surprised at the positive results such interest would have. SACCHARIN AIR FRIED CHICKEN MALTED MILK BALLS TEA WATER BLUEBERRY WAFFLES COFFEE LASAGNA < TOBACCO APHRODISIAC Carter's rights stand defended; Wolfe assailed To the editor: The Kansan's editorial on Tuesday, April 5, about President Carter's human rights policy did an excellent job of oversimplifying a very complex situation. The inference that Carter's statements on human rights will be nothing more than political rhetoric should not themselves to all the world's atrocities is somewhat bewildering. The result has been the unfortunate necessity of selective enforcement of the Helsinki about Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider. morality is unrealistic and dangerous. A foreign policy prudently tempered with President Carter, in an effort to reaffirm the United States' commitment to certain ideals, has followed a course that has lent a bit more integrity to America's global position. It also has contributed to economic and military posture. The previous approach to American foreign aid was completely divorced from any sort of human rights principle. The current approach to such aid is linked to human rights considerations only when they are being beaten or detriment to America's strategic position. Bemis would have us believe Couple coupled with a deluge of self-righteous cries of hypocrisy. The fact of the matter is that the United States is a good deal less hypocritical than many countries few years before. Before the Carter administration, the State Department vilified the decency of every American by totally abandoning the distribution of foreign aid. Now, however, while we still must tolerate the abhorrent conditions of a South Korea or an Iran, we can take care to ensure that the ideals we aspire to are being applied where realistically possible. With respect to human rights, we now practice some of what we preach, whereas when we did not practice any of it. The only significant letter was the short letter of Del Shankel, executive vice For Carter to zealously impose the Helsinki provisions on all nations equally would be international suicide. As long as we reside in a world that is stabilized by military respect, we cannot afford to impose moral sanctions on all of our repressive allies. A foreign policy dogmatically dictated by Readers Respond morality is necessary and welcome. Jeffery Byrd Jenery Byrd Chicago, Ill., senior Editorial left holes To the editor: Upon reading Jay Bemis' editorial entitled "Kansas Republicans Threatened," I became bewildered as to how he could write an editorial leaving so many unanswered questions. MORNEY AFRICA It is true, Democrats do control the Kansas House for the first time in 64 years. But what have they done with it? The excuse in the past for unresponsive terms were that they were a minority party. But even now since they control the majority their unresponsiveness has continued. Bemis points his attacks on a Republican leader's comments that Schneider was just *u* beating the bushes and walking across hot coals all the way across the state to protect poor, unsuspecting senior citizens from consumer fraud. If this doesn't Schneider's only motivation he would deserve congratulations. But they start now, after six men from the Democratic state committee have declared him the governor in next year's election. But why have these trips only recently started? Were they not just as necessary during his first two years in office? Three of the men named were Terry Scanlon, Democratic state chairman; Norbert Dreling, former state chairman; and Schuster himself, who declared himself a candidate. Bernis didn't mention this meeting in his editorial. To refresh memories, it was talked up in March 22 editorial in the Kanusan. I don't intend this letter to sound like a paranoid Republican which Benn refers to; instead, I feel that facts should be told when editorials are written. Having read Valerie Voigt's letter in the Monday edition of the Kansas, then the critical responses which appeared in it helped me wish to express some opinions on all of this correspondence. Without this, the Attorney General's office will have to send representatives around the city to cites citizens from editorial fraud. Center criticized To the editor: Mark Stucky, Co-organizational chairman, KU College Republicans chancellor. If Voigt's letter had been more timely, then Shankel's comment would be much easier for her usage of his name, this may or may not be applicable, except it would raise the question of whether he go over Paul Wolfe's head to accomplish something? Voigt is not a politician, nor is she subject to the internal political games of the University. Her own case, referred to in her letter and referred to in Kramer's letter, is before Shankal presently. It is my hope that Voigt perseveres with the knowledge of University politics, and the Kanans' "questionable" printing of her letter, doesn't affect her case. As for Ray Kramer's letter, he mentions that this is the second letter written by Voigt criticizing of Olfer the Computer Center. He goes on to say that she was dismissed from the Computation Center for unsatisfactory job performance (whatever means), and may needate supervise, Jeff Bangert, and Nifford, assistant director and part of the management team of the Computation Center, both disagreed with Olfer's Wolfe's decision and his alone that brought about her dismissal. To correct both Nordlund and Kramer, many people who have resigned from the Computation Center have done so. I am a Volg. These comments are reflections of the words and feelings of the people involved, not the "management team," I tend to believe that the Center employees before I believe Wolfe, Nordlund or Kramer. The quality of service and lack of productive output from the Computation Center in the past years is not because of the lack of management, because of no management. Current service at the Computation Center is much improved over service at this location, and because of the new "structured environment"; this is because a computer system nearly four times the size and far more complex handling the load was installed. Considering that a new computer system is installed, and a new building is in progress, the "structured" environment would be the cause for those who would leave, to stay. Indeed it was for many who weathered the long journey to KU, loyality to KU, but because of the potential to grow with KU. Those who left were discouraged because after the hard work they put into the construction process, they felt duned. Finally, Wolfe's chances of winning were statistically improbable. When you finish fourth in a race for six positions, you have to finish fourth when only three can be the winners, it doesn't convince the voter Alexander Barket, Jr. cut the mustard. A job of convincing the voters has to be done to overcome the "humor" he generates, if he didn't convince the voters. Letters Policy Lawrence special student Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and bold. All letters in words are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgments. KU students must include; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; and KU students must provide their position; others must provide their address. Alum vs. Title IX To the editor: KU Student Body President Steve Leben has brought up an important point when he asks whether it is the students' or the teachers' role to bring KU under the requirements of Title IX by July 1978. First of all, let me say that I am strongly against many of the Title IX provisions. This "equal funding" it is by carrying things a bit too far; women's athletics simply cannot bring in enough revenue to even begin to support their programs. I am so- ardent KU alumnus, but I wouldn't think of spending two hours in Allen Field House watching a women's intercollegiate basketball game. Frankly speaking, they are about as interesting as an Ida Lapino film festival. However, I do believe that women should have the opportunity to compete at college level and I don't think that the student activity fees should be allocated toward this. My two sons currently attend KU, and I feel their fees are too high already. If our university is to be forced to come into line with the Title IX requirements, it should be the University's responsibility and not the students' burden. Rug Roy Earle, M.D. 9421 Sierra Lane Overland Park The K the first with the The ga ternoon The K Eight I State w in the t were i Injur hampen teh m will als Managing Editor Greg Hack Jim Hates Editorial Editor Stewart Brann In its Univer- hosts Stephen triangi alvam KU triangi week i 365, in had boles. the after Grea Wich 635 Okla e 58% Published at the University of Kansas daily August 18, 2014 Subscriptions to the Daily and daily event Saturday and Sunday, Holiday Edition, and daily evening Saturday and Sunday, Holiday Edition, are subscriptions by mail or a $1 commission on $18. A year ago the student government issued a year ago mandate the county. Student subscriptions increase in percentage. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Editor Urs Wales Kl 70 Campus Editor Alson Gwinn K Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Copy Chefs Sports Editor Associate Sports Editors Photo Editor Make Up Editors Mary Myers Wise Editors Lynda Smith Barbara Rosewine Bernel Johnson Purr Prewell Gary Vee Dana Domingo Courtney Thompson Mike Campbell Jay Koehler Marion Thomas Suan Appleh Ann Signman Dervish Vornil Larry Bonucci, Carla Lumlun Ellen Wiley Bill Uiyeko Contributing Writers Ball Sniffen, Barbara Rousewine Editorial Writers Jay Bensu, Paul Jefferson Er at E Business Manager James Clements Advertising Manager Tim O'Mahon An assistant Advertising Manager Randy Harbe Randy Harbe Assistant Classified Manager Pat Thomson Dennis Doherty National Advertising Manager Brian Gardner Natural Advertising Manager Brian Gardner toward basing the bank, bankingests fearcent vote," e evidence e afraid of if they are, invested in the terested in i, think I highly. The note I vote in ch in some ally aren't WITH rest to inhinks it awer to the mn college would be live results have. innus, but I responded two Field House women's in- netball game, g. are they as an Ida- val. b believe that have the op- portunity to just don't student activity located toward nurses currently I feel their are too high isity is to be to line with the events, it should city's respon the students' Boy Earle, M.D. 21 Sierra Lane Overland Park O'Shea Jarsulic Higbee hornton 'Connor cruender mstrand Smith, *Seib.* Cobb. Purecel. the wrierman. the illencer amplifier. in Cobb. Bennis. Bennis. addwin. addwin. Leech. Leech. addison. afferson. Suffier. Sports Roundup Ruggers host KSU The KU Rugby Club will be at home for the first time since March 13 when it tangles with the Kansas State Rugby Football Club. The club will play an afternoon at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU ruggers finished second in the Big Eight Tournament last weekend, and K-State was third. The two teams didn't meet on Friday, the latter, because they were in opposite brackets. Injuries, especially in the backfield, have hampered the Jayhawks in this season. The Ateam has a 2-5 record and the B-team, which will also play tomorrow, has a 2-2 record. Golf triangular here In its only home meet of the year, the University of Kansas women's golf team hosts the University of Missouri and Stephens College of Columbia, Mo. in a triangular meet tomorrow. It will be at Alvamar Hills golf course. KU placed second behind Stephens in a triangular with these same two teams last week in Columbia. Stephens beat KU 35-36, in the rain, even though the Jayhawks had a二o-stroke lead after the first nine holes. Missouri was third with 376. KU golfers in tenth The KU men's golf team is in 10th place after the first two rounds of play in the Great Plains Invitational Tournament in Wichita. The Jayhawks have a team to win into, to be the national round. Oklahoma State has the 14-time field with a 884 total. KU to WSU Relays Encouraged by a successful open meeting at Emporia Kansas State College, the KU Baseball Standings New York W L Pt. GB Cleveland 1 1 1000 Iowa 1 1 1000 — Railroad 0 1 1000 — Baltimore 0 1 1000 1 Detroit 0 1 1000 1 Milwaukee 0 1 1000 — AMERICAN LEAGUE East | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | California | 1 | 0 | 1.00 | - | | Riverside City | 1 | 0 | 1.00 | - | | Oakland | 1 | 0 | 1.00 | 16 | | Minnesota | 1 | 0 | 1.00 | 16 | | Chicago | 2 | 0 | 1.00 | 1 | | Detroit | 2 | 0 | 1.00 | 1 | Yesterday's Results women's track team leaves today for the two-day Wichita State University Relays. **Year-to-Result** New York 3, MIL. 8, Chicago 10 Kansas City 7, Detroit 4 Texas 2, Baltimore 1, Illinois 6 Cleveland 5, Boston 4, Illinois 11 Detroit 10, Cleveland 11 Kansas State University, winner of the relays for the past two years, will once again be defending its title when the teams begin at 8 o'clock with the high jump. The field events will be completed tonight along with finals in the 5,000 meters, an event in which Jayhawks Laura Mordy and Nancy Bissell are entered. Preliminaries in the 100-meter dash, the 90-meter hurdles and the 400-meter dash are not required. aneta Calamese and Kathy Kennedy are entered in the 100 for KU, and Karol Fitzgerald and Buntia Bassa are slated to go in the 100-meter hurdles. CHARMANE KUHLMAN, winner of the 400 at Emporia, will lead KU into that event along with Jo McMillion, who was third last week. A full day of events is scheduled for tomorrow, with high school and college division events beginning in the morning and continuing through the afternoon. Division events taking place in the afternoon. The KU women's tennis coach, Tom Kivisto, has picked his own team to win the KU tennis invitational, which starts today at Allen Field House. Netters host meet The "Jayhawks" opponents will be Missouri, Stephens College and Kansas State. KU has defeated Stephens twice this year but hasn't played either KState or "We played tough against Stephens, but it was a case of both duals going either way," he said. "They have some good players, but we won those wins with Astrid in the No. 2." Kwista said that although his team had battled Stephens twice, the meets had made up 50% of the attack. Astir Dakla, KU's No. 2 singles player, has been out about four weeks with a severe cut on her playing hand. The invitational will be her first competition since the inning. Kiviste plans to play her in the No. 6 spot, to replace Lynda Hill. The rest of KU's lineup will be: Carrie Fotopolus, No. 1 singles; Mary Stauffer, no. 2; Marlene Cook, no. 3; Tracy Spellman, no. 4; and Kathy Merrion, no. 5. The invitational will continue through Saturday with matches being played on the Allen Field House, Robinson Gymnasium and Alavar Racquet Swim Club courts. Soccer club in K.C. The KU Soccer Club will play a TWA-sponsored team at 2 p.m., in Swouse Park, Kansas City, Mo. It will be the team's first before next week's Big Eight Tournament. The Remodeled LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE & 7th Spirit balcony present the Billy SPEARS BAND Friday & Saturday—April 8th & 9th $3.00 cover—Showtime 9:00 p.m. - SPECIAL - GORDON CLEVELAND BAND 7th & Mass.842-6930 In the balcony Sat., 12 to 3:30 a.m. BUY TWO TACOS at regular price GET ONE FREE with this COUPON Friday, April 8,1977 Expiration date 4-15-77 Taco Grande 9th & Indiana * 1720 W. 23rd SUA THE MISSOURI BREAKS (1976) Dir. Arthur Penn. With Marlon Brandon, Jack Nicholson, Popular Fr. April 8 & Saf. April 9, 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30, p.m. 1$ SUA FILMS MOSES AND AARON (1975) Dir. Jean-Marie Straub. A top-drawer production of Schoenberg's opera; a radical film experiment. University of Michigan, Monday, Wednesday, April 13, 7:30 p.m., $1 Steak & SHRIMP FRANCISCAN Woodruff Auditorium $4.50 Kansas Union $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open a.m. - 9.p.m. Daily Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT We deliver EASTER in beautiful bouquets. MARY JONES STUDIO Celebrate the Easter holidays with a basket of fresh, fragrant flowers. Stop in or call. YOUR EXTRACTS ARE FILTERED FTD Owens 9th and Indiana 843-6111 FLOWER SHOP Nicolai Relax next fall—move to Naismith Halll Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features. 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-853-8559 University Daily Kansan LEASING NOW If you desire a pleasant place to live, and if your parents will sign the contract, then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W. 25th St. PARK 25 SUA POPULAR FILMS SUA TEALS. NE KILLS. ONE DIES. MARLON JACK BRANDO NICHOLSON "THE MISSOURI BREAKS" LLLISTY KATURT MARINA BALLEN - GIACONIAN THE PINK TANNER "MARINA BALLEN" IS A HIPPIE BLACK WANNA OF THE HIPPIES! FRIDAY, APRIL 8 & SATURDAY, APRIL 9 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 3:30 Matinee each day Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union $1 Tickets available at SUA Office. University-Community Service Scholarship/Award As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/ awards from the gift. $^*scholarship financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Qualifications: Applications: *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). *Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 8, 1977 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. *More information and applications available Tuesday, March 29 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. 6 Friday, April 8, 1977 University Daily Kansan Arts & Leisure RANDY NELSON I am not the only one. You are. Last stretch Cliff Keuter, second from left and inset, practices with the CHI Keuter Dance Company, one of the best modern dance troupes in the nation. Known for his provocative choreography, Keuter delighted a Hoch Auditorium audience Wednesday with dances both whimsical and tender. By CHUCK SACK Reviewer Ira Wells (Ar Carney) is not a typical Hollywood detective. At age 65 he limps, is overweight and hard-of-hearing, and suffers from a perforated ulcer. Missing feline begins unusual 'Late Show' BUT IF IRA isn't corrupt, he isn't necessarily effective either. When the肘 man is struck by a bullet, Roche, a wealthy under world "fence" for stolen goods, Ira tries to bluff information from the criminal. all he gets for his trouble is a bloody nose and another blow to his head. He spent six months of the previous year in a V.A. hospital recovering from surgery and would be retired if he hadn't agreed to take the job. "The Late Shop" is about Ira's last case. It's part of the spaced-out charm of writer-director Robert Benton's plot that the hunt for the cat leads immediately to a car crash. Working without David Newman for the first time since they collaborated on "Bonnie and Clyde," Benton has fashioned a script that delivers both realistic comedy and surrealism, which is associated with the hard-boiled dick genre. IRA AND Margo meet, appropriately on, for Friday the 13th at the funeral of Ira ex-partner. They are introduced by Charley Hatter (Bill Macy), a longtime informant of Ira's who knew that the dead man had been searching for Margo's cat. Keuter dance: love, laughter, life "The Late Show" is solidly grounded in the style of "48 mysteries. Ira is a private self with honor, desperate to distinguish himself from 'low-rent gumshoes.' He still wears white shirts and baggy suits, and he sports values like wanting to appreciate his friends. Recent cover stories in Time and Rolling Stone make it impossible to overlook Lily Tomlin's virtuosic performance. Viewers should be warned, however, that it takes a long time to build up a solid madcap character. And it should be noted that Art Carney supplies an equal portion of It also is about Margo's first case. Margo (Lilly Tomlin) is an actress, turned talent agent, turned dress designer. She pushes grass on the side to pay for her shrink, so that it stays in place herself as being "a little weird around the edges." Margo is the missing cat's owner. By SHERI BALDWIN Entertainment Editor Clad in maroon warmups and leggings, an elf-adorned female practices an intricate movement with her partner and ends in an arabesque, nose-to-nose with him, her face Good examples of Keuter's comic choreography are found in "Sunday Papers," in which a hat pulled on a leash and the band launches a lariat twirl becomes a抖腿 interset between ferent scenes cowed intoBetween toy piano and hand organ music. The "How'd that look?" she turns to ask. A soft-spoken man, Keuter is constantly creating and improving his steps. In rehearsal he is serious but gutsy of antics when Frankenstein walks in love scenes. Kuter learned ballet only a year ago to help himself recover from an injury. Since, ballet has become integrated with his dance studies and has strength, speed and line to his work. On to other movements. They embrace, and a bare foot squeaks unprofessionally on the wooden floor. She giggles. Both continue, trying to regain serious faces. Cliff Kuester is polishing details on "Table," a modern舞 dance that explores the developed relationship of a long-in-body couple. Many of the dancer's movements are sexually expressive and demonstrate only part of Kuezer's provocative nature with Formed in 1969 after Keuter left the Paul Taylor Dance Company, the troupe is now recognized as one of the best modern dance companies in the nation. A core group of fine dancers have followed the troupe from its start. The Cliff Keuter Dance Company delighted a good-sized Hoch Auditorium audience with its own solo performance who came expecting samples of traditional classical ballet. Keuter's brand of modern dance looks fun and tense and brings winning fun—via comic and romantic moods. movements become a language where comprehension is a bit delayed, but once the game is established, the audience is buoyed with anticipation for the next puzzle. Keuter says his ideas for his work come from slices of his life. Sexual connotations On Stage frequently are included because Keuter considers sex one of the highest nature of life. "I think you shouldn't hesitate to speak about what you think you know about," she said Wednesday. "Each舞 has its own kind of growth. Even those considered me, I don't think of as abstract, because every gesture is informed—has a motive." Keuter usually works on dance ideas without choosing music. Often he has brought composers to his rehearsals to create the proper accompaniment. Thus a repertoire ranging from the rolicking, lighthearted "Lisbon" to music by Australian composer Percy Grangle or the quiet "Mule" to music by Bavel. Keuter does both modern and classical choreography by commission for major companies in the United States, Canada, and Europe. After this year's touring is over, he will go from his New York City base back to the Baltimore in London for similar geographical work. talent. They are so well paired that it is hard to consider one without criticizing the other. Usually, the group does four day residencies at schools on its tour. No residence was scheduled at KU. Tours last about six weeks. The company's appearances are supported by agencies including the National Endowment for Arts and the Mid-America Arts Alliance Project, Kansas City, Mo. JUAREZ TEQUILA Rare...yet so well-done! It's prime rib tequila at a hot dog price. GOLD OR SILVER IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY TEQUILA MADISON ST. LOUIS, MO 63020 SALE AUDIOTRONICS BONANZA SOON MARGO and I are teaming up as well as Nick and Nora Charles, the detective spouses of the "Thin Man" movies. Ira provides the exposition and the questionable muscle, while Margo contributes intuition and the necessary finances. Together they take on Los Angeles, discovering one corpse stashed in another and another spread-engled on a punctured waterbed. Finally, they locate the cat. CAR STEREO SALE! 1000 Car Stereos and Speakers Slashed to Once-in-a-Lifetime Prices! SALE but the une the villain, his wife, his bodyguard, Charley, Margo and铁风 up in the same apartment, Benton has a new theme. "The story theme—the fate of friendship in a materialistic society. The journey is so entertaining that even the mandatory expation at the end doesn't disturb the expation," she says. "Show" is fascinating fun for the audience. Audiotronics For Margo, momentarily angered by the violence of Ira's profession, it is something else. "This is just one last chance for you to escape the situation,"cries him at Imao. "You're playing cops and robbers." Slowly she senses that this is Ira's "late show," his final display of dignity before he gives up the game. That bit still makes her transforms Margo, and ultimately the movie. Weekend Highlights "STERILE LULLABY," "WEBS WEAVED" and "LEDA AND THE SWAN" one acts by KU playwrights, 8 tonight and Saturday, Ince Theatre. Theater Concerts JESS COLIN YOUNG, 8 tonight, Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kan. p.D. BACH Frank Culture, conductor p.M. D. BACH Music Hall, Kansas City, p.S. Recitals ESCS Nightclubs JACK WINEROCK, plano; Kansas City Recital Series; a program of Bach, Beethoven, MacDowell, Ravel and Chopin. University of Kansas Medical Center THE BILLY SPEARS BAND, 9 to mid- night Friday and Saturday, the Opera House. THE GORDON CLEVELAND HOUSE, the GORDON CLEVELAND Friday and Saturday, the Seventh Spirit. SKIP DE VOL, banjo player, and CLAUDE "FIDDLER" WILLIAMS, to midnight Friday and Saturday, Paul Gray's Jazz Place. FORT DOOGE, a rock band, 9 to mid night Friday and Saturday, J. Watson's CORNELL HURD AND HIS MONDO Friday and Saturday, Off the Wall Hall THE SEVEN PER CENT SOLUTION—Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud, and they set out to solve the kidnapping of one of the good doctor's patients. Along with his team, a number of addictions is explained. Nicol Williamson, Alan Arkin, Vanessa Redgrave, Robert Duvall, Laurence Olivier and Joel Golem star, Herbert Ross directs, rather ineptly. ROCKY—Eighteen round, and the champion shows no signs of tiring. Sylvester Stallone and stars with Taila Shire, Burt Young and Burgess Merideth. (PG) Films BLACK SUNDAY—This combination of football and political suspense works very well. With the unfortunate lot of competing with terrorist acts in the national news, John Frankenheimer's direction is professional and intelligent. The stars are Robert Shaw, Steve McCarthy and Alex Gibney. ROCK ISLAND LINE, a string line, 9 to midnight Frister, Sister Kettle. CAVE STEVE GNAGY, guitarist, 9 to midnight Saturday, Sister Kettle. THE MISSOURI BREAKS-This curiosity frustrated critics and the public because the anticipated confrontation between Marlon Brando's hired killer and Jack Nicholson's outlaw farmer should provide delightful moments for almost anyone. Arthur Penn directed Tom McGuane's quirk script. (R) Campus Veterans Attention General Elections will be held for Campus Veterans President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer on April 14, at 4:30 in the Meadowlark Room, 3rd floor cafeteria in the Kansas Union. LET'S NOT BE APATHETIC THIS YEAR—CAMPUS VETERANS IS YOUR ORGANIZATION-KEEP IT THAT WAY-VOTE! Pd. in part by Student Activity Fund. JAZZ! BAND setting up afterward DISCO Benefit Disco Fashion Show Extravaganza Nite! Tickets! $3.50~(includes door¢dinner) 644 Massachusetts Time! 7-9pm Wed,April 13,1977 Place: LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE Available at: Lawrence Arts Center Alice's Closet Cornucopia VIrology Lawrence Opera House Lawrence School of Beauty SUA Office Visions Britches Corner and other participating merchants . . . Proceeds! First Donation to Lawrence Arts Center Scholarship Fund Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 "And the whole men of them arose, and led Him to Pilate. And they begin to accuse him. Saying, We found this man a fool, and we are not going to see Caesar, saying that He Himself is a Christa King." Then said Pilate to the chief priests and to the people, "If no fault in them, ... And as soon as he knew that He belonged to Herod's jurisdiction, he sent Herman to Herod himself also was at Jerusalem at that time. ... And the same day Pilate and Herod were made friends together; for before they were at emity between themselves. And Pilate when he called together them, he asked, "What is it that you mean to me?" He have brought this Man unto me, as one that pervert the nature of this Man touching those things wheered ye accuse Him: No, nor yet Herod, for I send you to him, and no nothing worthy of death is done unto him. I will thereforeachet Him, and release Him. (For of necessees I cried all at once, saying, Away with this Man, and release unto us Barabbas: (Who for a certain sedition, 'AND FOR MURDER,' was cast into prison). Pilate therefore, willing to release Jesus, spake again to them, but they cried, crucify Him. ... And Pilate gave sentence that it should be as they requited, so he said to Pilate that for sation and murder was cast into prison, whom they desired, but he delivered Jesus to their will ... "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" The 23rd chapter of the Book of Luke gives the account of the Trial, Crucifixion, and Burial of the Lord Jesus Christ. "And there were also two other, male-factors, led with Him to be put to death. And when they were come to the place, they came out and took away all the male-factors, on the right hand, and the other on the left. And one of the male-factors which were hanged on the left was taken by the men." Some Comment: They preferred a "murderer" to The Saviour. The Lord Jesus Christ when we reject the "Death Penalty that our God and Creator has commanded, do we accept it?" The Lord Jesus Christ and Our God and Saviour! This witness thinks so, and so testifies! other answering rebuked him saying, DOST NOT THOU FEAR GOD, SEEING THOU ART IN THE SAME CONDEMATION? AND WE INDEED JUSTLY: FOR WE RECEIVE THE DUE REWARD for OUR DEEDS: BUT THIS MAN HATH DONE NOTHING AMERICAN! And he said unto Jesus, "And Jesus said unto him, 'VERILY I SAY UNTO THEE TOOALY THOU BE WITH ME IN PARADISE!' And it was about the sixth hour, and there was a darkness over all the earth until the ninth hour. And the sun was darkened, and the veil of the temple was rent in the midst. And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice. Father, into Thy Hans! Remember My Spirit, and having said thus, He gave up the chapel." One of the Maleactores, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Saviour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Saviour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Saviour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Saviour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Saviour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Saviour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Savour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Savour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleacteur, in spite of the terrible sufferings from the weight of his body hanging on the nails driven through his hands and feet, his hatred and anger so exalted that he was forced to walk on the rail on The Savour: "If thou be the Christ save myself and us!" But the other Maleactue AND JESUS SAID UNTO HIM, VERILY I SAY UNTO THEE, THOSE DAILY TSHALT BE WITH ME 'M' IN PARADISE! "And now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the fountains of that sleep." Mt. 15:20. P, O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 Friday, April 8, 1. University Daily Kansan ing band, 9 to settle Cafe, to midnight LICOLUTIONAL TREATMENT RÉDUCÉE diaminatif in the lance of LM William Bilham robusten observe Jorjol Gerber Jorjol Gerber the cham g Sylvester Tala Shire. DIEHLE, PEG (CH) works very well, but has a well with picking up news. John professional Shaw. Show. nner) ADVENT SPEAKER SALE Arts LAST WEEK — LAY-A-WAY NOW! TOSHIBA HI-FI & Stero Review magazines agree that their response & overall performance would be noteworthy in any speaker, regardless of size or The speakers at Ray Audio are selected to sound as good in every respect, including frequency, noise, as any speaker of any price. The little stereo store RAY AUDIO 13 E. 8th 842-2047 To hear just how much better our speakers sound, come in and hear the Adventus. At Alray Audio, the little difference that offers a big difference. THURS. EVENING TILL 8:00 invites you to apply for positions as chairpersons of the following committees: Commission on the Status of Women MINORITY AFFAIRS—HUMAN SEXUALITY POLITICAL ACTION—ALTERNATIVE LIVING SELF-HEALTH—WOMEN'S RECOGNITION NEWSLETTER—PUBLICITY If you have an interest beyond these topics please apply. Applications available in 222 Strong; due Wed. (April 13th) 5:00 in 222 Strong. KU vs. KSU (Partially funded by Student Activity Fee) Sat., April 9 - 1:30 P.M. At 23rd and Iowa St. KANSAN WANT ADS Automation solutions, goods, services and employ- ment support. Develop new solutions for automatio- n systems. Design and implement automation sys- tem components. Perform testing. Support en- gineering teams in the development of auto- mation software. Provide technical support. Analyze and improve automated systems. Conduct user experience research. RUGBY CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times time times time time 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 10 run Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 4 p.m. Tuesday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDR business office at 844-3538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Persons invited in joining a campus futures research club call 819-8940 or 812-2471 evening ENTERTAINMENT COLLEGE STUDENTS*+ time, earn $10 per hour and win $14.500 in scholarship awards as an American Youth Enterprise Dealer, with a salary of 179.1s Era. Laurel Springs, NJ U8021) 4-8 Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special arrivals include 4-hour river tours. Other trips 4-hour ride. $3.60 per person. Other trips 4-hour ride. $2.80 per person. Sponsor Hawke Camp. Loop Route (2 miles north on highway 10). Tableauville. Oklahoma 74464. (9) 811-555-3333. www.hawke.com FOR RENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 500 set up. No group limits. Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in Downtown Denver. Vermont. Call 842-8644 for information. 5-12 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to unities, unions贴. parking. 843-579. clf Apartment and rooms furnished, utilities paid, nails, brass 875-5267. ff Gatehouse Apartments - Cali Becky now, summer. Gatehouse Apartments - Cali Becky now, summer. contacts on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 845-762-0193. Frontier Ridge - short term apartments, some with study. Heat index hot walls, outdoor pool *e* disposal, *u* toilet, laundry facilities, furnished and unfurnished from $359. Call #861-234-7200 or visit www.frontierridge.com 1- bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- age; allow rent reduction for labor. 442-585- 484-606 442-585-606 Subletting apartment. It has 1 bedroom. Come by 435 Firestone Drive, Apt. 10, after 5:30 p.m. CARFET CLEANING STREAME Rent the Pro- Slaverware Rental Locations Call us 5-100 5-105 S-10 Furnished, efficiency apartment, $70 mn., utilities plus 5 bedrooms. Apartment size: 2 baths, 642 sq ft., Apartments 1 upstairs; 3 upstairs. **Sublease—three bedrooms, townhouse, two baths,** **two laundry, tennis courts. You'll drowl **C** **3285** — **3385** Married, grade, upperclassman; quiet attentive; has strong work ethic and good interpersonal skills; base course taught: 1403 Tennessee-Ask for more information. two bedroom unfurnished apartment for sub- lease. 14/month. Call after 9:00 p.m. (mib. 523-876-6700). 1. bedroom furnished apartment 19 W at 10th St. 2. $83 available immediately, 842-6760 5. 4-88 8. $39 available immediately, 842-6760 Subscribe for summer 3-bedroom lowercase at 785 W. 14th St, 2nd Floor; call 643-3213 to with option to renew lease. Call 643-3213 to Summer sublease 3 bedroom unfurnished apartment, with air conditioning, 2 bathrooms, City Hall # 841-843-6000 4-12 Sleeping room upstairs. Share bath. $45/mo. In- 1496 Ikea, Illinois, evenings. **Sublease** — summer furnished/2-bedrooms AC campus and campus downslope $150/month 842-869-308 Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center, Furnished and unfurnished, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open 7 days a week for rent. Call 914-262-9800 or 914-326-7407. Call either 914-262-9800 or 914-326-7407. 4-21 Sublase studio apartment for summer Quit for study (call 842-2650, central air, all rooms 842-2650) Subletting furnished apartment, all utilities paid, for summer month $159. Call (800) 236-3347. Need to submit 2 bedroom townhouse at Trinity County Court, reasonable rate. Call Chuck or George. Sublake-Purified Room apartment, July 14th. Room furnished with carpet, hardwood flooring, AIA Bedroom next to pool, tennis courts and sauna. 800-256-7231. Make your plants bloom. Applications are now available from Grow by for a lot of the latest growing fast. Go to grow by for a lot of the latest trends. Furnished room, utilities paid, share bath refrigerator, close to campus, 929 Indiana 6-10 FOR SALE Western Civilization Note—New on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization for Class preparation. For Class preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Towson University. Alternator, starter and generator. Specialize. BELL AUF ELECTRIC, ELECTRIC 435-9009, 5009, W 6h., Whi- per. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, kits, and audio Systems, 8th and Rhode Island. Neechi sewing machine with buttonholer, good condition. Price: $42-85/2009 evening; more information available. Ludwig drum set, 8-piece, bass silver, bassi- mpl, drum kit will, call: 841.529.2299 4-8 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fair good condition $225. 861-1357 4-12 192. Chevrolet Impala, 460 ed. in PIE. AM FM stereo drive. $1,600, i-816, 545-566. 4-8 Motorcycle - 1874 Honda CL 320 = excellent condition, new spring time-up, 460 miles like new. Yamaha Guitar with case, good condition, nice sound, best offer. 842-2573. 4-8 1970 Kawanoki 500, front disk drive, electronic storage. Inventory cost $350. Call 800-248-6700 for details. tactile rack, facial at $600. Call 800-248-6700 for details. 124 first cupset, new 1808, headers, mags. T5 on- suspension, stern, CBE, call 81-3581. 4-8 RIFLE-2 call. calib. gunwave w scope. Excellent condition. call 842-0598. Keep trying. INFINITY 2000 B Speakers. 5 year warranty. This speaker will cost you $100 more. Will call both. Civil $841 - 646-7050. 1971 Buckl LaSabre _good condition, full power, crutate control, till tilt) 843-5279 4-8 Would like to trade a Yamaha 400 Enduro in excellent shape for a VW. Call after 5:50. $499. Mobile home, 1975, Champion, 12 x 60, front window, 38" x 34", exterior mounted on corner kit, slotted, approved tie down, storage sheet, central air conditioning and humidity control. Very reasonable! Call 841-3289 at 5 p.m., or 6/4-13/16. For Sale - Dumbo Pat4-1st家 pre-map. Recently cleaned and rejuvenated. $75,841-323-4-8 Guitar F-40 Steel-string guitar, SUN 200s guitar amp, PUllib 2000b Bass amp-240 watts, RMS, S.V.T bass band, L-120mhz YC-30 Electron orator, B-L-120mhz B-L-120mhz with PUllib 4-13 available. Guitar 843-0197. 1972 Ouel GT, blue, low mileage, air conditioning, automatic, luggage rack, good tires plus snow excellent condition, 25-30 mpg highway with without store. $250, firm. Car A-4-14 4- sale. Nice Datinum, need money soon. Call 842- 10858 only (ira). 64 Chevy Impala-good, inexpensive transportation, run good. call John 814-5387. 4-13 IVAN'S 86 SERVICE Ludwig Pro-Beat drum set w/cases, excellent call. Call 872-7169 - 4-13 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8-8 Sun 843-9891 "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 19th & Mass. Fender steel Lap guitar with case, $50, Milch, 4-13 845-8454 AIP 2600 Synthesizer, 15 months old. Also U.S. newschool tech tank and register, callick #148 (718) 353-9677. 10-speed excellent condition. Call 842-3013. 4-8 Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. 1940 clothing and furnishings, including Pendleton, wool suit, wool coat, comforters, curtains, wool carpet, overfurred chairs, picture frames, wrought iron, dresser mirror, saturn. See Map 19-4. 10-5. mall east of mirror. See Map 19-4. Piano for sale, call. 843-1272. 4-12 1937 Buffalo Frontenac '60? Beter Park w/WNY 1952 met pigeon, real fish, 1901 Tensiometer 4-14 847 1972. Busuki, 38667, needs work. $150 firm. BUD 4-13 861-6395 1974 Snark Müller Successor, 111% foot holds, $255 Negotiable at 841-648-5088 www.snarkmullersuccessor.com 2 bicycles. 2$^{1}$: in-spired Perugian UO-18 Many extra workpieces were used for UO-18 both excelsis and preparation; m2 or m42–40. Honda SS50P (super sport) 1825, 6,000 miles, metrical baseball, paled sandy垫耳 with rack high- peak fear, peaking at (913) 824-3600, 24 hours. 4-14 1942 Gold D仕-PB, DS_AB, DC_AC, AM_PM-8 (two) 1942 Gold D仕-PB, DS_AB, DC_AC, AM_PM-8 HELP WANTED *Medical student* microspore, Zeiss Bincular, Excellent condition, call 842-787-28. 5 - 4:15 194 Gold Dust; PR, DB, AC, AM-FM, 3-键 gazemaker prd, piston-driven wheel lights, ores capacity 600 psi, load capacity 250 kg 1975 Honda CB-125 plus 2 helmets - bicycle by 2000 good quality. Call Caryll at 833-261-8000. - "students": 15 telecommunications receptionists for bev- liefing a Good Job, and 20 telecoms receptionists for Good Job, salaries, and bonuses. Call 9-12-7 at (800) 456-7890. Men or women. We need 5 people immediately. Must have own transportation and are willing to travel. For personal interview call Bohn Lawson, 843-211-6. Lawson Kirby Co. Will head to Calif. for further information. 4-14 Avon selling can help you earn money for college. Flexible hours. High $ Call. Mrs. Self. Smil You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s $103 less than the youth fare you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is to be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. *Local Local Delivery* must know area well. Each Good daily call, Call 212-456-7340 and 3-6 p.m. on Monday-Friday. Summer job for married couples. Must have a car. June to June is start of KU in August or Champlain, New York $130/woman, for couple. Type of work required: housekeeping or living Quarterly. Your own private homekeeping and Cerf. 1000 Sunset Drive, driving references and other contact information. PLEASE Information center accepting applications for April 15. App 100 strength. Application dead- line: -15. Office of Information Systems, Univ. of K. (Lawrenceville) is seeking a student computer Science major and fall semester full-time during summ Spring and Fall semesters. Please apply to the Sat., 1700-2000 Mon, through Trojan, and con- fer with our team on your experience as computer operator, knowl- edge of operation of equipment and peripherals, and peripheral equipments, including wiring methods, ability to read and write files, knowledge of tape and disk handling procedures, and prowess in data processing and program error. Prior experience on operating system. For appointment call 866-366 or submit resume to Mr. G. of Computer Oper- ation, Bluffton High Campus, Application de- bate number 866-366 Need a good part time job fill school's job! Apply in person at Heavy Dye's Pizza. 507 w/午 after $39 p.m. Local. Below the Wheen. Deliver $25/hour plus training. $25/$30 hour plus培训. Will训. 4-15 Owens Liquor Store 843-1186 910 N. 2nd Eyednoctor Optical SUA Maupintour travel service Icelandic DISTINGCTIVE EYEWARRI Avon open territory in Lawrence. Even if you don't own a house, the firm's profitable world favors avon. They print, sell and distribute world-famous Avon products. Office of Information Systems, Univ. of KS (Lawrence campus) to provide Fax and Spring service servers and physically time dating summer. Requirements physically able to work on Friday and Spring service servers and to maintain records. Schedule weekdays Saturdays and Sundays during enrollment periods have a current driver license and proof of instruction; and to maintain records. Prefer weekly schedule flexibility to accommodate 2-4 hour time block. For application, Operations 864-3646, or submit resume to Maj. of Computer Operation at Amphitheatre Mall, Univ. of KS *CAMPUS Amphetame* mallfield. Opportunity EMPLOYER-WOMEN MINIMI PORTUNITY EMPLOYER-DWOMEN DISABLED COURAGED TO APPLY 4-12 SUMMER JOBS: Forced service How where, when to apply Complete training 2721 Polygon 508000 Phone 2721 Polygon 508000 Applications are now being taken for the position of Director and Assistant Resident Director at Nanaim Hospital in December 2016. Job descriptions and applications are available from the Nanaim Hall Business Office, 5148 W. 79th Street, New York, NY 10017. Applications must be received in the Business Office by Friday, April 15, 1977, EQUAL OPERATIONS 618-273-1111. College English teachers possible openings this spring at various literary courses. MA, in English and literature-related courses, teaching English at the University of Kansas required. Deadline for application is May 15th. A. Gwen, English Department, the University of Kansas Lawrence, requires a Bachelor's degree and women of color. A. Gwen, English Department, the University of Kansas Lawrence, requires a Bachelor's degree and women of color. A. Gwen, English Department, the University of Kansas Lawrence, requires a Bachelor's degree and women of color. Schumann Poole. Noeled a full-time position. 8-4-30 School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Needle, Appalachia; (1) Mass. 8-2-30 pm (p.m.) (2) Mass. 9-2-30 pm (p.m.) LOST AND FOUND LOST: $1000.00 CAUSE! You can find it, you can Lose it! Look for Turtle Hunt Chases on 16x9 size vinyl records. Blue light 187 pocket calendar containing informa- tion about the Mira gift. Return receipts: 403-542-376 Found—a key with 844 on it. Found in front of Flint Hall if it is yours, at 844-603-6923. Lost-Glasses in flowered case. Brown plastic plate. Call Charles, 842-2530 or 844- 2616. Beward. Lost: Blue work unit, endured before, left at 19th morning; March 25 Sentiment, March 41 at 7:07 PM and March 41 at 7:07 PM. Lost-/Blue/gra wki sweater with brown stripe, from 3138 Wesleyan at 3:30 on CALL 641 Call 641 from 3138 Wesleyan at 3:30 on CALL 641 Found - Vernon Kiley 1 found your billboard Call Dave Cohn 864-2083 4-12 MISCELLANEOUS DORM ROOM FOR SALE-Contract for something special on a double bed, placed alfamide, summer on lights, insulated mattress for you inmokers TONY'S IMPORTS DATEUN Drive-in Clinic for most imported cars 0 0 0 1 2 Kansas Union 843-1211 ... Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts &. Creators, 841, 3532 TORTS DATSUŸ 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 in THE MARKET PLACE & Craffs 841-3522 Su Casa ... Hole-In-The-Wall & Sandwick Skob 846 Illinois 843-7685 --has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 814-7421 www.ibm.com - Pinball "A different kind of bar "turing seclusion and quiet." NOTICE 9th and Iowa PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday- 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. - Foosball The Lounge Wash Shop 629 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, diners, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12:37- 842-3577 VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS! Brand new BF Goodwin ART-185 (15-15) (155-15) direct tree cut to $3 each at Ray Stonkbach's 929 Mare (Monstrat). We ship from Los Angeles. Steel cuts to $4 each! Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday NEW SONY COMPONENT SYSTEM WITH AM 2750 Cable to cut to $175 at Hydra- 4-12 925 Max Sample Hydra-4-12 4-12 CHEF OWNER$! Pickup owners. Brand new kitchen with stainless steel appliances. $250,000 PET included ($25,000 but $18,750). PET included ($25,000 but $18,750). PET included ($25,000 but $18,750). PET included ($25,000 but $18,750). **Athens, Tel Aviv, London, New York.** You name it... Budget big airlines. Top travel agencies Europe from $299 round-trip in Chicago, Asia, $499 Africa, specialists in travel foreign. Travel majors specialists in travel foreign. Mobility experts. PERSONAL CONTACT LENS WEARERS Have an youtube hard copy of the Contact Lens Supply Center, 111 Camelback Road, San Francisco, CA 94105. ISO-2, chemical potassium in a complete film of paracrylamide is available at Love Records. 15 Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Inquiries, Inquiries, Box 306, Lawnery Kansas, Kansas Gay Consulting Service. Call 813-7250, 6:10 p.m. for veterinary. For socializing calls, call 813-7250. Need助士, to Greek Church in KC-Saturday and Sunday. Call 512-638-0974 or email catholicgreek@yahoo.com for Greek Elderly service call. Lazarette 918-612-5820. KU RELAYS ATTENTION! BEN WILL BE IN THE HACES! 4-14 To attractive English (Ph) master you need to in english you would like to meet someone just same place @ 1 200 - 3 500 RMB per week. SERVICES OFFERED Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl MAGOO-Happy 18 Hope this is your best year MAGOO-Happy 18 Understand RUBBERT BANDT UNDERSTAND RUBBERT BANDT 4-8 He George, I give you everything I have for you. He George, I give you everything I have for you. He George, I give you everything I have for you. In good shape. Husband Nindra. Minda. In good shape. Husband Nindra. Minda. Diana Heapy 22nd birthday. House your day is Peggy — don’t forget potatoes—blooming rice I can bring your tennis racquet more economically than anyone in town. Call 843-605-485. AIRFRAME WATERbeds THE FIELDS AVAILABLE AT STORE 112 MASS ST. 8 2-7187 THE FIELDS VISIONS - Pool HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CANG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon Sat Sun 8 a.m - 5 p.m HEADQUARTERS for - Bud on Tap Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30p.m. Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 113, 116, 171, 171, 121, 122, 124, 142, 500, 508, 517, 519, 529, 539, 549, 559, 569, 579, 589, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, 599, Respondible math. Call 842-271-6367. TYPING THEISM BINDING COPY Center The House of Udler's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you. $85 Massachusetts or phone 842-384-7167. Thank you. I do damned good typing. Pongy, 862-4476. *Teddle editor.* IBM PC/elite; Quality work. Responsible tasks. Trevas, dissertations woven. Call No. 862-9127. Experienced typist—term papers, mice, misc. 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Call隋坤民 41381 or 684-1232, keep trying Studio or one bedroom apartment to sublease for Small house wanted to rent by faculty family fall semester, 1977. 841-4667. 4-12 Female roommate needed immediately. Own room. $83.30 mo. Prefer upper lounge. 843-7579 Pier 1 imports associate store 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing • Furniture • Antiques • Imported Clothing 7308 Mass 841 7070 HALF AS MUCH NAISMITH HALL 7308 Mass. 841-7070 Home 0: The Chalk Hawk HILLCREST BILLIARDS --- - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong - Pin-Ball - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEEP 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcress Bowl> Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted Friday, April 8, 1977 University Daily Kansan Jayhawks win pair Kansas tournament Sports Writers Bv GARY BEDORE and JASON NUSS If yesterday's performance is any indication, KU baseball coach Floyd Temple can stop worrying about the Jayhawks' hitting. Kansas chalked up 19 runs and 25 hits as KU took home the championship trophy from the second annual Kansas Baseball Tournament in Manhattan. In the semi-final game, the Jayhawks stopped Emporia as well as Win for victory. In win. In the finals, Kansas rolled over Marymount, 12-2. The Jayhawks' record is now 11-8-1. After their first-round, 3-1 victory over Kansas Wesleyan on Tuesday, in which the Hawks got only three runs, Temple called for a second round. The team more aggressive at the plate. IN THE XTH inning of the Emporia State game, the hitting finally got untracked: Trailing 2, the Jayhawks began a rally. Lee Ice walked to open the inning and was moved to second base as Carl Heinrich singled. Emporia State's pitcher, Kevin McKenzie, drew foul balls and threw the ball into right field. Ice scored on the error, and Heinrich moved to third base. Designated hitter Andy Gilmore tripped to tie the score, 2-2. In the seventh inning Kansas permanently took the lead. Jeff Watson singled and went to third on another errant throw, this one by reliever Dawn Pickert, who pitched a four-run single to Ron Macdonald singled home and Mon Slowle took second. A walk for Heinrich filled the bases and Gilmore was hit by a filled the bases in run and in making the score 4-2. Catcher Brian Moyer lined a double that cleared the bases, and insured the 'Hawks' victory. It also set the stage for a 12-run outburst in game two. TEMPEL WAS pleased at the hitting at the end of the semi-final game. "We needed an inning like we had in the seventh," Temple said. "We've been kind of dormant lately and stunk up the joint against Kansas Wesleyan." In the finals against Marymount, Kansas jumped off to a 5-1 lead and got a complete game win from Clay Christensen, who is now 3-2. The final score was 12-2. Catcher Gilmore went 2-for-3 with a triple and four RBf. His had six RBf in the two games. Ron MacDonald tied a KU record with four hits in the championship game. His six hits in the tournament helped earn him the most valuable player award. FIVE JAYHAWKS made the all-tournament team. Carl Heinrich, 1B, Ron MacDonald, 2B, and Lee Ice, 3B, received the honor with designated hitter Andy Glimore and pitcher Terry Sutcliffe, who got a win and a save in the tournament. NEED A GOOD PART TIME JOB TILL SCHOOL'S OUT? The Jayhaws return home to face Kansas State in two double-headers, one starting at 1 p.m. on Saturday and the other at 1:30 on Monday. Apply in person at Heavy Eddy's after 3:30. Located below the Wheel. K-State, 13-0; will bring a .291 batting average into the games. The Wildcats won 4 to 2. 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HOUSE OF USHER / QUICK COPY CENTER 838 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Telephone 842-3610 SPECIAL TODAY SOUR ENTREES ESSERTS DRINKS Special Treat FISH CAKES SPINACH LIME JELLO Now comes Miller time. er time. Miller CHAMPAGNE OF BELGIUM 24 Champrenons de Belgique ©1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. 1 Alu has 1 most valu Univ A or t adm stu pro Profs say sabbaticals valuable to better University By JEANNE HIERI Staff Reporter By JEANNE HIERL Although the procedure for awarding sabbaticals has been a matter of concern in the Faculty Senate, most faculty members said that sabbaticals were a good tool to better teaching and to an improved university. But there aren't enough sabbaticals available for those who want them at KU and the Faculty Senate is considering proposing changes in the criteria for awarding sabbaticals. At the University of Kansas, sabbaticals are a one- or two-semester leave of absence from teaching and administrative responsibilities to pursue advanced study in business or gain industrial or professional experience. The Board of Regents specifies that each year the sabbaticals can be granted to a maximum of 4 per cent of full-time faculty members on regular appointments and have taught continuously for six years or longer. Faculty members on nine-month appointment who are awarded sabbaticals are paid up to half their regular salary for a full academic year, or full pay for a one-semester sabbatical. Faculty members on 12-month appointments—faculty with administrative or service duties that carry through the summer months—are paid up to $300 for each month of leave, or up to full pay for five months of leave. Faculty members granted sabbaticals must agree to return to KU for at least two years after the sabbatical or pay back their sabbatical salary within two years. June Michal, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said last week that at KU sabbatical units, considered warm for warfare, a university service was probably not suitable; sabbaticals probably could be criticized as vacation time but that at KU they were used only for professional development and were rarely, if ever, Jack Landgrebe, chairman of the chemistry department, said that asabaticals were rare operatives. "I can assure you," he said, "that they are no paid vacations. In chemistry, on sabbatical work To apply for a sabbatical a faculty member must prepare a summary of his teaching, service and research accomplishments. He also must prepare a proposal that explains his work during his sabbatical and how it will improve his teaching and research at the university. His research evaluations must be included in the application. hard keeping heavy and tight schedules. Sabbaticals require time and time. To my knowledge they really makes use of them. The summary and proposal should be endorsed by the person's departmental chairman and by the dean of his school before reaching the University Committee on Sabatellian Leaves (UCSL), a committee of nine faculty members and two ex-office members. The committee is for academic affairs is the committee chairman. The UCSL recommends which proposals should be awarded sabbatical leaves. Its recommendations are sent to the executive vice chancellor and the chancellor, who make final recommendations to the Board bactical positions available. Too few positions available have caused stiff competition and many complaints about the way sabbaticals were awarded, she said. The criteria for granting sabbaticals have been studied by the Senate Committee on Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities, which last week approved the Senate Proposed changes in the selection criteria. T. P. Srinivasan, chairman of the Faculty Rights Committee, said the proposed changes would result in a more equitable distribution of sabbaticals. He said that now the UCSL decided which proposals were most meritorious and that problems arose when several proposals were of equal merit. "What does the UCSL do when the number of meritorious cases exceeds the number of sabbaticals available?" he asked. "It makes arbitrary decisions based on the personal preferences of the committee." Srinivasan said the proposed changes would include impartial, general guidelines and would emphasize secondary considerations in cases of equal merit. Such considerations as whether a person has had a sabbatical before, how long it has been since the last sabbatical and the immediacy of the op- tion? Dora Beer, a member of UCSL, said he thought the committee was able to make fair decisions based on In some parts of the country sabbaticals are the subject of intensive legislative investigation and, in some cases, also judicial proceedings. The system in Kansas doesn't draw extra state funds. Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that such investigations were usually in systems that had "funded sabbatical systems," but that they were also used for sabbaticals and replacement faculty salaries. KU Calgaird said he saw no evidence of resistance to the present system and that there were no current pressures on it. State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, said he hadn't heard any discussion of sabbatical leaves in the race. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY See SABBATICALS page two KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87,No.123 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 Students allegedly block other student from class Royals win home opener See story page eight Bv LEON UNRUH Staff Renorter A University of Kansas student has complained that he was detained from entering a classroom by five other students and that the member of SAVAK, the Iranian secret police. The student filed a report with the KU Police April 6, following an incident that allegedly occurred about 12:35 p.m. that on day the first floor of Marvin Hall. The report doesn't request legal charges against the students. The student, who was unidentified in the report, said the students blocked his way into the classroom and restrained him by grabbing his arms and hands. He also said the students said that he was a SAVAK agent and that they wanted him to be there. THE NAME OF the student wasn't the name of the Buckley An- dment's privacy provider. Mike Hill, KU Police lieutenant, said yesterday that an officer had answered a call by the student. The officer took the name of the person's persons involved, but no arrests were made. A spokesman for the Iranian Students Association (ISA) said that the group was composed of members and supporters of the ISA. THE SPOKESMAN said the ISA members told the students not to go into the "In the past two or three days of class, ISA members went there and talked to the students, teachers and the people in the classrooms at Marvin," the spokesman Women's sports funding fee raise to be considered A $1.50 increase in the student activity fee and a resolution calling for an end to Student Senate funding of women's intercollegiate athletics after this year will be considered by the Student Senate when it meets tonight and tomorrow night. The Senate will also consider final budget allocations to student organizations. IF PASSED by the Senate, the increase in the activity fee must be submitted to the Board of Regents for approval. If approved, the increase would take effect this fall. A bill to be considered tonight would recommend that $60,000 in unallocated Senate funds be allocated to the student activity fee, which combined with the additional revenues provided by the recommended increase in the student activity fee would allow Robsonkian Gymnasium to maintain its open and would finance planned improvements. Steve Leeben, student body president, said last week that without the additional revenues generated by the fee increase, he would not maintain its present number of open hours. He said the open hours were paid for last year by an emergency allocation from the University of Kansas that would be difficult to repeat this year. The Senate also is to consider a resolution calling for an end to student funding of women's intercollegiate athletics after this year. THE RESOLUTION states that it is the duty of the University and state of Kansas to fund the women's program, although the program should continue to be funded by the Senate this year because additional funds would be difficult to find now. The Sports Committee had earlier applauded the allocation of money to women's intercollegiate program. classroom when the alleged SAVAK agent attended. He said the student who filed the report began shouting at the students, and threatened the ISA members while they were talking. The spokesman said statements that the student had been restrained by the ISA were faxed. The instructor of the math class meeting in the Marvin classroom, Paik Kee Kim, said that the disruptive students had been in the classroom for a long time, but that they left before it was time to start. "TECHNICALLY, THEY didn't interrupt my class itself," Kim, assistant professor of math, said. "They didn't interrupt my time." Caryl Smith, associate dean of women and chairman of the University Events Committee, said that student groups had abstained from speaking outside classrooms. "If they're not blocking traffic, they can do it," she said. "If they cause a disruption to traffic." The University Code states that peaceful demonstrations may be held in public areas of the city. KU POLICE won't follow up on the alleged incident, Hill said. If the victim files charges with Lawrence police, the KU Police will investigate. County attorney for legal consideration. The ISA spokesman said members of the association were upset because they were unable to learn details of an administrative incident involving two Iranian students. The Feb. 25 incident involved an ISA member and a student the ISA charged was AFTER A MONTH-LONG investigation by a committee composed of Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Mike Davis, university general counsel; and Donald Alderson, acting dean down on what, if any, disciplinary action should have been taken. The University released a statement March 30, which announced that a decision had been made to end the agreement. SHELBY HOLLOWAY Soviets held for fishing violations "Mr. Christopher noted the recurring incidents involving Soviet fishing vessels that ratTERated the deep concern of the United States over a week over the continued patterns of In Washington, Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher simulated Vladimir Vasev, minister of the Soviet embassy, and warned him that continued fishing violations could worsen relations between the two countries. Coast Guard cutters yesterday tied up a Soviet trawler in Boston Harbor and shepherded a Russian refrigerator ship toward port in the first major test of America's new 200-mile fishing limit law. The State Department officially warned the Soviet Union against continued fishing violations. Bv United Press International The 725-foot trawler, Taras Shevchenko, taken on the high seas at l.e. 1m., Sunday, is the first foreign vessel seized under the 6- year moratorium to protect and preserve the U.S. J. Fisher. Coast Guard officials said that 50 tons of fish in the vessel's holds had been confined and that possibly the ship itself would be seized on arrival early today in Boston. Staff photo by JAY KOELZER CUTTERS ALSO escorted the 500-foot refrigerator ship Antnaxes,母子船 of the Soviet fishing fleet off New England, toward nort. violations of the U.S. fisheries law," a State Department statement said. VASEV HAD BEEN called to the department last Tuesday after the Soviet Union's fishing vessels had been issued 58 warnings—more than the total issued to all other countries combined—since March 1, the new U.S. fishing limits went into effect An official from the Soviet embassy in New York was traveling to Boston yesterday to be with the 93 detained crew members of the Taras Shevchenko. In Boston, U.S. Attorney James Gabriel decided to wait to press charges against the Taras Shevchenko until a review of its logs and fish catch was finished. He said part of the investigation involved a vessel's documents were written in Russian and interpreters would be needed. A State Department statement said Christopher asked that extraordinary measures be taken by the Soviets to insure that the violations cease so that this situation won't worsen bilateral relations. The Antanas Snechkus was boarded GABRIEL SAID "part of the delay was in trying to understand the regulations ourselves." He said they were new statutes that hadn't yet been interpreted. The federal government can detail the tawker for a reasonable length of time, he added. SEIZURE OF THE Tars Shevchenko took place without resistance from the Soviet crew, according to Alan Smith, a special forces officer, which escorted the ship into Boston. Sunday morning by Coast Guard personnel and National Marine Fisheries Service agents about 160 miles east-southeast of Nantucket Island helping others through the Special Olympics program. Here an athlete in a wheelchair is supported to help him overcome his handicap. See story page 119. Golden reward Last year at this time, Robin Matthews, Rochester, N.Y., junior, was running track for the KU women's track team. Although the team ranked fifth in the region, he Riverfront may be city hall site By JANE PIPER Staff Reporter A University of Kansas professor and his wife, Kathryn, have done preliminary legwork that might place a city hall on the Bowerstock Mill site, east of the Kansas River Bridge at Sixth and Seventh Streets. Design Build Architects, headed by Robert Gould, assistant professor of architecture and urban design, was one of several local architectural firms asked by the city commission last fall to study potential city hall sites. According to Gould, Design Build's plan would completely renovate the Bowersock house. entrance, and would re-establish the historical link to the Kansas River. See related story, page three THE BOWERSOCK site is the prime spot being considered by city officials if a new city hall is built, Commissioner Barkley Clark said yesterday. A site between the county courthouse and the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center was rejected by the County Commission last month. The city offices are now in the First National Bank Building at Ninth and Massachusetts streets. Two floors are leased by the city and make up city hall. The firm has predicted that renovation of the building now housing ClosetCarpet Carpet Company is in progress. WITTENBERG JOINED the Bowersock project team of Gould, Mike Treaner, former KU student, and Tom Williams, Lawrence graduate student, last December and worked on a more detailed estimate of renovation costs. "The issue is to clean up the mull site." Corton Wittenberg, assistant professor of geography at Columbia University. Gould's proposal outlining the benefits of a riverfront city hall was first submitted to the City Commission last November. A vote on the proposal did not done and is under consideration now. Design Build's plans also call for renovation or removal of abandoned buildings and grain elevators on the site and maintenance of the Bowers dock. the cost of a new building. Could said almost all of the building could be used. An important part of the design, Gould said, is re-establishing the city's historical identity. "IT WOULD revitalize the northern end of Massachusetts." he said. He said the Bowersock site offered a unique point for public access and gathering around the kitchen. See BOWERSOCK page ten 2 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Cuba demands embargo lift WASHINGTON - Cuba has indicated it won't renew the United States-Cuba anti-immigration agreement until the United States completely lifts its 1923 trade embargo. "President Castro gave the strongest indication that Cuba will not consider agreeing to an extension until the United States ends its economic embargo on McGovern met with Castro for more than four hours in Hawaiian Saturday. The 1973 agreement on handling blackouts expires Friday. Husband charged in murder NEWTON, ran -A *Newton man* mournended yesterday to authorities in neighboring Marton County and was charged with first-degree murder in connection with a killing. Police Chief Paul Hastings said the shooting apparently was the result of a family argument. He said Mrs. Harris was in the process of filing divorce proceedings and an argument developed after Harris went to her home Sunday night. They had been separated. Bond was at $10,000 for Dale Harris, 39, who was accused of shooting his wife, Sharon, 34, in their home nightly while their two daughters looked on. A federal judge later ruled that the shooting 38 dead in Pakistan riots ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—Police shot and killed three demonstrators and injured hundreds during antigovernment protests across Pakistan yesterday, bringing the tensions to a boil. In Lahore, the opposition, Pakistan National Alliance, called on Pakistani to stop paying taxes, depositing funds in banks and paying of bank loans. It said the government had not paid taxes for the last five years. The opposition began its civil disobedience campaign after it lost the March 7 national elections. It has asserted the vote, in which Prime Minister Zulkifil Al-Kurdi won. The deaths came when police fired into crowd protesting the opening of the Punjab provincial assembly, which the opposition claimed was illegally elected. Pot bust is state's largest JETMORE, Kan.-Authorities in southwest Kansas yesterday arrested four men and consoled them to 10 at sea of marijuana from an airplane grounded by authorities. Officials made the preliminary estimate by the amount that could be carried in the four-engine plane, a DC8 registered in Colombia, South America. An exact figure is not available. Ten tons of marijuana would have a current value of at least $4.8 million. School board ends talks KANSAS CITY (AP)—The president of the Kansas City school board said yesterday that the district won't return to the negotiating table with striking teachers, and that the board's offer of a 7 per cent pay raise was final. James Lyddon told a news conference that teachers should understand that the pay raise was granted to the teachers by the board, and wasn't an offer to the union. Nearly 51,000 students have been out of school the past three weeks. School officials have announced that all schools except some junior highs will resume classes today. High school seniors facing graduation returned to classes at five high schools last week. Norman Hudson, president of the Kansas City Federation of Teachers, said his officers had instructed his negotiating team to return to the bargaining table without a federal mediator as the union demanded earlier this month. The district earlier announced that the contracts of 500 teachers wouldn't be renewed next year and yesterday began taking applications for teaching positions. A district spokesman said more than 150 positions were vacant the vacant positions yesterday morning. Lyddon said the 7 per cent pay raise was decided by the board to fulfill, the statutory deadline of April 15, 1977 when contracts will be issued for the teachers. Lyddon said the board's decision to forego her next negotiations was firm and final. French official says Cuba aiding Katangese invaders PARIS-A French official just returned from Zaire said Cubans and East Germans are helping Katanagee invaders in the south, and French aid to the government was greater than announced, the Aurore newspaper said yesterday. Pearson fire could be arson The University of Kansas Police suspect arson in a fire that caused about $300 damage at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Residence Hall early Saturday morning. The Lawrence Fire Department dispatched 79 units from two stations about 45 mi. from the fire station. Police said that possibly a flammable liquid and shower curtains were used to start the fire. The fire was contained in the hallway of the fourth floor in the east wing. Damage was confined to the hallway and a rug. "It's the Cubans who are operating in the south of Zaire, and East Germans," the newspaper quoted the unidentified officials as saying. "I can assure you that all the radio messages we monitored were in Spanish." The officials said the Cubans helping Katangese rebels who swept in from Angola a month ago were responsible for using sophisticated semeheavy weaponry of Soviet manufacture. He didn't identify the weapons. "Our military effort has been more important than is thought," he said, "In fact, the 20 Transall transport planes based at only four have been kept in France." The East Germans in Zaure were military advisers specializing in radio communication. In announcing the airlift Sunday, French President Valery Giscard d'Estailing's office said only 10 Air Force Transals and one Air Force Sikorsky helicopters would be shuttleing arms, not soldiers. BUY ONE BURRITO GET ONE FREE BUY ONE BURRITO GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON BUY ONE BURRITO, GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON! The burrito is a soft flour tortilla covered with a thin layer of beans, laco meat, garnished with cheddar cheese, sauce and roiled. One offer per customer. Offer ends April 17, 1977 TACO TICO 2340 Iowa Several University professors and administrators have said they wanted more sabbaticals granted at KU. KU is the only university offering such a program; more applications than available leaves. Sabbaticals ... From nage one Elizabeth Schultz, associate professor of English who has been awarded a sabbatical leave for next fall, said, "The sabbatical leaves are the best time to be a member needs time to be replenished." One professor suggested that KU be allowed to grant additional sabbaticals each year by the same number not used at the other state schools. But Calgard said such a change in the basis of Regina's policy would be very difficult. Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said that sabbaticals were considered so valuable that certain businesses undergoing sabbaticals for their executives. Although the criteria for selection of sabbatical recipients may be disputed at KU, most faculty members and ad- hoc students agree that sabbaticals are valuable. Schulzt said she had tried to be responsive to her students and to serve on University committees, but said that it was very difficult to research and write during the school year. TACO TICO She said she was looking forward to her sabatical as uninterrupted time to do necessary research by reading. Teaching is enhanced by research, she said, and the more he has read the more he can convey to the student. Landgrebe said he thought sabbaticals were so important for professional development and psychological refreshment that people should be forced to take He said he had noticed people came back not only with new ideas but also with renewed enthusiasm that enabled them to project projects they wouldn't have tried before. One reason KU has such an excellent reputation, he said, is that its professors are involved in their work and interested in keeping abreast of changes. This involves research, he said, whether it is reading the latest publications or visiting labs where the latest research techniques and instrumentation are used. "Research makes the difference between our first class job and not doing a first class job." Landgrebe said he knew of chemistry teachers in other Kansas schools who didn't keep abreast of the latest research and as a teacher's tare aware of idea-designed and theoretical The students taught by those professors, In the fine art it is extremely beneficial, Moeser said, for faculty members to take sabbaticals. He said it was important for faculty members to get out into the mainstream of their discipline and to be engaged in the mindset of divided between art and teaching. A professor on sabbatical hears music he wouldn't be able to hear in Lawrence and makes valuable contact with professional who can help later KU graduates find jobs. One chemistry professor, Rahm Adams, is now in Europe on a one-semeet sabbatical visiting several laboratories enaged in brain chemistry research. "It's very easy at KU to get out of the mainstream of culture." Moeser said. "Our faculty needs to be in the mainstream of culture if they are to be of help to students." Sabbaticals, he said, make faculty members much stronger teachers. Landgrebe said that the expertise Adams brought back to KU would help produce students who would have a greater chance of contributing to than if Adams hadn't gone. James Moose, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said a lack of funds for hiring replacements sometimes caused severe hardship to departments in his school. But some of the short-term replacements had been averted because they wouldn't be exposed to otherwise he said. he said, wouldn't be an well equipped to work as those taught by professors who teach it. Kick Rickler, a graduate student in Adams' research group, said he thought Adams probably learned a lot of new research ideas that would benefit students and was making important contacts that would also aid in job placement for his Nearly all of the professors and students questioned said they thought the contacts made during sabbaticals improved job opportunities for students and helped to promote KU. Keller said the only problem he and other members of his group were having because of Adams' absence, in makingusions to him, and to be made by phone. These decisions Professors from several departments said that students didn't suffer any major negative effects from a professor's absence but said that the inconvenience caused by a postponed course was the biggest drawback of sabbaticals. By sending outstanding faculty members around the country and the world, the provincial image of KU is broken down, they said, and often these contacts result in bringing prominent people and outstanding students to KU. Rv MISSV PETERSON 'Right' education can lead to job Staff Reporter The adage, "If you want a good job—get a good education," has worn thin through the years. But the trend is toward a situation aggrivated by the number of college graduates pouring into the job However, recent studies indicate that having the right kind of education, particularly in business or engineering, draws students who are accompanied by increasing salaries. College recruiting this year continues at dramatically higher levels than a year ago, according to the results of a survey of 160 schools by the College Placement Council THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas was one of the schools surveyed. However, Frederick Madua, placement director for the School of Business, recently said he was uncertain whether the results were representative of current recruitment at the University. "We aren't experiencing the percentage increase that other schools seem to be." Ms. Although data on recruiting won't be out until May, he said it appeared that the number of companies recruiting on the KU team down from 137 last year to 122 this year. ACCORDING TO THE CPC survey, employers of business graduates have greatly stepped up their recruiting, making 59 per cent more offers than they did last March. However, Madaus said, the number of job offered reports this year in the business school seems to be lagging behind last year's count. Although KU hasn't had a large recruitment increase over last year, he said, the job market still has improved since 1974. Because the economy was tight at that time, many companies put holds on their recruitment programs. In fact, Madaua said, Ford Motor Co. didn't interview at all during the 1974-75 recruiting season, and Shell Oil Co. cut off its spring recruitment the same year. NOW IS a catch-up period for several companies similarly affected by the company. Reid Fordyce, director of personnel for Monsanto, said the company was neither a big employer nor a recruitment programs. The Food and Drug Administration ordered Monsanto to close three plants producing plastic cola bottles, he said. Otherwise, recruitments might be Wendell Hayes, head of University Relations and recruiting officer for Boeing, said his company would make about 125 more offers this year. However, the increased demand for engineers hasn't significantly affected job recruitment in the School of Engineering or the Department of Metrology, placement director for the school. THINGS ARE looking better for Boeing, he said, because the company has more contracts to fill and more airplanes are being built. It also has more mechanical and electrical engineers. According to the CPC survey, engineering has attracted continuous employer interest, making up 47 per cent of all job offers reported this year. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING student city Langer, Kansas City, Kan., senior, aid team member. "I think that any engineering student who 'i want a job' won't have any problems finding one," he said. According to Linger, the college's engineering department companies a day interviewed at the school. Wike Mempte, Seneca senior, said that some of the company representatives he had talked with said they were planning to join the Rockwell team as interviewer with the Rockwell Corp. had said that he intended to boost his staff from 60 to 160 by this time next year. Wempe said IN A STORY that appeared in a recent Wall Street Journal, a General Motors spokesman said that engineers were in such bad moods that they concerned about getting enough graduates. Metzler said this was particularly apparent in the branch of petroleum engineering because of the energy shortage and related problems. He said there were relatively few petroleum engineers compared with mechanical, civil and chemical Increased demand boosted salary offers for petroleum engineers up to $1,500 a month, according to the CPC report, an increase of almost 8 per cent since July 1976. Chemical engineering had the second highest increase in about of about 8 per cent. The largest increase, according to the report, was a 9.7 per cent gain for industrial engineering graduates. VERNON GEISSLER, University placement director, said salaries offered to KU graduates were close to those reported by the CPC survey. Although the business school hasn't had the high degree of recruitment that the engineering school has, salary offers for business graduates also are rising. According to business school records, a student with a bachelor's degree in general business will draw an offer of about $121 a month, up $95 from last year's average offer averaging $1,086 up $91 from last year's average of $995. SUA MOSES AND AARON (1975) Joan-Jean-Marie Straub. A top-drawer production of Schoenberg's opera, Classical Film Series. Wed, April 13; 7:30 p.m., $1 THE WORKING CLASS GOES TO HEAVEN (LULU THE TOOL) (1872) (1972) Dir. Elio Petri, With Mariangela Meloat, Co-Grand Prize winner 1972. (italy/subtilties) Film Thurs.; April 14, 7:30 & 9:45 p.m. THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR (1975) Dir. Sydney Pollak with Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway, Plus short films by K.K. students. Films by K.K. students, April 16, 3:30; 5:10; 9:30 p.m., $1 Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union ZERCHER PHOTO SAVE • SAVE • SAVE • $1.00 ON PROCESSING OF ANY ROLL OF KODACOLOR FILM After Easter Sale! this coupon good for $1.00 TOWARD THE PROCESSING OF A ROLL OF FILM GOOD AT ANY ZERCHER PHOTO DESIGN AUTHORIZED BY ZERCHER PHOTO EXPIRATION MAY 15, 1977 rades paper for a good look at the times of your life ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 51 Kodak paper for a good look at the times of your life ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas BOY! HAVE WE GOT A DEAL FOR YOU! All this week, for our Grand Opening, we will discount our entire selection of pipes, papers, clips, coke accessories and other smoking aids. ALL BONGS 25% OFF. THE DRUGSTORE "All you need... Except the weed." 706 MASS. ST. NOTICE: We do not employ a registered pharmacist or sell prescription drugs. L Unt with wedlc Lawr The been its co Um Kans F si For whet mont discr C Tuesday, April 12, 1977 of Fine hiring severe doll. But hands had its beard. But he said, official, to take ant for e main- engaged art and art and faculty music be ce and essional graduates it of the aid. "Our ream of students, members, contacts covered job helped to members wrld, the in down, result in standing Robert is short, , 3:30. ium RE Law oddities and ends cleaned up The image provided does not contain any text or visual content. It appears to be a placeholder or an empty document. By DONALD WILSON Staff Reporter Until six months age in Lawrence, living with a person of the opposite sex out of wedlock was illegal, according to the Lawrence city code. That ordinance and about 20 others have been revived because the city has brought in a new police force. Unusual laws seem to have flourished in Kansas. Kansas was the place where, at one time, trains approaching each other were required to stop and not move until one had passed the other. That one has been repealed, but others still exist. FOR INSTANCE, it is unlawful to eat snakes in public, according to Kansas law. Also, candidates for office in Kansas can't give away cigars on election day. City ordinances are also replete with bloopers. In Manhattan, an ordinance requires that the premise of a junkyard be kept neat and clean. The Lawrence City Commission has revised the city code to clean out odd laws, or Lawrence, too, would have some laughers. Physical abuse of squirrels by humans is prohibited in Topeka. ONE ORDINANCE that was repeated said, "No proprietor, employee or agent of any billiard hall or pocket billiard hall in the city shall permit or allow any child under the age of sixteen (16) years to work, leaf or latter in any billiard or pocket billiard pool hall at any time except when accompanied by a parent or legal guardian." Another part of the same ordinance said it was unlawful to lock the rear door of any pool hall while the establishment was open to the nublic. Most of the ordinances皱 by the city commission, however, weren't at all funny. Some were unconstitutional; others were vague or repetitious. THE DECISION to revise the city code was spurned by a police speedup last A speedup is a tactic occasionally used by police instead of a strike to attract attention to demands. Under a speedup, police will enforce all ordnances to the letter, attempting to flood the courts with irate citizens summer, according to Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager. Wilden said the speedup attracted attention to some obsolete city ordinances, as did a Mobil Oil Corp. advertisement that warned residents of the shade carried bees in a hat on the street. WLDGEN SAID that no such ordinance was in the code then, but that the advertisement nevertheless drew attention to the city code. After these two events, Barkley Clark, his commissioner, asked his staff to be present. unacceptable ordinances still on the books, Wilden said. Once the list was compiled, it was given to Wilden and Marilyn Harbur, Wichita law student, who was his temporary assistant for the job. "She did the research on how to change these children," the Widger said. "I thought she did good job." HARBUR SAID, "I was looking for bacon and anything that might be unconstitutional." Wildgen said the changes had made the city code much more modern. The Kansas legislature, however, apparently hasn't decided to take this step vet. So a Lawrence resident, if he wished, could ill hat with bees and take a stroll through the woods. He just can't stop in a public place and dine on rattlesnake. Four KU sororities silent about hearings Four KU sororites won't comment on whether they will attend hearings later this month investigating possible racial discrimination in KU living groups. The four sororates are Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Gamma Delta and Alpha Phi. They are included in the group of seven sororites who haven't been involved in the University Senate being conducted by the University Senate's Human Relations Committee. The hearings stem from recent charges that a KU student wasn't able to pledge a loan. Five sororites met with the committee last month. Three sororites, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta, said recently that they intended to appear at the events, which are to resume April 21, according to Cinda Ossess, Panilene president. Jane Replegio, president of Alpha Delta Pi, and julie Jones, president of Kappa Kappa Gamma, wouldn't comment last week, but they would send representatives to the hearings. still waiting for procedural instructions from its national office. Mary Gajewski, president of Alpha Gamma Delta, said that her sorority was Pankhellen sororities are required to contact their national offices concerning these matters. Megan Johnson, president of Alpha Phi, said she wasn't aware that any more bearings had been scheduled. She wouldn't know whether her sorority would be represented. A STATEMENT issued by the Panbellenie Executive Council said that a separate task force had been organized to examine discrimination within the Greek system and to develop communications with college students and members of KU sororities. Mary Turney, chairman of the task force, said that the group, comprising representatives from six sororites, was meeting with all interested sororites. She said the task force wasn't focusing on racial discrimination alone. "We're talking about how we ourselves have been discriminated against," Turney said. "We're exchanging ideas and learning to improve our relations with minorities." Emergency changes urged Contest offers prize of $200 Civil defense emergency programs must be revised if Douglas County is to have an effective Emergency Operating Center, Travis Bran, emergency preparedness director, told the County Commission yesterday. The third annual student sculpture content, offering a $200 grant prize, has been selected. The winner of the contest, sponsored by SUA and the office of the vice chancellor for student affairs, will display his winning certificate. Students from the Museum of Natural History for a year The sculpture will be installed by the artist in the spring. He may then keep his work. Plans and models should be submitted to the SUA office by May 1. "We don't have a strong emergency center now," he said, "so we need to establish a revised procedure involving both city and county governments." Bran said that the center, in the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center at 11th and New Hampshire streets, could handle an emergency now, but services and personnel weren't sufficiently coordinated to provide the best service. "We are operating under a 2-year-old plan, he said," and it needs a lot of money. In case of an emergency, such as a tornado, flood or bomb attack, a bad situation could be made worse without adequate planning, Bran said. "For instance, in a tornado, he said, "all casualties couldn't be taken to Lawrence Memorial. We need a coordinated plan for evacuation and emergency first aid programs." Bran recommended that the County Commission meet with representatives from other cities in the county to revise civil defense programs. Super Cuts for Guys and Gals only $6.00 Blane's SALON ANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES Fall Membership Program 1977 Informational Meeting Phone 842-1144 Shopping Center REDKEN Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union The seating of three new city commissioners and the election of a new mayor will highlight tonight's Lawrence City Commission meeting at 7 p.m. on the fourth floor of the First National Bank Tower. Tower. Malls Registration materials will be distributed In the past few terms commissioners have elected the vice mayor as mayor for a term. Donald Bins, the only remaining old term commissioner when the new commission is sworn in, is expected to be elected the new vice mayor. Commission to elect city's mayor tonight For more information contact: Panhellenic Association 220 Strong Hall 864-3552 Fred Pence is the outgoing mayor. A discussion of policemen lobbying at the Ed Carter and Barkley Clark will be sworn in tonight for four-year terms as commissioners and Jack Rose will be sworn in for a two-year term. Vice Mayor Marine Argersinger is expected to be nominated as president of the club, the vice mayor if precedent is followed. The new guidelines also recommend that the city commissioners' views be solicited for the city lobbying stance on sensitive matters, including gun control and mandatory sentences. state capital in Topeka, which was deferred from last week. it is also on the agenda. Guidelines have been drawn up by the Lawrence Police Department in response to reports two weeks ago that a Lawrence police officer, Tom Tschappat, was being lobbied almost full time before the Kansas Legislature. The guidelines are expected to give city officials greater supervision and control of lobbying activities and would require that the activities be submitted to the chief of police. Discussion of the county's plans for a 180-foot radio tower at the new Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Building, located on Brazos Street, has been deferred indefinitely. Reg. 4 $ ^{9 5} $ A discussion of policemen lobbying at the $1.99 THIS WEEK Pirell 27" Gumwall Tires 1401 Mass. Ride-On SPECIAL PURCHASE OPEN TUES.—SAT. Granada (647) 819-2345 | granada.com Sherlock Holmes meets Sigmund Freud THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION 10 Academy Award Nomination "THE Robert Shaw—Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" "ROCKY" Hillcrest Starring SILVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.Sun.1:45 "BLACK SUNDAY" PG Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat. Sun at 2:30 Varsity TWENTY-FOUR INSTRUCTIONS ST. PARK 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped, underwater. "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST" AIRPORT 77 Eve. 7:40 & 9:50 Sat.Sun.1:55 Hillcrest E -Plus- "CHARLY" Show starts 7:10 R University Daily Kansan Sunset Mist in the Wilderness. Music on Sunday, 11:30 AM. up with People with People Colleg Lawrence High School Musical entertainment for the entire family Haskell Indian Junior College in cooperation with Kansas University in cooperation with Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Tickets: SUA Office, Lawrence High School, Haskell Indian Jr. College, Rusty's IGA stores $3.50 public/$2.50 students ROLFING appointments with Tom Path from April 11-April 17th Call 841-3145. Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358. Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT 1. 2014-08-15 2. 2014-08-15 3. 2014-08-15 JAZZ WEEK presented by the Lawrence Opera House & 7th Spirit balcony THE HOUSE OF USHER / QUICK COPY CENTER AT 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET IN DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE THE HEADQUARTERS FOR THEISI BINDING AND COPYING. LET US HELP - WE WILL MAKE THINGS EASY FOR YOU AT A PRICE THAT'S RIGHT! WE CAN MEET THE DEADLINE! HOUSE OF USHER / QUICK COPY CENTER 838 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Telephone 842-3610 BATMAN BATMAN Wednesday April 13 JAM SESSION SESSION with the River City Jazz Band. Bring your own AXE and join in with the fun. 9:00 p.m. 'till ?? 50' cover Thursday April 14 KU JAZZ BENEFIT Friday April 15 Benfit for KU School of Fine Arts Jazz Scholarships The Tuesday/Thursday Band, The 12:30 Band & Tommy Johnson 9:00 p.m. 'till ??? $1.00 cover LAWRENCE JAZZ COMBOS Fast Eddie Quartet River City Jazz Nairobi Trio with Johnny Moore on drums Tom Montgomery Quartet with Jim Stringer on guitar 8:00 p.m. 'til 3:00 a.m. $1.00 cover Saturday Saturday April 16 KANU FM 91.5 Concert Presents The Ralph Towner and John Abercrombe Band with special guests THE NAIROBI TRIO with Johnny Moore on drums Two Big Shows 7:00 and 10:00 Admission $4.00 7th Spirit Members will purchase $6.00 Tickets for the entire night. Listen to KANU FM 91.5 FOR FURTHER DETAILS 4 Tuesday, April 12, 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 One of President Jimmy Carter's first campaign promises, one that no doubt helped him win the presidency, might be the one he is also first forced to break. Carter's promise to reduce the size of the federal bureaucracy from the current 1,900 agencies, advisory boards and bureaus to a maximum of 200 is proving to be virtually impossible, despite last week's approval by Congress of Carter's governmental reorganization bill. Carter aides, especially Bert Lance, director of the Office of Management and Budget, already are starting to hedge on that promise. MEANWHILE, TWO federal employees were discovered raking in an estimated $2 million on rent-free Capitol grounds as they provided free printing to congressional leaders. Nobody has found any legal basis upon which to censure the two. The connection? The activities of the two House of Representative clerks serve only to point out how far off-base Carter's campaign promise was. These two low-level Congressional staff members are but two of the thousands—not all crooks—that abound in the nation's capital. Surely, one cannot reasonably have expected Carter to know about their activities. If he knew they never made the promise, if Carter is to truly reduce the size of the federal bureaucracy, what better place to start? UNFORTUNATELY, Carter's performance thus far has not been much of a start. His White House staff is at least as large as that of his predecessor. The cutting edge of the whole Washington mess: even with congressional approval of his reorganization package, Carter has maintained 1:500 governmental advisory boards. With full knowledge of that fact, plus the knowledge that presidents have promised governmental reorganization since it became a popular notion, Carter aides are backing off. They publically concede that such a massive effort—cutting 1,900 down to 200–will take a long time. They are privately conceding that such an effort is impossible; that the former Georgia governor, with little knowledge about entrenched Washington bureaucrats, was premature in his promise. IT WAS A nice try. And Carter certainly has made positive efforts towards keeping the expense and size of government down—his insistence that some government officials give up their chauffeur-driven limousines and his efforts to consolidate the massive energy-related departments are a step in the right direction. But that may well be all we can expect from Carter. He has bitten off a bit more than he can chew. And in this case, he has no place to spit. To a considerable extent, the way the Kansan plays various news stories is dictated by tradition. Most students and faculty use other newspaper during the day—or at least they catch part of a television or radio news broadcast—and then return to their school. Kansan's primary responsibility isn't national, international or even state news, but campus and local news. Kansan weak on national news The poll did not throw Kansan tradition out the window. On the contrary, the poll indicated that the paper had been doing a good job at collecting students what they wanted—but by no means a perfect one. And, in the same way, tradition, word-of-mouth and old editors' tales have determined the way the paper plays sports and city commission meetings. LAST SEMESTER, however, a journalism class actually conducted a poll to see just how much justification there was for the authors' paper. The author's paper's determination of what goes where is ascertained by what the editors think the public needs to know. A greater part of it is determined by what the author thinks the public wants to know. A total of 76 per cent of the 265 responding students said they had read another newspaper during the last week. Thirty-four per cent of Lawrence Journal-World, 35 per cent just read the Kansas City A typical evening in Watson Library. Behind the library's massive facade sit innumerable students, crammed together like horizontal stack systems. THE PERSONA: THE SCENE: Hunger hinders research The hard core "regulars" who come to the library night- after-night after-night until they all recognize each other The (Thursday Night Specials smile in conspiratory understanding). Go set down to diligent research for next 29 7:56: Right about now, in between volumes of the New Republic, just the tiniest hint of thirst should tickle the throat. Ignore it for 17 more minutes, then go to drinking fountain. Apparently national news is more important to the readers than campus news. This probably means the Kansan should run more national news than it traditionally has. There has been a small initial variation very small) movement in that direction this semester. The non-regulars and the innocent newcomers. One can easily recognize them as they wander around the library with their eyes fixed on something haven't yet learned how to use the Dewey Decimal System. **THIS DOES not mean, however, that the Kansan should run more national news stories and that the paper should change its policy of giving campus news stories an artificial and substantiated head start as far as the newspaper on page one is concerned.** but are too engrossed in their studying to acknowledge the presence of their partners in misery. A. Yours Truly—Senior Scholastic. papers again) The Kanseis is still almost the only place that campus news is covered. As a student activity fee—the campus newspaper that has its subscriptions paid for by student activity fees—the Kanseis has a responsibility to campus news is covered. The "Thursday Night Specials" who come in at 2:30 Thursday afternoon and stay until closing time. They wander around all day Friday carrying lunch bags under their eyes. It is comforting to know that the Kansan doesn't rate all that low on its coverage of national news — 25 per cent said it was good, 33 per cent average, 12 per cent poor. But it is still the most needy and one that definitely needs some improvement. 7:20; Advance to Serials List and take a number. Wait five lines and then 10 more. State R—Journal of Molecular Occupied by innocent peonw 7:04: Walk to Reader's Guides and spend next 10 minutes tracking down the 1963- 1965 index. 7:27:FIND several hefty magazine volumes, raising eyes to heaven in thanks that the material isn't on microfilm. THE SEQUENCE OF ACTION: 7 p.m.: Yours Tearly enters The Library and heads towards period bop. 7:02: Find table in period-pop, in back of room, beside all the other hard-cores. The hard-cores look up and store for a minute, then dig deeper into volumes of Foreign Affairs Yet and here we're back to the business of reading other The small efforts of this semester were, it is hoped, just a precedent for bigger and more steps in semesters to come. Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer 8:15: Back to the New Republic. 8:30: The thirst returns. This time it's egged on by the taste buds, which have put in a request for Coca Cola. Ignore thirst and go track down volume 55 of Esquire. 8:51: THE thirst is back again, bringing with it fantasies of being plane-wrecked in a hot, merciless desert. Worse yet, the stomach is chinning in, growling. "I'd like a Joe's about 'Hit stomach hard" and the doctor would round to see if anyone heard. Then try to pacify stomach with a cigarette in the ladies' john. Debt. Debt. Debt. said they thought the Kansas was doing a good job covering campus news. Thirty-seven per cent rated it "average" and The hard-cores are staring. 9:04: Suecumb to instincts and get another drink of water. Star and 4 per cent read just the Topeka paper. A total of 19 per cent read both the Lawrence and Kansas City papers and 7 9:25. THE stomach and throat won't be satisfied. Entertain thoughts of walking over to the Union for a snack. Tell stomach and throat that research is more important than candy bar. Try to read Commentary. To silence stomach. 9:50. The hard-core's stomachs are also growing. A mass exodus starts toward the drinking fountain. The hard-cores are still staring. Tell self that in one hour and ten minutes Yours Truly can go home to revitalize blood sugar. You should comment the comments on Companionery. TELL STOMACH for the final time to be quiet. Get another drink of water and then spend two minutes Xeroxing the Economist. 10:30: Tell self that it will all be over, soon that one's grade depends on plowing through five years of the Economist by 11 p.m. 10:57: Exit from Library and speed toward home and work. Tell the author about writing a letter to the editor of the Kansan. Tell so that what the University教授 machines in Watson Library. per cent read either other combinations of the three papers or other papers. So far so good. But the results of the poll concerning national news are a bit more debatable. A total of 84 per cent said national news was important to them - 4 per cent more than cited newspaper news and commentator news and 62 per cent who said local news was important or the 61 per cent who said sports news was important. ALTHOUGH we really don't know how much the students gain from reading these other papers or how much time they spend on them, we do know that they read them. Editor's Note Jim Bates The poll also indicated that 80 per cent of the students considered campus news coverage important. A total of 80 per cent only 3 per cent said "poor" or had no opinion. "NAW! I AINT SEEN MARGARET TRUDEAU!" PLACE REFUSE HERE NEW YORK CITY LAWRENCE DEPT. Letters Policy Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address. Justify the idea to oneself. Tell self that after all, spending every evening in the library is no joy—a little nourishment must make the pursuit of higher education more bearable. MATHEL YOUR MOVE. SALT WASHINGTON - The Senate got around to adopting an ethics code the other day. The vote was 86 to 9. So lopsided a policy was passed, overwhelming majority of the Senate regarded the code as both necessary and wise, but such was not the case. Sen. James McDonnell, then leader, said the whole thing was "absurd," and he was right. Byrd, of course, was among the 88 who voted in favor of this foolishness. He felt that nothing less than this bristling codification of possible misconduct would restore public confidence in the integrity of the Senate. Byrd, I Honesty not guaranteed by code believe, is mistaken. Those voters who look at the code are more likely to suspect that the Senate must be composed of crooks if it takes so formidable a document to restrain them. THE CODE has 55 pages,with James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. 25 printed lines to the page. It is accompanied by an explanatory committee report. This has 19 pages, with 52 printed lines to the page. All these thousands of words—these innumerable rules, restrictions, exceptions and requirements—are intended to keep senators honest. In the end, a truism makes it all immaterial: Good senators won't need a code, and bad senators won't live up to it anyhow. This is the kind of thing that evolves when political lawyers put their heads together. A lawyer says that a senator shall not accept gifts having a value of more than $100 from any one person during a calendar year, and applies to gifts from a 'relative'. Screw-one of the most popular magazines in America. IT OCCURRED to the lawyerly authors, as they considered their colleagues' devious talents, that the word Miller out to purge state of popular porn Screw is obscene, according to 12 persons in Wichita, who convicted its publisher Al Rappaport for partner, James Buckley, of years. But the infamous Vern Miller, who came within a whisker of beating Gov. Robert Bennett in 1974, was "convenced" he should run for district attorney. MILLER HAD been Kansas TED MILLER During the "Screw" trial, the district attorney in the Wichita area was Keith Sanborn, who held the position for eight Brent Anderson Editorial Writer mailing obscene issues of Screw and its sister publication, Smut, into Kansas. Theis ordered the retrial because he thought the jury had been prejudiced by the prosecutor's closing statements. The trial was completed in June. THANKS TO Vern, whom I'm sure you'll all remember as the super sheriff attorney general who almost became governor of Kansas, Wichita won't be subjected to a retrial of Goldstein and Buckley, U.S. District Court Judge Frank Theis ordered last week that the retrial proceeded without further because of "recent, current and continuing events in the Wichita area." It seems that the people of Wichita aren't going to be subjected to Screw and Smur or any other "obscure" material. Vern Miller, yes, good O'Derm, has decided that if he thinks obscure, it isn't going to be viewed by the people of Wichita. attorney general four years when he decided to try for the governor's seat. After he lost to Bennett, he went into private law practice in Wichita for two years. Sanborn tried desperately to keep his job, but he was no match for the super sheriff. Miller handily beat Sanborn in the democratic primary, and disposed in the general election. Miller got the "super sherif" nickname while he was Sedgwick County high school for six years, and the support he has built among Wichitaans is incredible. Apparently he has decided that the support he has enjoyed in the club has contributed to the smut peddlers out of town. "relative" had better, be carefully defined. Otherwise, some slick senator would wiggle out of the ethical net. Thus the drafters of the code inserted in Rule XII.4 a subsection (7) "relative means"... an individual who is related to the person as father, mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, great-uncle, great-aunt, first cousin, grandfather, grandmother, father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother, sister, or who is the grandfather or grandmother of the spouse of the person reporting." THE "RECENT, current and continuing" events in Wichita referred to by Thesis are nothing more than a one-man antipathy, undignition, and the one man conducting it is none other than Vern. The first thing he took care of after he was sworn in as district attorney was a bevy of massage clients outside the Wichita city limits. He took care of them by raiding them, locking their doors and telling their owners to get out of town. That's tellin' After he took care of the massage parors, Vern decided to get into movies. His most impressive victory was over a movie about the student who had organized the showing of X-rated movies on the WSU campus. Vern also closed down several "adult" theaters, and another was closed down by an "irate citizen." SURELY IT WAS! Vern. He wouldn't do anything like that. Now Nerv is after dirty books. He has directed his investigative staff to determine whether there are any pornographic books being sold in California or to drive to save the citizens of Wichita from themselves will continue. Considering the anti-smite campaign in Wichita, This really had no alternative but to move Goldstein's new trial from Wichita. Theis is probably happier about Vern's work than he. He won't have to look at those dirty magazines anymore. NOW KANSA City, Kan, has the trial. It is hoped the jury selected there will exonerate Goldstein and Buckley and the foundement, and lessen the entitlement to the estate. The jury fered by the State of Kansas Screw and Smut might be lousy magazines, but they certainly aren't had enough to force the imprisonment of two activists by back-bursting material that is disgustingly popular. HUMBUG! The code isn't entirely silly. For the first time, the Senate (as well as the House, in its own version) has passed a bill to allow lame-duck junks. These are the foreign vacations that are taken in December of even-numbered years by members who have been deposited in the Code. The code prohibits "unofficial office accounts," otherwise known as slush funds. There may be some dubious value in some of the infinite disclosure require- Otherwise, it is hard to find anything good to say of this assumption. It may be that assumptions are demeaning. One assumption, at random, is that senators are likely to accuse the president of influence their vote; thus such --gifts must be delineated, defined, appraised, recorded and publicly disclosed. In some circumstances $250, in others $100, in still others $250. No senator may accept an honorarium of more than $1,000 for a speech. Food, lodging and entertainment are served on the senatorial hospitality of any individual" needn't be reported. O E C FIDLDESTICKS! The Senate's laborious attempt to codify these things won't produce a better Senate. A sense of propriety comes from the fact that the senate rules, sections and subsections. Code or no code, a senator knows when someone is out to bribe him. In practice, men and women in public life make their own decisions years ago, would accept a 15-bounty ham or a fifo of boobie, but he regularly spurned the 16-bounty ham or the quarter. He measured the corruption per capita. Perhaps it is as good a way as any. Lord Macaulay once remarked that he knew of "no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in one of its periodical fits of morality." For example, the American public has been suffering the spasms and heaves—or at least Congress thinks so. Now that the House and Senate have decreed themselves moral, perhaps the British statesmen can go back to being statesmen, and rogues, alas, to being rogues. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kassas daily August 28, 2017 June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. 60444 Subscriptions by mail are a $1 member or $18 year-end subscription. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor tim Rates Managing Editor Greg Hack Editorial Editor Stewart Bram Campus Editor Alison Gwinn Associate Campus Editor Lynda Smith Assistant Campus Editors Barbara Roewee Copy Chiefs Bernell Cushman Jm Cole Sports Editor Dan Girey Sports Editors Suzie Editors Dan Girey Photo Editor Courtney Thompson Photographers Gary Mackell Make-up Editor Jay Koehler Make-up Editors Susan Applbury, Jim Cobb Wire Editors Jay Myrne Jay Bemis Wire Editors Jay Bemis Business Manager Janice Clements Advertising Manager Anti盗贼 Advertising Manager Randy Randle Assistant Classified Manager Pat Terron Daniel Dammann National Advertising Manager Robin Burdener Tuesday, April 12. 1977 5 nsan is race that add. As a thing it has its for by byes the ability to news is of this ped, just ger and resters to now that all that national d it was. 21, age range, area, and ds some ineated, recorded In some imitation rs $100, in the mayor may author of more ch. food. in the attainment the per- manency in reported. !1 The attempt to attempt it isn't won't be made. names from supposed by dissections. a senator is out to attempt to make their make their tor, some or some a 15- degree of booze, used the 16- degree of booze, for its corpse as it is as eow of once waw as the aus as the "Forlery" for years, thes has been and Congress the House perhaps thes thes. Then ck to being es, alas, to University Daily Kansan MONTREAL OnCampus Events TODAY: Kansas State Geological Survey is sponsoring the KANSAS MAPPING CONFERENCE from 3 to 13 in the Aloyom Roop Room of Nichols Hall. TONIGHT: STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 in the Big B Room of the Kansas Union. There will be a meeting of all WOMEN ATLETES at U 7 in 411 Summerfield Hall. The KU FILM GROUP will present a free film, Frederick Wiseman's "Law and Order" at U' in the Union Forum Room. TOMORROW: The DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY will sponsor a movie, "Miss Goodall: The Wild Chimpanzees," at 4 p.m. in 627 Fraser Hall. THE STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Big 8 Room. The SEMINAR WILL BE held at 7:30 p.m. in the CONFLICTS AND CIVIL RIGHTS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. KU Hillel will sponsor a film and lecture on the NAIZI HOLAOCUST at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. There will be a meeting concerning the SUMMER INSTITUTE IN ENGLAND at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. The program will be on marriage counseling. Correction A story about job prospects for law school graduates, which appeared in inst Wednesday's Kansas, incorrectly said that 108 of 197 graduates of Washburn University's School of Law had found jobs; the figures should have been 148 of 197 students. Taiwanese coming to KU Sixteen college students from Taiwan (the Republic of China) will meet KU students, tour the campus and present an evening cultural show April 21. The students, sponsored by the Chinese Television Service, are guests of the East Asian missionary missionaries in the United States as part of the Youth Goodwill Mission of the Republic of China. studying Chinese or who are interested in international communications at 3 p.m. April 21 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The students also will present a free 90-minute culture show featuring a fashion show, a martial arts demonstration, a music and dance presentation and a painting and calligraphy demonstration at 7:30 p.m. April 21 in the Union's Ballroom. The group will meet KU students who are ARNÈBRAV HAWKS NEST 8 p.m. Wed., April 13 $1 admission His Music is Always in Poor Taste ROOMS FOR RENT 博雅书院 本院为著名图书馆,集学术文献、图书编目与教育科研为一体,是成都地区最早的综合性书院之一。 Sigma Nu House Air conditioned —Tennis courts —Recreation area —Plenty of parking space —Close to campus —Large sudeck —Basketball courts —Two acres of grassy lawn —Kitchen available —Huge living Quiet study areas —Coed living; Girls top floor; Guys first floor —Weight room —Charcoal grill —Two month lease—June = August —'75/month FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Call Mrs. Mastin 843-5673 between 12:30-5:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00'p.m. Staff Renorter By LEON UNRUH between 12:30-5:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00 'p.m. The chancellorship of the University of Kansas is financially the best college ad- KUchancellorship financially tops Not only does the KU office draw the highest salary for college administrators in Kansas, $85,000—it is also the best-paying Conference, a Karsan survey indicates. Other Big Eight presidential salaries are $33,000 for Missouri and Iowa State, $51,000 for Colorado and Kansas State, and $49,000 for Oklahoma State. Chancellor Archy Dikes also can boast of fringe benefits that several Kansas schools and even a few conference universities can't match. For example, there is a home provided by the University and a KU airplane that chancellor uses to travel across the state. Other Kansas Board of Regents schools salaries include $47,000 for Wichita State and $40,000 for Emporia Kansas State College. The Colorado chancellor's salary may be lower than the figure indicates. Out of the $1,000, Levy must pay housing and some personal expenses to Mary Barrero; administrative assistance. SALARIES FOR THE conference's top administrators range from the $55,000 at KU to $47,000 at Oklahoma and $46,000 at Nebraska. Only Dykes and Colorado's Jan Levy have the title of chancellor; the rest are THE PRESIDENT AT the two-year kaleen technical Institute in Salina recruiting $60,000. Residents are provided for presidents at other conference and state schools. Gerald Tomanek, Fort Hays State president, lives in a 23-year-old house that cost $5,000 when it was built, according to his administrative assistant. ROBERT PARKS, ISU president, lives in a house built in 1900. IUSK' chancellor's house, called Outlook is more than 60 years old. The University in 1989 by Elizabeth Watkins. Anck Antner, WSU president, lives in a partly furnished 10-room house. Like other schools surveyed, WSU pays for upkeep of the house. Most presidents and chancellors have the use of a state-owned car. But Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said that KU and K-State leaders drove under a ban from offerment of that most other administrators. THE ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION, be bought, bought a Ford for Dykes to replace a state-supplied Plymouth or Dodge he otherwise might have driven for official "We provided that for him because it's a little more than the car the star might have wanted." SIZZLER SPECIALS TUESDAY NIGHT — Steak-A-Bob Dinner for only '1.29! Tuesday Night Only WEDNESDAY NIGHT — Top Sirloin Steak Dinner for only '2.19I Wednesday Night only Dinners include choice of potato and toast. Specials good from 5 p.m. until closing 1516 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Kansas KU is one of three conference schools that can fly its top administrator in a school airplane. The KU plane, a Twin Beech G8, is in the air about 300 hours a year for the KU administration staff, according to Norman Hoeker. KU pilot. SIZZLFR FAMILY STEAK HOUSE Missouri and Iowa State use university plane pools to fly their presidents. Each of the Kansas and Big Eight schools has an expense account for its administrator's official business, which may include money for entertaining official guests such as legislators or Regents. The amount in the entertainment funds, described as discretionary or contingency funds, is held by the school although Seymour said Dykes had several thousand dollars at his official disposal for entertaining. WHEREH TO ACCEPT or demand honariums for public speaking is generally left up to the president, representatives of their offices said. Rick Von Ende, executive secretary at KK said he wasn't aware of Dykes as secretary. CU's Levy, however, doesn't turn down the money offers. "If they offer her an honorarium, she takes it," her assistant said. James Appleberry, president of Pittsburgh State and former assistant to Dykes, said that because he had just taken over at the university he hadn't discussed accepting honorariums. GERALD TOMANEK, Fort Hays State, don't accept the fees. K.S. Duane Dauer may take them, according to his attorney, to know how much money might be involved. "My own position is that I wouldn't take them," he said. Vista RESTAURANTS •MONDAY •TUESDAY •WEDNESDAY BANANA SPLIT 77¢ Reg. 85¢ 1627 West 6th, Lawrence 842-4311 Ford RENT-A-CAR LEASING 2340 Alabama FALS WORLD'S LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTOMIZED LEASING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR SUNFLOWER HOSTESSES The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is now accepting applications from students interested in assisting with the recruitment of prospective student-athletes for the Football Department. Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled KU student in good standing during the 1977-78 academic year. For further information and applications contact the football office, Allen Field House annex. Application deadline is 5 p.m., Friday, April 15. --- 6 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 University Daily Kansan Arts & Leisure Punt needed to kick 'Pepper' out Bv JOHN RINKENBAUGH "PEEPER," by pepper Rodgers and Al Thomay (doubled. 178 pages, $7.95). No so long ago the University of Kansas head football coach was Pepper Rodgers, an unpredictable Georgia cracker whose behavior was beheaded by a bult of nunchucks on third down. Now Rodgers and Atlanta sportswriter Ai Tommy have teamed to produce a short autobiography of the screwball champion after a brief period of confusion at UCLA. The book be classed with the worst of sports biographies, a low form of literature at best. Rodgers' coaching record is hardly the sort that innables books, but that doesn't By JAMES BARKER Off the Shelf Reviewer Poems accent death motif THE BOOK covers Rodgers' glorious so learn to the unfamiliar coach. His coaching record is barely above 500. The coach's performance has gone up. "DRY SEASON", by Michael I. Johnson (Cottonwood Review, 32 pages, $1, purchase price.) Those who wonder what KU English professors do in their spare time would do well to buy this inexpensive chapbook of Michael Johnson's poetry. "Dry Season" is an easy accessible, direct study of mid-autumn, a time when by Johnson's voice for concrete detail The first poem, "To a Fellow Prisoner of the 1980s," quickly introduces the poet's basic concern—the inherent guilt of a dry, arrogant character—and it is continually repeated in natural imagery. Except for a few character studies of artists from the past, which often clash with the book's largely contemporary concerns, most of the other poems are an exploration of the poet's guilt or his frustration. In "Breaking Ground," the frustration takes form in the calculated uncertainty of a survivor who kills insects and earthworms by using a special paint to kill the garden's plants to eat them. Images of death also dominate the other poems—always with man and machine juggernauting over Nature. Perhaps the poet's most fallible material is provided in Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358 the barren existence following the death of his mother and the slow-diving of Nature days at Tech as quarterback and follows his coaching career through assistant jobs at Air Force, Florida and ATA to the helm of the team. The team alternated with little stories that Rodgers says have helped to shape his football philosophy and anecdotes intended to The haunting anticipation of his mother's death in "Death Dream" is *is* simple brilliant and so is the title poem, "Dry Season." A book by David K. Johnson pinpoints our place in time. Much of "Dry Season" is worth reading and contemplating. Johnson occasionally is a more mournal than a poet and sips into a prosaic, pushy style that would be better served by his imagery. The anguish of the poems, coupled with the poet's midwestern temperaments for the occasional flaws in producing an enjoyable chapbook of poetry. Rodgers says that people involved in football take themselves too seriously. "There is no mystique to football, "he writes." It is a boy's game played by the man-boy. The game has no problem. Those who make a holy crusade out of it." James Barker is a senior majoring in human biology. That is the one endearing thing about Rodgers, he sees football for what it is, not as a sport. LESS ENDEARINGLY, however, Rodgers also uses the book as a podium for superficialities of his lifestyle such as carrying a shoulderbag, wearing a wig and riding motorcycles. He goes to some length free spirit. The attempt fails tediously. Rodgers seems to think the fact that he disdains a pre-game prayer makes him a leader. The book will appeal only to the real dreh sport fans. But even such fans will want more for their money. Don't buy the book, but the historical history of Rodgers' stay at Kansas. He fails in his attempted conversion from coach to author. Better, he should have punted. And yes, he does retell the story of Dan Devine and the peace sign. John Rinkenbaugh is a junior majoring in education and journalism. Oliver Hall Guild presents musical comedy Thursday Bruce Schentes, Westwood, N.J., junior, is director and choreographer. Susan Timmerman, Albuquerque, N.M. sohmore, is assistant director. Lead characters in the play are Laura Beth Davidson, Overland Park freshman; Sue Smith, Long Island, N.Y., freshman; and David McGregory, Wichita sophomore. Musical accompaniment will consist of piano, flute and percussion. The Oliver Hall Drama Guild will present Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurent's musical comedy "Anyone Can Whistle" at 8 PM through Saturday in the Oliver Hall lounge. exposed the "cookies" mix with the crayons before the mixup is sorted out. The plot concerns a small town near bankruptcy that has a female mayor. She and the police chief instigate a miracle and health-seeking pilgrims help the town to profit. But when the "cookies"—members of a house for "socially pressured"—come to be cured, the officials decide to destroy the miracle because the plan would be A large portion of the Lawrence jazz community will be blowing their horns and picking their axes this Wednesday through Saturday, which is billed as "Lawrence Jazz Week," by the Opera House and the Seventh Spirit. The beat goes on. All shows will take place on the main stage of the Opera House, at 7th and 8th floors. Jazz festival begins Wednesday A JAZZ jam session, which is normally be placed Thursday at Palm Beach Beach, meets the audience with the River City Jazz Band leading the session. Admission is 50 cents and all musicians and performers are welcome. Thursday. Two KU jazz bands will perform—the Tuesday-Tuesday Band and the 12:30 Jazz Band, directed by Jim Barnes, KU assistant to the director of band ensembles. The two local jazz bands, the Tommy Johnson Experiment and the Joe Ubtack Trio A benefit show for the KU School of Fine Arts' jazz scholarships will be at 9 p.m. Jazz in the Night programming. Guitarists, Ralph Towner and John Abercrombie, will play at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m., with the ensemble set. Admissions for each show is $4. Towner, who also plays piano, has played with groups such as Weather Report, the Paul Winter Consort and Oregon and has recorded albums with Gary Burton and Horace Alberrombi. Aberrombi has played at the Bergen Ballet, B吉尔 Evans and Jack Delonette. Admission is the show starting at 8 p.m. Friday by more Lawrence jazz combs—the Fast Eddie Quartet, the River City Jazz Band, the Nairobi Trio with John Moore on drum and the Tom Montgomery Quartet with Jim Stringer on guitar. Admission is John Easley, KANU development director, said this was the first of a concert series presented by KANU Jazz in the early May or next fall, he said. SATURDAY WILL WIND up Jazze Week with two benefit concerts for KANU-FM's Admission on Thursday will be $1. This Week's Theater Highlights "ANYONE CAN WHISTLE." Oliver Hall at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday. Concerts Recitals UP WITH PEOPLE, 8 tonight, Hoch ENGLERGET HUMPERDINK, 8 p.m. Thursday, Kemper Arena, Kansas City. UNIVERSITY SINGERS, 8 tonight. Swarthout Recital Hall. ALBERT GERKEN, carilion, 7 p.m. Wednesday, camanile. Wednesday, campanile. CONCERT CHOIR, 8 p.m. Thursday SawgrassHunt Lectures PAUL METCALF, and great grandson of Herman Melville, reads from his writings. 8 tonight, Kansas Union's Council Room. "STOBI: A CITY OF ANCIENT MACEDONIA" James Wiseman, chair of classical and archaeological studies at the University of p.m. Thursday. Lawrence Public Library. LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER—"Four Printmakers," work by Jane Abbey Exhibits KANASS UNION GALLERY- Downtown Galleria. Show, mostly paintings, through April 18th. ELIZABETH M. WATKINS COMMUNITY MUSEUM—"An American Sampler: A Look at Life in the 1800s," through April. Colette Bangert, Evonne English and Judy Geer Kellas, Exhibit Hall, Kathryn Clark, photography, Conference Room, through April. LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY- Lawrence High School art students. Jason Kernigan THE MARKETPLACE GALLERY—Ann paint and glaze silversmithing, through Auction. 7E7GALLERY-H . J. Bott, maquett and 7E7GALERY, sculpture, through April 28. SPONDER THAYER MUSEUM OF ART, Casey Thayer Collection, Main Gallery. Nightclubs ARNE BREV, local guitarist, 8 p.m. Wednesday, the Hawk's Nest. JAZZ WEEK, Wednesday through Saturday, the Opera House. JAM SESSION, bluegrass, folk, old timey, b to midnight Wednesday. Off the Wheel Films THE WORKING CLASS GOES TO HEAVEN—This Italian film won honors at the Cannes Film Festival and centers on a young factory worker as he realizes the facets of his middle class goals. MOSES AND AARON—Schoenberg's opera aoratea is the subject of this radical film experiment. All of the symbolism of Schoenberg's drama and all of the colors in overwhimming musical scores are captured by director Jean Marie Straub. THE HIGHBINDERS, by Oliver Blecke (Pocket,$1.50) -- A thriller about Philip St. Books lives, who showed up earlier in Bleek's "The Procane Chronicle," later renamed "St. Ives" to coincide with the Charles Bonmon movie *Excellence* and dirty *dirt*. THE DISPENSABLE MAN, by Woll Rita Davis, 26, who lives in the city, who gets drunk and emblazes the firm's money and heads for Acapulo, where he is pursued by a dogged Scotland Yard THE BAIT, by Dorothy Uhnak (Pocket, Scribner) and Tom Hanks. DA's special investigators squabble, the only woman on it. Our heroine sets out to solve three murders after getting herself into a car accident. THE MARAUDERS, by Gordon D. Shiretts (Gold Medal, $1.50). A book about adventure in the West, involving a hero who is traveling back to making place in the Mexican state of Sotra. DESERT CAPTIVE, by Eliot Tilson (Gold Medal, $1.75).—Another thriller, involving a man who is asked by a powerful woman to save her life by rescue the man's abducted daughter. FLAME OF NEW ORLEANS, by Frances Patton Statham (Gold Medal), $195—Historical stuff about a Confederate spy with a union officer during the Civil War. THE SLAVE OF FRANKENSTEIN, by Robert J. Myers' (Pocket, $175)—In which the monster kidnaps the son of Frankenstein and keeps him alive to keep Gene Wilder jumped up in a long. AT BERTAMRS' HOTEL, by Agatha Christie (Pocket, $1.75)—Still another reprint of a famous novel, this one with Jane Mapple solving a murder at a famous GREAT HOME COOKING IN AMERICA, by Farm Journal editors (Pocket, $1.95) A book of recipes. Looks good. No plot available. "BRINGIN' IT TO K-STATE!" SATURDAY, APRIL 30,1977 8:00 pm AHEARN FIELD HOUSE Kansas State University THE DOOBIE BROTHERS Tickets Available April 6 thru April 27 at: TICKETS GO ON SALE: K-State Union Ticket Office Only 9:30 am Sunday, April 3 TICKET PRICES. $7--$6--$6* (All Reserved Seating) TEAM ELECTRONICS 2319 Louisiana Another K-State Union UPC Concerts Presentation- A An exciting added value when you buy a Hewlett-Packard calculator now. Now through May 31 The tist's perform concern the pe amid a HP Spring Added Value Days All shows the Ka Music But made it—of This condu music On an on who's P.D.G. 20 yea faces recor writin It's the best way we know to remind you of the added value you always receive when you buy an HP calculator—like free application books, uncompromising quality, efficient RPN logic system, and exceptional service. Each HP instrument is designed to be the finest of its kind in the world. Free reserve power packs. During Spring Added Value Days, Hewlett-Packard is adding a free reserve power pack—a $20 value—with the purchase of every HP-21, HP-22, HP-25, HP-25C and HP-27. SCH appeal on the tied or to the "Th probin power at the pictur P NEWLETT - PACKARD In 1 mark album later, with fortune of the In people and say in why h of rea New Accessories Hewlett-Packard is also introducing two new accessories to increase the value of the HP calculator you may already own: A DC Recharger/Adapter lets you operate and recharge your HP pocket calculator in cars, boats—wherever a 12-volt DC supply is available. Bas four other A Games Pac for the HP-67 and HP-97 includes 19 programs designed primarily for fun but also useful in teaching principles of math, physics and logic. Come in and take advantage of Hewlett-Packard's Added Value Days today! kansas union BOOKSTORE Tuesday, April 12, 1977 7 guitarists, able, will with the sets. Ads played sport, the and has rton and s played iieri, Gil development a concert z in the for either Bleeck's renamed Charles and dirty Wolf Rilla aged man the firm's here he is and Yard (Pocket, New York, the only t to solve itself into ordon D.ook aboutg a heroace in the at Tokson riller, in- powerful dian desert aughter. y Frances $1.95) -erate spy cer during TEIN, by -In which Franken Keep Gene y Agatha another with Jane a famous AMERICA. $1.95)—A No plot w accesiator Reviewer and boats Bv JIM COBR udes 19 o useful logic. Antics mar music of PDO Bach The concert began with the visiting artist's road manager announcing that the performer hadn't arrived but that the concert would begin anyway. It ended with the performer's piano bench blowing up amid a cloud of smoke. All of which is routine in today's rock shows. But it isn't something an audience of the Kansas City Philharmonic expects in Music Hall. But Saturday night, allowances were made to accommodate the style—or lack of it—the Philharmonic's special guest. This was Peter Schickele: composer, conductor, arranger and fabricator of musical tall tales. CHICKELE DID arrive for the show. He appeared, half-dressed and out-of-breath, on the first balcony. He produced a rope, which he lowered himself to the auditorium floor. ckard's On stage he began his customary lecture on an obscure 18th-century composer—one who scholars of music insist never existed—P.D.Q. Bach. Schickele has devoted about 20 years to proving them wrong, but he still faces a skeptical public, even after recording six albums of P.D.Q.'s music and writing "The Definitive Biography of P. D.Q. Bach (1807-1742)?" TO SHARE his research on the dubious composer with the public. Schickel has been a professor at St. Mary's, which P.D.G. is blamed. He also attempts to stifle ruminous rumors, one of which, he says, is that Christopher Marlowe actually wrote the music Schickle traces to P.D.G. Nonsense, Schickele cries. "Frankly, Marlowe could have done a better killer." But many doubts remain, hard-core skeptics who insist that P.D.Q. wasn't "the last and least" of Johann Sebastian Bach's many children; that P.D.Q. didn't spend his Performance live at Wein-am-Rhein, Germany; that he never wrote the opera "Hansel and Gretel and Ted and Alice (S. 2-1);" and that the greetie is a hoax. THESE PEOPLE probably don't believe Schickle when he says he is a temed professor at the University of Southern North Dakota at Hoolpe. But even if the "evidence" Schickele presents to prove P.D. Q. Bach's existence is irrelevant, that is, when it comes to the Schickle began having fun with P.D. Kab while studying at the Jullillard School of Music in New York. He later taught at Jullillard and has written music in several styles; a rock group he organized several years ago arrived on the Broadway show "Oh! Calmica!" HE FOUND willing accomplices in Kansas City for his fun. Frank Collura, the Philharmonic's new associate conductor, seemed to have a great time as he guided the orchestra through the ridiculous counterpoint demanded by the music. delightful, irreverent parody of forms used extensively by composers of the 1790s. The concertos, sonatas and suites are musically absurd but all is true to its form. And Kansas City's professional musicians couldn't hide their smiles as they watched their guest intentionally stumbled over chairs and music stands. But when Schickele presents the baraque and classical form of P.D.Q. Bach, he adds a much more profound influence. The more ridiculous the form, the more expertly the orchestra mastered it. The local musicians' mistakes of the dozens of intentional mistakes was nearly perfect. IN THE MIDDLE movement of the 'Gross Concison for Divers Flutes, Two University Daily Kansan Trumpets and Strings in C Major (S, 2)-"for example, the music builds, in two long rehearsal cadences, to form a long, repeated. The listeners prepare for the upward progression of tones to reach the tonic key in which it began. But the progression is retraced and the music shoots off in another." Pink Floyd's 'Animals' lacks real bite An inherent characteristic of the music of both P.D. Q. Bach and Shickele (if the two can be considered separate) is plagiarism. Not petty plagiarism, lifting a measure here and there, but theft of complete melodies. In a musical context this can result in the listener's total confusion. In "Eine Kleine Nichtmusk," a work Schickele she wrote he wrote "with a little help from Mozart," one detects snatches of the music of the Black Jack, "Jake" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb." THE HUMOR inherent in this music has a nobility疯 that sets it apart from most music. Schnickele the learned professor is funny when he confides to an audience that "a lot of people don't believe anything I say." But Schickele the clown is more suited for an episode of "Hee-Haw" than a concert hall performance. Getting his finger caught in a mouse trap on the piano keyboard is all right; doing bump and run across it creep. Sure he's poking fun at the solemnity associated with classical music, but does he need to play milkmaid and squash beside it with a pallet between them. In spite of this 'seal in performance', Schickle does transmit his fun to the audience. The violinist Bach is the music, and for this one needn't go to Schickle's concerts. For about $6, a P.D.Q. Bach album can provide as much joy as much longer, as a $7.50 seat at Music Hall. Recreation Services NEED INTRAMURAL TRACK OFFICIALS Side of the Moon." Without unity, the chain makes an important statement. When it comes to this question, "Animals" has some excellent moments, but they are engulfed by the album's weaker moments. Perhaps it should be repeated or even repeated for parts of enjoyment without interruption. Roger Waters. Waters is talented, but this time he obviously took on a task too large. Recreation Services NEED INTRAMURAL TRACK OFFICIALS for meet on Saturday, April 16. Sign up at Recreation Services rm. 208 Robinson Gym J. Watson's April 11-15 J. Watson's April 11-15 TONITE IS LADIES' NIGHT. 50c cover—Disco SOC cover—Disco U "The Best of Ernie Kovacs" 8:30 E "Pueblo" 10:30 Free Disco for Everyone— on our 7' TV—"Star Trek" 7:00 "On the Amazing Howard Hughes" Part 1 8:00, "Columbo" 10:30 Live Music—Cover $2.00 Poor Willy 9-12, also "Paint Your Wagon" 7:00 50c Disco—"Howard Hughes"—conclusion. "KOJAK"—10:30 in the Peanut Gallery Live Music—Cover $2.00 A Flash & Glitter w/ Limosome. A night that's very different. Come watch the show 9.12. Peanut Gallery free from 1:7 p.m. SUN Peanut Gallery 7' TV Free from 1 sun to. 10. Come watch the doubleheader—KC Royals or Seattle at 3:35 The album also is divided into only four songs (one song, "Pigs On the Wing," has six pieces; two singles; and three songs. Because of this, the individual songs in "Animals" are far too long. The best song Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Millcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa By JIM MURRAY SUA Presents The World's Largest Traveling Music Media Production THE BEATLES: AWAY WITH WORDS M N U S. AMERICAN PROJECT WOCH AUDITORIUM 5 UNFORGETTABLE PERFORMANCES at 4 p.m. at 100 East 2nd Street, NJ Fri., April 15 N U STUDENT ARRANGE TICKETS ONLY $2.50 Available at UBA Box Office Only ALL N U STUDENT TICKETS - $3.60 AT THE BOOH Reviewer In 1973, Pink Floyd made an indelible mark on the world of rock with the brilliant album "Dark Side of the Moon." Four years later, they have to tiple that feature "Animals," "Animals," "Unfortunately, 'Animals' is a pale shadow of the earlier success. THE BEATLES AWAY WITH WORDS "The Dark Side of the Moon" was a probing look at many facets of life. It was a powerful, haunting work. "Animals" looks on at young children. It is not a pretty picture that is painted. In its newest album, Pink Floyd sees people as three types of animals: pigs, dogs and sheep. The album has the potential to say important things about what man is and why he is that way. But it fails, for a number of reasons. JOHNSON, ALEXANDER (1920-2015) Born in New York City on May 3, 1920. A graduate of St. John's College, Princeton, and Columbia University, he was an accomplished playwright, screenwriter, and novelist. His works include "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew," "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1967), "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1974), "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1980), and "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1986). He received a BA from St. John's College, NY, and a Ph.D. from Columbia University. His books include "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1967), "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1974), "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Know" (1980), and "The Man Who Loved the Woman He Knew" (1986). Basically, "Dark Side" was created by our group members, "Animals," on the website www.theanimals.org. A company is formed when a number of investors, who have agreed to sell their rights in the ownership of the company and agree to pay them for the time that they have held the rights, come together to form an agreement. In this case, the investors are the same group of people who originally bought the company from a different person. When a company is formed, all the investors agree to hold their rights in the company until it is dissolved or sold to someone else. If the company is dissolved, the investors may buy back their rights and return the money to the company. Assess the risk that a firm may be exposed to the financial stress of the global economy. Identify the factors that contribute to the global economic stress, and develop an investment strategy to mitigate the risks. Conduct a thorough analysis of the current financial landscape, including market trends, regulatory changes, and economic indicators. Develop a comprehensive financial plan to manage the risk exposure of the firm. Monitor the financial performance of the firm and make adjustments as necessary to maintain its financial stability. AUTHORIZATION: AUTHORIZED FOR USE IN THE EDUCATION OF: ELEMENTARY, MIDDLE, AND HIGH SCHOOL SCHOOLS; BEGINNING, INTERMEDIATE, AND ADVANCE SCHOOLS; BY ALEXANDER K. BROWN, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, STATE UNIVERSITY OF N.Y., NEW YORK. IN ASSOCIATION WITH: THE PROGRAMMING TECHNOLOGY COORDINATORS, INC. NEW YORK, NY. WHERE: THE TEXT IS PROVIDED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK FOR USE IN THE EDUCATION OF: ELEMENTARY, MIDDLE, AND HIGH SCHOOLS; BEGINNING, INTERMEDIate, and ADVANCE SCHOOLS; BY ALEXANDER K. BROWN, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, STATE UNIVERSITY OF N.Y., NEW YORK. IN ASSOCIATION WITH: THE PROGRAMMING TECHNOLOGY COORDINATORS, INC. NEW YORK, NY. WHERE: Riffs The songs' excessive lengths result in a surfeit of repetitions instrumental passages. The most of the songs, and there are only a few, the time, is covered by an instrumental filler is on the two-part "Pigs on the Wing," mainly because neither part is more than half a mile long. DESPITE THE repetition in its songs, "Animals" lacks any kind of unifying theme, either lyrically or instrumentally, in contrast to themes that ran through "Dark Z.Z. Top backs out of concert SUA has no plans for other concertes, Mason said. The group Z.Z. Top canceled their May 7 concert that was to be held in Allen Field House, Thorton Mason, SUA president, said yesterday. Z. Z. Top, a country rock band gave no reason for the cancelation, he said. COST CUTTERS 23rd & Alabama Meat items sold as advertised. None sold to dealers. Quantity Rights Reserved. Right to Limit, Please NOW OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Effective thru April 17 Kroger COST CUTTERS 23rd & Alabama Meat items sold as advertised. None sold to dealers. Quantity Rights Reserved. Right to Limit. Please NOW OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Effective thru April 17 Kroger Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE QT. MIRACLE WHIP With $10.00 in other purchases and coupon. Beer 6-12 oz. Cans OLYMPIA...$1.29 Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE MOUNTAIN DEW 8-16 oz. Bottles Plus Deposit Fresh Glazed DONUTS...doz. 99c Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE MONKS HI FIBRE BREAD Quarter Sliced PORK LOIN...lb. 79¢ Qt. of Coke FREE With the purchase of 8 pcs. Fried Chicken ... $2.49 Plus Deposit California NAVEL ORANGES...15 for $1 KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Miracle Whip Qt. Buy 1 GET 1 FREE. Limit one deal with $10.00 in other purchases excluding beer and cigarettes and this coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $1.15 KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Miracle Whip Qt. Buy 1 GET 1 FREE. Limit one deal with $10.00 in other purchases excluding beer and cigarettes and this coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $1.15 KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Jumbo Roll. Buy 1 GET 1 FREE. Limit one deal with $10.00 in other purchases excluding beer and cigarettes and this coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $1.15 KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Decorator Jars. Limit 4 per coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $50c KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Home Pride Plastic Broom. Limit 1 per coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $50c Kroger Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE QT. MIRACLE WHIP With $10.00 in other purchases and coupon Beer 6.12 oz. Cans OLYMPIA...$1.29 Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE HI DRI PAPER TOWELS With $10.00 in other purchases and coupon. Fresh Glazed DONUTS...doz. 99c Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE MONKS HI FIBRE BREAD Quarter Sliced PORK LOIN...lb. 79c Qt. of Coke FREE With the purchase of 8 pcs. Fried Chicken ... $2.49 Plus Deposit California NAVEL ORANGES CUTTER SPECIAL CUTTER SPECIAL Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE MONKS HI FIBRE BREAD Qt. of Coke FREE With the purchase of 8 pcs. Fried Chicken ... $2.49 Plus Deposit Quarter Sliced California KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Miracle Whip Qty. Buy 1. Get 1 FREE. Limit one deal with 1 coupon excluding beer and other purchases excluding beer and other purchases including coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $1.15 KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Hi Dipper Towels, Limit 1. Get 1 FREE. Limit one deal with $10.00 in on other purchases including brushes and cigarettes and good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $50c KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON Decorator Jars. Limit 4 per coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. Home Pride Plastic Broom. Limit 1 per coupon. Good thru April 17, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE $50c Selling something? Call us. The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358. I'm looking for a home where there's BABY BIRD - Swimming in a heated pool - Free utilities - Air conditioning - Laundry facilities - On campus living - Covered parking - Wall to wall carpeting I'm looking for a home at Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 Apartments 1603 W.15th 8 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 University Daily Kansan REGGIE IS A BOZO staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Reggie Jackson finds Royals Stadium unfriendly Sports Editor Home opener is late Royals' win By GARY VICE KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Monday Night Baseball almost became Tuesday morning baseball in Royals Stadium as the Royals and Yankees battled for 13 innings before John Mayberry singled home Fred Patek for a 5-4 victory. It's too bad the Royals home opener won't be in the running for any Oscars, because last night's nationally televised contest well win one for the best dramatic score. BOTH THE ROYALS and the Yankees made grand entrances, scoring in the first imining and keeping up the fast pace through the first five innings for a 4-4 score. Then pitchers Paul Splittorf and Mark Littell of the Royals and Dock Ellis and Sparkly Lyke played together on center stage and scoreless frames followed until Mavroy's run-scorring single. Mabyberry, who was 34-for-7, ripped a Dick Tidrow football off the top of the fence in right field to give the Royals the win over the Finland American League champions. Kansas City is now 40 and off to its fastest start in the club's history. New York is 13. Both clubs are off today before their two-game series concludes tomorrow night. FRED PATek HAD opened the 13th for the Royals by drawing a walk and had advance to the playground, sacrificing barge. George Brett intentionally walked by Tidrow to set up a possible inning-ending double play. Hal Meyers, not bringing, brought up Mayberry with two outs. Then Mayberry, who strides around the bases to the tune of "Big Bad John" booming over the public address system, is seated in a tent that contains on the three and one-half hour game. "Damm, I wanted a home run." Mayberry said between drags on a cigarette in the dressing room. "Oh well, they'll come. Just like tonight's game, the end had to come sooner or later. It's baseball—just a matter of time." Mayberry's hit was one of the few produced in the last eight innings as both teams were held in check by strong pitching. The Yankees had only two men reach base after the fifth—both on walks—and both were cut down trying to steal. THE ROYALS HAD the game's best opportunity to avoid extra innings when they loaded the bases in the seventh with no outs but were unable to score. Lyle, who pitched five scoreless innings in relief of Ellis, got out of the jam by retiring the next three Royals. He struck out pinch-hitter Cookie Rojas, got AI Cowen to force him out and by grounding third, and retired pinch-hitter Martinez on a fly to center. Royals manager Whitey Herzog rubbed SALE SALE AUDIOTRONICS BONANZA SALE CAR STEREO SALE! 1000 Car Stereos and Speakers Slashed to Once-in-a-Lifetime Prices! Audiotronics BORDER BANDIDO Texas Burrito EAT IN OR CARRY OUT now only Reg. 99¢ $1.59 The Yankees scored once in the top half of the first on a double by Thurman Manson and a single by Jim Wynn. The Royals did better than keep pace, however, by retaliating with a pair in the bottom half of the first and another in the second. The Yankees came up with two more in the top of the fifth, nearly chasing Splitterff from the mound with four hits, before Kansas City could come back and tie the game. Marshall Burrell Porter doubled off the left field was to score Mayberry from first in the fifth. REGGIE JACKSON, who patrolled right field in front of a "Reggie's box" banner, hit a towering home run in the fourth to right to pull New York within one. 3-2. Beth Boozer shot 82 and tied for second in the meet. Medalist honors went to Diane Dougherty of Stephens who shot 81. Charnell Hadl shot 85, Nancy Hoehn 87, Patrina Bomberg 88 and Jackie DeLong had 97 to finish the scoring for the Jayhawks on the windy day. The University of Kansas women's golf team finished just three strokes behind Stephens College of Columbia, Mo., 340-343, in a triangular meet at Alvamar Hills golf course Saturday. The University of Missouri was third with 356. "We were very concerned about Oklahoma." Gates said. "I feel that we proved that we can play singles with them by winning those three matches." "THAT SPARKY'S something!" Herzog said. "You know what he's going to throw at me?" his hands over the top of his head trying to explain what went wrong for his club in that MEXICO CITY "Bill has proved that he can beat everyone else in the league. This is the only team he beaten." Gates said. "The Big Eight. Every championship matchup goes down to these two." Women golfers 6th KU has a 13-8 record going into today's meets with K-Sate and Missouri. Gates is more concerned with the Tigers than he is with KSU. sided by many to be the strongest in the conference. 99c "I think everyone could have taken off a stroke here or there, and we might have beaten them," coach Nancy Boozer said. "We was pleased with the way we played." *R-STATE DID not have a team last year, whereas Missouri was one of the state's top teams.* The game was played before 39,460 fans—the second largest home opening crowd in Royal's history. But the Royal fans didn't present themselves very well for the television audience as numerous fights erupted in the stands. Gates said Clarke would have one of his toughest matches of the season when he hit a 20-foot shot from behind. Perhaps the biggest disappointment of the week, according to coach Kirkland Gates, was the play of Hosking at No. 2 singles. Hosking lost all three of his matches as his record sank to 14-7. He has lost six of his last nine wins. KU CAME back to defeat North Texas State Friday, 7-2. Clarke, Greg Boulder, Chet Collier and Ruyser all were winners in singles play as were the teams of Clarke and Mark Hosking and Buller and Lonnie Taylor in doubles. "MARK'S IN a slump," Gates said, "his play hurt because those No. 2 singles and No. 1 doubles are points KU desperately needs." Yankee manager Billy Martin commented on the crowd: "It's fine to come out and play in a game." But he wasn't nasty. There was a lot of swearing going on behind us. They don't have enough guts to get near the dugout and say anything. If they do, their heads knocked back into the stands." Offer good Mon., April 11 - Thurs., April 14 1528 W. 23rd across from Post Office 842-8861 On the brighter side was the play of KU's singles against Oklahoma, a team con- After finishing sixth in last week's Oklahoma City University tournament, the KU men's team returns to action this afternoon when it meets Kansas State and KU faced Oklahoma in the final meet Saturday and was defeated, 6-3. Clarke, Buller and Collier provided the points for KU, each winning their singles matches. Netters take sixth, face MU. K-State here today The Hawks started slowing, slowly losing their best meet to Oklahoma State in the second half of this season. 4. Only Bill Clark at No. 1, singles and Joe Ruyser at No. 6 singles were victorious for By ERIC MARTINCICH KU had a disappointing outing in the last week, when it lost two of three runs. Snorts Writer The Hawks will meet KSU at 1, and then play MU immediately afterwards. Both matches will be played on the Allen Field House courts. MARY QUANT 25% Off Soft machine lipstick in a stick, lucious lips, cheeky, eye gloss, gold gloss, peep eyes, mascara, nail polish, crayons "The perfect finishing touches for you from the Carousel." 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center 10:00-8:30 Mon.-Thurs. 10:00-6:00 Fri. & Sat. carousel BANKAMERICARD CAROUSEL CHARGE master charge THE COMPANY ONLINE master charge THE OPERATOR'S LAND Trust the Round Corner To have what you need Pro Double Duty Toothbrush 4 for 89¢ Cosmetics for you 6 Oz. Chloraseptic Spray Chloroseptic Amastatic Antibacterial $1.09 or 18's Lozenges 73¢ Cosmetics for you Bonnie Bell After sun lotion 3.50 Coconut tanning butter 2.25 Bronzer-glo 2.50 Johnson's 9 Oz. Baby Powder or 4 Oz. Baby Oil 93¢ Johnson's hair powder Johnson's baby oil New Javan Summer Fragrance "Eau Fresh" Spray mist cologne 4.00 Anti-spirant deodorant spray 2.50 Bubble bath 3.00 Moisturizing lotion 3.00 After splash 3.00 A Chantilly Special Houbigt bubbling bath gel 17 oz. free with any $5.00 Chantilly purchase. The two e outdis capt track L Arrid Extra Dry 8 Oz. Anti-Perspirant or 2½ Oz. Roll-On ARRID EXTRA DRY $113 ARRID u Alt the Wom coach with "A said. the ti Tw natio perfo Wich ta in ROUND CORNER DRUGSTORE Th for th own Ca one singl Astri doub Ka Miss and 801 Massachusetts 843-O2OO Tuesday, April 12, 1977 e y 9 gest in the d about I that we with them " to today's. Gates is than he is seam last the team of the states said. one of his when he was born. I single- can beat it the only "The Big might go 6th men's golf es behind , 340-343 Hills golf versity of second in to Diane 81. Char- 87. Pam had 97 works on the MERCICARD JSEL RGE charge www.jesel.com laken off a night have ozer said. way we ARRID Track team wins easily The Kansas Jayhawks in all but two events, amassed 173 points to easily outdistance Arkansas State and Oklahoma. The Jayhawks track title race Saturday in Joplin, Ark. Host Arkansas State finished with 104 points, and Florida was third with 71. KU's Cliff Wiley was named the out-standing performer in the meet, as he broke the meet record in the 200-meter dash, winning the event in 20.6 seconds. He also anchored the 440-yard relay team of Dave Blutchor, Anthony Coleman, Kniew Newell and himself to first place in a meet record time of 39.8 seconds. Wiley seconded to Arkansas State's Olympic sprinter Ed Carpenter, who dash but defeated armin in winning the 200. Other first-place finishes for the Jayhawks came from Steve R仁holt, who broke the meet record in the high jump with a leap of 7-4. George Mason in the 3,000-meter race called in the 806, and the mile relay team Whitaker, McCall, Blutcher and Jay Wagner, who broke another meet record, winning in 3:10.2. University Daily Kansan Women 4th at WSU; two qualify for AIAW Two KU sprinters qualified for the AIW national track meet by turning in strong performances Friday and Saturday at the Wichita State University Relais. Although the Jayhawks finished fourth in the meet behind Kansas State, Texas Women's University and Wichita State, KU women's coach said he was pleased with the results. "All in all we had a good meet," Lianvale said. "Our individuals are improving, and we're doing very well." The KU women's tennis team warmed up or the big Eight tournament by winning its first and only victory. Charmane Kuhlman ran the fastest 400 Kansas won the meet with 21 points. Kansas was next with 13, Kansas State 11 and Missouri 9. Women netters take easy win in invitational Dual meet scores also were kept but didn't count. KU defeated Missouri, 6-3, in the second round. Carrie Fotopoulos, the Jayhawks number one singles player, won all three of her singles and doubles matches to lead KU. She was named the MVP and doubles matches in the number six position. Daksa, who the season as KU's number two singles player, saw her first action sine she severly cutting a finger on her playing hand about four weeks ago. KU coach Kivisto said he was pleased with her effort. "Astrid played pretty good doubles," Kristivo said yesterday. "Her singles game allows her to play from the baseline and not go to the net. In doubles we were watching for signs of a weak wrist in her net play, she lookedok-a-vile little tired thought." In doubles action, Kiviši switched insems a few times to allow more KUI play. The opponent's KUU’s level of play because the Jayhawks wear nine its doubles matches and lost eight in theirs. The Big Eight tournament will be held April 15-16 in Lincoln, Neb. at the U.S. Military Academy. meters of her life and broke three records in the process as she won her preliminary heat under perfect weather conditions Friday night. KUHLMAN'S TIME® of 65.34 was nearly a full second better than her previous best, and besides breaking the KU record her first time since 1967, Relays record and a Cessna Stadium mark. The finals of the 400 were run in strong winds Saturday afternoon, and Kuhman小姐 had to retrieve her relay record of 56.17 that she set last year while running for Dodge City Junior Sheila Calamse also qualified for the autumnal Saturday, turning in her best time of year. Calamese won her preliminary Friday with a 12.26 clocking but had to settle for second in the finals although she ran an 11.43. Kansas State's Jan Smith won the event, beating Calamese by less than a tenth of a second. IN OTHER action Friday night Jayhawk distance runner Laura Murahy captured second and set a school record in the 5,000 meters, running a 19:20.8 Terry Anderson, a KU graduate assistant, won the 5,000 with a 16:32.7. Bunita Bassa won her preumuntay year in the 100 meter hurdles and then broke a school record in the finals while finishing third with a time of 15.01. the rest of the Jayhawk's 56 points came from the two-mile relay team of Seena Frame, Kim Glasgow, Jennifer Howe and Brown, which finished third in the event. Brown also finished fifth in the 1500, and Connie Lane was fifth in the 400 in 1932. Soccer Club wins The KU soccer club defended a squad sponsored by the Wheaton Swimming in Swope Park,奢华 City. Mo. Felipe Santos scored two of KU's goals, and Monsour Tahzeradeh accounted for the team's victory. All 17 players that traveled with KU played in the game, and coach Bernie Mullin said the game was very well played and generate enthusiasm for the Jayhawks. How to attract the opposite dex Let your feet tell people where your head is at. Tie on a pair of DEX by Dexter—big-bottomed shoes with sole. All in soft, supple, no-phony Nature Hide™. They're the absolute last word in Uni-Dex styling. And they're for both men and women DEXTER Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass Coach Bob Timmons was pleased with his squad's performance. DEXTER Arensberg's = Shoes "When you go to a meet like that," Timmons said, "all your people are important. In a Relays meet, the feeling's not the same. It was a good team effort." Jay Reardon finished second in the lenght jump and picked up a fourth in the high. Mason, who will run in the Boston Marathon next Monday, also picked up a four place in the 5,000-meter to go along with his steppechase victory. Teammate Joshua Gay was the second. Other Jayhawks who performed well were John Rosceo, who placed second in the steeplechase; Glenn Harter, second in the 1,500-meter; Coleman, second in the 110-meter high hurdles with a time of 13.7 seconds, and Wagner, second in the 400-meter sixth in the 400-mintermediate hurdles, by teammate Jimmy Little took third. The only two events the Jayhawks, who now have a week off before hosting the Kansas Rangers, failed to score in were the discus and the pole vault. KU's best pole vaulter, junior Tad Scales, sat out the meet recovering from a sore hamstring. "I think it will be good for us," he said. "We can get ready for the Kansas Relays and not have to get up for a meet next weekend." Timmons is glad his squad has next weekend off. By GARY BEDORE SportsWitness KU nine wins two, loses two Sports Writer The KU baseball team discovered this problem with a difference in degrees. On Saturday, the Jayhawks swept a doubleheader from Kansas State, 5-1 and 4-1, looking unbeatable in the process. The 'Hawks played errorless ball in the sweep and received complete game pitching from Brian Ribocks and Terry Sutcliffe. Yesterday, however, the Wildcats turned things around, beating Kansas 10-7 and 10-6. Kansas committed nine errors in the two games, but neither team were pounded for twenty runs on 26 hits. Jayhawk coach Floyd Temple said there was no way to explain the team's turnaround. IN YESTERDAY'S first game, Dave Rusch, the losing pitcher, now 3-2, was in trouble right from the start. Kansas State scored on a double and two innings, helped by four Jawahk errors. "When you're dealing with young people, "nothing makes sense," Temple said after the double loss yesterday, "One day we la, lift and catch well, and today all w could Even with the early errors, the score was 3-4 after two innings. In the Jayhawk's first, Vince Monsoil walked to start out. After Ron MacDonald defiled out, Monsoil broke for second base on a hit and run, and Lee Ickhoff an infilt tap where Jon Yeagley hit a home run. With runners on first and second and out, Brian Moyer hit a high drive to center field that dropped for a double, scoring two goals. With a double, scoring the 'Hawks third run. K-STATE KNOCKED out Rush in the third inning as he gave up two more runs without getting anyone on. Rick Bidman broke out at first and then put out the inning after giving up four runs. In the damaging inning, the Wildcats sent 11 men up to the plate and scored six runs, ending in a 7-6 victory. With the score, 9.4, KU played back on a two-run home run by Brian Moyer-His second in two games. Bogdan retired the deficit, but couldn't overcome the deficit, losing 10-7. In the second game yesterday, K-State, behind 16 singles and five KU errors, knocked around Clay Christensen, 3-3, the losing pitcher, and reliever Kevin Kerschner for ten more runs. The hitting highlight for KU in this game was a two-run homer by Mandel. For the day, KU hit three home runs, by Moyer, Stan Messner and MacDonald. THE JAYHAWKS, who are now 13-10-1, played a different kind of baseball on Saturday, in a sweep of their own. The Hawks won three games, stealing nine times in the two games. Temple decided to run on the Wildcats when starting catcher Craig Cooper was forced to play first base because of a sore arm. Replacement Jon Yeagley had caught only three times in his college career. Brad Lawson caught in game two. Out of the nine runs scored during the 5-1, 4-1 wins, five reached second base by stealing. KU now has 23 stolen bases for the year—eight short of a team record. IN THE SECOND win, freshman Terry Sutliffe threw a five hitter. IN THE FIRST game Saturday, a four-run fourth inning by the "Hawks provided the necessary offense" by Lee Ice, triple by Andy Glmore, and RBI single by Heinrich were the highlights of the outburst. Glmore's triple was his fourth season, teeing a KU单季-season run. After today's doubleheader in which Stan Messner and Greg Thurman are scheduled to pitch for KU, the Hawks return Friday to the Royals for doubleheader against Iowa State. Men golfers eighth The University of Kansas men's golf team paired edged in the 14-in Team Great Plains tournament. The Jayhawks had a total of 693 for the 54 holes, six strokes behind seven place K. Oklahoma State State the invitational. Oklahoma State and Iowa State also finished ahead of KU in the meet. Jim Dylem shot a 299, and Bill Grows had a 240 to lead the Jayhawks. Big 8 Softball Tournament at Holcomb Sports Complex (Back of Park 25 apts.) April 15-16 Nebraska GAMES DAILY Friday 2:30-7 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Championships 5:15 p.m. Saturday ADMISSION Friday $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Saturday Early Session $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Championships $1.00 Adults $ .50 Children 12 and under Tournament Pass $3.00 Adults $1.50 Children 12 and under DEODORANT TAMPONS 30 tampons CAUTION: CAUTION: DEODORANT TAMPONS 30 tampons CAUTION: Before you buy a deodorant tampon, read the "caution" on the package. It tells you to discontinue use and consult your physician if irritation develops or if you have a history of sensitivity or allergies. Now, ask yourself if you want to take this risk with your body. There is no warning on a Tampax tampon package You wont find any warning on the Tampax tampon package. A deodorant, or cover-up scent, which may cause allergic reactions or be harmful to delicate tissues is unnecessary. When a tampon is in use, embarrassing odor does not form. So why take chances with something that isn't needed? What's more, the Tampax tampon container applicator like the tampon is flushable and biodegradable. It's as safe to dispose of as a few sheets of facial tissue You can't say this about plastic applicators. And unlike some other tampons, Tampax tampons expand in all three directions—length, breadth and width—to adjust to your inner contours so that the chance of leakage or bypass is minimal. No wonder Tampas tampons are the #1 choice of millions of women around the world. TAMPAX Lunches 40 no 30 the same amount TAMPAX fruits & vegetables 40 Super FOR INTERNAL HISTORY MAIN MENU PACK ECONOMY PACKAGE MASS ONLY BY FINANCIAL INCORPORATED FALCON MASS MASS ONLY BY FINANCIAL INCORPORATED FALCON MASS 10 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 University Daily Kansan NCAA fighting sex rules KANSAS CITY, KM. (Ap) The National College Athletic Association told a judge yesterday that the federal government should be prevented from enforcing regulations against sex discrimination in athletics because they are too broad. "this means," said Charles Clarke, attorney for the NCAA, "that a Big Eight school that gets a $10 federal music scholarship would be forced to alter its football program—which is entirely self sufficient and not receiving federal assistance—to comply with the wording of the HEW regulations. This would upset the financial budgets of nine out of 10 NCAA institutions." BOTH SIDE's indicated that U.S. District Judge Earl O'Connor would take three months before issuing a decision. The arguments yesterday were on pretrial motions. Both sides are asking that the case be decided in their favor without trial. The NCAA, composed of more than 700 colleges and universities nationwide, has a large student body. Olympic gold medalist to throw in Relays The only athlete ever to win four Olympic gold medals in the same event will compete for the silver medal. Al Oerter, a KU graduate, won the gold medal in the discus at the 1968, 1969, 1974 and 1976 Olympics, a major meet since the 1969 Kansas Relays, but he announced last June that he was going to make a comeback. His goal is to make the U.S team for the 2010 Olympics in London. "I'm more enthusiastic than ever" over "45-year-old Olerter said. "I believe that our community is doing a great job." Oterer entered a masters (40 and over) meet in Raleigh, N.C., last week and unleashed a throw of 197 feet—almost three times as many as in losing toss at the 1960 Olympics in Rome. OERTER WILL compete on the final day of the Retails against a talented group of professionals. for a declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction against enforcement of 1975—the Al Oster Discus Throw. Track conduct and direct director Bert Himmons and producer Peter L. Bohlen. "We're really thrilled to have Al back," Timmons said. "I think it’s one of the great stories in track and field that an athlete who has won four Olympic gold medals is making a comeback to try for number five. The youngest teammates, and were just glad he’s returning." During a two-year period from 1962 to 1964, Oeerer, now a communications engineer living with the family in West Isle, died suddenly on April 20, 2015. He discussed. He owned the world mark four times in that span, with his final shot of 206-6 coming in April, 1964, at the Mount San Bernardino ski resort. The NCAA contends that the HEW regulations are worded in such a way that any educational institution receiving federal financial assistance of any type must object to withdrawal of federal funds if sex discrimination were predicated in athletics. As a collegian, Oerter, who stands 64 and weighs 270 pounds, won NCAA titles in 1957 and 1958. He won the Big Eight championship in 1956, 1957 and 1958. He took all three legs of the Midwest Relays circuit—the Texas, Kansas and Drake Relays. All three years he was a variety performer—a feat no one has matched. "THE NCAA has no quarrel with women's athletics," Clarke added. "But if these regulations are allowed to stand, it will give the University of Michigan grants, it would have to grant one field hockey scholarship. And last year the revenue generated by Michigan football program paid for every space in the university's department, including women's athletics." "IN SEVERAL ways, federal assistance is absorbed by athletic departments and physical education departments," Thornton said. "Maybe not direct payments, but maintain payments are used to buy and maintain equipment and build huge physical plants." Jacock Thornley, attorney for HEW, argued that athletic departments are not as self-centered as the courts. Intervengers in the case on the side of the government included the Association of Intercollegiate Women for the Senate, the University Studies Institute, and attorneys included six women, all seated at the government table, and at one point Connor interrupted the proceedings. "I looks to me," he said with a wry smile, that from the makeup of each side's shoulder, it might have been her own. "That's not what it is, your honor!" she said, "that government would have you believe it is." "We believe an individual institution should have the right to say how its money is allocated." Tough weekend for softballers Sinclair kept her perfect record in tac by attempting to use GMS. She is 50. Graves was the losing pitcher in the first game. Her record is now 3-2. Hernandez got her first starting assignment in the second game and took the loss for an 0-1 record. KU PLAYED three games Friday—losing to Illinois State, 6-3, and to Missouri, 1-4, but not losing at home. Things just didn't go well for the KU softball team this weekend. The Jayhawks went into the two-day Southwest Missouri State Invitational in Springfield, MO, with a 6-4 record, but lost to Iowa, where teams were entered in the tournament. getting the win over CMS. She is now 5-0. Graves and Bravis also pitched for KU in the Saturday game against Oklahoma State, and the Jayhawks lost, 4-3. Yesterday, KU split a doubleheader with Northwest Missouri State in Maryville, Mo. The 'Hawks won the first game, 40, with Shelley Sinclair picking up the win. Northwest Missouri State came back to win the second game, 21. Paula Hernandez, northwest Missouri State, gave the game to the Jayhaws but gave the loss. Gloria Graves who absorbed the loss. Gathering in a circle on the playground at Corday Elementary School, 1837 Vermont St., the children began to warm up. They stretched their muscles preparing for the day's workout, and awaited coaches' instructions. KSU defeats KU ruggers HUGS OFTEN were given after a good jump or a long throw. But encouragement didn't come from volunteers only. The children themselves clapped and cheered for each other. Yet, typical of most athletes, the competitive spirit was still present. As the children trained for the 50-yard dash, the softball throw, the standing broad jump and the 404-relay, each effort and improvement was warmly encouraged by volunteers from the community, many of whom are University of Kansas students. The children were practicing Thursday afternoon for the Special Olympics, an international track and field program held in the spring and summer for the mentally retarded. It is sponsored by the Joseph Kennedy Jr. Foundation. Staff Reporter IN THE SECOND half, the Wildcats had the wind behind them, but KU kug in on several occasions to prevent tries when K-State was close to the Jayhawks' goal. This fun and hard work in a prelude to the local, regional and state Special Olympiclympics. Early in the half KU surprised the Wildcats as it nearly seceded a try, but KU overwhelmed. Jayhawk's coach Kieltya said the condition of the field had a lot to do with the injuries and many players were already in the latter series, which made them more injury-or-porre Bv JANET WARD "MINE WENT the farthest," she said. "You can never catch mine." the final K-State try was scored by Rocky Osborne, who kicked the ball deep into KU territory, recovered the lost ball and ran for the try. At the softball throw, Nancy jumped up and down. In the B-team game, Kansas State held off the Jayhawks late in the game to secure a 8-6. Kansas State's Rugby Club took advantage of a strong wind in the second half to defeat the KU Rugby Club, 12-0, Saturday at 2rd and Iowa streets. As the children lined up to race, one girl shouted, "I'm going to heat everybody." "Oh no, you won't," another insisted. After the race, they ran back on the starting line. The Jayhawks kept play mainly in the Wildcats' end of the field in the first half, but two penalty kicks tried by Kelly McGillvray were wide of the mark. The heat, wind and hard playing surface took its toll on both teams, but more so on the team's rosters. The Jayhawks, who have already lost several players so far this spring, got another blow when their hooker Dan Katz broke out of a tight game. The KelkaVa also was hurt in the game. A regional meet is scheduled for April 30 at Wandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan. May 7, there will be a local meet at Haskell Indian Junior College stadium Nevertheless, KU played an inspired match against the stronger Wildcats, especially in the opening 40 minutes that ended in a scoreless tie. Special Olympics has rewards Jack Meyers got the first Wildcat try and he held on with a time, twisting run through the crowd. The state meet will be June 34 at KU's Memorial Stadium, where about 1,500 are immortal. ABOUT 110 participants, ranging in age from 8 to 73, are expected to compete locally this year, according to Rick Chambers, coordinator of the local program sponsored by the Douglas County Association for Retarded Citizens. Practice sessions, which run from the middle of March to the local meet, are being conducted at the Cottonwood Inc. Workshop, 2801 W. 31st St., the Wakaura Manor Inc., 1800 W. 27th St. and the Eudora public schools. Competition is divided by age and sex to allow participants to compete against those of the same ability, he said, and training is geared to the individual. Usually only basic concepts are taught, he said, but some are able to learn more ad- PARTICIPATION IS the key to the program, Chambers said, and anyone can enter. "It's not necessary to qualify for the regional or state meets," he said, "but you must participate in the regional meet to go to the state." The purpose of the Special Olympics is to LEASING NOW “It’s the only chance he have to get involved in something outside the school and home in any organized fashion,” he said. If you desire a pleasant place to live, and if your parents will sign the contract then you may qualify for a very special program at Park 25 apartments. Move in now, June 1st or August but do plan your move to Park 25 Apartments. 2410 W. 25th St. give the retarded a chance to compete in athletics, Chambers said. CHAMBERS SAID that most of the participants had competed for the past two years. TRAVEL TRAVEL TRAVEL TR TRAVEL TRAVEL TRAVEL TRAVEL TRAVEL TRA TRAVEL TRAVEL TRAVEL TR OWL SOCIETY One girl stood quietly and watched others throw the softball. A volunteer approached her and said, "Angela, do you want to come jump?" How would you like to organize a SUA trip? Skiing, Backpacking, Sports, Bahamas. Canoe, Padre Island (and many others) PARK 25 Only a few of the children at Cordray have participated in the special Olympics. Chambers said, but even those who don't enter them still enjoy the practice sessions. Junior Men's Honorary Organization Applications available in Alumni Association Office, Rm. 403, Kansas Union. Call SUA office for Info. 864-3477 Deadline for interview-April 13th Applications due Friday, April 15 "Many of them wear their T shirts and medals year-round," he said. Sandals Several styles to choose from like: Pedwin A SMILE quickly crossed her face. "Oh, I'd love to," she said. The City Commission last week approved the Bowersock contract, which gave the city control of part of the land and the option of maintaining the Bowersock dam. Leather Hurrache style with long wearing tire-tread sole. Sizes 7 to 13. 15.95 ANOTHER SECTION of the land is owned by Fibreboard, Inc. and is now involved in a lawsuit. The decision on the city hall probably will await the outcome of the court case because commissioners have come up with plans to use as a parking area for the city hall. Pedwin BALBOA (smooth) Bowersock The decision whether to build a new city ball probably will be made in the next year. From page one would tie in well with Riverfront Park, now being developed. The section of Massachusetts Street adjacent to the Bowersock Mill was the only block in the central business district untouched by a 1972 renewal project, which provided widened sidewalks, trees, lighting and improved parking. Other aspects of Design Build's plans call for meeting room in addition to other city, office Settlement in the case might be as far as eight months away. Clark said. Kahn will research and teach at the University College of London from January to June of 1978 and study the Structuralist movement which occurred in architecture from 1948 to 1963. Both Bays and Kahn plan to write books their findings after they finish their projects. Soft leather sandal with tire-tread sole. Sizes 6-13 13.95 CHICO 18 mccoy shoes A SERIES of multilevel plazas would lead from Massachusetts Street to the riverfront. East of the city hall would be a plaza, commercial rental space and a parking area. The Bowersock contract said the city must decide within six months after the property title closure if a city hall is to be built there. If the city hall is built there, the land will cost the city $1. If it isn't built there, the cost will be $25,000. 813 Mass. 843-2091 Bays said he would research the impact that the late 19th century missionaries had in changing the cultural and social history of China. The Fulbright-Hays awards, made on a competitive basis, are given by the Board of Foreign Scholarships and the State Department. master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Academia Sinica is the Republic of China's national research institute. Two professors awarded Fulbright-Hays accolades Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here Pedestrians would be able to walk from Massachusetts Street or from the adjacent river park areas into the city hall, and the powerhouse would be visual attractions. Two University of Kansas faculty members have accepted Fulbright-Hays awards, which will fund their research in foreign countries. Award winners receive funds for round-trip travel to the countries they visit, a living allowance and money for research. For the program is provided by Congress. The awards have been accepted by Daniel Bays, associate professor of history and associate professor of East Asian studies, and the School of Architecture and Urban Design. Bays said recently that he would do research at the Academia Sinica, Taipei; and then be a professor at Stanford. Summer Employment Royal Prestige needs students to supplement summer work force $250^{00} per week Student Union - International Rm. Wed., April 13 - 12:30, 2:30 or 4:30 For further info., come to: Student Union - Oread Rm. Thurs., April 14 - 1:00 or 3:00 CLAS Accor ment as are off sex. co BRING MICHAEL Relax next fall—move to Naismith Halll Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features. Naismith Hall Cane studen mule, available Sparrow on big 456-ST Person rescue Reserv or me too la Kitche the n Verme 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 1 union Apart no pe Front Studio with drape door furry turns 4444. they have nuropics, who don't sessions. d others roached to come KANSAN WANT ADS approved the city option of the city after the is to be here, the can't built is owned in a city hall the courtlive con- parking China's e impactaries had 1 history at the January facturalist architecture ite books ish their ade on a Board of e State Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race or national origin. BRIING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times times thrice times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional $2.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS word ___ .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Friday Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Saturday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. If an item can be picked in person or by calling the UDX Business office at 864-3538. Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special discounts for students. Tours include: 4-hour bike ride $20 per person. Other trips: 15-minute boat trip $35 per person. Sparrowhawk Camp, Leo Route 72 mile north on highway 30. Tableauville, Oklahoma 74451 (818) www.canoeingamerica.org Persons interested in joining campus future research club call 849-840 or 841-2121 evening. ENTERTAINMENT FOR RENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 600 inquiries, no groups will be denied. All rooms are Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in the new newsroom across the Bldg. at 8th and 11th floors. 842-894-3044 for info. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, nets, pots 843-767. if 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to union, utilities paid, parking. 933-0799 Gatlowhouse Apartment - Call Becky now. Summer. contracts on all Gatlowhouse apartment. Call Bail- dock at 212-480-3525. Merritts, grad. upperclassman, quiet directive, advocacy. Bachelors, 1803-1905; most likely more recent. 1603 Tennesse. *Ask for materials* and advice. Frontier Ridge—short term lease available, furnished with study. Heated indoor pool + shag carpet + study room + balcony pool + disposal + polyrhine facilities + furnished and unfurnished from $75; Call 822-690-1010 or visit www.frontierridge.com CARPET CLEANING STEAMAX. Call collect. $5 lower rent. Rental locations. Call collect. 1-800-326-7492. 3-bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- able possible remotion for labor 445-526 (526-539) Summer sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartement, with air conditioning, call 841-8632. Call 841-8632. Call 841-8632. Submitting apartment. It has 1 bedroom. Come by 351 Fireplace Drive, Apt. 1, after 3.00 p.m. Bukhane - summer furnished-21-bedroom/AC close to campus and downsourds 128m² more for rent. bathroom for numbers 3-8 bedrooms btw apartments with option to review lease. Call 843-3294 to order. Formalized, a delivery apartment, $70/mi. utilities, electricity, water, gas, and sewer, 10 km by 5 km, to 1542 feet. Apartments 2 upfront. Fully furnished, private suite, 10 min. to university. Sublime studio apartment for summer. Quint for study, outdoor activities, central air, all-18 *** Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center Furnished and unfurnished, laundry facilities, waxing pool, office furniture, more information ease please call 913-265-9029 or 913-265-7407 please call 913-265-9029 or 913-265-7407 Subletting furnished studio apartment, all atti- tudes paid for summer months. $190 Calm. Sulhasee - Formerly studios apartment, Mid May Sulhasee - Formerly studios apartment, Mid May A.M. Bedroombottle, next to pool, tennis courts and gym. AIRFRAME WATERbeds THE FIELDS AVAILABLE AT STORE 712 MASS ST. YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 15 East 8th, 841-7656 Make your plant bloom. Applications are now available for all major soil types and fast-growing fast 'b' by the company and complete with a FREE 30-day trial. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday Furnished room, utilities paid, share bath, refrigerator, close to campus, 329 Indiana, 4-15 Bobbies-Louisville townhouse, three huge bed rooms, flat screen TV, fireplace, garage. 914-385-3888 4-18 Sublease for the summer-1-bedroom apartment. furnished Call 841-584. 4-18 Wanted two girls to subdue Traitance Townhouse $80. Mo plus 4'½ units. Call 623-5287. To subside we must move. Beautiful 3 bedroom apartment with large master suite will give up wife with no deposit. Phone call 914-268-7050. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 843-893-0 or stop by 163 W. 7th St. 8:30 - 3:30, Friday - Saturday. Two-bathroom apartment with all bills paid, mo- tions in and out. 360 sq ft. $173.40 per sq. $85.93 per sq. or come to 853-993-2000 New 1 bedroom apartment built for fall on, off the great location by the stadium. Call 843-652-6700. Nice, 1-bedroom apartment. For May June July Nice, 1-bedroom apartment. Block from Union, $85 Nice, 601-400, 611-400 2-bedroom apartment, 2 beds from Union, $165 plus utilities, 843-703. Available immediately. FOR SALE Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization series to be received. 2. For Answeration, 3. For Exam preparation. 'New Analysis' of Western Civilization' available now at New Outlook. Alternator, starter and generator. Speakers. Aluminum housing for BELL ALU ELECTRIC 645-800, 900-800, 1000-800. We are the only Full Line Branchless Crown dealer in Kanaas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crownt system, speakers room at Audio Systems, 12th Flr, Rhode Island. 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition $225. $86-1537 4-14 1970 Kawasaki 500, front license plate, electronic transmission, manual gearshift with burgundy rack, real lifesize at $000. Call 866-234-1234 or visit www.kawasaki.com. INFINITY 3000 B Spikers, 5 year warranty, lift kit for $120 plus both sell. Call Brian J41-646-8367 or $120 plus both sell. Call Brian J41-646-8367 1972 Opel GT, blue, low mileage, air conditioning, automobile, luggage rack, good tires plus snow, excellent condition, 25-30 mile, withoutderter, $250, kit Call. Jef 845- 6455 64 Chevy impala-good, inexpensive transportation; runs good; call John 914-5367. 4-13 Ludwig Pro-Bat演场 set w cases, excellent condition. Call 843-769-1769 4-13 Galaxy P-40 Steel-string guitar Same 800 grit texture as Galaxy P-30. Tailpiece in black with gold accents. Two 31 B1 strings with Plush picks and Plush strings. String weight is 25 lbs. Fender steel guitar with case, $50, Mitch 843-8454 4-12 AIRP 2600 Synbyster, 15 month old. Also U.S. divers schutz tank and regulator, call kick. RH-853 RH-853 1975 Bultena Frontera "667" Better Forks w/W 419 new pldn, iron, 130 ft. treads 4-14 4-14 1974 Snow Mk3 Mayflower Sailboat 11F, four hubs, eight adults, 325 Negotiable call; 341 11F, 4-125 8-412 1972 Sukurai 380 GT, needs work. $150 firm. BUM 864-6305. **4-13** 1974 Gold Duster - PB, DB, AC, AM-8, 7-track, quaker maze, spike brush, spidewheel, wheels, excavator tank, digger Honda 205F (superior) airport 18725, 6万公里里程, fairingway (superior) airport 9123, 6万公里里程, wafer way, fairingway (superior) airport 24, 4 hours 2 bicycles. 21" in-road Penelope UO-18, Manly 3 bicycles. 21" road Penelope UO-18, condition 841-308 or 842-402 4 - 13 5 bicycles. 21" in-road Penelope UO-18, Manly condition 841-308 or 842-402 1975 Honda CB-125 plus 2 hp engines- 76cc Honda CB-125 plus 2 hp engines- 76cc Call Carydell at 843-994-191. 4-15 Pioneer XS64 receiver ~$155, $130 r truck deck Pinellier XS64 receiver ~large selection of tape $25 Baltimore B14-2291 Baltimore B14-2292 Medical students microcurese, Zeiss Biocinal, Excellent condition call 842-896-7267 4, +15 HP 35 calculator like new, only $80. Please call Mike, 542-2584 4-19 Yard Sale Fri. and Sat, 15 and 12, 1138 Miss Yard sale damn good jig. Peggy. 4-15 1972. Vega Batchback AT, AC, AM-FM Good-4 reasonable price, reasonable phone: 664-181-854 73 Plymouth (Duster) available June 1. 4-14 excellent condition, 842-0190. **Note:** Dusters are sold individually. Dodge Polara 71 full power, excellent condition. 8-13 547-4006 JAMES GANG Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 304 Locust Foreign Auto Parts Imported Auto Parts HEADQUARTERS for Set of four new 13W 13 steel belted radials only $128. Other new radials from $69 each. Rex Payne. Must sell. Schwinn Continental 10-watered, JBL L-100-l speaker, deluxe king size watered, in fantastic elevated frame, Koss H 4.1 headphone. Macy's. Baseball cap. Mark B4-8291@aol.com 6:00 p.m. 4-15 Final call on C.B. Bailin's and Antarctica Some Bank's 299.799 shares. 299 open times. U.S. BIL 30 85.214. Cain Carteau Tape recorders final cut to $35 from New York, NY. Cain's MIDI recorders to $40 from Boston, MA. 999 Music Works, Thirteenth Street, 167 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10018. 10 speed Pewan motorcycle, low mileage, many garages and friends. Hold friend license. $109, $144, $184, every month. RADIAL THE CLEARANCE 148 x 15 x 138 x 13 PETV Monitoring and available services PETV Monitoring and available services 73 Mazda RX-3 Auto, Air Stierre 9 trakw. Low Mazda perfect shape,马车 841-6026 www.mazda.com Brand new stem arrest, 110 watts, RMS, fastness spec just verified by IMS 84-9999, evening release. Hearley-Davidson 250, 100 ml, no timed tint condition. $500, $832-9999, conditions 4-18 Men or women. We need 5 people immediately. Mark have a transportation and will be willing to travel. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-3100 Craig. Will head to job site for employment. 4-14 1975 Yumira Enduro 400, excellent shape 206-4 call. M42-5253-583 HELP WANTED Axon selling can help you earn money for college expenses. Home, Call Me. Sell Me. Credit cards. Information center accept applications for the following forms: April 15. App 100 Strong. 4-15 Office of Information Systems, Univ. of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. Operate computer for half-time employment during Spring and Fall semesters—full time during summer on Sat., 7:00-10:00 Mon through Thurs., and from Sat., 10:00-2000 Mon through Thurs., and from Sat., 2000-1000 Mon to Sat. Req. most experience as computer operator, knowl of basic hardware and software, computer and peripheral equipment, including wiring methods, ability to read and understand basic computer language, edge of tape and disk funding procedures, and programmer skills. Req. experience in programming and program error error protection on operating system. For appointment call Larry Kinsler or submit resume to Mgr. of Computer Operations, Summerhill Campus, CAMPUS. Applicable deadline: April 12, 1987. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY ASSIGNMENT IS PROVIDED TO SOMES WITH DISABILITIES ENCOURAGED TO Summer job for married couple. Must have a car. Time June to start in Augt 1, August or Sep 1. Required: Chicago, New York $120 wif for couple. Type maintenance work, ote. living Quarters. Your type maintenance work, ote. living Quarters. Your type maintenance work, ote. living Quarters. Apply in writing to Raymond Cert. 1000 Sunset Drive, giving references and other relevant RELEASE. (E-3) Need a good part time job tell school's out. Apply in person at Heavy Eddy's 507, W19. 80th after 3:30 p.m. located on the Wheel. Deliver equipment to clients. Pay $250 plus $25 per hour. Will train. May 4-15 Avon open territory in Lawyers. Avon If you want to prove a fact, you can then profitably sell your famous works of writing. Office of Information Systems, Univ. of KS (Lawrence campus) is seeking inventory technicians and full time during summer. Requirements include the ability to work a day or two, available to work Saturdays and Sundays during enrollment periods, have a current driver, have received instruction and to maintain records. Prefer instruction and to maintain records. Work schedule flexibility to accommodate 2-4 days per week. Position requires work schedule flexibility to accommodate 2-4 days per week. Mar., Mar. of Computer Operations 863-364, or submit resume to Mar. of Computer Operation 863-364, Amphitheater Hall, Univ. of KS CAMPUS Appliance Mall, Univ. of KS CAMPUS PortUNITY EMPLOYER-WOMEN MINIHOUSE PORTUNITY EMPLOYER-WOMEN MINIHOUSE WITH DISABLED COUAGED TO APPLY 4-12 Applications are now being taken for the position of Resident Director and Assistant Resident Officer at Nassau College, New York, beginning december 1. Job descriptions and applications are available from the Nassau Hall Main Business Office. Please contact the office directly for details. Applications must be received in the Business Office by April, May 15, 1977, EQUAL OPERATION; 626-308-2000. SUMMER JOB'S. Forced service. How where, Mountain Co. P.O. Box 727, Mount Moriah, 38009 ATTENTION SUN WORKSHIPPERS. Eighty-a man, twenty-eight women and twenty-nine children demand meals, breakfasts and fry cooks to equip their staff to comfortably in good time hiring available Company workers. 100-250 Lake Jacket, Missouri; 600-999 Oak Ridge, Missouri; 800-1725 Baker Valley, Missouri Need intramural track official for meet on Saturday, 4th April 16th from 8 a.m. at Horizon Education Center Part-time费 $95 per week for 20 hours, male or female over 18 on mercury. Call 848-762-4744 or 848-762-4743 DEADBOLTS INSTALLED MORRIS Director- PRINTING SERVICE director, University of Kansas Printing Service. Lawrence, KS. Resumes with annual volume about 1.5 million, and 60,000 copies annually for modern management systems for estimating. Must have 3 years experience in managing print job requests. Must degree in printing plant management deserves a bachelor's degree. Please apply only. Serial application to Dr Russell Mills. University Director for Support Services, University of Kansas. Applicant number 66107. Application deadline, May 9, 1997. An individual qualifies if they are a Qualified man and women of all races are enlisted. BARN PROGRAMMERS—two 14th-grade positions with the division of program library, responsible with the distributed program library. The position consists of responsibilities in placement and identification areas. Responsibilities include describing maintenance in transition of program library content to ensure that programs are available at University of Kansas with undergraduate or graduate students on the Home Library or their HLSI experience with PORTMAN programming; knowledge of English, mathematics, computer science; Design Qualifications. Computer Science knowledge; Desired Qualifications. Computer Science knowledge; DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS. Java 2012 University of Kansas Compatibility Benchmark. knowledge of statistics, monthly language, Java, JDBC, JVM, JMX. January 8, 2017, University of Kansas Computation Center, Barrett Hall, 1897 S. Pennsylvania Avenue, August 16, 1917 THE COMPUTATION CENTER QUALIFIED MEN AND WOMEN OF ALL RACES Student artificee engineer wanted to produce spices and working drawings for energy saving homes from our ideas. Knowledge of pottery, baking and calligraphy. Call before 20 anytime. 913-415-2581. LOST AND FOUND Leaf tape 1977 pocket calendar containing informa- tions about the return. Put it重复 four. Mike 842-3467 LOST: $1000 000 CASU! You can find it, you can listen to Titanic Hunt Causus on 1988-05-27 710 Mass. 843-2182 Found a key with N. 681 on it. Found in front of Flint Hall if it is yours, at bkay at 844-792-3050. NSTUDENT CLERK TYPER. Responsibilities include investigating, filing other duties as assigned. Registered personnel in a position may interact with other staff and visitors. Accurate attendance, meeting times, and occasional Saturday meetings are required; currently enrolled student at the University of Kentucky or University of Kansas Computation Center. April 15-19, 2017 THE COMPUTATION CENTER MAIN LINE FOR QUESTIONS ON QUALIFIED MEN AND WOMEN OF ALL RACES HAVE TO APPLY. Lost-Glasses in Inward case. Brown plastic tray. Call Chatline: 8425-2531 or 8425-8509. Reward: $500. Lost-Blue gray skirt, white with brown stripes, 21 inches Wide at 3.30 on C1, Call Miami. 100% polyester. Found-Vernon-Kelly, I found your billboard Call Dave Corman 864-293-0100 4-12 Found-German shepherd, older dog, brown eyes, white fecal color, inside black Cell MH-25. Lost: Blue workbook, embroidered; left at 19th and 20th floors, Lusitanian landmark. March 25 Settlement of the House of Commons. Medium size short part Norwegian Elkhorn. At Mark I Arrivals Phone at 811-654-3700 Lost—19 cookies. If found, please return to Loot-Kit. Arroweye Can BE FURNISHED. April 14 - 15 (Saturday) Lost-Silver bracelet with Tiger Eye stone 4-18 balde 541-1506 or 842-469) 4-18 Found. Kodachrome slide in front of Front Hall. Claim at 249 Sack. Ask for George Found Frog Trophy, with Brass plaque. Call Frog or Julienne at 861-3439 and identify initials. Last. Ladies yellow-gold watch. Has white, aqua squares, with on nonuners. Sentinela- tion 25mm. $39.99. Ivory, April 7th, four silver keys on ring, plain lost plastic, tab attached. Ibiblio 4865. Wearable MISCELLANEOUS DORM ROOM FOR SALE - Contract for something special. Olivor dorm room with two twin beds, a desk and chair, switch on lights, installed door for you smokers. This much more. Mint-See no. 835 Olivor Rooms. (906) 747-2511. www.olivror.com PRINTING WHILE YOU WATT is available with Alice at the House of Uthar/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 4 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8:35 Mass. "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" IVAN'S 66 SERVICE 4:30:9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Harleu-Davidson Honda Cycles and 8-8 Sun. TIZONS 1811 W. 6th I COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 843-3333 9th and lowe — West of Hillcrest Bowl Days Week — One Under 18 Admitted Icelandic TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS ● Pool ● Pin-Ball ● Snooker ● Air Hockey ● Pin-Pong ● Foos-Ball NOTICE NEW SONY COMPONENT SYSTEM with AM P30 door sample cut to $12 at Ray Stanley Store. Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo ... You name it. Airlines depart from major cities across Europe from $290 roundtrip. Departures are airlines American Europe from $290 roundtrip. International rates: Excalibur Power taxi schedule. United States airlines: IAH to LAX, LHR, DFS, DHL, Multilinconal. Call TBS toll free 1-800-252-2230. CONTACT LENS WEARERS Have on your hand Contact lenses that wear with contact lenses. Contact Lenses Simply Compact 31 Carnaby Street, New York, NY 10016. VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS® Brand new BP Goodrich ART8-15 (155-15) (155-15) radial fire cut to $80 each at Ray Stonebanks' 929 Main Street (Moncton) or $45 each at $45 each) stricts cut to $45 each) 4-12 Enroll now! In Lawrence Driveing school read their first grade reading book, then pay for transportation provided. Drive your car on the city's bus or take a streetcar. PERSONAL CHIEV OWNBRIA $450. Foreign posss. Brand new 18x9 custom car with rear roof rack. $450 each Fitted incl roof rack $27 each tail box $27 each Rear window $ $27 each Bottom rear window You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s 103 less than the youth fare* you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is to be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. Shops Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, dishware, clothes, televisions. Open daily 12, 8:30-5:30. Make our favorite albums your own directly the KJHK FM 51 record giveaway, beginning April 4. Graduate student seeks domicile for KU summer session. If you are leaving Lawrence for the summer, live near campus, and would like to work in apartment in room call 1-422-3806. 4-18 NEEDED: GAU CLOUFS who have been living in the UK for more than 10 years may be requested in an interview study investigating non-compliance with our positive and strength quality standards will be on the positive and strength quality standards of the university. COMPLETE COMFIDIENTIAL guarantee, and courses will be paid for $2 per course. Course fees for Bachelors (W41-0628) with cooperation of Gau Survey team. KARATB - Learn the airman secrets of this mission, including conditioning and burn self defense. Spread awareness of the risks associated with flying. free albums from The Sound Alternative listen to KJHK FM 81 for details 4-14 To the anonymous porpoise who found my blue suitcase, I returned, and retailed. Thank you you we ever met! 4,123 Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. KU RELAYS ATTENTION!! BWILL WILL BE IN THE RACES! 4-14 Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Life Ministry Inquiry. Box 3006, Lawrence Fargo, MN 55704 Abolition is the most prevalent form of destructive strang addiction. For help or info, N8-9210 (876) 334-6500. Guy Counseling Services. Call 842-7555, 6:12 p.m. referral. For socializing activities, call 842-7555. PJR-Shortsort, Happy four years 4 12. We've had ups and downs and even though times are rough now, the good things remain. Behry's everything works out. I'm not worried. LMJ. Everything always works out. I'm not worried. LMJ. Will Friend for escape but fate? Will J. Brownier Hunt for the friend? April 14, 2017 ¥137 Hunt for the friend? April 14, 2017 ¥137 Dear Curiosity—I decided to call in. It took 3 years that I finally got a “reaction.” I’ll meet any afternoon secretary Tuesday; my time any day you name it. Signed. The very sweet. 4-13 We put on a damned good show. Peggy. Anyone Can Whistle. Oliver Hall Lounge. 4-15 PEACE CORPS and VISTA are looking for volunteers PEACE CORPS and VISTA are looking for volunteers we are trained in US Naval Air Force 138th Air Command 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 Kansas Union 843-1211 Pier1 imports SUA Maupintour travel service Home of ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841-7946 M-5 10:5:30 (Thurs. 8:00) Paragon: striving towards excellence. 4-14 VIEWERS OF JESUS OF NAZARETH, If you want to talk with someone concerning Jesus' life and claim, I'm ready. Call Dave, 842-570-174, Pinae, don't put it off. Pelly-Happy B-Day. Hope you like your present- Buck, Donnie. Ferd, Ned and Clement. SERVICES OFFERED TYPING Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 114, 118, 126, 142, 150, 358, 359. Regular lessons or one day of preparation. Reasonable calls: Call 842-768-1. Hatty Yoga class beginning Wednesday, April 13 10 a.m. at Hattie Yoga Studio 208 North 96th Street, Information call Curtis Leah 811-245-6750. STEREO BROOKEN* deckers, amplifiers, turntable, tape decks. Preventive Maintenance clean and clean the tape deck. Custom Modification. Reamable tape. Reamable warranty. Jaeger Electronic, 724 Mass. 841-353-6334 Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, note. electronic resume — proofreading, spelling corrections. proof reading — proofreading, transcription. Term Papers, Proofread, Suppread, Corrected, Written in English, March 17, May 14, Wolters, 1712, Alumni, 833-1522 THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us handle your $8 Massachusetts or phone 346-7581 Thank you. Bethis, term paper, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 4-14 Bethi, 841-0477. TYPING·Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6658. 75c a page. if I do damn good typing. Peggy, 842-1476. tf Typetr, editor; IBM Priceline. cite; work. Reasonable rates. Threats, dissertations welcome. Call Joan, 842-9137. tf WANTED Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for guest typing, 804-4314 days, 892-9098 overnight. Will type your paper with FCL. Tissue paper and will type your paper with ABS. Paper and Will type your paper with weekends. 4-29 187-178 weeks and weekends. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf Small house wanted to rent by faculty family fall semester. 1977, 814-667. 4; 5 Tire-speed, rms. 50". Name price. Call 841-4820 between 1.8-5 p.m. 4-14 Studio or one bedroom apartment to hostfare for fall semester. B41-64756 after 6 p.m. 4-13 Female room $33.30 wanted immediately. Own room. Room #33.10. Prefer upperclassmen. 845-7579. Male or female banquan needed for summer to participate. 50% plus utilities. Call 617-398-3420. $75 plus a $1 utility. Call 617-398-3420. Female tennis for summer and/or fall only $125 for extra summer. Jiajieher Towers $185 $300 for junior, senior, and varsity players Group A & I want you! 8pm Can Whistle, April 14-17 Olive Hall Laundry, 8pm. FREE! (12) 516-933-3300 Roommates. Share a house, summer and next year. $75 plus split utilities. N43-8209 www.roommate.com Male graduate, student seeking male formal or graduate education in public policy, business, Gordon Davis, Division 10, Street, Lincoln, Nc. 68523 (212) 545-7922 www.lincoln.edu tor most imported cars Drive-in Clinic TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 NAISMITH HALL The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap - Pinball - Pool Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl - Foosball Kansan Classifieds Work For You! 12 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 University Daily Kansan S FALLEY'S Ohse—Five Varieties—Sliced Luncheon Meat...12 oz. 69°c Theis Sliced Bacon...16 oz. $ 1¹⁹ Seitz Braunschweiger ...By the Piece lb. 69³ Smoky Canyon Turkey Ham Roast...lb. $ 1³⁹ 69c 2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices Good Tuesday thru Sunday April 12—April 17 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Armour Star Wieners . All Meat ... 59¢ Van De Kamp Halibut Fillets ... $1^29 Eckridge Smoked Sausage... $1^29 Smokey Canyon Sliced Smoked Meats 5 Varieties 3 oz. OPEN OPEN 7 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT (WE'RE HERE WHEN YOU NEED US) Olympia Beer 6 pack $12 oz. Cans 89c Peter Pan Peanut Butter 18 oz. Folgers Coffee Two Pound Can All Grinds While Supply Lasts $699 Crisco Oil $149 48 oz. 6 pack $129 12 oz. Cans Peter Pan Peanut Butter 18 oz. 89c 18 oz. 89c Folgers Coffee Two Pound Can All Grinds $699 While Supply Lasts Two Pound Can All Grinds $699 Kraft Bar-B-Que Sauce ...18 oz. 59c Gedney Sweet Gherkin Pickles ...16 oz. 69c Gedney Pantry Pickles ...16 oz. 49c Falley Potato Chips ...9 oz. Bag 59c Cotter's Hotter Charcoal Briguettes 10 lb. 79c Cotter's Hotter Charcoal Briquettes $ ^{10} \mathrm{lb.} $ bag $ 79^{\circ} \mathrm{c} $ $149 48 oz. Crisco Oil $1.49 48 oz. Falley's Whole Kraft Deluxe Sliced American Cheese Armour Treet ... 12 oz. Can $ 89^{c} $ Coronet Decorated Napkins... 180 ct. $ 49^{c} $ Zestee Salad Dressing... 32 oz. $ 69^{c} $ French's Mustard ... Large 24 oz. Jar $ 69^{c} $ Ott's French Dressing ... 16 oz. $ 95^{c} $ Kraft Deluxe Sliced American Cheese 12 oz. 99c 12 oz. 99c $129 Gallon Purina Soft and Pretty Bathroom Tissue 4-roll Pkg. 75c Shurfine Sandwich Bags ... 80 ct. 45c Garden Club Grape Jelly ... 18 oz. 49c Hefty Lawn & Leaf Bags 6 bushel capacity 10 ct. $199 Shurfine Pear Halves ... 16 oz. 39c Libby Chunky Fruit Cocktail ... 17 oz. 49c Creamette Egg Noodles 10 oz. pkg. 3 for $1 Ajax Cleanser Large 21 oz. size 3 for $1 Green Apple Liquid Chiffon Detergent ... 32 oz. 89c Dog Chow 50 pound Bag $8.99 Regular $11.89 SAVE Toxas Ruby Red Dog Chow 50 pound Bag $8.99 Regular $11.89 Grapefruit 10 for $1 Grapefruit 10 for $1 9" Potted Hanging Plants ... $5 99 California Buttery Rich Avacados...5 for $1 Home Grown Spinach ... 16 oz. Bag 69¢ Fresh Tender Broccoli ... Large bunch 69¢ Fresh Tender Asparagus ... lb. 79¢ Vine Ripe Cantaloupe ... each 69¢ Premium Russet Baking Potatoes ... 5 lbs. $1 Shurfine Frozen Bread Dough..5 One Pound Loaves 89¢ Shurfine Frozen Orange Juice ... 6 oz. $1 434 79c 69c 4 16 oz. Cans $1 Pork & Beans Food King Peaches 29 oz. 49c Van Camp Pork & Beans 4 16 oz. Cans $1 Food King Tomatoes 3 16 oz. Cans $1 Food King Green Beans 5 15 oz. Cans $1 FALLEY'S Green Beans 3 16 oz. Cans $1 5 4 16 oz. Cans $1 3 16 oz. Cans $1 5 15 oz. Cans $1 FALLEY'S SAVE FALLEY'S SAVE Over Falloy's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S ZESTA SALTINE CRACKERS 16 oz. 49¢ Regular 71c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S KEEBLER FUDGE STRIPE COOKIES 12½ oz. 79¢ Pkg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S COCOA PUFFS CEREAL 12 oz. 79¢ Regular 97c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S O'CEDAR COUNTRY KITCHEN BROOMS $1.99 Regular $3.49 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S LIQUID AUTOMATIC VANISH 12 oz. 69¢ Regular $1.05 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S HEINZ KETCHUP 32 oz. 79¢ Regular $1.05 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S DIAL BATH SOAP Bath Size 4 bars $1 Limit 4 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S CHEERIOS 15 oz. 79£ Regular 97c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S HEINZ RELISHES 9¾ oz. 3 for $1 Regular 3 for $1.47 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S BUTTERNUT INSTANT TEA 2 oz. 79£ Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S SUPER POWER PLUS ALL PURPOSE 49¢ COUPON COUPON FALLEY'S COUPON O'CEDAR COUNTRY KITCHEN BROOMS $1.99 Regular $3.49 FALLEY'S VANISH 12 oz. 69c FALLEY'S HEINZ KETCHUP 32 oz. 79¢ Regular $1.05 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 4 for $1.48 DIAL BATH SOAP Bath Size 4 bars $1 Limit 4 with coupon Good thru April 17 FALLEY'S CHEERIOS 15 oz. 79c Regular 97c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUPON Cheerios FALLEY'S Regular 98c SUPER POWER PLUS ALL PURPOSE CLEANER 32 oz. 69¢ Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 17 COUpon NO KU ? KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Vol. 87, No. 124 Cubs arm bands to honor Wrigley Wednesday, April 13, 1977 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas See story page six $1.50 fee, move to stop women's financing pass Bv LINDA STEWART and JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Reporters A $1.50 increase in the student activity fee and a resolution calling for an end to Student Senate funding of the women's intercollegiate athletics program after this year were approved last night by the Student Senate. The Senate also approved the use of up to $80,000 of unallocated Senate funds for improvements in recreational facilities and okayed the budget allocations of the Sport Department. The Senate will meet again tonight to consider the budget recommendations of the Academic Affairs and Student Services committees. The student activity fee increase was approved after little discussion by the parents. The fee is for students each semester to $11.00. The fee increase would provide for maintaining the current number of open hours at Robinson Gymnasium new year and improving facilities. The $60,000 allocation from unallocated funds would also be used for improvements to recreational facilities, such as the lawns and tennis courts and the resourcing of intramural fields. Steve Leben, student body president, explained that the Senate now had only 37 seats. "They're not going to vote," he said. See SENATE page five Watson's job to be judged By JOHN MUELLER Staff Reporter City commissioners will meet at 3 p.m. tomorrow in closed session to discuss the job performance of Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager. "PEOPLE NOTICE it every day. They The commissioners haven't publicly announced that they plan to discuss Watson's performance during the closed session. But one commissioner said yesterday morning that Watson's actions as city manager had necessitated the session. Arersinger, the commissioner said, was unhappy with the low priority Watson allegedly had given sniper pickups. She "really gave him (Watson) hell," the commissioner said. "Situation is still way down on the issue, and I think it sterily important. Commissioners Don Binnis and Marcie Argersinger "have been just furious sometimes about the way things have been called in city," the unidentified commissioner said. don't notice the chucklehounds until they fall in them, and they don't know that maybe the police department isn't as keen as it could be. knows. But everybody knows sanitation. Apparent budget and morale problems in the sanitation department last fall caused it to lose about 10 percent of its staff. "Apparently those three guys who campaigned together have really made some decisions; they've come to some kind of agreement on how they're like the city to be and how they've put their heads together, but they've campaigned together for 20 or 30 meetings." The commissioner also said that Barke, Clark, Jack Rose and Ed Carter had come to the conclusion. CARTER, THE commissioner said, "fancies himself as a management expert—be's really keen on personnel, and that's all right. "We do have evaluation procedures set up for every city employee except the manager." this, and of course, it's only fair to let him know what the basis for evaluation is." Carter said yesterday afternoon that better evaluation procedures for city employees were being implemented. "We should set up a system," he said. "We need more effective procedures." He declined further comment on the reasons for the closed session. WATSON, when asked after last night's city commission meeting whether the council would be planned to discuss at tomorrow's session, said, "No, they haven't. But even if they do," he added. that other one the commissioner with the "publicity," the commissioner said, referring to Dick McClanathan, city planning director, who resigned three months ago. Charges that the city planning department had been inefficiently administered. Only the five city commissioners and a newspaper publisher knew why the closed session was called, according to the unidentified commissioner. [Image] Staff photo by MARIANNE MAURIN Bubble gum seems to provide some relief to the long hours out in by senators during the senate meetings. Am Holderman, Hutchison freshman, doesn't mind the amount of business to be New commissioners approve police lobby guidelines Donald Binns will serve as the new vice mayor. Commissioner Marnie Argeringer Was unanimously elected the new mayor of Lawrence at the Lawrence City Commission meeting last night. She is the second female mayor in the history of Lawrence. Mibee also expressed his thanks to citizens and commission members. Barkley Clark, Ed Carter and Jack Rose were sworn in as new city commissioners last night. Clark and Carter will serve four terms and Rose will serve a two-year term. "I MIGHT get emotional," Pence said in making his exit. "I think being a commissioner is a very responsive job. I thank everybody." Amid poems commending their services to the city, outgoing Commissioner Carl Mibeck and Mayor Fred Pence received the keys to the city from Argersiner. "I'm going away from this job a stronger and better person," he said. The new commission also approved guidelines for policemen lobbying before the Kansas State Legislature on police and law enforcement. The guidelines had been deferred from last week. The Lawrence Police Department developed the guidelines to maintain closer supervision of the activities of officers in lobbying at the state capitol in Topeka. UNDER THE new policy, an officer assigned to legislative monitoring duties on city time couldn't represent the interests of law enforcement or the Lawrence Police Department. The action was prompted by news reports of an officer's lobbying activities while on city tin' The officer, Tom Tschopph, had the city and the kansas Eastern order of buying. The officer's activities were in apparent violation of a year-old action in which the city commissioners agreed to let an officer lobby for the city on law enforcement matters. The agreement allows an officer to lobby only part-time. RICHARD Stanxw, chief of police, was present at the meeting to voice his support of the new guidelines, which he assured commissioners would be followed. Included in the guidelines is a recommendation that the city commission's views be solicited on the lobbying stance for sensitive matters, such as capital punishment, gun control and mandatory sentences. Binns b expressed his apprehension of such a rule, saving he didn't want to be a sensor. "We're not really muzzling anybody," he says, but in very sensitive matters the complains can be heard. THE POLICE department's proposal also requires that the lobbying officer working on behalf of the city or the department operates on a weekly basis to the chief of police. Included in the reports will be the amount of time spent during the reporting period and an estimate of the amount of time required during the next week, reports on new legislation developed during the week and reports of regulatory situations that should be taken on legislation. In other business, the city commission approved a price rise in the water bill, and in a humorous note refused a sign variance from the U.S. Army Reserve Center. An approximate 11 per cent price rise for the average household will take effect on MPs. ACCORDING TO Buford Watson, city manager, the rate increase will be used to help finance the new water treatment plant and voters in the primary election last March. The city commission scheduled an executive meeting for tomorrow at 3 p.m. to discuss the job performance of city ad-hoc committees, the meeting is close to the public, and the press. The regular April 19 commission meeting was canceled because several commissioners will be attending a conference in Denver. Kansan officials chosen The summer and fall Kansan editors and business managers were selected last night by the Kansan Board. The first three candidates were Des Moines Iowa, junior, and the summer business manager will be Larry Kelley, Lawrence senior. The fall editor will be Jerry Seib, Hays junior, and Jody Lehr, Kansas City Kan., junior NO HITCHHIKING DENVER 70 Just resting Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Traveling was slow yesterday so Steve Quinn took a nap while his partner Jimmy Murphy tried to get the two a ride. Both men are from Rochester, N.Y., and both seemed oblivious to the sign behind them. Delay on new student loan plan likely Bv DEENA KERBOW Gov. Robert Bennett yesterday signed into law legislation that would help establish a guaranteed state student loan program in Kansas. But the legislature delayed the program until after fall semester begins. "The main force for delay is the Washington Office or Education." Jeff Weinberg, University of Kansas The nonprofit Minnesota organization that would sponsor the program must be approved by the Office of Education, a branch of the department of Health, Education and Welfare in Washington. Staff Reporter "It's very unfortunate," Weihring said. "It has been sitting on somebody's desk in Washington for years." Weinberg says the delay could be a serious problem for students who will need the program money to It is projected that applications for loans will be taken in August, but that money won't be disburished until December. "I think students are confused about when this money will be available," he said. Weinberg said the University couldn't make arrangements for offered payments from students. "All state schools' fees must be paid at enrollment," he said. "And the University's short-term loan program will do its best, but our funds are limited." The loan is a size of the loans that the students are going to need." He said many more students would receive financial aid under the new program. Richard Hawk, director of the program's financing foundation, estimated last fall that the number of students receiving loans would more than double if the program became law. One reason for the increase would be that, in addition to guaranteeing loans made by commercial banks, the Minnesota foundation also would lend students who were refused loans by commercial banks. "—At public schools in Kansas," he said, "there is a great question on residency. One thing that keeps many students from residency is that they receive assistance from outside the state. They will be borrowing from here rather than from their home towns under this new program." "The program will not discriminate against nonresidents," he said. "If a student comes to KU from Guam—and I know Guam doesn't have a campus—the he can get a loan through our state loan program." Jerry Rogers, KU director of financial aid, said. The real beauty of this program is that the sponsor is not required to pay for training. He said the foundation would be the insuring agency for the lender (local banks), but also would be the borrower. Weinberg offered three other reasons for the expected increase in the number of student loans: He said that students who had never applied for commercial loans would request loans under the new program when it became known that the money was available. The loan project will be administered by the Higher Education Assistance Foundation. The foundation "is not trying to born in on banks," he said, "though I suspect a lot of banks will be eager to get out of loafing to students. They're coming in, but they don't want to take lending interest from the banks." The interest rate for a state guaranteed loan is seven per cent. However, he said that a student from a family that has an adjusted gross income of less than $100,000 aid that would pay a portion of the loan interest. "The student pays back the loan after graduation and assumes the interest payments, but doesn't have to reimbuse the government for the interest it paid during the student's school years." The program will be financed through the sale of revenue bonds that will be exempt from taxation. The terms and conditions are set forth below. Rogers said that an added advantage of the program would be that some students would be able to get in touch. Enrollment rise still expected If the number of recent applications to the University of Kansas is any indication, KU's 1977 fall enrollment should increase as previously predicted, because dean of admissions and records, said yesterday. Dyck said a 1977 fall enrollment projection of 22,750 students at the Lawrence campus was still accurate. students at the Lawrence campus was still accurate. Reports have said KU freshman enrollment would decrease during the next several years because Kansas high school graduating classes are decreasing in size. But Dyck said the number of freshman applications received by the University has been increasing, and the time last year. Applications for new students often are used as indications of protected enrollments. DYCK SAID he thought people were applying earlier this spring because of last year's housing shortage. A shortage of rooms in the residence halls last fall has encouraged potential KU students to apply early so they are assured a place to live, he said. The Office of Admissions and Records has received about 100 more freshman applications this spring than at this time last year. Dyck said, but the number is still growing. He will end up close to the number received last year. Dyck said the number of Kansas high school students was about the same as it was last year, but the numbers have risen. See ENROLLMENT page five 2 University Daily Kansan News Digest Grain sales to be revealed WASHINGTON — Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergbland has reversed his decision to keep big sales by private grain exporters confidential for up to a week, an The side, Harold Wilhelm, said Bergland will soon resume a previous policy of announcing major farm product sales to Russia and China within 24 hours of the announcement. Under a law passed in the wake of a surprise, massive Soviet purchase of American grains in 1973, exporters are required to inform the Agriculture Department weekly of all contracts for foreign sales and are required to report within 24 hours on sales of 100,000 tons or more. In addition, Wilhelm said, Bergland will go a step further by providing 24-hour notice to the public on similar sales to all foreign buyers. Fires burn in Minnesota Nearly 250 fires burned 51,000 acres of dry Minnesota forest and grassland yesterday and, Rudy Pervich aided most of them were started by people with no experience. Pernich said that citizens must "cut out this irresponsible act or there will be nothing left of Minnesota by the end of the summer." The fires blazed in a mid-April heat wave in which temperatures rose to record marks from southern Michigan into the mid-Atlantic coastal states. Detroit Minnesota authorities said some north woods fires were started accidentally by discarded cigarettes or burning rubbish, and others by arson. "Thearson is sick," Periphil's aide, Baron Aronson, said. "It puts people's lives in danger. It doesn't make people sense." Mansfield sweaks on Asia Mansfield, who retired from the Senate in January and was part of a recent mission to Vietnam to check on Americans still missing from the war, made his first visit in 1973. He is now a professor at Columbia University. MANHATTAN—The American position in Asia is more favorable than at any time in the past 30 years, but there are still some volatile trouble spots, formerly part of the U.S. economy. Mansfield said the United States had a good relationship with most of Asia and "in general, our remaining problems are manageable." "What is needed now is a will to clean up those remaining problems," Mansfield said. He was the first return speaker ever in the lecture series honoring former president Richard Nixon. Ruling says Rabin can't resign TEI, AVIL, Israel (UPI)—Israeli Atty. Gen. Aharon Barak ruled yesterday that Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin can't leave office despite a political scandal in which prosecutors are preparing to bring his wife to trial. Even if Rabin takes a leave of absence until the balloting he will still be legally responsible for the duties constitutionally required when he took office in June 1974, Barak said. Barak said Rabin can't quit because there was no precedent for the resignation of a caretaker prime minister. Rabin resigned on May 14, 2015 after being named caretaker prime until an election May 17. Rabin, 55, and his wife Leah, 49, admitted he kept an illegal $160,000 account at a bank in California. Barak's ruling means that if Israel is faced with a crisis requiring a top-level decision, Rabin would be responsible for making it. withdrawal Saturday as the ruling Labor party candidate for prime minister. The 46-year-old Liddy will be eligible for parole on July 9 after having served a total of 50 months. Thirty-two months of that time counted toward his main sentence, while the other 18 months were for refusing to testify before the Watergate grand jury. Carter reduces Liddy's jail term by 12 years WASHINGTON (AP)—President Carter commuted the 20-year prison sentence of Watergate burglar mastermind G. Gordon Reagan, who was sentenced to five years but called the interests of equity and fairness. "I'm grateful to the President for commuting my sentence, bringing it into line with the sentences received by Mitchell, but I'm not sure," Liddy told his lawyer, Peter Marullo. Lady's wife had just ended a visit with her husband at the Allenwood, Pa., minimum security institution and heard communication on the radio while driving home. Maroulis said, "She told me, 'Thank God.'" Once Liddy is released, all the participants must pay a burglarage at the political party headquarters. E. Howard Hunt, Liddy's lieutenant in the botched burglary, was released Feb 24 after serving 32 months. He is now on the lecture circuit. James McCord, the burglary squad's electronics man, served four months and moved to Colorado. The foot soldiers in Watergate, four cubans from Miami, served slightly more than one month before he left. From Richard Nixon's re-election committee as settlement for being duned. Watergate office complex will be free. But John Ehrlichman, the second-ranking Nixon alice convicted of covering up the Watergate affair, is serving a minimum $25,000 year sentence in Arizona. Former Atty. Gen, John N. Mitchell and H. R. Halderman, Nixon's chief of staff, are awaiting word from the Supreme Court on whether he must serve their 2½ to 8-year sentences. Without presidential intervention, Liddy wouldn't have been eligible for parole until 2015. Deputy White House Press Secretary Rex Granum said the President commuted Liddy's sentence in the interests of equity and fairness based on a comparison of Mr. Liddy's sentence with those of all others in *Watergate*-related proceedings. Carter's commutation order doesn't lift that fine, but Granum said Liddy could win parole without paying it if he was able to take a pauser's oath. Liddy was given the harshest sentence, six years, eight months, to 20 years, by U.S. District Judge John Sirica. He also was fined $40,000. But Grumman said if Liddy's financial fortunes improved subsequently, he would be less nervous. state director of the USDA'a Agriculture Stabilization and Conservation Service. Bergland's package also included emergency loans to farmers and ranchers to cover crop losses in all counties designated for emergency drought relief. No counties in Kansas have applied for emergency drought relief, Frank Mosier, Drought-stricken Kansas counties now eligible for crop insurance The Ford administration did not act on Liddy's petition. A reporter asked Granum if Liddy had agreed to cooperate. But Bergland noted that recent precipitation in an eight-state area including Kansas had relieved the drought situation to the extent that federal crop insurance could now be offered to farmers who weren't already insured. O. D. Christiansen, acting director of the Federal Crop Insurance Corp., said 12 Kansas counties remained closed to new applications because of lack of moisture. Sirica, apparently piqued because Liddy steadfastly refused to talk, refused to trim the sentence as he did for many others involved in Watergate. "To the very best of my knowledge, he has not," he said. Granum was asked if Carter might now consider commuting the sentences of other prisoners. Those counties, whose only insured spring crop is dryland grain sorghum, are Ellis, Russell, Rush, Barton, Pawnee, Stafford, Bingham, Kingman, Sedgewick and Summer县。 "As far as the White House is concerned," he said, "this is not related to any other concern." MANHATTAN (AP)—Forty-seven Kansas counties have been reopened for federal crop insurance applications under a new rule that requires agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland. Ehrlichman has asked for commutation of sentence. The applications were cut off by the USDA's Federal Corp Insurance Corp. last year when it appeared that severe drought had begun in the Farms of farmers into the insurance program. Liddy has lost numerous fights in the U.S. Court of Appeals and in the Supreme Court, but he was not guilty because, the judge said Liddy hadn't given the court even a hint of contrition or sorrow. Under federal law, a prisoner is eligible for parole once he has served one-third of his sentence. He may be sent to eight years or 88 months, Carter made, Jada's eligibility possible after 32 months. T Student Union - International Rm. Wed., April 13—12:30, 2:30 or 4:30 Student Union - Oread Rm. Thurs., April 14—1:00 or 3:00 Ride-On For further info., come to: Royal Prostige needs students to supplement summer work force $^250^{00}$ per week HAWKS NEST 8 p.m. Wed., April 13 $1 admission his Music is Always in Poor Taste Summer Employment $1.99 THIS WEEK Rea. 4 $ ^{9 5} $ OPEN TUES.—SAT. SPECIAL PURCHASE 1401 Mass. ARNEBRAV Pirelli 27" Gumwall Tires ♪ d. ♩ d. ♪ d. ♩ d. ♩ d. ♩ The Tom Montgomery Trio الحسن المؤمنين Introducing our new Wednesday Special The Tom Montgomery Trio Cover charge only 1.5011. Pitches of beer only 1.5011 Thurs: Jam Session Fri: Joe Utterback plays tonite 9 p.m. to midnight Cover charge only '1.00!! Pitchers of beer only '1.50!! Thurs: Jam Session Fri: Joe Utterback Sat: Claude Williams - Jazz Fiddler! only at PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. Paul Grays MISSION the classic "sailing shirt" by Polo designed expressly for Mister Guy... open thurs. nite till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. 3 rs knowledge, he if Liddy had er might nowences of other commutation bits in the U.S. supreme Court. Liddy early in sorrow or sorrow ner is eligible one third of time for a judge's months. Liddy's months. s concerned," to any other SO!!! mass. Carter meets Soviet on arms limitations WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter conferred yesterday with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobryznik in an effort to emphasize on a treaty limiting nuclear weapons. The 40-minute session at the White House was held against a backdrop of a dispute over apparent Russian violations of new fishing regulations. But U.S. officials said this was only "touched on" and that the concentration was on arms. "Good meeting," was Dohryn's only comment to reporters after the session. On the U.S. side, a brief statement issued by White House press aides said that there is no constructive and useful discussion of policy issues, which included strategic-arm limitation. Attending the session-Carter's first with Dobrynin since the breakdown in weapons negotiations - Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, national security adviser Zhigun Brezinski and Robert Hunter of the National Security Council staff Emphasizing the meeting's importance, White House spokesman Rex Granum said the two sides "were anxious to meet" to update U.S. Soviet relations. Dobrinyn's call was arranged before the Coast Guard seized Soviet fishing vessels off the Massachusetts coast over the weekend, where they were in apparent violation of the 200 mile U.S. zone established last month. While there was no formal agenda, a possible topic for discussion was sending War琳 Warnke, the U.S. arms control chief, to Geneva this month to renew weapons discussions before Vance meets with Soviet Foreign Minister Alain Crespin. The two sides haven't set a date for the Vance-Gromyk talks, which are likely to be critical in the effort to reach agreement to limit nuclear weapons and to take some steps toward general disarmament. Carter has said if they are unproductive and the Soviets do not negotiate "in good faith" he would be forced to consider stepping up U.S. weapon development The Russians rejected two sets of U.S. proposals during a visit by Vance to Moscow March 30. But last Friday, Carter said he was encouraged by "private" contacts he has received from Soviet party leader Leonid Brezhnev since the rejection. Hours earlier, the State Department announced that the administration was rejecting Zaire's request for "lethal" equipment to combat an invasion by Katanang rebels who, according to reports, were partly armed by the Soviets. A $4 million transport plane and some $4 million in radio and other U.S. equipment were granted to Zaire, but the White House minimized the Soviet interest in the fighting. "We do not see the situation as an East-West confrontation." Granum said in a statement prepared for him by higher officials. Easter Bunny ad spells trouble for liquor dealer TOPEKA (AP)—A newspaper advertisement that depicted an Easter Bunny going to "Fill My Easter Basket" at an Abilene store shop may force temporary closures of the store under a 1968 state regulation for forbidding references to Easter in liquor ads. William Strukel, chief enforcement office of the state Alcohol Beverage Control Division, yesterday said he was recommending a ban against Johnson's Liquor Store of Abilene. Strukel explained that a formal citation THE ADVERTISSEMENT was carried by the Sunday Chronicle in last Friday's edition. Strukel said it was his opinion that the advertisement violated the regulation against references to Easter, Holy Week and Mother's Day in liquor store ads. would probably be issued today by the ABC and that an administrative hearing would follow sometime later. He added that the ABC had been forced to force its doors temporarily. STRUKEL SAID HE'M NOT sure just what the purpose of the regulation was, but inaccurately that the ABC board had instructed that such advertisements were in bad taste. The Rev. Richard Taylor, Jr., head of the Kansas United Dry Forces, said in a letter to Strukiel released yesterday that he was disappointed "that an editor would permit such a sick advertisement in paper on Good Friday." "It just happens to be the rule," he said, adding that at one time it was illegal for liquor stores to even have Christmas trees on the premises. George Segal & Jane Fonda "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Granada 714-649-7300 / Stephanie C. 32588 10 Academy Award Nominations Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" 1st Class Entertainment ART CARNEY LILY TOMLIN "BLACK SUNDAY" University Daily Kansan "THE Eve, 7:15 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun, at 2:30 "ROCKY" "THE LATE SHOW SAT SUN MAY 10 FIDG Hillerick Starring SYLVESTER STALLONE Eve, 7:30 & 9:45 Sat, Sun, 1:45 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped underwater. Hillcrest Varsity W14107 ... Virginia W14106 AIRPORT Ends Friday The great Scout & Cathouse Thursday. Eve. 7:40 & 9:50 Sat.-Sun. 1:55 Hillcrest Plus Small Town in Texas MOVIES PG 7:20 show time MOVIES WASHINGTON (UPI)—An administration spokesman informed Latin American envoys yesterday that Congress will inject the human rights issue into U.S. decisions on loans made through international financial institutions. A See the first run movies right in our RecRoom. If movies aren't your thing, there are plenty of other social activities going on. The opportunity is available through the Hall Council to jump on the band wagon and help plan and organize an activity that you're interested in if we don't already offer it. Sunset May 13th at 8:00 - Most on highway 54 Relax next fall—move to Wednesday, April 13. 1977 Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features. "I THINK YOU are aware that the U.S. government has strong views on human rights, deeply held views that are reflected in our federal agency's assistant secretary of state, said in an address to a meeting of the Organization of American States' Economic and Social Affairs." 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 U.S. official ties rights to foreign aid He said the United States already was required by law to take the human rights abuses of Haiti. "There is presently consideration of whether similar requirements should be applied by Congress to loans from the World Bank." he said. sidereal when it considered granting liability to the Inter-American Develop- ment Bank. President Jimmy Carter told Congress last week that he opposed rigid links between the human rights issue and either the death penalty or abolition to international credit institutions. "IN THIS INSTANCE," Todman said, "human rights does have a direct bearing on an extremely important economic matter and will have to be dealt with." Todman said the United States "sees our 2 for 1 Buy one pizza get next smaller size free with coupon only. Thin crust only Pizza inn Coupon Expires April 15. LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet During the non-snow off season the U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team members go on the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right — 20 pounds in 14 days! The basis of the diet is chemical food action and was devised by a famous Colorado physician especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal energy is maintained (very important!) while reducing. You keep "full" — no starvation — because the diet is designed that way. It is a diet that is easy to follow whether you work, travel or stay at home. (Not the erdanfruit diet.) This is, honestly, a fantastically successful diet. If it weren't, the U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn't be permitted to use it! Right? So, give yourself the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scientific, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other diets, you owe it to yourself to try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. Send only $3.00 ($3.25 for Rush Service) - cash is O.K. - wm. W.Carman - Human Ecologist, P.O. Box 4262, department 16, Hayward, Calif. 94540. Don't order unless you expect to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the SKI Team Diet will do. neighbors to the south as representing a particularly important part of the world's climate. But he also said, "There will be differences among us. . . . There will be problems" that can be solved only if discussed "in an atmosphere of mutual respect and understanding, even when we may disagree." Student ranks among top beauty entrants top beauty entrants A KU student finished second runner-up at the Midwestern Regional Black Beauty Competition. The winner of the content will represent the Midwest in the national contest in Las Vegas. --good jobs. We'll need to create 18,000 people jobs to take care of the young people joining the work force. The staff will be the competition for jobs will be fierce. The student, Carmen Dotson, Junction City junior, was a representative of the Alphas. e l The Airowisp By THANE THE VARNACO GROUP a beautiful assortment of solids and strips in Thanes Airowisp fabric. Cool and comfortable ... It's a shirt you'll love to live in. Solids - $14.00 Stripes - $16.00 Campbell's Men's Wear 841 Massachusetts 843-2828 So if you're a woman or a member of a recognized minority group, you stand a better chance than other people of equal ability. Companies are working to catch up, and that's good for you. PLAIN TALK FROM ARMCO ON FINDING A JOB: But when you look at a potential employer, we think you ought to discriminate a little, yourself. Ask sose tough questions. Such as how a company promotes people. Or how many higher-level women and minority members they have. Chances are they don't know what you demand some straightforward answers about what a company is trying to do about that. How carrying out Equal Rights law may affect you Who could quarrel with the right of every individual in America to an equal chance for a job? No one we know. But when you look for a job, you should understand some things that would make those situations that could affect your chances. Most large companies are deeply involved in affirmative action programs. These are plans and actions designed to overcome discrimination. Statistics are the only evidence that counts. If a company's statistics don't measure up, the company is presumed to discriminate. Some people think affirmative action programs discriminate against the majority of Americans. But that kind of talk doesn't solve any problems. Affirmative action is the law. And it's here. FREE--Armco's plain talk on how to get a job We've got a free booklet to help you get a job. Use it to set your apart, above the crowd. We answer 50 key questions you'll need to know. Like why you should bone up on companies you like. What to do after the first interview. Hints to make you a more aggressive, attractive job candidate. All prepared for Armco by a consulting firm specializing in business recruiting, with help from the placement staff of a leading university. Send for your free copy of How to Get a Job. Writ Armco Steel Corporation, Educational Relations Dept., General Office. U-5, Middletown, Ohio 45043. Our supply is limited, so write now. ARMCO Plain talk about EQUAL JOB RIGHTS So far, there just aren't enough women, blacks or other minority members in some fields. That's where the real opportunities often are. But you're not likely to be hired as a chemical engineer if your major was black literature or feminist history. If you're looking for real opportunity, you should polish your talent in a discipline that is needed most by those who offer Most of all, we think you should look for companies that really try for excellence in the people they hire, develop and promote. Equal rights and jobs with tough standards and exciting futures are sometimes also alone. Next time somebody gcrips about job discrimination, you might ask: "Have you ever thought about metallurgy?" Armco wants your plain talk about equal rights and jobs Does our message make sense? We'd like to know what you think. Your personal experiences. Facts to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We'll send you back a more detailed report on equal rights and jobs. Our offer of *How to Get a Job*. above, tells you how to write us. Let us hear from we. We've all got a stake in more American jobs. 4 Wednesday, April 13, 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. Fishing laws tested The U.S. State Department has cautioned newsmen against drawing diplomatic implications about the holding of two Soviet fishing ships. But the U.S. actions seem to fit into the mold of recent U.S.-Soviet relations. President Jimmy Carter and the Soviets have played cat-and-mouse games ever since Carter took office three months ago. The Soviets repeatedly have tested Carter, and Carter seems determined to leave them a "get tough" impression. The U.S. fishing expedition is the latest in a series of tests, and this time the Soviet test has been intolerable to the Carter administration. The Soviets can be thanked, in a sense, for their violations, because they have brought about enforcement to recently passed U.S. fishing laws. Congress last year authorized the U.S. servalion Act, but only recently has the United States imposed its boundaries and enforced violations. UNDER THE fishery act, foreign vessels can catch and keep only certain types and amounts of fish from certain areas within a state's jurisdiction. States for which they've received permits. Since the United States announced enforcement of the act about a month ago, the Soviets have received more than 60 citations and warnings. Several Soviet vessels were released, but then continued to violate the U.S. fishing quotas. As a result, the Coast Guard has seized two ships, and the State Department has called the Soviet embassy to complain about the report's allegations. Carter's Press Secretary, Jody Powell, reflected the United States' concern about the repeated Soviet violations by pointing out that the United States showed restraint before the seizures. But, he said, "No person's patience is unlimited." THE TARAS Schevchenko was the first Soviet ship seized because it was carrying more than 3,500 pounds in excess of its quota of river herring. More fish that had been caught by the Shevchenko were found on the second Soviet vessel, the Antanas Snechksu, a nonfishing, processing ship. The Snechksu also was carrying seven species of prohibited fish in its holds. It is clear that the Soviets consider our fishing waters to be rich ones. Fish in U.S. waters, and wheat exports, are effective trading tools for dealing with the Russians. Carter is using these tools to show the benefits of a U.S. defense attitudes toward their policies after what many are calling a U.S. defeat in strategic arms limitations talks. SOVIET OFFICIALS knew of the new fishing limit and repeatedly were warned of their violations before this week's two seizures. Whether they were testing Carter's catch was not clear, but understand. But at least they have helped strengthen a necessary U.S. fishing policy. The election in Lawrence is over, the shouting has died and most of us are glad of it. But an election week incident continues to graw away at my mind, and, because my concern for freedom seems to be growing, the granny, I can keep quiet no longer. Freedom of all speech absolute There is no point in dwelling on the specifics of the incident, because what is at issue is a matter of more concern than the Lawrence school board, the Law School or the University of Kansas. THE ISSUE is, in my mind, freedom of speech. Freedom of speech is like the freedom of assembly or of religion or of any other right in the Constitution. We have reservations to this, but it close to home. Then we have our reservations and write letters to a newspaper or our Congressman complaining about unethical practices. And freedom of speech is like freedom of religion. We have to hail it out of the closet every so often, dust it off and display it, lest we forget what it's all about. Those who say that freedom of speech must be tempered by one consideration or another are usually just saying that freedom of speech should be limited to touchy issues or things we'd rather not hear about. I contend that touchy issues are the ones Freedom of speech is Jerry Seib Editorial Writer C. JOHNSON criticizing politicians, candidates and journalists. It is also praising politicians, candidates, journalists and whoever else seems worthy of comment. BUT IT MUST be both the good and the bad, and the journalist in his office and the politician in the campaign have at the edges of freedom of speech for personal convenience. Being mostly free to practice your *religion wouldn't* be difficult, but you should be mostly free to say what you want when you want. that should be talked about and that the things we'd rather not bear about are the things we'd better hear be hearing, for our GRANTED, PEOPLE with the right of free speech can get rather ugly in their exercise of it. But so can people given the right to campaign for office or public places by public places for a demonstration. We have no business stopping people from doing any of these things, even if it would hurt the rights outside the window. to total freedom. But, in many cases, those bumps can serve to make the ride more interesting. And when the bumps make the ride uncomfortable, we should grit our teeth and bear it. Any politician who throws his hit into the ring, an journalist who types a word on a blank piece of paper or any educator who moves into an administrator's office should be careful not to criticism—some of it warranted, some of it not. WHEN I WALK into the Kansas office tomorrow morning, I expect to find letters from frate readers who are litching to tell me how wrong my language of free speech is. So be it. But if freedom of speech means anything, it means complete freedom. Those who write White House dirty movies and girlie magazines don't understand what our Constitution means, and neither do people who don't know it. They're written to the editor of a newspaper. The only obligation that any speaker or writer has is to tell the truth. If truth has been served, the arena is wide open, and we shouldn't be surprised if some free-wheeling speech There's nothing wrong with it. THINGS ARE probably much more peaceful in places where only one side of any issue is heard. But I don't think those places are very healthy, and I would guess that there is quite a lot to be said for the side that was involved. Alexander Solzenhitsyns of those places have to defect before they can speak up. Comparing Russian dissidents to a Lawrence school student, we learned that they fetched "If someone thinks so, I apologize. But we are talking about freedom of speech, and place on place or issue to issue. I hope the Kansan continues to print letters to the editor on any and all subjects, and I hope readers who think I'm wrong continue to write in to tell me so. But more than that, I hope that the writer would like a whole process stopped or curbed do some serious thinking about what freedom really means. Gandhi's excesses caused loss The Indian national election that "ousted" Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from office three weeks ago was widely hailed by the media as a "vote for democracy." No longer, correspondents wrote from New Delhi, would anyone be able to say that the poor and hungry are more concerned about food and shelter than they are about human rights. However, now that elation over the elections has subsided, and Moraji (Desai) is imminent, the prime minister, it would be wise prime minister, it would be wise to re-evaluate the events in India since Gandhi declared a state of emergency in 1975 to the moment she resigned from the executive branch virtually unlimited power. Gandhi, then, had all the necessary qualifications to be a MAFNELY AW,COME ON DOWN. OL' JIMMY WON'T BITE. SEE? HE'S JUST GRINNIN'... WALL ST. ST LANCE LANCE P WALL ST. CITY office. Then one might ask whether India's elections were truly a barometer of its citizens' power, the press and of political rights. GANDHI FIRST declared a nationwide emergency on June 26,1975 in reaction to her election victory, the election law violations. Gandhi had been barred by the Justice of the High Court of her home town from holding public office until the conviction was up for appeal. Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer In moves related to the state of emergency, the Indian government carried out a crackdown on leaders opposed to Gandhi and jailed others involved in antigovernment demonstrations and violence. Desai was among those arrested during the roundup. By September 1976, Gandhi's government had introduced to the house of parliament a series of amendments that would give Press censorship was imposed and subsequently removed, only domestic newspapers and also foreign correspondents. ON AUGUST 5, 1975, a new government election law that required all candidates was adopted. Then national elections, which had been scheduled for March 1976, were held on April 23. The extended emergency rule. dictator. Since her Congress Party still controlled parliament, she could have held onto her power indefinitely, had her husband been killed in national elections and then, in the face of her defeat, to resign. CRITICS TAY that Gandhi misjudged the mood of the people, as she was counting on the traditional Congress vote to secure a majority in population living in rural areas. That these illiterate people ignored tradition and the propaganda spouted from Gandhi's India Radio team in Kabul was remarkable political sophistication. But can the rural vote against Indira Gandhi really be credited to a political sophistication or rather to a backlash in Gandhi's "ex- isolation that so widely affected India's poor?" Illiterate people care little about censorship of the press. What hits them where it counts — in schools, hospitals and massive sterilization program, which reportedly resulted not only in the sterilization of old men and unmarried boys, but also in more young women due to unsanitary conditions. WHAT CONCERNS the poor and illiterate more than sophisticated theories on human rights are pet government projects such as Sanjay Gandhi's slum-clearance program, which resettled thousands of slum dwellers in even more miserable conditions outside city limits. The poor and illiterate are often unaware of such basic human rights as political freedom and free speech and press. But tamper with their rights, especially through cruel and extreme methods, and they're bound to react in anger. Thus India's "vote for democracy" wasn't the result of a sophisticated awareness of Gandhi's dictatorial political practices. It was a vote against the methods she had employed in the country, its countrymen's good, which had alienated the masses. HAD GANDHI stuck to the broader topics of censorship and police order, she would only press against the press, both domestic and foreign, and with India's often sophisticated minority. Now that Gandhi is out of office and in disgrace, she should be credited with actually making a decision and calling for new elections. Gandhi finally must have realized that although power is addictive, power without favor would have an acidic taste in one's mouth. Letters Policy Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-space 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 accurate and provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address. Editorial focus page a flop, saccharin ban a bane Focus page piffling To the editor: I was greatly disappointed in your editorial page on Europe in the April 7 Kansan. Nearly all the articles on the present state of Europe were hopelessly oversimplified, prejudiced and distorted. I was also very proud that we was paid to the positive side of the issues. The implication seemed to be that we Americans have it pretty good, while those Europeans (poor souls!) have it rather rough, mostly because of their far-out political ideologies (which we naturally find distasteful). We even considered whether such searching" might be, in fact, beneficial. Particularly offensive was Paul Jefferson's article on the "two Irelands." To even suggest that one country can be "right" and the other "wrong" is a gross misconception about politics, history and culture. We are too incredible naive to the part of Jefferson (who, evidently hasn't been out of the country). In general, the articles suggested (albeit tactily) that customers of this kind less like little shops downtown, suffering from unemployment, high prices, political discontent, (as if we didn't have equally disconcerting problems of ours, and so forth. That each of us would be interested in the vibran cultural heritage that informs and even outlives these difficulties certainly wasn't emphasized (with the possible exception of Andy Warren's writing) and we have one of tone of these articles we may feel free to pat ourselves on the back, knowing that we Americans have it all together (unlike certain other nations we may think of as 'true capitalism' has taken the day. We number one! If this is all the more deeply the editorial writers on the Kanans staff can research their subjects, I would prefer them to themselves as campus issues that they know more about. Inquiry invited David Radavich assistant instructor, English I see from Friday's Kansan that my friend Alexander Barket has replied to the charges made against me by Ray Kramer, business manager of the Computation Center, and Dave Nordlund, assistant director of same, in last David Radavich Tuesday's issue. However, I feel that I should make some additional comments. Kramer claims that I was dismissed for unsatisfactory job performance. Either he is lying or he doesn't know what he is talking about. I invite the Kansan or anyone else to see my personal records and other documents in my possession, or ask me if I am a worker or supervisor about the reasons for my dismissal. I wish to publicly apologize to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, for mentioning my letter to the editor April 4. To respond to Kramer's and Nordlund's assertion that the resignations were for reasons other than Wolfe's response, I came to speak when I spoke with these people, they told me that Wolfe was their main (and in some case, only) reason for quitting. Jay Bermis' column on British politics in the April 7 Kansan shows an appalling lack of the English Parliament. Situation explained To the editor: Lawrence senior Valerie Voigt Lawrence senior Bemis states in the second paragraph **that** that "the Laborists" * vote, when combined with the vote of the opposing Conservative Party, and other political factors, resulted in a 293-0 defeat for Callaghan's government." I don't know whether Benis knows it, but if he does, he is likely to have conservatives and other factions actually all voted together, the total would be nearer 650 votes. Later in this same column, Benis unknowingly proves this by printing the no-conffidence vote total, 322 to 298. Doesn't he wonder where the extra 300 votes are coming from? He checked several sources and I have found no record of any unanimous vote of the whole British Parliament recently. Bernis also writes that the probable successor to Callaghan would be Margaret Thatcher, leader of the Conservatives. She says saying that if Carter didn't have the election, Ford might have. Britain, like the United States, is essentially a two-party nation, and if the Labor Party leader (asn't prime minister), by virtue of its parliamentary majority, the Conservative Party is. Briefly, here is what actually happened in Britain: Prime Minister Callaghan's government never had more than a three-vote majority and in recent months, because of death and resignation, it had become a minority government. When it did become so, it couldn't get government passed, the Conservatives, led by Thatcher, called for a vote of no-confidence. If Calaghan had lost the vote, new elections would have occurred and would have probably meant the return of a Conservative government. After some political bargaining with the 13-rate Party, Calaghan received enough votes (322-298) to站在 office. Rob Green Hays sophomore Sugar-free felon To the editor: Despite all the years at the University of Kansas, of the strife in trying to become a functional member of the system, I have learned the possibility of becoming a common criminal. For several years saccharin has been a source of solace in the moments of need for one of Joe's donuts. But as I grow older, saccharin this summer means I will, if I can buy booled diet soda My dentist bills will now attest to the fact that I began with the legally condoned addiction to refined sugar. As I grew older I resorted to this potentially illegal device in the furtive attempt of retaining the few clothes in my closet that fit and the teeth left in my mouth. I stopped on both sides of my family, the inclination to become a saccharin addict may be considered inherited. And finally, I must say it grieves me to know while the rest of the whole world still has which are, in excess, bad for you. Potato chips and pork, the government has been so thoughtful as to protect me and habitually satisfied craying. Barbara Merschen St. Louis senior Americanizing track To the editor: Having to go cold turkey from saharrin could have side effects, which contribute to things such as heart attacks and high blood pressure. I close with the plea that anyone knowing of illegal diet soda refineries get in touch with me this summer. In the wake of the KU track team's superb performance this Giving scholarships to foreign athletes also means that the more marginal American athletes who would otherwise get them are left out in the cold by their own institutions, and In the first place, most foreign athletes recruited by colleges and universities in the United States are older than their American counterparts. It is unfair to expect Americans just out of high school to compete with 24-year-olds in college sports. Europe, especially distance runners who have had many years of training and experience. This all may sound like sour grapes because KU would have won the NCAA Indoor track championships if foreign athletes hadn't been allowed in the scoring. But note the fact that more than half of the 34 national teams were by non-Americans and it is supposed to be an American meet. If the United States is to compete successfully in future international and Olympic programs, we will have to emphasize a program built around American rattlesnakes to foreign athletes as a training facility for their own Olympic aspirations. year, I would like to comment on the problems brought about by the recruiting of foreign track athletes. Although I am in no way prejudiced against them, I believe this practice is wrong. Tom Cadden Glenview, Ill., senior thus deprived of the chance to come to college and further develop their talents. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - published at the University of Kaiser Paul August 2015 Edition; and published June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday 2016 Edition. - Subscriptions by mail are $9 a semester or $24 a year. Outside the county students subscriptions are $4 a year. A year outside the county students subscriptions are $8 a year. Editor Jim Rates Business Manager Janice Clements e a is wide open, be surprised if feeling speech nothing wrong probably much in places where of any issue is in *I* think these healthy, and I there is quite a or the other to defend them is the zethenyts of have to defect speak up. 5 Russian awareness school of speech, one thinks so, we are talking of speech, and plan to issue to issue. usanman continues to the editor on press, and I hope ink I'm wrong I'm in to tell me so. that, I hope that we would like to be stopped or serious thinking reedon really illiterate are of such basic as political tree speech and with their through promene methods, and to react in erable conditions its. s' "vote for n't the result of awareness of torial political a vote against employed of her coun- 1, which had passes. 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States is to successfully in future and Olympic will have to built program institutions to training their own Olympic Wednesday, April 13.197 Cadden view, Ill., senior THE CITY OF NEW YORK OnCampus Events TODAY: THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY will sponsor a movie, "Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees," at a 16:27 Fraser Hall. **TONIGHT:** THE STUDENT SENATE will meet at 8:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The Lawrence Indian Center will sponsor a forum on civil disobedience and the human rights of Americans AMERICANS, "at 1:30 in the Union's Forum Room. KU HILL will sponsor a film and lecture on the NIHO AZALOCUATE at 7:30 in the Union's Council Room. There will be a meeting with the SUMMER INSTITUTE IN ENGLAND at 7:30 in the Union's Watkins Room. TOMORROW: The KU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will sponsor a "Most Corrupt Official Content" from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. outside the Kansas Union. KU will host a CONFERENCE ON PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT all day in the union. KU will host a CONFERENCE ON TECHNOLOGY all day in the Council Room. THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall. There will be an ARCHITECTURE MEETING at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. AAUP will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. James Wiesner, Boston University professor, will lecture on "STORIES: A CITY OF CORRUPTION" from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Vermont State, CONCENTRATE CHOIR will perform at 5 p.m. in Swartout Re壳all Hall. Correction Z. Z. Tepper will present its country-rock music at 8 p.m. May 7 in Allen Field House. Yesterday the Kanan reported the group had cancelled. Thornton Mason, SUA president, said negotiations had been resumed after he talked to the Kansan reporter. Reserved tickets for the concert are $6 and $5, and go on sale within a week at the SUA office. Enrollment . . . From page one KENNETH Anderson, professor of administration, foundations and higher education, predicted in a report for the legislative educational planning committee that the number of Kansas high school students in 1970 to about 23,000 in 1980. The report says KU enrollment will fall by more than 1,000 students in the next five years, and KU's enrollment for next fall is expected to be 22,464. The KU administration last fall submitted a projection of 1977 fall enrollment of 22,756 to the legislature. Dyck said the actual fall enrollment probably would be close to that figure. Dyck said estimated enrollment figures, which are established by the University to help the legislature plan future budget goals, had been fairly accurate in the past. However, enrollment in fall 1976 exceeded the projections by 558 full time equivalency students, and KU had to ask the legislature for permission to spend the $1.4 million in fees collected from the extra students. Gov. Robert Bennett cut most of the request, and so far the legislature hasn't restored the far Dyck said he was optimistic about next year's enrollment. "I'd have to be optimistic," he said. "Applications have held up and the reputation of the University has had no major problems." RECENT PUBLICITY on marijuana use at KU and on the Integrated Humanities Program probably wouldn't greatly affect enrollment. Dyck said. In the past, KU enrollment has been adversely affected by campus events, such as the Kansas Union fire in spring 1707 and a series of rages in spring 1794. he said. "Students are the best recruiters for the University," Dyck said, "because they are going to go home and tell their friends how to get there." Students and friends are going to tell their friends." Dyck said the administration needed to keep the students happy" to indirectly bring it about. have about $65,000 by the end of the semester from additional student activity Randy McKernan, Salina junior, said the allocation would almost allege the unallocated fund, leaving a limited amount of money for student organizations requesting additional funding from the Senate in November. From page one He presented a motion asking that the bill be sent to the Sports Committee for study. Senate . . . Leben said the allocation needed to be passed now to allowed improvements to be made. "This bill would provide us immediate improvements, and students will begin to see an immediate return on their activity fees," Leben said. He added that money would be available to fall Senate allocation because an extra $10 million from the Controlled Reserve Fund, About $14,000 was allocated to student organizations last fall, was used. The motion to send the bill to the Sports Committee for study was defeated and the committee voted to keep it. "This is a significant change in the priorities of the Student Senate and making the intramural program our No.1 priority is a good step right now." Leben said. He said the passage of the resolution calling for an end to funding of the women's intercollegiate program after this year was a notice to the University and the state that the Senate wouldn't be responsible for the University in compliance with Title IX. The Sports Committee previously had approved the women's block allocation of $3,405 for this year. The Senate approved a $1 million alternative funding would have been available. Tide IX, which will go into effect July 21, 1978, will require that there be no sex discrimination in University sports programs. Leben said the administration interpreted this to mean equal opportunity for college athletes in funding of nonrevenue producing sports. "We need to tell the University that we won't fund the program any more," Leben said. "The University is now deciding its budget and priorities for fiscal year 1979 and we should tell them it needs to be a high priority item." SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Patricia Hearst's attorneys said they would offer oral arguments today, asking a federal appellate court to throw out her bank robbery conviction on grounds her trial judge—now dead—made crucial errors. Hearst appeal CATCH THE CAROUSELE SKIRTS and GAUCHOS 499 and 999 "Don't Be Caught In Left Field" Values to 3000 SWEATERS and TOPS 499 and 999 "It's A Steal" Values to 3400 It's A Homerun Of Great Bargains A Real Sellout! Up to 75% OFF PANTS 799 and 999 "Single Hits" Values to 2500 SHORT and LONG DRESSES GAUCHO SETS and PANTSUITS 999 to 1999 "Homerun Values" Up to 7400 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center Mon.-Thurs. 10-8:30 Fri. & Sat. 10-6 CAROUSEL CHARGE BANK OF AMERICA CARD master charge Ralph Munyan, student body vice president, said the revenue code stated that all block allocations must receive funding by April 30, so the women's program could receive the allocation without presenting a line-itemed budget. In reviewing the Sports Committee budget, Sam Zweifel, graduate student senator, presented a motion asking that the allocation for the women's intercollegiate program be held in escrow on its group provided a line item breakdown on its request. In other action, the Senate passed a petition requesting Chancellor Archie Dykes to seckBoard of Regents approval for a $1 increase in Kansas Union fees. The Senate previously had passed a resolution approving the fee increase, which would raise the fee from $14 to $15 a semester. outed operational and maintenance costs. The Senate also approved a bill and a petition concerning attendance policies for student members of the University Council The bill states that StudEx members will be removed from that committee after four months of reelection. The petition to the University Council stated that if student members of the council had either two unexcused absences or four absences of any kind, they would be suspended from the council. The suspended student would one week to appeal the suspension to StudFax. Zweifel's motion was defeated. The additional revenue would be used for added operational and maintenance costs. Officials, striking teachers dispute school attendance KANSAS CITY, No. (UPI)-School officials said most of the city's 30,000 elementary students attended classes yesterday in 67 reopened schools, but the striking teachers union said less than half of the students appeared. Norman Hudson, president of the Kansas City Federation of Teachers, said board president James Lyddon testified in Jackson County Circuit Court that he acted as chairman of the board earlier the board's negotiating team wouldn't meet further with the teachers. Hudson also said Lyddon admitted acting on his own in sending to the Service Employees Union Local "threatening" jobs for teachers they considered job for honoring teachers' picket lines. "The intimidating, harrassing threats of the school board chairman are without official substance and reflect his cynical view of the professional employees and their responsibilities to which they have been subjected by the district and the courts," Hudson said. HASHINGER HALL Extends an invitation to all past Hashinger residents to join the present residents at our Spring Arts Festival. Pops Concert — 8:00 — Theatre Monday, April 18, 1977 More information on posters around campus. a Parable by Plinio Correa de Oliveira A psychiatrist has been interrogating a man for a long time in his office without coming to an agreement. Yes, doctor. He's absolutely crary. And I can tell you he's very scared. He's been up and awake, while the doctor listened, half skeptical and half bored. "Then, sir, you still insist your brother is crazy?" the weary doctor reopened. "Come now, none of what you've been telling me is really very conclusive. Some of your facts could have a very normal The distressed man made a final plea: "Doctor, please, just give me five more minutes to tell you this one last thing." explanation. Others are a bit strange. But realistically speaking, they could be explained by a certain nervous tension, caused possibly by the state of his business or home affairs. He is clearly and indisputably demonstrates a state of imbalance. And with the acquiescence of the doctor, this little narration began. Let the reader sit in the psychiatrist's seat, feel at ease and trust that he will be a safe guide. "my brother, doctor, lives in a house, all run-down, 'd itrettess Farm X, which belongs to the richman "Now the rich man didn't want to waste time on a petty problem like this, since time is money, as you know. So he decided to settle this domestic squabbling as quickly as he could, and he went to see my brother. "Inconstolens because he's not rich too, my brother began to harass his powerful neighbor. He stirred up trouble among his neighbor's servants. Then he organized a kind of strike of the workers against their employer. "Now, doctor, you imagine, I'm sure, that he told his lawyers to threaten my brother and denounce him to the police as a subservient, or that he did something to him to stop his troublemaking once and for all. "But no, by no means. The rich man offered my brother loans with easy terms so he could fix up his ugly, old house, and properly clothe his hungry and tiltily children and begin to spend their money on the things that bad. Evidently the rich man thought that if he invested a little of his capital, repayable in an undefined period and at least free himself from the annoyance of his bothersome neighbor. "Obviously, the offer should have calmed my brother enough to allow me to pay his money. Then, right away, he used it to make free trouble neighbor. He did everything he could to prolong the agitation on his neighbor's property and to continue spreading lies against him." "Now, doctor, what do you think of such a contradiction? He hated the man because he was rich while he was poor. Yet the man was giving him the means to stop being poor, and not getting any money. How could like any same person would, he attacks his benefactor." least that's how we interpreted the continuous flow of revolvers into the little farm, where the house and children were. "As you can imagine, there were lots of people that told all this to the rich man. And being a sensible man, he thought that he needed to do more for my brother—that the money would be enough to calm the envy and hatred that were boiling in my brother." "But madness, as you know better than I do, has its own rules. Seeing that the more he smiles, the less rich he is, the less he gets, my poor brother went right on increasing his infrigues, equipment and plans of aggression. It's all clear - at least in the head of a crazy man." "But we couldn't believe our eyes when we saw that with the generous grants of the rich man, my poor, demented brother was setting up nothing more than a shop to produce homemade weapons and explosives. My brother, doctor, wanted to invade the rich man's farm. He wanted to break the good benefactor, which would stop this rich source of credit, and could have used to get out of his misery—out of the very misery that was the first cause of his hatred for the rich man. "Now, would you do that doctor? To someone who had made you friendly loans to remodel your office and home? To someone who had supplied your pharmacy with medicines and even bought you a new car?" "Tell me now, doctor, is my brother crazy or not?" I ask you, reader, in the position of the doctor, what would opinion be? Would you consider that scheming farmer craftsman? At any rate, you are not the psychiatrist, and neither am I. So let's see what the reaction of the doctor was. Exasperated and fed up, he rose, putting an end to the challenge. Getting reprimanded, he asked the gaping man why not give him a chance to breathe. He's just a dye-in-the-wool soufreer, who is exploiting that good natured rich tap. The rich man is the crazy man of your own generation, and that's how he thinks about his job. champion of naivete. For your age, you must be mentally retarded. "Now, either you get out of here right away, or I'll have you locked up for psychiatric examinations—because it's impossible to be of sound mind, and at the same time, as naive as you." The story ends with the poor man fleeing for the elevator, when he reached the street, he calmed down a little, scratched his head and shouted, "I'm going to eat these more nuts in this world every day. My brother is crazy. I see this doctor isn'tlar from it. Why, the only sensible man in this world." I remembered this story when I was reading in the next time ago that a certain Patolichev, minister of Russian Federation, told me that he would then give the secretary of the U.S. Treasury, that Russia would give up the North American market if their commercial balance was in the United States of old go ahead soon. The "good natured" State would be flouted. Fluence Congress to put an end to the obstacles that still exist for an increase of commercial relations between the two countries and let us off from our country the "threat" made by this Patolichev. Reader, what is your opinion? In all this, who is the crazy man? At the same time, wires reported that Soviet submarines posted in the Bering Sea near the Kola Peninsula can, at this moment, quite easily devastate the Atlantic Coast of the United States with nuclear bombs, wiping out all of New York, for example. However, there is not the least sign that, should they be attacked, the threat will diminish. According to the "logic" of "detente," they should even increase, in efforts to put a final stop to Soviet irritability. Is there, reader, any connection between these reports and the story that went before them? If there is, I ask you: who is the madman? Who do you think the crazy man is? Your comments are invited. A St. Thomas More Student Association P.O. Box 1103 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 6 University Daily Kansan Cubs owner Phil Wrigley dead at age 82 Wrigley, chairman of the gum company his father founded and owner of the Chicago Cubs, said of a gastrointestinal disease: "I would tell William Wriley Jr. Co., said He was 82." CHICAGO (AP) - Philp Wrigley, whose name was told to the gung wug gum attacking team, died on Friday. He was stricken Monday night at his resort home in Lake Geneva, Wis., and died yesterday at Lakeland Hospital in Elkhorn, Wis. Funeral arrangements were incomplete. In memory to him, E.R. "Salty" Saltwell, director of Cubs operations, announced the team's blue black arm bands for the season. Wrigley, whose wealth has been estimated at more than $100 million, preferred the life of a reclosure, saying once he was "to go live in a cave somewhere." Wrigley inherited both the gum company and the baseball team from his father. "I'm not sure I'm succeeding on my own merits," he said when he assumed the presidency of the gum company at the age of 29. "I have the fear that 'pull' and the fact that I am my father's son had much to do with my election." The gun company is the world's largest with profits last year of more than $33 Sports million, The Cubs, the first team ever to finish last and draw a million fans, haven't won a championship since 1945, a dry spell longer than that of any other major league team. In 1969, it appeared the Cubs would win the pennant and a record 1.6 million fans poured through the turretis. But the club went into a September swoon and lost to it (Mets). It’s been downhill for learn since. Wrigley was one of the first owners to stop the practice of selling advertising directly to consumers at park and, instead, wrapped Wrigley Field's outfield walls with vines. As a result, a new ground rule had to be written to cover the not-musual occurrence of a ball in play that would have been thrown out. He reduced the seating capacity of the ball park, which is among the smallest in the majors, to put in wider and more comfortable seats. He refused to put lights in the ball park for night games in reference to residents whose neighbors were lighted. overnesses, the Cubs last year went over the million mark for the eighth concurrence. Known for unorthodox attempts to make the Cube a winner, Wriley sometimes used a trick that allowed him to win on six balls. He once quit the board of directors The Kansas Jayhawks, playing their eighth and ninth games in seven days, split a doubleheader yesterday with the Washburn Ichabods in Topeka. KU lost the first game 2-1, but came back to win the night-cap. 4-2. Weary Jayhawks win nightcap to split twinbill with Washburn By JASON NUSS Sports Writer "We played tired today, both mentaly and physically." Ku Coach Floyd Temple said. "We've played a lot of games this past week and it finally caught up with us." In the opener, starter Greg Thurman held the Ichabods scoreless until the fifth innning when Gary Cartwright led off with a home run. Washburn added another run in the inning on a walk, two wild pitches and a srike by Mike Custenborder. KU'S ONLY run carne in the seventh on the board. The maid and a sacrifice飞 are designated ladies. The "Hawks leading hitter, Lee Ice, the "Lakers leading UWU Utes, Thurman 0%, was charged with the In the second game, KU received another good performance from Terry Stelife, who had won two games and saved two in the first half. In the second cliff relieved Stan Messner in the seventh Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East taught aviation mechanics in World War I at Great Lakes Naval Training Center. | | W | L | Pet. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Cleveland | 2 | 1 | 600 | - | | Tennessee | 1 | 1 | 200 | - | | Milwaukee | 1 | 3 | 250 | 1/4 | | Minnesota | 1 | 3 | 250 | 1/4 | | Detroit | 1 | 4 | 200 | - | | Pittsburgh | 1 | 0 | 000 | - | **Yesterday's Results** District 1. Weston 4. Towne 3. Baltimore 2. Milwaukee 1. Oakland 0. California 2. Dallas 0. Philadelphia 1. **WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS** General Motors once adapted some of his ideas on ignition systems to its production models, and his invention of a non-elic screwdriver was the result of his making electrical and other repairs around his Lake Geneva home. Today? Gaines California (Simpson 0) at Oakland (Langford 0); 6:M KANSAS CITY W 4 Pet. GB L 0 1,000 Oakland 3 1 1,000 Detroit 2 2 490 St. Louis 3 4 620 California 2 4 450 Colorado 2 4 300 Houston (Jenkins 0:0) at Chicago (Johnson 0:0), 11:15 am. Milwaukee (Bishop 0:0) at Atlanta (Johnson 0:0), 9:35 pm. Detroit (Teaslon 0:0) at Phoenix (Johnson 0:0), 9:35 pm. Minnesota (Gold) (0.0) at 10:38, Thessaloniki (0.0) at 9:35, Milwaukee (Green) (0.0) at 9:35, Athens (0.0) at 9:35, York (Western) (0.0) at 10:35, Kaneaton (1.0) at Hassle (1.0) Moyer, Andy Glmore and Rich Dodson each collected two hits in the nightcap. Glmore hit a home run in the second and drove to the end with to raise his driving bobby RB1 total to 21. with one out and the bases loaded. KU was protecting a 4-1 lead. Sutcliffe then got Charles Lord to ground out. A runner scored from third, but Sutcliffe struck out Randy Johnson to preserve Messner's second win. KU is idle until they host Iowa State in doubleheaders Friday and Saturday. Temple said he would give the players a day off today and have a light work out tomorrow to give the players a little more rest. "TERRY IS doing a fine job," Temple said. "In high school, Terry threw the ball completely overhand, which is all right, if you have real good velocity to make the ball rise. It took him a while to change his delivery to three quarters overhand, but he's done it and he's throwing well now." Horton, the aging slugger who has complained that bench duty this season was "like a slow death for me," had the right to be on the team. He is the maniaurs 10 years, five with the same team. Horton dealt to Rangers Foucault, Texas' top reliever last season with an 8-8 record and 3.32 ERA, has not appeared yet this season. The Rangers had picked up several relief pitchers during the off-season either by trades or by signing free agents. DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroit Tigers traded veteran Willey Horton to the Texas Rangers yesterday for right-handed relief pitching Foucault and cash, the teams announced. Wrigley liked watching baseball on TV better than at the ball park and usually stayed out of day-to-day operation of the Cubs unless a big star or manager was involved. But when he took a hand, controversy usually followed. The trade came as a surprise to Ranger manager Frank Luchci. The KU men's tennis team did the expected and the unexpected dayafter afternoon, defeating Kansas State, 9-0, and losing to Missouri, 6-3. KU tennis team splits matches "I still think we're better than MU; that why 'm disappointed,' Gates said,耐心地说. It came as no surprise that KU defeated the Wildcats because K-State didn't even field a team last year. But KU coach Rudy Lewis said he was matched at his team's poor showing against MU. The split sent KU's record to 14-9. The Jayhawks' next action is tomorrow against Arkansas at the Allen Field House varsity courts. The MU meet had some highlights, however. Bill Clarke defeated Brian Mitchell, considered by many to be Clarke's toughest B eight opponent, 6-3, 4-3. Earlier this season, he traded National league batting champion Billy Madlock rather than submit to what Wrigley considered exorbitant salary demands. "Detroit will always be my home, and I will always be a part of the Tigers—my heart is here in Detroit," he said. "But I'm also looking forward to going to Texas." Following Monday's loss to the Blue Jayes, Horton almost unwittingly predicted a trade, and indicated he would not oppose the team. The sadness after the announcement was made. Houk said he made the trade because, "I got (leftover Steve) Kemp, who is a young fellow who is going to be a bell of a hitter. He wants to accept not playing every day." But Detroit manager Ralph Houk said be afraid, the contract wasn't a problem; be angry. "Horton would go as a designated hitter," he said, "but we already have plenty of pitchers. I'm going to throw." SPRING FEVER SALE! 30 to 50% off "Willy had to accept being a pinch-hitter x a designated hitter occasionally. He was very good." "I'm 33 years old, but I think I can still play the game for a few years." Kemp, with only two hits in 17 at-bats so far this season, connected with a three-run homer in the Tigers' 6-1 win over the Jays yesterday. Herton has reportedly been seeking a multi-year contract, and was unhappy with the company. Warm Ups By Head, Adidas, Winning Ways, and Loomtogs. first serve Register-FREE RACKET He expressed disappointment, when in 1971, the company raised the price of chewing gum from 5 cents a pack. Until then the price for a five-stick package had remained the same since the founding of the company in 1893. "He's been with this club for a long time, and we felt it he wanted to go somewhere Women's Tennis Dresses, Shorts, Tops, sweaters By Head, Iord, Iad, Tail, Cole of California, Fred Perry. No. 1 Sun Christie Everl, Pierre Cardin, and White Stag. SPRINT FEW S 30 first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE Men's Shirts, Shorts, Separates By Head, Iod, Pacific Trails, Newcombe, No. 1 Sun, Borg's Fila, Fred Perry and Iad. One of his proudest achievements was finally coming up with a chewing gum in 1975 that didn't stick to dentures. Wrigley used searching for such a gum since the 1960s. because of a suggestion that the quality of gum be reduced in the interest of bigger profits. He returned at a salary of $1 a year when some of the directors resigned. 1119 Mass. Lawrence A mechanical wizard, he enjoyed unkering with cuts in his garage. He maintained a constant smile. New York's Jackson gets a royal welcome Rv the Kansan Staff KANAS CITY, Mo.-Reginald Martinez Jackson made his first visit to Royals Stadium in a New York Yankees' uniform on Thursday. The fans gave him their traditional welcome. They booed him. Jackson, that charming son of a Philadelphia tailor who has played golf with Gerald Ford, has never been warmly welcomed. When he affair began when Jackson wore an Oakland Athletics' uniform—the gold and green threads designed by Charles Finley— So it wasn't surprising when a banner proclaiming "Reggie is a Bozo" greeted him as he trotted out to right field for the bottom half of the second inning. JACKSON, HOWEVER, said he never pays attention to the fans. His home run to right field in the fourth inning to pull New York past Washington to shut up the hecklers in the bleachers. "No matter what the farsay, no matter what they think and no matter what you write," Jackson said, "all I will get to do is take the fence 30 times. Then I'm in the clear." Women face WSU today Until this weekend, the Jayhawks had a 6-0 record. But after their games Friday, Saturday and Monday, their record dropped to 8-4. The team will try to boost the record in a doubleheader today against Wichita at 2:30 p.m. at Holocaun Sports Complex. The KU softball team hopes to regain the thumb it has for a while when nothing wants it. Coach Bob Stancifl said that KU's pitching was still strong, but that the team wasn't hitting the ball and was making many errors. "We had five errors in the first game of the Southwest tournament and although there were far fewer mistakes in the other game we beat ourselves with the errors," he Shelley Sinclair, one of KU's two starting pitchers, increased her perfect record to 5-0. Gloria Graves. KU's other starter, now has a record of 3-3. When reminded his round-tripper was only his first of the year, Jackson responded, "Yeah, 29 to go. That's just all about there is to it." Then the multi-million dollar athlete, clad in his Superstar T-shirt, proceeded to grab away on couch and dinner while sitting with coworkers on the Yankees at Yankee Stadium. And as a final thought, he added, "What are we now, 1-3? Well, I wouldn't push any buttons yet though. We'll just stay in cruise mode." After an off day yesterday the Yankees conclude their two-game series against the Royals, defending Western Division champions, tonight at 7:30. Caffin Hunter, Jackson's old A's teammate, was scheduled to start but will sit with a sore foot. In his place Yankee manager Billy Martin has scheduled Ed Figueroa, 0-1. The Royals, 4-0 and off to the best start in their series, have lost to the Warriors with left-handed Andy Hassler, 1-0. Buy one and get one free! Pancakes or Waffles Village Inn 821 Iowa 842-3251 SOA Presents The World's Largest Traveling Multi Media Production THE BEATLES: AWAY WITH WORDS In R. D. Alcock's Perfect NOCK AUDITORIUM 5 UNIVERSITIES PERFORMANCES at 3 pm, 8 pm, 10 pm, and 12 noon SUA Presents THE BEATLES --at the Village Inn Pancake House Buy one and get one free with this meal certificate This coupon entitles the bearer to any pancake or waffle item on the menu—free of charge—when a meal of equal or greater price is purchased. Good anytime except 6:00 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday Expires May 30, 1977 Village Inn PARK AVE HOUSE BISTAURANT THE BEATLES AWAY WITH WORDS Available at SUN BAY Box Office 1055 ALL N U STUDENT TICKETS $3.00 AT THE DOOR The firm's legal team is dedicated to protecting the interests of its clients. Our lawyers work with clients to ensure that their interests are protected and that their rights are upheld. We also offer a range of legal services, including criminal defense, family law, corporate law, intellectual property law, and real estate law. Our team is committed to providing the highest level of service and support to our clients. We believe in building strong relationships with our clients and ensuring that they receive the best possible legal care. Our team is always available to answer any questions or concerns you may have. If you have any questions or need further information, please contact us. Thank you for your business with The Firm. We are committed to providing the best legal services to our clients. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Brian is a software engineer with more than 10 years of experience in developing, testing and maintaining complex software applications. He has worked on various projects ranging from small scale to large-scale projects across different industries. His expertise lies in creating efficient and scalable solutions using modern technologies such as Java, C++, Python, and SQL. Brian is passionate about continuous learning and improvement, which drives his work. He also enjoys traveling and exploring new cultures and landscapes. Brian is an avid reader and writer. He loves reading books, articles, and novels. He has a keen interest in science, technology, and business. Brian enjoys participating in coding competitions and hosting tech events. He is also a member of the IEEE Computer Society and the International Software Engineering Association. Brian is a proud father of three children. He works as a software engineer in a company that focuses on providing innovative solutions for clients' needs. Brian values family and community, and he enjoys spending time with his friends and family. Brian is dedicated to improving the quality of software applications. He regularly reviews code, performs unit tests, and collaborates with team members to ensure that the software meets its objectives. He is also a keen listener to industry trends and best practices. Brian is excited to start his new career in the field of software development. He is confident that he can make a positive impact on the industry and contribute to the growth of software technology. ABOUT THE EDITOR The editor of this article is Dr. Alexei Alexandrovich. He is a professor at the University of St. Petersburg and a research scientist at the Russian Academy of Sciences. Dr. Alexei is known for his expertise in computer science and technology. He has published numerous research papers in top-tier journals and has been awarded several awards for his contributions to the field. Dr. Alexei is a regular contributor to various online platforms such as GitHub, GitLab, and GitBook. He is also a frequent commenter on popular tech websites like Twitter and LinkedIn. Dr. Alexei is passionate about sharing knowledge and insights with readers, and he encourages them to explore new ideas and techniques. Dr. Alexei is always looking for ways to improve the quality of his writing. He has created a review process to ensure that his articles are written in a clear, concise, and engaging manner. He also writes short articles that provide helpful tips and advice to readers. Dr. Alexei is an active member of the professional communities in computer science and technology. He is involved in various conferences and workshops where he shares his expertise with other professionals. He is also a member of the AI and大数据 communities. Dr. Alexei is committed to promoting the use of technology in education. He has developed a variety of educational resources such as tutorials, videos, and interactive simulations. He is also involved in promoting digital literacy and robotics education. Dr. Alexei is always eager to learn new things and explore new technologies. He is interested in researching new algorithms and techniques for computer science and technology. He is also interested in exploring new applications of technology in different fields. Dr. Alexei is a passionate advocate of open-source software. He believes that software should be freely available to everyone, regardless of their background or level of expertise. He is also an advocate for open-source software in countries where it is restricted or prohibited. Dr. Alexei is a proud alumnus of the University of St. Petersburg and the Russian Academy of Sciences. He is deeply grateful for his education and experiences. He is also grateful for the support and encouragement from his peers and colleagues. Brian is very excited to begin his new career in the field of software development. He is confident that he will make a significant contribution to the future of software technology. He is also confident that he will continue to grow and develop his skills as a software developer. A company that is able to deliver the best quality of services is one that has a strong focus on customer service. The company's focus on customer service means that they are committed to meeting the needs and expectations of their customers. This commitment is reflected in their commitment to providing excellent customer service, as well as their commitment to helping customers stay满意. A company that is able to deliver the best quality of services is one that has a strong focus on customer service. The company's focus on customer service means that they are committed to meeting the needs and expectations of their customers. This commitment is reflected in their commitment to providing excellent customer service, as well as their commitment to helping customers stay满意. Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358 "It's another ___ sunrise" Fill in the blank MEISNER MILSTEAD Retail Liquors Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 842-4499 BOY! HAVE WE GOT A DEAL FOR YOU! All this week, for our Grand Opening, we will discount our entire selection of pipes, papers, clips, coke accessories and other smoking aids. ALL BONGS 25% OFF. THE RUGSTORE "All you need . . . Except the weed." 706 MASS. ST. NOTICE: We do not employ a registered pharmacist or sell prescription drugs. RADS teaching in Michigan BLOOMSBURY University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 13. 1977 7 t? ansan --- TREND RE Critics deal with Feedback flaws Staff Reporter In the first century B.C., Pubillus Syrus said, "it is a bad plan that admits of no one." That attitude may apply to Feedback, the study tool for survey at the University of Kansas. By MISSY PETERSON THE Designed in 1988 as a student evaluation of faculty instruction, Feedback has seen one change after another and the demand for improvement continues. In its present form, Feedback consists of nine questions about an instructor's skills. The instructions asked to rate an instructor on a scale of one to exceptional performance, to five, which means improvement is definitely needed. A grade of one or better, a letter grade to the instructor and the class. ACCORDING TO Phl McKnight, associate professor of curriculum and instruction, any survey has inherent drawbacks. One of Feedback's drawbacks is that it tries to do to many things. I yawn Nelson, please. But you're not a person. It was first designed to help students decide among possible courses by providing information on courses and instructors. The results of the Feedback surveys were compiled in a booklet. Each course and teacher received a numerical rating, an Beer strike won't affect supply here A strike by union employees of the Adolph Coors Co. in, Golden, Colo., won't affect local supplies of law, Lawrence bar owners and managers say. Larry Bazzi, manager of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., said, "There was an initial lag in production but with the new equipment, the brewery, Coors is back in full production." Bazzell he foresaw no shortage of Coors beer in this area. The strike began last week when 1,500 workers walked off the job in Golden during a dispute about a new contract put into effect the company despite union rejection. Bill Drelling, manager of Father's, 2408 Iowa St., agreed with Bazzell that there wouldn't be a shortage, and said, "My husband isn't even said anything about the strick." Coors officials said that new employees would be hired this week to help the management and to aid the 460 workers who have returned to their jobs in the brewery. The union requested a boycott by consumers of Coors beer beginning last Monday, after distributing information to bars and liquor outlets over the weekend. Bazzell he didn't think his customers would boycott Coors beer. Jerry Porsch, owner of the Clydesdale, 611 Vermont St. agreed. "I don't think that the local drinkers will boycott Coors," he said. "The only way that the boycott could affect us would be if the company took to the up the railroads or something." Porsch said his distributor hadn't placed any restrictions on beer orders. "We're totally a student bar, no townies," he said. "I don't think that they will pay any money." average of all the scores an instructor received from his students in each class. more because of low ratings, Nelson said. SALARY INCREASES also are partly determined by the teacher ratings, which often reflect the scores received by the teachers survived. "There are teachers who aren't here any more because of low ratings." Nelson said. Criticism of Feedback revolves around this aspect of the evaluation. Many think comparing the class mean with the actual score can help determine if determining who deserves recognition. According to Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, the mean doesn't reflect the many variables that affect a student's perception of a course, such as class size or whether the course is required. The "immediacy" of the evaluation also greatly affects the results, he said. "Sure," one student said, "If we've just made an 'A' on something from a teacher, There also are students who don't care who think the evaluations are ridiculous and misleading. Many students give all their teachers one standard rating without considering what decisions rest on the evaluations, Nelson said. As a member of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) subcommittee that prepared a report dealing with Feedback problems, Nelson is aware of the role that Feedback plays and the problems accompanying it. An important aspect of the committee's report provided that due process be guaranteed to every instructor when a student is admitted in such matters as tenure and promotions. AALP is committed to the protection of academic freedom and promises due respect to its students. THE REPORT noted that Feedback results tended to be biased because not all It is possible that only one-third of all KU instructors are ever evaluated in Feedback. Nelson said, and those who submit to feedback are more likely to be working toward tenure or promotion. the instructors were required to administer them, and those that did seldom got 100 per cent. Nelson said that because of this, most of the evaluated instructors made an effort to be good teachers, and the survey benefited from their teaching. How do we improve our teaching methods? However, because it is often the better teachers who are evaluated, the University should not penalize those who perform GEORGE WORTH, chairman of the English department, said he suspected that most of the instructors who needed to be evaluated didn't use Feedback. And some teachers present taking time out of class to give the survey, he said. McKnight said this essentially meant those who were evaluated were compared with the best teachers, whose high ratings have boosted the mean. Because of this, the AAPU subcommittee report has recommended that the University set aside a time outside the regular class periods when all students can evaluate all their courses, and that the University will not be by the University, not by the instructors. The report also recommended general guidance for interpretation of Feedback result. Nelson said the manual should point out certain factors about certain classes. FOR EXAMPLE, if a class is very large, the teacher's availability will be limited. The manual should be designed to create an awareness of such cases. The 14 students, from the Colonie metropolitan area, are spending three weeks in the Kansas City area to learn about American culture. They live with host American families and have attended high school and a local school district the past two weeks. Nelson also said that the statistical flaws of Feedback programming should be corrected. The AAUP report recommended that standard deviation and margin-for-error calculations be included in the processing of Feedback results. American customs confuse touring German students One student said it was difficult to compare the American and German school systems, because she couldn't understand what was happening in the classes she attended. She said the Americans spoke too fast for her to understand them. German high school students who toured the University of Kansas campus yesterday said they found some American customs confusing compared with customs of their Because of the differences, American students are more free to travel and participate in social activities, the Germans said. The 'students were surprised at the American families' practice of allowing their children frequent use of a car. In use, use of the family car is more restricted. Several of the students also said age 16 should be too young to obtain a driver's license. Germans may not drive until they are 18. Many of the students on the tour have limited knowledge of English. During evenings, the Germans are entertained by their host families and participate in high school social activities. The students said they had been to movies, concerts, dances, bowling, the Worlds of Fun amusement park and area shopping centers. Some of the students expressed disappointment that they couldn't go to a disco to dance. They weren't allowed to go to舞会 because dancing is popular in Germany, they said. The German students said they thought it strange that Americans couldn't drink beer until age 18. Germans drink at a much earlier age, one student said. The students' visit to the United States is sponsored by the Goethe Institute in Boston and the America House in Cologne, a cultural meeting club for Americans and Germans. Its purpose is to expose German students from family life, schools and entertainment. While on campus, the visiting students toured the University Theatre, the Museum of Natural History, a sorority house and a scholarship hall. They were escorted by members of the German club and by students from KU German language classes. Indian pow wow to be Saturday Native American residents of McCollur Residence Hall will present a free "pow wow" for residence at Lewis Hall cafeteria. The pow wow, made possible by the funding and assistance of the Pearson Trust enrichment committee, will include an Pow wows are traditional gatherings of Indians to dance and socialize, Lawrence Yellowish, Dallas sophomore and a pow wow coordinator, said recently. The native American residents recently sponsored a display and film in McColm Hall, Yellowfish said, and the pow wow will be their last event this year. Phoebe Snow Washington Ash Watsonbone Ash Renaissance Flying Burtifrio Bros. Quincy Jones Quincy Jones Maryland Magneforce Maryland Magneforce The same sound alternative you enjoy on KJHJ FM8! can be of your own album collection. For two weeks beginning April 14, KJHJ will give away free albums to listeners from 6 PM to midnight. Mon, thru Sat. Available artists include: Kris Kralferman Kris Kralferman Kansas BED Taylor Tanker Miles Daw Taylor Tanker 张杰 Jammer Hamm Jammer Hamm B.B. King Weber and Rice L.A. Express Justin Hawley Justin Johnson Manhattan Transfer Manhattan Transfer Jansen For all of the details, keep tuned to KJKH FM91. THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE Make Your Summer Profi Continue Your Studies at WASHBURN UNIVERSITY OF TOPEKA KJHK FM91 MONTANA NUMBERED PHONE & MEDIA CENTER Day and Evening Classes Quality Instruction Excellent Study Environment Air Conditioned Classrooms Graduate Education Course Short-term Workshops Eight-Week Session Foreign Language Workshops urses REGISTRATION FOR DAY AND EVENING CLASSES - MAY 31, 1977 For further information and application, contact: SUMMER SESSION OFFICE Morgan Building Room 107 913-295-6619 Small library fines go uncollected Library finserve an important purpose, even though they don't always get paid. Unless a fine, or accumulated fines, total $1 or more, the business office of Watson Library won't take any action to collect the fine, according to Brenda Caffrey, a fines If a student receives a 30-cent fine for returning a periodical an hour late, the library has no assurance that the fine will be paid. But, according to Sarah Couch, periodicals and reading room supervisor, notices of fines are an important way to curb the use of the library's library books on returning material. "People won't pay attention to when the magazine is due and assume that they can keep it for 24 hours or for three days," Couch said. The periodical and reserve reading rooms charge 30 cents for the first hour something J. Watson's April 11-15 TONITE IS LADIES' NIGHT. U 50c cover–Disco T U "The Best of Ernie Kovacs" 8:30 E "Puebla" 10:30 Free Disc for Everyone on our 7' TV--*Star Trek* 7:30' The Amazing Howard Hughes 14' Part: 8:00" 10:30 50c Disco—"Howard Hughes"—conclusion. "KOJAK"—10:30 in the Peanut Gallery F Live Music—Cover $2.00 Poor R Willy 9-12, also "Paint Your I Wagon" 7:00 Live Music—Cover $2.00 Live Music--Cover $22.00 S Flash & Glitter w/ Lisson A Playful, Dame Come T watch the show 9-12. Peanut Gallery free from 12-7 p.m. SUN Peanut Gallery? TV Free from 1月 p. to 10. Come watch the doubleheader—KC Royals vs. Seattle at 3:35 Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Millcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa is overdue and 15 cents for each additional hour. Fines on overdue books are 25 cents a day. The Office of Admissions and Records refuses to let a student see his transcript or any other record. "We're just interested in having the periodical returned so it will be available to users when needed." Even though the library won't take action to insure that fines under $1 are paid, she said, smaller fines are more likely to be paid than larger amounts. "Most of them know that they're bringing the magazine back late and for their own convenience they're willing to pay the fine," she said. "People with smaller fines are more willing to pay because it's not much skin off their nose." OWL SOCIETY Junior Men's Honorary Organization Applications available in Alumni Association Office, Rm. 403, Kansas Union. Applications due Friday, April 15 Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. sisterkettlecafe Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 Coffee House Fri. & Sat. with live entertainment 9 pm-Midnight MEXICAN PASTELS Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kanson 864-4358 --now only MEXICO BORDER BANDIDO Texas Texas Burrito EAT IN OR CARRY OUT 99c Reg. $1.59 Offer good Mon., April 11 - Thurs., April 14 1528 W. 23rd across from Post Office 842-8861 --- Spring is STRAW HAT TIME!! C Don't miss spring because the sun's in your eye. Get your straw hat at Raasch's. Also Denim Jean Sale Reg.14.50 Now 12.50 See our new location at 25th & Iowa North of Gibson's FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, BOOTS, HATS, JEANS RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDES SHOP 123 Main Street New York, NY 10014 822 6413 BankAmericard MasterCard 8 Wednesdav. April 13, 1977 University Daily Kansan Amtrak runs here only at night; commuter service unlikely now By DONNA KIRK Staff Renorter **Note:** there are two instances that fade into darkness, the Lone Tone Ariamtrik passenger train that travels between Victoria and Melbourne, and renameur in Lawrence only at night. The No. 10 train leaves Kansas City's Union Station, Pershing Road at Main Street, at 12:30 a.m. and returns at 11:45 a.m. E17th Sewen, at 1:10 a.m. another train, No. 16 leaves Lawrence Group study of insurance is upcoming A Council of Presidents' subcommittee which has examined academic liability insurance policies will report its recommendations to the Board of Resedents schools tomorrow. According to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor and subcommittee chairman, two proposals will be submitted to the Council of Presidents. Both proposals address issues in law, faculty, staff and administrators in lawsuits stemming from their academic work. However, Shankel said, the proposals differ in both rates and coverage. Specific details of the proposals, including the amounts of protection offered, won't be discussed. ONE OF THE proposals would require a payment of $20 a year and would include a deductible clause. Employees in different positions would be charged the same rates for coverage. The second proposal has no deductible clause. Payment for the coverage would be at the time of payment. Both proposals would be open to all faculty, staff and administrators, Shankel said, but no employee would be required to purchase the insurance. According to Shankel, the Council of Presidents could decide to use both proposals. The employees would then decide between the two. Kansas State University is the only Regents school that offers a liability insurance policy. Marvin Thompson, treasurer of the Teachers and Employers Association at K-State, said that even though the policy wasn't required, 802 members have purchased the insurance, provided by a Toneka agency. THE POLICY is renewed each year, Thompson said. K-State has had some type of liability insurance from different sources and amounts for the last four years, he said. Thompson said he thought that K-State would agree to join the other Regents in the effort. According to Shankel, 2,000 employees from the Regents schools would have to purchase the insurance in order for all to participate in the policy. Mike Davis, University of Kansas general counsel, said, "There is a real need for me to work with the agency." LAST SPRING a survey was conducted in which 81 per cent of the respondents at KU indicated that they would purchase the dress. A second survey found that would be higher than originally estimated. The misconception in many people's minds, he said, is that state employees can't However, he said, it is only the state itself that applies. Employees can be sued and frequently are. Violin equipment lost in theft; suspect held Musical equipment with an estimated $1,755 value was reported stolen from a KU student's apartment sometime Sunday or Monday. Lawrence police said a duplicate key was used to gain entry to the apartment. Stolen were a 200-year-old violin, a violin and an amplifier hook-up for the violin. at 1:20 a.m. and stops in Kansas City at 2:15 a.m. Police have a suspect and are investigating the theft. Although the arrival and departure times aren't convenient for commuters, a commuter service between Kansas City, Lawrence and Topeka is out of the question for now, according to an Amtrak reservations agent in Los Angeles. "JUST TO ADD two extra cabs for between Los Angeles and San Diego on a Saturday." * New services are added only after Amtrak has conducted a study to determine the potential number of riders, profits and cost, the agent said. A proposal to establish a county must be approved by the county county and city agencies affected by the service. The federally owned Amtrak, in operation since 1971 when the government bought bankrupt passenger lines, will be six years old May 1. Amtrak continues to replace old lines by hiring staffing restoring Robert Casey, public affairs manager of the Chicago Amtrak office, said. "WE LACK equipment to begin new services," he said, "but we're planning to build more coach cars for our Amfleet for distances under 500 miles We've got some metroliners in use in Philadelphia, Chicago and on the West Coast." He said that a section of the Amtrak Act authorized state governments to establish local services, but that the process took a long time. Ray McKinley, state director of transportation, said establishing a commuter service to conserve fuel was a good idea that wouldn't work. He said the state wouldn't want to spend the money necessary to set up and operate a commuter service. THE KANSAS Legislature would have to McKinley said that an Amtrak commuter service would also have to obtain an operating license from the Kansas Corporation Commission after showing that the service was needed and it had been approved by the legislature. John McNeal, state director of planning and development, said a computer service could be established to help coordinate transportation or the state division of planning and research had conducted a study to determine the advantages of the new system. But the results were not done so, he said. LARRY DANIELS, manager of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said the chamber had received no inquiries about commuter train transportation. appropriate one-third of the cost of establishing an intra-state service, according to the Amtrak Act. A Lawrence Amtrak official said "lots of people" rode the late-night trains between Lawrence and Kansas City, but he said he didn't know how many bought tickets just for the Lawrence-Kansas City round trip, which costs $7. The local Amtrak official said he couldn't be identified because of Amtrak regulations. The regulations also specify that the only schedule information local stations can provide is to say whether a train is on time, be said. "No one's really expressed any interest," **w** said. People who want information about Antrik arrival and departure times must call Antrik intercity rail passenger services in Los Angeles at a toll-free number, 1-800- The reservation agent in Lost Angeles said the trains that stopped in Lawrence and Kansas City were on daily runs between Chicago and Houston. Rate hikes boost KU energy bill despite drop in natural gas use Although the University of Kansas has an natural gas conservation program, it is not an option for most students. KU has lowered its gas consumption; and rates have increased dramatically to raise KU's gas bills. Max Lucas, University of Wisconsin, said the increase in KU received its seventh natural gas rate rise in the last nine months with the February bill, he said. February's bill showed that 43,877,000 cubic feet, costing $53,312,000, had been used at KU. In February 1976, KU used 41,750 cubic feet but paid only $41,750,000. The cost rose 32.6 per cent in 1976, but consumption went down 15.3 per cent. Lucas said that good weather helped the conservation program. Gas is used for heating and lighting. RATES FOR gas jumped from $1.24 in February 1977 to $1.26 in February 1977. The program included lowering the thermostat and turning off unnecessary lights. "It was warmer in February than last year," Lucas said. "We also have an energy conservation program that has been in operation for two years and people are paying attention." Gas rates have risen a total of 34 per cent since June 1976, Lucas said. Since July 1975, gas prices have fallen by more than 20 per cent. BECAUSE OF higher rates for utilities, including natural gas, the University was forced to ask the Kansas Legislature for more money for KU's 1977 energy budget. KU asked for $275,680 extra in October 1976, to cover rate hikes for all utilities, as well as $112,382 this February to cover a budget in the bedget by high fuel oil costs. The change made the budget less flexible than before and made extra money harder to acquire. Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs, said that KU was budgeted $100,000 to pay for the item used was for the first time this fiscal year instead of placing energy programs on the campus. endanger service to homes and to high- priority institutions, such as hospitals. During those times, between late December and early February, KU alternated full fuel- oiling with 50 per cent oil and 50 per cent gas. KU IS ON an interruptible-service contract, which allows the gas company to pay for services. In the more than eight months since the 1977 fiscal year began, Jones said, natural gas has accounted for 25 per cent of the energy budget. Electricity took 61 per cent, fuel oil 10 per cent, and water and sewer service 2 per cent each. KU has used natural gas exclusively since Feb. 4. Jones said. Imagine studying in an environment of massive stone walls and lush foliage. Imagine studying at one of the largest women's universities in the world or living among some of the world's friendliest people. This was how Cameron Hurst, associate professor in East Asian Studies and in history, described a coeducational study abroad program in the Republic of Korea. South Korea opens doors to Study Abroad program The University of Kansas, in cooperation with Ewha Women's University, is inaugurating the program in the 1977/78 academic year. The program is in Korea by an American university Three or four KU students and 12 from other American colleges and universities will be offered. Hurst, co-director of the program, said recently that all parties connected with the program were pleased with its reception and that different benefits would arise from it. "I WAS IN Korea last November and December and I had a chance to talk to the government," Hurst said. "The Blue House, very enthusiastic. The White House, was very enthusiastic." Hurst said that through the program the department of East Asian Studies hoped to increase student participation and to give a real understanding about Korea. "If you make access to a country easy, people are more likely to study that country. It's more fun to study in a country where people are less likely to study it in the middle of Kansas," he said. The program will involve four courses of academic work in the Korean language and English. TWO COURSES will be devoted to an intensive Korean language program of 10 classroom hours per week under the supervision of native speakers. A third course will be a lecture in English on a Korean subject. For the first semester there will be a team-taught course on contemporary Korea, which will provide a detailed introduction to the political, social and cultural patterns of Korea today. The fourth course will be an independent study project, designed to take advantage of the location in Korea so that students can materials not available in the United States. ONE OTHER aspect of the program is to help dispel the image people have of Korea. Hurst said that people remember Korea after its invasion and scandals involving the Korean government, "Lots of students study in Japan and China but few study in Korea because of its size, the war and the biased publicity it receives," he said. "Right now, people who study Korea have Ah, lasagne, spaghetti, pizza, salads! Campus Hideaway, Thanks for life's delicious pleasures! Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park 843-9111 Big 8 Softball Tournament at Holcom Sports Complex (Back of Park 25 apts.) April 15-16 BROADCAST April 15-16 GAMES DAILY Saturday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Friday 2:30-7 p.m. Championships 5:15 p.m. Saturday ADMISSION Friday $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Friday $2.00 Adults Saturday Early Session $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Championships $1.00 Adults Championships $1.00 Adult $ .50 Children 12 and Tournament Pass $3.00 Adults $1.50 Children 12 and already been there with either the Peace Corps or the army. Very few are the "Joe College" type, and we would like to change that," he said. He said many of the Peace Corps workers stay in Korea after their service to teach English, study foreign languages or "I KNOW FOUR people from KU who have stayed there and enjoyed living there," Hurst said. "I don't think I ever would have gone into East Asian studies except I had a chance to go and study in Japan." In addition to the academic program, there will be field trips and other cultural activities throughout the year. Participants in this course normally earn 32 credit hours through KU. Although the program is only offered by KU, students from all over the country are required. The cost of the program is $3,200, which covers transportation from the West Coast, all academic fees, room and board. It includes an expense of transportation to the West Coast. A few fellowship grants of up to $1,000 are available. Applications can be obtained from Hurst in the office of Study Abroad until Friday. Greeks paired for Rock Chalk Fraternity and sorority pairings for the Rock Chalk Revue were announced The pairings were made by the KU-Y from preference lists submitted by intersted Greek groups, Jo Bedard, KU-Y coordinator, said yesterday. These are the fraternity-sorcery pairs: Alpha Tau Omega-Alpha Gamma Delta; Beta Theta PI-Chi Omega; Delta Chi-Apha PI; Kappa Pi; Sigma-Gamma Pi; Phi Delta Theta PI-Beta Pi; Phi Gamma Delta-Kappa Kappa Delta; Phi Kappa Pi-Sigma; Phi Kappa Pi-Theta Alpha Pi-Sigma. Chi-Apha Chi Omega and Sigma Nu-Delta Gamma. Independent organizations interested in participating in Rock Chalk should notify THE 80 HOUSE OF USHER / QUICK COPY CENTER 838 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Telephone 842-3610 JAZZ WEEK TABLE OF CONTENTS THE HOUSE OF USHER / QUICK COPY CENTER AT 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET IN DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE IS HEADQUARTERS FOR THISIS BINDING AND COPYING. LET US HELP - WE WILL MAKE THINGS EASY FOR YOU AT A PRICE THAT'S RIGHT! WE CAN MEET THE DEADLINE! Bat presented by the Lawrence Opera House & 7th Spirit balcony Wednesday April 13 JAM SESSION with the River City Jazz Band. Bring your own AXE and join in with the fun. 9:00 p.m. 'till ?? 50' cover Thursday April 14 KU JAZZ BENEFIT Experiment 9:00 p.m. 'till ??? $1.00 cover Benefit for KU School of Fine Arts Jazz Scholarships The Tuesday/Thursday Band, The 12:30 Band & Tommy Johnson Friday April 15 LAWRENCE JAZZ COMBOS 1758 Fast Eddie Quartet River City Jazz Nairobi Trio with Johnny Moore on drums Tom Montgomery Quartet with Jim Stringer on guitar 8:00 p.m. 'til 3:00 a.m. $1.00 cover Saturday April 16 KANU FM 91.5 Concert Presents The Ralph Towner and John Abercrombe Band with special guests THE NAIROBI TRIO with Johnny Moore on drums Two Big Shows 7:00 and 10:00 Admission $4.00 7th Spirit Members will purchase $6.00 Tickets for the entire night. Listen to KANU FM 91.5 FOR FURTHER DETAILS University Daily Kansan Wednesdav. April 13. 1977 ZK 9 KANSAN WANT ADS Our City wrining E and the fun. ll ?? school of charolships thursday 30 Band msnson on drums on guitar 3:00 a.m. ver crombe guests ROBI nbers will 0 Tickets night. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their ability to participate. Bring ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL. CLASSIFIED RATES KANU FOR three times twice four times times times times times 15 words or fewer Each additional $1.00 $2.25 $2.75 $3.00 AD DEADLINES intentional word ___ .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 deprived deprived Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UD Business office at 864-5258. 864-435f UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special trips: 4-hour boat trip $32 per person. Other trips: 4-hour bike ride $60 per person. Sparrow Hawk Camp, Loop Route (2 miles north on highway 10) Tabuleau, Oklahoma 74446 (918) 505-4990. Persons interested in joining a campus futures research club call 814-690 or 814-2111 evening. ENTERTAINMENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party and a large dance floor. The hall is larger than or equal to, Large. Extra large dance floor. Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in the news on NBC's "Hall of Fame," at Hagel, at 815 W. 46th St., Birmingham, PA 215-894-5800 for information. p. 3-15 IN YOU, OVER CRYING FOR MORE MEAN- ING. He was grazed at the Hawk's nest at 10 a.m. FOR RENT 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to 1 and 2 utility spaces, parking. 843-859-709. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets, 843-7567. tt Frontier Ride—short term lease available. Frontier Ride offers a study, heated indoor pool, sliding carpet, heated outdoor pool, heated pool door, pool disposal - laundry facilities, furnished and unfurnished for $135. Call 815-720-9866 or visit www.frontierride.com. Subletting apartment. It has 1 bedroom. Come by 351 Fireside Drive, Apt. 10, to 3:50 p.m. by 11 a.m. 1- bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor, 842-506-9300 Sublease for summer-- 3 bedroom house lease at 150 sq. ft., incl office, with option to renew lease. Call 843-3124 to meet requirements. CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX Rent the Pro- CAMPER Rental Routes. Call集会 5-10 4-10 Gatcheous Apartments - Call Becky now. Sumner: 612-537-9900, gatcheousapartments.com contracts on all Gatcheous apartments. Call 843-824-2500. www.gatcheousapartments.com Sleeping room upstairs. Share bath. $45/mo. Inquire 706 Illinois, evenings. Sublease - summer/furnished/2-bedroom/AC/ close to campus and downtown $130/mo $180/mo Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center. Furnished and unfurnished, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open 6pm a day a week for rent. Inquire at (312) 922-8900 or (312) 928-7417. Call either i912-929-8020 or i912-928-7421. 4-21 Bubblebase studio apartments for summer. Quilt for study, outdoors activities, central air, all宜用 materials. Call (617) 345-8020. Subtlety furnished studio apartment, all unities paid, for summer months $130 Cash. To be resided in. Need to adult 2 bedroom downtown townhouse at Trailside Court, four room reasonable rate. Call Chuck or Casey for details. Sublanee—Furried studio apartment. Mid May 2017. Furnished studio, 80'x50', with fresh desk, dark floorlock, naut kt to pool, leisure space. Call (314) 646-2999. Hole-In-The-Wall 846 Illinois 843-7685 8 Sandwich Skob HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand - Furniture - Antiques Make your plant now. Appliances are now available to you that can be used for giving fast 'fit' by for a warm and complete environment. Goods • Vintage Clothing Sublime Luxury townhouse, three huge bedrooms 841-1509, breeze room, fireplace, air conditioner, 4-18 Parmished room, utilities paid, share bath, fire-rescue close, campground, 389 i4ths. Indiana 4-25 Sublease for the summer--1-bedroom apartment, furnished. Kit 841-5548. 4-18 7308 Mass. 841-7O7O Wanted two boys to sublease Trailridge Town-house $86 Mo plus 1/4 utilities 633-549-824 www.trailridgehouse.com To subluate. -We must留夜. Beautiful 3 bedroom room. -We must留夜. Beautiful 3 bedroom room will give up some flowers. Please call 841-5258. Please call 841-5258. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 842-393 or stop by 1635 U.S. House house 8-28-30 Monday-Friday, i at Saturday, New 1 bedroom apartment being built for fall, on the great location by the stadium. Call 847-290-5680. Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid, on two floors. 1979.30 $ and 1979.50 $ each. 843-695-003 or come in 1655-200-003. Nice, 1-bedroom apartment. For May June, July August. Block from Union, $185 per month. 411-6097 b-room apartment 2, blocks from Union, $165 plus utilition. #431-708. Availible immediately. ROSAILA K HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 61004 (212) 548-2730 www.rosaileahotel.com or come on by car 3-bedroom apartment. Spacious, near campus and downtown, not paid, furnished or unfurnished. Can be 4-dormbed, parking, laundry. 1403 Tremont Ask for manager after 4:00 p.m. To ask, Aik for manager after 4:00 p.m. 4-15 FOR SALE Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make some out of this material. (See study guide) For Class preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, "New Analyzer of Western Civilization" available now at Towson University. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties: BELL AUTOLINE ELECTRIC, 843-605-9900, W. 6th. HVAC & Heating ELECTRIC, 843-605-9900, W. 6th. We are the only Full Line Franchise Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, monitors, at Audio Systems, 8th floor, Rhode Island. 1970. Kawasaki 500, front disk brake, electronic braking system, with luggage rack, real sacrifice at $600; Call 800-236-2888 or visit www.kawasaki.com. 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition, $225, 864-1537 4-14 INFINITY 2000 B Speakers $2,999 your warranty $1,599 $100 credit both. Call Jill 814-646-8838 or $150 must be paid Mobile home, 1975, Champion, 12 x 40, front kitchen, 2 bedrooms, partially carved, located near train station. Age safe central air conditioning Very clean, age safe central air conditioning Very clean, reasonable call 841-383-85 on 5 p.m. or 844-644-2888, reasonable call 841-383-85 on 5 p.m. or 844-644-2888 1972 Opel GT, blue, low mileage, air conditioning, automatic, luggage rack, good tires plus snow, excellent condition, 25-30 mpg high performance without stereo, $250, kit. Call 4-146 6455 64 Chevy Impala-good, inexpensive transportation runs good call John 813-5877 4-13 Ludwig Pro-Beat drum set w/cases, excellent condition. Call 842-7169 - 103 4-13 Guild F-40 Steel-string guitar, Sunn 200s guitar gun. Two J.W. Bell speakers with Flash can not available. Call 843-1037 at 123-135 ARP 2600 Synthesizer, 15 months old also US. divider clutch tank and regulator. Call Nick. 877-555-3999 1975 Bullecoo Frontiera "66" Beter Forks w/WN Seals new plato, rein fast. 130 Tortoise. 6-14 1974 Smark Mushroom Salivall 11/10 feet holds, Snark &$25 Negligible. call 641-842-3000 4-12 1972 Suzuki 380 GT, needs work. $150 firm. BUM 864-6035 4-13 Honda S200 (super sport) 1975, 6000 miles. meet- dress size 34-38. age range 13-18. year of birth 1975. 4-14. walking distance 1925-2528 mph. 2 bicycles, 21" 10-speed Peugeot UO-18 Man, 25" 10-speed Peugeot UO-18 Man, condition number, 643-79 or 892-4042 4-15 1974 Gold Dater-PB. DB, AC AM-FM 8, trakce 1974 Gold Dater-PB. DB, AC AM-FM 8, trakce Must sell: 841-715-736, 4-14 Medical student's microscope. Zeiss Biuncular. Excellent condition call 842-857-68. 5-15 has the eyeglasses you want. VISIONS 73 Plymouth (Duster) available June 1. One earlier, excellent condition. 842-0100. 4-14 1975 Honda CB-125 plus 2 helmets~only 600 miles on tyre~60% bicycle ~28% on road. Capacity at 844 lbs. HP 35 calculator like new, only $80. Please call Mike: 452-2844 4-19 DEADBOLTS INSTALLED Yard Sale Fri. and Sat 15 and 138 1636. We sell dann good junk. Peggy. 4-15 Lock & Key MORRIS Pioneer XS2-60 receiver-$165, $165 to truck deck Pioneer XS2-80 large selection of tapes $2 each Call 841-253-9750 Email info@pioneer.com 1972, Vega Hatchback, AT, AC, AM-FM Good. AC, AM-FM Good. Must sell Schwinn Continental 10-inch JBL L-100 speakers, deluxe king size waterbed, in fantastic elevated frame. Kiss H of 1 headphones. Mk 8426 amplifier. Amplifier. B4-158 Mk 8429/1 after 4:00. Caucasus Casket Tape recorders final cut to $35 from $175. One of the largest tape recorders on the market, W Stoneham 2009, 699 Mass. Open air, Towers, 125 West 48th Street, 200-222-3500. Dodsonville, touchpad price: $199.00 Carson Bastiora, high power, excellent performance must sell: 824-5000 8-13 BADIAT, THE CLEARANCE, 145 x 135 x 155 mm. BADIAT, THE CLEARANCE, 145 x 135 x 155 mm. PFET. Monitoring and balancing available. Ray Dickey, PFACT, Inc. Set of four new 135mm 13 steel belled radically only 92mm $994, $994, Open Thru $994, $994, 10 speed Peugelt motor bike, low mileage, many mileage points. Hand held frame骚骚,$103,446; eventing, $103,446; eventing, Final cut on C.B. Radio's and Antenna's. Some tracks on C.B. Radio's. Ray Stoneback on Ray Stoneback's 292 Mass. open. Uh 8:30, 8: 10:30. Nancy & Sherry's big sale: Much 4'6" style cloth and blouses, Pendleton cardigan and other shirts, blouses, Pendleton cardigan and other shirts, good goods and old furniture including caddies, carpets, mats, tables and chairs; much more; Sat and Sun, April 16th and 17th 710 Mass. 843-2182 73 Mardis RX-3, Auto Ai. Stereo, 8 track, Low mileage, perfect shape=make肩, 84-16063 Last days at last year's price. Eureka temp. up to 50°F. Eureka up to 75°F. parkas, men and women's $62.0. Price must go up after super Sat. sale. Winter merchandise marked down Sat. onLY. Sunburder Boulevard, 844 130 N. 7th St. 1975 Yanaka Enduro 400, excellent shape 3500 Call. 842-5263 26' Motobee record grain record器. Never been used for any recording for $00 or more. 44' Kall 842228. ext. 44 8-15 Harrison-Davidson 250, 1000 ml, just tinted milti condition, $50, 842-989-638, 4-18 HELP WANTED Brand new stereo amp. 110 watt, RMS, fantas- brand just verified by B42. 842-9499, evening www.b42.com men or women. We need 5 people immediately. We'll have a team of 5 to work. No experience necessary. We will train. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-310-6 He Will be need to fill up with employment. 4-14 Aven selling can help you earn money for college. Flexible hours. high $M. Gall, Mrs. Bellz 521-734-8060 Need a good part time job tell school's tuts Apply in person at Heavy Eddys' S07. 507 w.14th after 3.9p.m. located on the Wheel. Dell-ivy $250 plus tips. Will train $250 plus tips. Will训 Summer job for married couples. Must have a bachelor's degree and at least six months of uninterrupted time to it, possibly for your location. Lake Champlain, New York, $130; w/w for couple. Type maintenance work, etc. Living Quarters: Your occupation will apply in writing to Raymond Cert., 1000 Sunset Drive, Oakland, CA 94628. Please inform: NO TELEPHONE CALLS PLEASE. Information center accepting applications for Application deadline in April - In App Deadline 4-15 Avon open territory in Lawrence. Even if you have an interest in profitable real estate, avon provides them profitable real estate. Avon operates its offices 842-842-1120. SUMMER JOB'S: Forest care services. How where, Mountain Co. P.O. Box 727, Penngrove, Mt. 58800. CLOSED NOW. Applications are now being taken for the position of Resident Director and Assistant Resident Manager in a five year term. Job descriptions and applications are available from the Naismith Hall Business Office, 1204 North Market Street, Minneapolis, MN 55803. Applications must be received in the Business Office by M.F. April 15, 1977. EQUAL OPERATION 6-12. ATTENTION SUN WORKSHIPPERS. Enjoy a summa of fun with us! We are delighted that the restaurant needs waitresses, breakfast cooks and fryers to make our menu appealing. You will comfortably in good shape hoping Available Catering in good shape. Call (415) 365-7898 for an interview. *4 - 19* (*415*) 365-7898 for an interview. 8th & Mass. JAMES CAMP Pier1 imports Imported Auto Parts Downtown Foreign Auto Parts HEADQUARTERS for Phone: 841-7525 843-8080 304 Locust Need intramural track officials for meet on Sat- day. Are 16th high at Recreation Site? Yes. Please call (877) 320-5555. **STUDENT CLERK TYPET** Responsibilities include: reception, typing distribution manual, copy-mapping of materials for students, internships. Please and helpful - able to effectively interact with other staff and visitors. Accurate attendance, and occasional Saturday mornings, afternoons, and occasional Saturday mid-morning. Currently enrolled student at the University of Kansas. **APPLICATION should be made to Jan W. Brown**. **Summerfield Amherst A. (425) 967-0138** on center fax or mail to: Summerfield Amherst A. (425) 967-0138. **AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER** IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER OF ALL RACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPEL. Part-time $3 per week for 20 hours, male or female. 40% cash necessary. Call MAIL@HOLYSAK.COM Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30p.m. FORTRAN PROGRAMMERS—two I/2+ positions are offered with the statistical program library, the computer applications library, the maintenance facilities, and the assisting in maintenance of program library, conference activities at University of Kansas with undergraduate or graduate students. (or other HBLI course system); experience with FORTRAN programming; knowledge of languages to communicate. Desired Qualifications: Computer science background; knowledge of statistic, assembly language and Java; University of Kansas Computation Lab; Junior University of Kansas Computation Lab; An I/2+ position is an EQUAL OPPORTUNITY MAKING RACE. BE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY ALL RACES. Director--PHINTING SERVICE director, University. Expertise highly diversified, modern plant, self-supporting with animal volume about 1/20th of the total volume and a well-developed modern management systems for sultoning. Must have 3 years experience in management degree in printing plant management designer degree in printing plant management designer degree. Send application to Dr. Russell Mills, University Director for support services University, 66045 North Carolina State University. Application deadline, May 9, 1977. An Qualified男士 and women of all races are encouraged. Qualified men and women of all races are encouraged. Student architect/engineer wanted to produce spices and working drawings for energy saving home from our ideas. Knowledge of poured pots, kettles, pots and cups. Call before 20, anytime. 913-451-2858. 4-18 Did your Easter break turn into a work week? Did you have to cancel your call? Go cost this summer. Call for interview. LIFEGUARDS-Johnson County firm has several LIFEGUARDS for personnel for person identification. Service Manual W31 preferred. Send application to A.S.L. 8433 Qutvilla Lewin K. 60215 or call 1-848-2429-419. *fax* 60215. LOST AND FOUND Last blast 1977 pocket calendar containing inform- ation to the mi. to return. Appreciate 4-13 Mike 842-3478 LOST: $1000 000 CA$H! You can find it, you can find it. Literate for Turtle Trains Cause Clues on 1234567890 Lost-Glasses in flowered case. Brown plastic case. Call Chatire, 825-423-0159 or 6448. Reward. Found-Germany shepherd, older dog, brown white flea collar, outside Blake Call 841-392-6700 Lost-48 cookies. If found, please return to Cookery Store. Cooks are required. Olivier Hall Lover 5 p. m. FRIED. 4-15 Lost: Blue workshift, embedded, left at 19th and 20th Lakesiana landmark. March 25 Sentinelu- ber. Medium sized part Norwegian Elkhound Mark I Ackermann. Call: a11 at 814-6614 after 5 hours. Lost-Silver bracelet with Tiger Eyes stone. 4-18 841-5058 or 842-4698. 4-18 Found. Kodachrome slide of artwork in front of Strong Hall. Claim at 29B Snow. Ask for Georgia Loat. Ladies yellow-gold watch. Han white, with orange, with no horn. Sirtile. Ladies silver-green watch. Munro. 846-182, 846-183 Found: Frog Trophy with Bram plaque. Call Greg or Julien at 664-3539 and identify initials. Lost: April 7th, four silver keys on ring, plain touch; tab attached, tabbed 165. Reward. Knife set. 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 10 p.m. Monday to 9 a.m., to 10 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Vista Harley-Davidson Fri. & Sat. fll 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th and Honda Cycles horizons 1811 W. 64k DORM ROOM FOR SALE—Contract for some equipment, furnishings, waterbeds, shaw carpet platform, dinner switch on lights, insulated door for you smokers and much more. Must see-N-68. 818 Oliver Hall-842-370-8390. NOTICE Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishe- tle, ectlectives, television. Open daily 12 843-327-577 Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo. You name it and we get it. Departures on major airlines, Europe from $299. Departures on major airlines, Europe from $299. Exact rates Entail Powers train schedule. International. Multinational. Toll free 1-800-282-3255 or multinational. Toll free 1-800-282-3255 or multinational. Needed: GAY COUPLES who have been living together for at least one year are needed to participate in the program. You will be required of traditional or unconventional life styles. The study will be on the positive and strength qualities of gay couples, often held assumption that gay relationships are guaranteed, and couples will be paid $10 for 2-3 hours. Call Denali Daley, 648-1720 or Michele McGraw, 648-1720 for information about Kansas and Women's Cancer. 4-15 CONTACT LENS WEARERS Save on your hard-to-find lenses. Contact Lenses Supply Center, 314 Camden Street, Suite 100, San Francisco, CA 94105. Enrol now! In Lawrence Driving School, you will receive a driver's license that is required for truck transport provided. Drive on the road at your own discretion. Make our favorite albums your own directly, the KJHK FM #9 record giveaway, beginning April 4. free albums from The Sound Alternative listen to JKHK FM 91 for details 4-14 Pipe show. We have now Moverham plums fire- tightly stocked in the garden and will be on- sunday, Saturday April 16th, all day. Town Clerk Susan Rowe. (503) 728-4520, Town Clerk KARATE Learn the ancient secrets of this martial art. Practice conditioning and learn wrestling. Defend your opponent with great strength. Graduate students seek domicile for KU summer session. If you are leaving Lawrence for the summer, live near campus, and park in apartment in good condition. Call Fern 1-432-3806. 4-18 Will Rogers never met Arne Bray. Hawk's Nest, Wednesday at 8 a.m. 4-13 PERSONAL Gay Counseling Service. Call 842-7555, 6-12 p.m. T176. For socializing activities, call 1176. Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Life Ministry Inquiries; Box 500; Lawrence KU RELAYS ATTENTION!! BEN WILL BE IN the RACES! 6-14 To the anonymous person who found my blue card, they returned it and wrote to thank you in very much. 4-13 We put on a dammed good show. Peggy. Anyone Can Whistle. Oliver Hall Lounge. 4-15 Will Fried Forenuse hire her? W. Will 2 Browne and Robert Forenuse hire her? Robert 14+17, will Honeau Invit. him? April 14+17, will Honeau him? April 14+17, will Honeau him? PJR—Shorttack, Happy four years 4/12. We've had ups and downs. Even though times are rough now, the good times outweigh the bad. Our lives are still hard, but nothing always works out. I am not worried. LML. Dear Curtis-- I've decided to call in. It took 3 years but I finally got a "reaction." I will meet you any afternoon (except Tuesday), any time, any day (except Friday), you name it. Signed, The Harry *y* Seider. PEACE CORPS and VISTA are looking for volunteers to work with their interested group by the KUV's 101 Union Paragon: striving towards excellence. 4-14 VIEWERS OF JEWS OF NAZARETH. If you were a Jew, read this and claim it. Ready to call Dwight, 942-7570. Griselda-Meet me at Squeezers. ANYONE can become a Universal Life Church Minute-stake athlete, legally performマイナンス, and have no more taxes. (Now over 25,000 tax-exempt ULC members nationwide!) Don't delay—become a credentialed member of the Ministry, send $3 and a self-employed certificate of Ministry, send $1 and a proof of P.O. Box 115, Lawrence, KS 66044 4-19 O P O I XL, Lawrence, KS 66044 4-19 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841 7964 MA S 0 6-90-71 10-5:30(Thurs.8:00 SERVICES OFFERED TYPING Hatha Yoga class beginning Wednesday, April 13 For information call Catherine Garde 841-516-3960 For information call Joanne Foster 841-516-3960 Sometimes Serious. Sometimes Hilarious. But always in poor taste. 4-13 Math tutoring--competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, Regular sessions or one time test preparation. Rateable reasons. Call 642-7681. **tt** GOT THE FLU! GIVE it to Arne Brawl Hawk's Nest, Wednesday at 8 p.m. 4-13 "Another year older and deeper in debt. Saint Peter don't call him cus he can't go — he owes his wife $1 million for her dental and the dentist and TWA and Douglas County. And you're not going anywhere. You're shared 8 of your生日 wishes, but I only remember 2 of them). In the age of 67, he couldn't sleep under a linen duck — in limb letting you know that you're overdue on a press run. Many happy returns and may have to pay back the debt on your wife on the rocks. (No flizzel) 4-13 Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of de- fective addiction. For help or info, 845-011-01 or 845-012-01. *845-013-01* STEREO BROKEN* Receivers, amplifiers, turn- table, tape decks Preventive Maintenance Modifications Reasonable rates 90-day warranty Jaeger Electronics, 724 Mass. 841-5353 I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-6476, 1 Typist editor, IBM Pica elite. Quality work. Support for user dissertations welcome. Email: 842-912-6917 THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrenze, Washington, 838 Manhattanis or phone 842-5801 Thank you. Thesis, term paper, etc. Reasonable rates. Call Bali, 841-6477. 4-14 Term Papers. Proofread. Corrected. Wolters, 1712 Albums, 833-1222. May 4-15. Woltern, 1712 Albums, 833-1222. quality travel since 1953 TYPING: Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6558. 75c page. tf Will you type your paper with TLC. Term papers and articles only. 814-731-8011, 814-731-8012, 814-731-8013, evertings and weekends. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for great typing, 843-1514 days, 829-8887 evening hours. WANTED No basis to just good typing at lower than averages. Good typing at higher levels of deadlines. Harvey or Linda. 82-919-3050 Studio or one bedroom apartment to sublease for fall semester. 841-6753 after 6 p.m. 4-13 You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That's $103 less than the youth fare you'd pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is to be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. Ten-speed rim. 26". Name price. Call 841-4820 between 1-8 p.m. **4-14** Male or female ropeanism needed for summer to start. $70 plus a utilition. Call anytime 800-215-9468. Icelandic Group A 14 and I want you! Anyone Can Whistle, Group A 17 and I love Hall Lounge. B FREEL! A FREEL! Female renault for summer and/or fall, only for entire summer. JaguarWaykers Towers. 5069 4,18 Male graduate student seeking male female to work at McGraw-Hill. Email: david.mcgraw-hill@gmail.com Gary Davis 1982 "A" Street, Lincoln NB 68203 Email: david.mcgraw-hill@gmail.com in THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts Female room $23.30, wanted immediately. Own room, $23.30. Prefer upper linen. #43-7579. Pines in Schoeller Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522 fall semester, 1977, 841-667 4-15 Eiddecker Optical ... Roommates. Share a house, summer and early years. $75 House rent. Phone 642-819-3500 - Pool SUA Maupintour travel service DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE - Bud on Tap - Pinball "A different kind of bar NAISMITH HALL The Lounge Si Cs featuring seclusion and quiet. - Foosball 9th and Iowa Kansas Union 843-1211 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 915 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday The Chalk Hawk Bird wav Pool - Snooker BILLIARDS - Ping Pong Pin-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Air Hockey Eggs-Ball Thin Hawk Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Administered 10 Wednesday, April 13, 1977 University Daily Kansan Recycling program saves pine trees, electricity, fuel Each ton of paper collected for recycling by "Waste Not," a University of Kansas recycling program, saves 17 10-year-old white pines, Join Seitz, project coordinator. Also, less electricity and fuel are used to manufacture paper products from the recycled paper than from wood, he said recently. Each week, about 3,000 of used paper is picked up from 40 campus locations by "Waste Not." The program is operated by an area center that assists assistant director of production services. The paper is sold to the Shade Paper Co. in Wisconsin, which accepts only high quality papers such as bond, computer printouts, data processing cards and Xerox The company doesn't accept newspapers. carbon paper, colored paper or stick surfaced paper. The paper is sold for from $40 to $60 a ton. Seitz said. Receipts pay student employees who collect the paper, and are used to buy books, binders, and boxes, which are used in the program. "Waste Not" was started two years ago by William Argeringer, vice chancellor for graduate studies. At that time, only about 300 pounds of paper a week was collected, most of it from the Computation Center, Seltz said. Seitz said he welcomed new paper contributors to the "Waste Not" program. Anyone who would like to donate paper may call him at 864-4291. The program has been publicized in campus departments and the campus Association of Clerical Workers, Seltz said, and has grown rapidly. Discount buying service aims for student market By DONNA KIRK Staff Renorter The voice on the phone says it's calling for the university division of Modern Guide to Buying, a national company that can save you money on consumer items. The voice announces meetings this week to explain how our services and services and invites you to attend. If you go to a meeting, the voice says, you will receive a free certificate for an ex-member. You're skeptical. You ask: what is this, a random sample survey? No, the voice explains patiently, we're referencing senior and graduate students. What would you And so, out of curiosity, you go. MEETINGS ARE at 1, 4; 30 and 7 p.m. seating is limited, the caller asks, so when you arrive, Contacting college students through meetings is one of the marketing programs of the Kansas City-based Modern Guide to Buying, Inc., according to a Better Business Bureau report. The company claims it can offer fee-paying members large discounts on merchandise by eliminating middlemen for customers and offering discounts for members through a parent company, Executive Buying Corporation, Cranbury, N.J. The Better Business Bureau report said that the company had a satisfactory performance record, and the bureau had maintained on the company since February 1972. The report said, however, that prospective members should consider joining the bureau fee as part of merchandise costs. THE PRESSURE to sign the agreement at the meeting, not the membership fee, has brought complaints from students to the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA). Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said many students had complained of high-pressure sales talks from sales representatives who said that if the students didn't sign the contract at the meeting, they would later pay higher membership fees. Under the company's college program, members who select merchandise from catalogs pay a $40 initial fee and $2 a year for postage and kits mailed to them. The $2 fee is subject to change, depending upon increases in postage, paper and handling. Kay Altman, a company sales representative, said recently the $480 was a "guaranteed renewable" payment, payable in a lump sum or in installments with a 1½ cent finance charge on the first $500 or less, equal to an 18 per cent annual interest rate. That means the student as a new member pays $506 in the initial lump sum. If he pays only $28, a fee Alfman said entitles a new student to pay $26. The student pays $7.20 a month in addition to his monthly payments on the remaining $480 balance. However, the company's college student membership agreement states, students who pay $30.30 will save finance charges on it." An April 19, 1975, letter from the company to the CAA said that the company allowed new members a three-day cancellation period. The company also noted that the company didn't accept a down payment until a representative has taken a new member to confirm his intent to join. According to the company's college student membership agreement a buyer can cancel the contract any time before the contract expires or the date of the transaction, if the contract is executed outside an office of Modern Guide Services. If the contract was signed by the customer at a meeting. *A buying service can give you savings only if you plan to buy lots of things, such as a car or a house.* However, Altman said, people buy small appliances, cosmetics, toiletries and other small items over and over, so it wouldn't take long for a member to realize savings. Altman said that according to figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a family simply needs a company to run it. By using company services, a family could average an annual $1,000 savings. Company members order goods from catalogs and send local price information with their orders for items, which the company claims can be less expensive. KROEGER SAID, "As a consumer, you should ask yourself whether you would want to shop that way and have to wait for the goods. If a toaster burns out, I don't want to wait two months to get another one. I'd go shopping today." And have the use of it in the meantime." She said some people who joined buying services told her it took from six to eight weeks to get some merchandise while others waited only one or two weeks. Time can be important, she said, because a buyer can't examine merchandise until it arrives, and additional time is necessary to return an item and get a refund. Altman said Modern installment to Buying accepted installation payments for merchandise from banks or other financing companies but the former made the financing arrangements. THE COMPANY guarantees all deliveries to be prompt and fully insured, she said, and provides a WATS line for members who can't get service on products or want to hasten their cover. However, delivery charges, cover installation and delivery charges, she said. Kroeger said that buying services generally offered larger discounts on items than local discount houses, but that the buying service added shipping charges to the price. The difference might equal or exceed the price of the same merchandise bought in a discount house. She said that not all retail stores charged manufacturer's suggested retail prices, and that students should consider how much money they will pay after paying the membership and annual fees. Utility deposits steep, but refunded By CHRISTOPHER COS Two roommates paid about $80. One woman had to pay approximately $90. A newlywed couple put down about $40. All women paid the same a utility deposit. Staff Renorter These deposits must be made before water, gas, electricity or phone service to new customers begins. In Lawrence, anyone planning to move into an apartment or a house probably will pay from $35 to $100 in deposits. To students, the amount of deposits can be staggering. But under Kansas law, the sting of paying the deposits is lessened a little because utility companies are required to return them with 3 per cent interest. In other words, utility companies pay more than that...up to 6 per cent. ACCORDING TO THE utility companies, a deposit can serve as an incentive for a customer to pay the amount of money the person is in paying his bills, utilities spokesman say, the more he improves his credit rating with the company and the sooner the utility deposit will be paid. A credit rating will often do a new customer little good when he's beginning to establish a good credit rating with a particular utility can be possibly avoid paying a deposit. Almost anyone moving into a new residence will pay at least one. THE LAWRENCE Water Department said that it required a $15 deposit from all renters but that homeowners weren't asked for one. The depositors were not paid, and they are refunded with $ per cent interest. If service is terminated before that time, the department pays the final bill with the refund and returns any money left over to the customer. Deposts usually aren't required at the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., unless a bank or credit card is certain to Bill Collinson, a company spokesman. If a person has had service with the phone company before in another city, he must pay bills, the deposit isn't required he said. COLLINSON SAID deposits were based on an average of two months' service, generally terminated. The account is reviewed by computer after about a year and if the credit Collinson said a letter of guaranty was sometimes used in place of a deposit, allowing a person who has a good phone company credit rating to assume responsibility for a new customer's possible default. standing is good, the computer automatically prints out a check to the customer for the deposit plus 6 per cent interest. Anyone can use a letter of guaranty, he said, but in Lawrence it is more popular with students than with the general public. Nonetheless, most students choose the deposit option, he said, "because it's easier to awkward to get a third party involved." THE KANASAS Public Service Co. asks for deposits from all customers who want to make payments by mail or in person. Community play first since '40s The Lawrence Community theater will present Paul Zindel's "The Secret Affairs of Milfred Wild" at 8 p.m. April 15 and 16 and "The Dance of the Lawrence Arts Center performance hall." The play, Lawrence's first community theater production in 35 years, is a comedy of fate. A group of young women evicted from their Greenwich Village candy store because of urban renewal. The wife, Mildred Wild, retreats to a secret life in the mansion, which finally reconciles her dreams on reality. from such movies as "King Kong," "Gene With the Wind" and "The Invisible Man." Mary Doveton, 212 Wren Lane, is director, and John Wilson, assistant professor of social welfare, is her assistant. Gregory P. Williams, 113 Vermont St., Bill Kelly (Roy Wild), professor of law; Steve Silver (butcher), Lawrence graduate student; Betty Collier (Helen Wild), 507 Lawrence University and Peggy Wilson (landlady). Bristol High School. Tickets, which cost $2.50, are available at Rusty's food stores and the Arts Center. Persons 65 and over will be admitted free to the Sunday matinee. company spokesman, said. She said that a $10 deposit was required for service to apartments and trailers and that homeowners usually put down between $25 Accounts that show year-old deposits are refunded with 4 per cent interest, she said. In the meantime, any deposit over a year is over, the deposit is applied to payment of the final bill and the remaining balance. Ines Rieagle, credit manager at the Kansas Power and Light Co., said deposits were required unless the customer had had previous service for at least a year with KP&L and had no delinquent payments during that time. RESIDENTIAL deposits are $35, she said, except for deposits for total electric homes, which cost $19.95 per square foot. Riegle said the deposit figures were based on an average two-month bill. If after a year the account shows all bills were paid in full, the account is not applied toward payment of the current billing. Intramural Track Meet Saturday, April 16 8:30 a.m. at Memorial Stadium Men, Women and Coed Events Entry Deadline: Thursday, April 14, 5:00 p.m. Rm.208 Robinson Gym Free Apartment Hunting? Special Summer Rates Reduced Security Deposit Call or come by. 841-3800 842-2348 WEST HILLS • AVALON • HARVARD SQUARE SUA FILMS MOSES AND AARON (1975) Dir. Jean-Marie Straub. A top-drawer production of Schoenberg's opera. Classical Film Series. Wed., April 13; 7:30 p.m. $1 THE WORKING CLASS GOES TO HEAVEN (LULU THE TOOL) (1972) Dir. Elio Petri. With Mariangela Melato. Co-Grand Prize winner of Festival 1972. (italy/subtilties) Thurs; April 14, 7:30 & 9:45 p.m. THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR (1975) Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium Dir. Sydney Pollack with Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway, Plus short films by K.I.U. students from CINEMAS, April 16, 3:30; 8:00; & 9:30 p.m., $1 DISCO ! JAZZ! BAND setting up afterward M Icelandic Lowest Jet fares to Europe of any scheduled airtime Benefit Disco Fashion Show Extravaganza Nite! Place: LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE 644 Massachusetts Tickets! $ 3.50 ~(includes door ¢ dinner) There are no booking restrictions. We give you the same service you'll get from other airlines, without the same high costs. So if you're not flying leander to Europe, you're probably going to another destination on fares and on a new New Horizon Tours tours, too. Available at: Time! 7-9pm Wed, April 13, 1977 From April 1 through June 14, you can fly roundtrip from New York to Laxenburg for only $410. Lawrence Arts Center Olive's Closet That's $89 less than the youth fund you pay on any other schedled airline. From Chicago you pay $488 thru April 30 and $430 from May 1 thru June 14.) All you have to do is be under the age of 26. Cornucopia Lawrence Opera House Lawrence School of Beauty SUA Office Garbage Visions Britches Corner and other participating merchants. . . Save $89 on jet fares to Europe and book anytime you want. iceland Airlines, Depot #,CN P.O Box 105, West Hesteadrop, N.Y. I 11552 new your travel agent or Call toll-free (800) 555-1212. New international calls cost low and taxes Historical Excursion. Tours of Europe Proceeds First Donation to Lawrence Arts Center Scholarship Fund APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR SUNFLOWER HOSTESSES The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is now accepting applications from students interested in assisting with the recruitment of prospective student-athletes for the Football Department. Membership requirements state that you-must be a regularly enrolled KU student in good standing during the 1977-78 academic year. For further information and applications contact the football office, Allon Field House annex. Application deadline is 5 p.m., Friday, April 15. d AAAAAAHHH KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Vol. 87, No. 125 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 14, 1977 Faculty track races via mail See story page eight KU Senate allocates $290,276 for special projects and JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Reporters The Student Senate last night completed its budget for next year by allocating $280 and acting on the budget recommendations to the Services and Academic Affairs committees. The Senate approved the recommendations of the Culture, Sports and Communications committees Tuesday night. The Senate made several changes in the Student Services Committee's recommendations. The Women's Coalition has advocated for a $700 allocation of $700 for a self-defense brochure, bringing its total allocation to $1,770. Mike Harper, StudEx chairman, told the Senate he had found a group in Kansas City, Mo., that printed the same type of brochure and would reprint it for the Women's Association. Mr. Harper printed an insert demonstrating self-declaration positions and procedures for another $125. The Senate also passed an amendment giving $700 from unallocated funds to Kansas Environmental Services to keep it operating on a trial basis next semester. The Student Services Committee had recommended not funding the program, which provides weather forecasts, because of a budget shortfall. The service to the student body was underfunded. The service is manned by meteorology graduate students and currently has a dial-in service with KJHK radio. The group is JKHK's only weather service, though the station can receive weather reports from the Associated Press. LARRY COSGROVE, founder of the service and student senator, told the Senate that the funds were essential to the program's suvival. "If we don't get them, we're dead," he said. "There's the same mockery owl still叫." year. New programs need to be given a break." Some Senate members argued that the service duplicated other available weather services and would benefit only those looking for it and not the entire student body. Steve Owens, Salina junior, disagreed. "I think we're being too hard on this group in particular," Owens said. "We fund other groups that benefit only members of our community, provides experience and training for methadone students and should be funded." THE AMENDMENT passed, and the Student Services recommendations were passed after defeat of a motion to send the budget requests of the Women's Coalition and the Commission on the Status of Women to the Finance and Auditing Committee to The budget recommendations of the Academic Affairs committee were passed as presented. Another bill allocating $475 of unallocated funds to three groups under the jurisdiction of the Academic Affairs Committee also passed. The additional allocations were $75 to the Undergraduate Philosophy Club, making its total allocation $165; $250 to the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics for a total of $321; and $150 to Blacks in Communication for a total of $350. The bill would restore funding for requests the Academic Affairs Committee requested to cut to meet its allocation limit. The Senate thought the requests were needed. THE UNDERGRADUATE Philosophy Club would be funded the additional £75 to pay for two printings of its journal, and the additional money had allocated money for only one printing. The additional $250 for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics would allow the group to take trips to the McDonnell-Douglas Corporation plant in St. Louis and the Boeing Company plant in Wichita. Blacks in Communication would receive an additional $150 to print a brochure ex-closure for their local radio station. The Senate defeated two amendments to the bill. The first would have provided an additional $150 to the Association of Women Engineers to pay postage on newsletters. See ALLOCATIONS page three THE ROAD FROM HAPPINESS TO SADNESS IS ALCOHOL AND DRUGS IS ALCOHOL AND DRUGS the Rev. Richard Taylor leads the Kansas Dry Forces' fight against liquor by the drink Taylor shows good record for dry forces Note: This is the first of two articles on liquor by the drink in Kansas. By STEVE FRAZIER Contributing Writer Contributing Writer TOPEKA-The man at the top of the stair in W. 21st W. St. smiled. Many say his work is the main reason Kansas is without liquor by the drink. —A repeal of the prohibition of liquor being on board for the kill twice in the *House of Coke* — A bill to allow the sale of 3.2 beer in private clubs after midnight on Sundays was sponsored by the Conservative Party. His supporters cheer, and his opponents acknowledge his reputation as one of the leaders in this movement. "This session we whipped 'em on everything." Taylor said. Some of his detractors say he is a malicious tyrant who bullies lawmakers against relaxed law loraws. Others say he is by monopoly-minded private club owners. —An extension of the time during on-screen watching in tavernas to 1 a.m. during Daylight Saving Time. One opponent, on the floor of the Kauzas nominated him as "sack bobster" of the team. THE MAN GRINDED as he dodged assessment of his personal power and denied charges of using intimidation as a lobbying tactic, but the biggest smile broke across his face as he reviewed another perfect record. It was April 8, and the Rev. Richard Taylor Jr., executive director of the Kansas United Dry Forces, could feel safe that the two leaders had been earlier in both houses of the Kansas Legislature meant success. The legislature would reconvene April 27 for final consideration of bills now in conference lawsuits against major laws wouldn't be among those bills. A Senate concurrent resolution to amend the Kansas Constitution to provide for liquor by the drink by county option was killed in a Senate committee. TAYLOR, $2, IS a seasoned professional. He knows what his opponents say about him and he often answers their charges by saying "I've already answered that," as he A bill to allow the consumption of alcoholic beverages in National Guard armories was passed by the Senate but killed in the House. A Senate proposal for city-option liquor by the bill was killed on the Senate floor. — A Senate chairman drinks in restaurants seating more than 10 persons was killed on the Senate floor. springs from his chair to retrieve from one of the file cabinets lining his office walls yet another article, clipping or newsletter that explains his position. "You can keep this," he says, and adds the specially printed material to the already furnished book. Taylor will then supplement his answers to well-practiced phrases that echo statements in the text. WHILE AT Wichita, Taylor served on the board of directors for the United Dry Forests. The board comprises representatives from several church denominations, the Women's Christian Temperance Union and the Prohibition Party. The United Dry season "agreed with me, that you honor the players who have finished the game by giving the game your best as long as you have time on the clock." The legislature may provide for the prohibition of intoxicating liquors in certain areas. Subject to the foregoing, the Legislature may regulate, license and tax the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, and may regulate the possession and transportation of intoxicating liquors. The open saloon shall be and is hereby forever prohibited. Kansas Constitution THE FEW QUESTIONS that seem to catch him off-guard are answered after some hesitation and will be referred to again until Taylor is satisfied he has answered them. "No comment" isn't in his vocabulary. the Kansas Issue, the United Dry Process heritage church, 60,000 Kansas heritage churches four miles Taylor, born in Dwight, grew up in Enterprise, near Abilene. He received his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering at Northwestern University, where he earned a bachelor of Dame University and served as a gunnery officer aboard a U.S. Navy patrol boat AFTER EIGHT YEARS at Salina and another eight years in Concordia, Taylor was transferred to the University Methodist Church near Wichita State University. There, after a 1970 plane crash that killed 22 men and fans, he met fierce his sermon, "Life is a Football Game," which he delivered at a memorial service for the players. "Life is like a football game," he said, "and the game has an end. Now when the game ends, and I walk off the field, I get to meet the coach face to face. He left his job as a diesel research engineer with Fairbanks-Morse in Beloit, Wis., to enter the ministry. He received his theology degree from Drew University in Madison, N.J., and returned to Kansas to serve as a Methodist minister in Salina. "If there are players who still have time on the clock, they must continue to give the game their very best, even if some of their biddies are off the field." Taylor said the surviving WSU players who voted to continue the 1970 football season. In 1968, the United Dry Forces board of directors asked Taylor to be executive director and lobbyist for them, but he declined. Kansas Constitution, section 10 of article 15 Forces also go by the name Kansers for Life at its Best, which Taylor describes as "a union of users and nonusers who refuse to be pushers." "See, lots of people think I fought and clawed to get their exclaimed position," he said. "I turned it down once. But the second time (in late 1970), my bishop said, 'Dick, maybe God needs you in Topeka at this special time in your ministry." TAYLOR'S BISHOP appointed him to his present position in July 1971. Taylor is appointed to his post each year for another one-year term. However, it was in 1970 when liquor by the drink was on the state-wide ballot, and Taylor was not yet officially head of the United Dry Forces, that he met State Sen. Norma Gaar, R-Westwood, and one of the leading supporters of liquor by the drink. Gaar was the senator who, in 1975, was quoted as saying "I dedicate to you, Richard Taylor, the title of sick lobbist by a letter that Taylor was prompted by a letter written by Kenneth Carlat, Topeka that Taylor had sent and to all Kansas legislators. CARLATS LETTER said, in part, "To you, Senator Norman Gaar, a prime mover in this legislation, I dedicate to you a very close friend, Ed. at the age of 22, married father of two children, killed by an automobile driven by a woman drunk out of her mind." Taylor said he based his opposition to relaxed law laws on the assumption that strict regulation reduced consumption of alcohol. Taylor cited a 1974 HEW report that says Kansas per capita consumption of wine and distilled spirits is less than half the amount in Missouri. That Kansas should keep laws that prohibit liquor the drink, sales to those under 21 years. See DRY FORCES page ten Part-time ombudsman to channel complaints Persons grappling with the complexities of the University of Kwaasan will soon have access to a new research facility. Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, told SenEx yesterday that the University would have an ombudsman starting next fall. The ambushman, according to the University Senate's Rules and Regulations, will aid members of the University committee by providing them with a lot of know where to go to solve them. The ambudsman will direct students, faculty and staff to the proper channels within the University structure where special grievances can be dealt with. ALTHOUGH THE ambassador won't have the authority to take disciplinary or legal action, he will have direct access to all administrative officials. This will establish a link between anyone who has a special problem or complaint and the established system of procedures for solving University-related problems and complaints. KU never has had a faculty ombudsman. Deanell Tachia, chairman of the Advisory Committee on Campus Grievances, said yesterday that the primary objective behind such an effort was to “make some order” out of the complex system of grievance procedures. The Advisory Committee on Campus Grievances currently is working on the department's request for a referral. TACHA SAID that a complete description and set of qualifications for the job would be finished late next week. At that time, the committee will solicit applications from faculty members for the ombudsman position, she said. Basic qualifications for the position outlined in the Senate's Rules and Regulations include "a comprehensive knowledge of University organization and procedures, and at least six years previous service on the University faculty." Tacha said that it would be essential that the ambulanceman have a 'good working relationship' with the medical staff. The job probably would be part-time, according to Tacha, allowing the faculty member to continue work within his own department. Shankel said the ombudsman would be paid about $8,000 a year. The funds will come from KU's increased enrollment this year, which has allowed the administration to add new positions, including the ombudsman position, within the University. ELDON FIELDS, chairman of SenEx, said the University Council and SenEx had been working on the creation of an ombudsman's position for nearly two years. Chancellor Archie Dykes and Shankel had been hesitant in the past to endorse the idea of having an ambassador, and early last fall they told SenEx that an ambassador was unnecessary because of the University's elaborate grievance procedures. But Shankel said yesterday after the attack that killed Dykes and Dykes had been convinced that KU was not a terrorist. "We just wanted to make sure that the patient system dealing with grievance matters." Watson's job meeting topic The Lawrence City Commission has scheduled an executive session for 3 p.m. today to discuss the job performance of Buford Watson, city manager. The meeting is closed to the public and the press. Final consideration of requested parking fee increases at the University of Kansas will be discussed at the Kansas Board of Regents meeting tomorrow in Pittsburgh Complaints about city services heard during the recent city commission election campaign are thought to be the cause of Watson's evaluation. Regents agenda includes parking fee, sabbaticals Authorization of the proposal, which was presented to the Regents at last month's meeting, would boost yearly parking fees by as much as $15 at the KU Medical Center and as much as $10 on the Lawrence campus. The proposal is one of 12 concerning KU on the Regents agenda. The monthly meeting will be at Kansas State College at Pittsburg. Representatives from all seven Regents schools will attend the meeting. THE KU administration will be represented by Chancellor Archie Dykes; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Keith Nichter, director of business and financial affairs; Max Lucas, director of student life; and Steve Leben, student body president. Besides the parking fee increase request, KU will ask that the Regents approve an upgrade to the library's schedule, the construction of a $24,000 tunnel running under the site of the new law school building to the satellite union; and recommendations for sabbaticals and promotions. KU ALSO will request that nine kU professors receive emeritus status and that the thermodynamics laboratory be named KU urata, professor of chemical engineering. See REGENTS page eight Artwork adorns museum doorway Bv CARLCEDER Staff Renorter For the first time since coming to the University of Kansas in 1963, the stone tympany of the Lamentation over Christ is seen, under an arch over a doorway. It stood for centuries over the entrance to a Spanish church and last week was removed from storage at the Museum of Art at Spooner Hall and placed over a doorway behind the yard of the new Helen Foresman Spencer Museum, which will open January 1978. The doorway of the new museum was specially designed to accommodate this particular room. THE TYMPANUM (an architectural term for sculpture in the arch above a portal) weighs nearly 3,000 pounds and is seven feet long. It is a Pieta, which literally means "pity" and is a term applied to artistic representations of Mary holding the crown. The sculpture, which is divided into three sections, dates back to the beginning of the 16th century and shows elements of both Medieval and Renaissance styles. The subject of the Lamentation over Christ was popular among Medieval artists. Betsy Broun, acting curator of graphic arts at KU's Museum of Art, said Tuesday that the deaths of the costumes suggested a possible connection to Western European country, or Burgundy, as region in France. The figures are contained in a rounded Renaissance arc rather than a pointed Gothic one, which indicates that the figures were a late Gothic early Eriaden period. "THE SENSITIVE modeling of Christ's anatomy and drapery shows the artist to create a sense of depth." BUT THE POSSIBILITY of La Armedicina as a site for the tympanum has been both supported. Supporters say the dates of the work on the church match a possible date for the bishop. The central figures in the Lamentation are Mary and Christ, with the additional figures of Mary Magdalene, St. John, Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus. Although the origin of the tympanum is uncertain, some say it came from the ruined Monastery of Santa Maria de la Reina in the Mount Montel Monte, Spain, which was built aguard the the figure," Braun said, "and the artist has arranged all the figures so they could be clearly viewed from below. The heads of the figures at the top all project strongly forward, and the body is tilted forward to make it clearable to the spectator standing beneath it." They also say that the measurements of the tympanum at KU are very close to the measurements of the space where a tympanum was set at La Armilla Monastery. Arguments against La Armedilla as the site of the tympanum say the region is so isolated that the sculpture is almost too fine for it. REGARDLESS OF THE origine of the condition, with little damage. Brou says it is extremely rare for a University museum to have such a monumental and important piece of Medieval sculpture. "Medieval objects that are available today are smaller, more portable objects," she said. "KU is extremely fortunate to have the imposing work of art in their collection." 2 Thursday, April 14, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Carter to withdraw rebate WASHINGTON (AP)—President Carter is planning to announce he is withdrawing his proposal for a $20 tax rebate for most Americans, the Los Angeles Times reported. Carter was expected to announce the action today, the Times said. The report said Carter would cite improved economic conditions for his decision to withdraw the proposed rebate, which has run into stiff opposition in the Senate. The Times report also said Carter was planning to withdraw his proposed $2 billion investment tax credit for industry. The report said Carter's decision would mean slashing his proposed $15 billion economic stimulus for this year to $2 billion. Gov. Bennett hospitalized TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett was to undergo a series of medical tests today, following his admission to a local hospital yesterday afternoon after he reported flu-like symptoms, the governor's office said yesterday. Bennett was admitted at Hospital on the advice of his physician Wendy Nolan. She attended to him. Pakistan leaders resian LAMABAHA, pakistan—Four leaders of the ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP) resigned yesterday to protest alleged government suppression of opposition demonstrators and demanded that Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, their party leader, step down. Officials of the PPP said Mubasir Hassan, secretary general of the PPP and the party's second in command after the prime minister, resigned from his post. He was joined by veteran politician Sardar Ahmad Ali of Punjab province, who left the party and called for Bhutto's resignation. The two others who bolted the party were Abdul Fahiz Kardar, former education minister and a FFP member of the Punjab provincial assembly, and Taj Mahal, the daughter of the Punjab provincial assembly. All, who was re-elected on the PPP ticket in the disputed March 7 national elections, called for Bhutto's resignation and said "repression has been let loose by the (Bhutto) government in every town and district and the country has been pushed to the brink of a civil war." Man shoots family,self CHICAGO—A man who police said had mental problems扎 killed three members of his family, including his wife, yesterday, then turned the gun on him. The bodies of Willy D. Jones, 25, and his wife, Rena Radcliff Jones, 21, were found on the blood-spattered front porch of their South Side home. Mrs. Jones had been shot in the neck and back. Jonas had a bullet wound through the right temple. The bodies of Anthony Radcliff, 28, Mrs. Jones' brother, and Larry Williams, 16, were found at the night at the house, were found in the basement investigator Vincent Russo said yesterday. Each had been shot and Radcliff's throat was slashed. Diplomats to discuss bombings in Zambia LUSAKA, Zambian (UPI)—Zairean jets have bombed Zambian villages and a mission hospital but a Zairean diplomatic mission has arrived in Lusaka to discuss the incidents, a spokesman for Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda said yesterday. The spokesman said Zaire Air Force jets bombed the Kalien Hill Mission Hospital in northwestern Zambia Monday, injuring members and damaging the hospital's facility. THE SPIKEMEN ALSO said "a small number of villages" were damaged since Hearst worried about threats, releases names SAN FRANCISCO—Patricia Hears't attorney revealed yesterday that she had given authorities the names of three people who she thought might try to kill her. F. Lee Bailey, arguing for overturning the 23-year-old newspaper heiress' bank robbery conviction, told three-judge panel of the 8th U.S.Court of Appeals that he was wrongfully convicted. Here Kady Soliah and Steven Soliah to the law offices in San Francisco and Sacramento. "We did this in an effort to get them off the streets so they wouldn't kill her, which was one of our priorities," she said. Later, he said he had been referring to bombings at the Hearst Castle at San Simeon, Calif., and a Hearst family ranch in Northern California at the time of her trial. He indicated that notification of the three names had been given at that time. Solah was arrested the same day that Hearst was, and she testified that she had lived with him prior to her arrest. He was subsequently tried for another bank robbery and acquitted. His sister, Kathy Solah, and Klgore still are at large. ♪ ♩ ♫ ♩ ♩ JAM SESSION TONITE WITH RIVER CITY JAZZ BAND — NO COVER CHARGE!! Saxophone FRI. The Joe Utterback Trio Great West Coast Jazz Admission $2.00 SAT. Claude "Fiddler" Williams Just back from Europe Admission $3.00 includes Free Beer!! PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. ♩ ♫ ♩ ♩ ♩ ♩ ♩ r r He said a group of Zambian security and defense force personnel had been sent to the city. Saturday in attacks by Zaireites in the same Mwinihlunga district 400 miles northwest of here. Zairean government forces are battling rebel invaders nearby. The spokesman said a Zairean diplomatic mission arrived yesterday in Lausau to hold "crucial and urgent" talks with Kaunda, who Tuesday sent a message to President Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire protesting what Kaunda called grave incidents. Stripe T-shirts by... "Cecily" Regular $10.00 The Zairean territory near the border, once known as Katanga, is under invasion from the French and Japanese rebels who swept in from Angola. Fiji and Tanzania were last reported to be about 50 miles outside the Zairean city of Kolwezi, less than half a mile from the Zambian provincial capital of Mwenguhla. THE ZAIREAN GOVERNMENT, helped by Moroccan troops and military material from Belgium, the United States and France, has vowed to launch a counterattack against the invaders and push them back into Angola. Western diplomatic sources said yesterday Zambian officials didn't necessarily view the bombings as an intentional act of aggression, but as an overspill of Zaizain government resistance to Katanage raiders operative in the area. THE ATTIC 927 Mass. WASHINGTON (AP) - Clothing union leaders and AFL-CIO President George Meany went to the White House yesterday to give President Jim Carter the same face-to-face demonstrations across the nation—clothing imports are threatening American jobs. Meany, clothing heads say imports threatening jobs The AFL-CIO last week hitter attacked Carter for not keeping his commitments to workers after the President rejected tariffs on imported shoes. Carter and Robert Straus, the U.S. trade ambassador, met with the labor leaders for their campaign. Strauss said before yesterday's meeting that Carter had no promises to keep on trade, despite union leader assertions that Carter had broken his promises. AFTERWARD, MEANY told reporters he hoped to get a favorable response from Carter, although the President had made no commitments during the meeting. Now $6.90 Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Administration officials say they are afraid that an increase in U.S. import taxes would only result in other nations increasing taxes on goods imported from America, jeopardizing up to nine million jobs in the country. clothing industry would be heading for extinction. Stirruss said the session had been "cordial" and "constructive." He said Carter had given his advice. Sol Chalkin, president of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, said the labor leaders were not seeking a ban on imports. Instead, he said, the existing import restrictions on foreign-made clothing and textiles should be limited to the most expensive garments. Current trade agreements maintain a 6 per cent growth level on imports, while American industries have been growing only 3 per cent annually. CHAIKIN SAID that the labor leaders backed up their arguments with figures showing the loss of 144,000 U.S. textile workers in 2015. The United States warned that the American Textile and FROM NEW YORK'S Herald Square to the plaza at Los Angeles' City Hall, the workers join in marches and rallies to call for new trade restrictions and import taxes on foreign goods. They blame imports for the loss of thousands of American jobs. The workers are also members of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers and the International Ladies Workers and the International Ladies Workers unions joined in the work stoppages and demonstrations, many of which took place during the noon hour with the approval of factory owners. Along with the demonstrations in New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Cleveland, San Francisco, Augusta, Maine, and other cities. - Major Damage Repair - Minor Damage Repair Give your Car a New Spring Coat! - Frame Repair - Insurance Repair Welcome - Estimates No Charge CAR TOLL FREE - Minor Touch-up Come by for an estimate Have your car completely repainted in the only heated drying booth in Lawrence John Haddock 23rd and Alabama FORD INC. SECOND GENERATION SINCE 1914 Phone 843-3500 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 843-1431 for information. Rooms available for parties. Sirloin Permanent DINING Private Club facilities available F Thursday, April 14. 1977 University Daily Kansan 2 say jobs heading for erly attacked commitments to ejected tariffs day's meeting to keep on assertions that uses. ay they are import taxes nations in imported from nine million ad直 square to Hall, the and rallies and import some imports american joe clothing Clothing and International joined on conventions, noon conventions, the tern owners. in new Niemens in new Sanders, San and other WWW.WWW.WW ! r 0 7 0 -3500 www3 --- Energy plan to use tax incentive WASHINGTON (AP) - President Jimmy Carter will propose use the federal tax system to force Americans to conserve energy and administration sources said yesterday. Some specifics of the President's April 20 energy message are still under review. But Jody Powell, White House press secretary, indicated most of the work was complete. Powell said Carter probably would make a televised fireside chat Monny talk to tell Americans how serious the nation's energy shortage was. Then the President will spell out his plan to a joint session of Congress next Wednesday night. There has been no official public disclosure of the likely contents of the energy plant, but a draft proposal circling the issue of official officials is known to include these options: A five-cent-gallon increase in federal gas taxes above the current four-cent levy. It would take effect in 1979, but only if gas prices fall to reduce gas consumption. In 1980 and 1981 an additional tax of 10 cents a gallon would be added annually, ALLOWING DOMESTIC crude on Allocations ... From page one allocated SCORMEBE an additional $1,200 for travel expenses. The money would have paid for trips out-of-state corporations to solicit funds for scholarships. The Senate began the meeting by voting to suspend a section of the rules and regulations that prohibited funding for special projects. Many of the Senate's allocations were for special projects, such as brochures, seminars and field trips. SEQQUINST LLLOCATOGN CULTURAL BANK of Tennessee Institute of Finance $ 3,500 $ 2,000 Dollar Purchase of Funds Dollar Purchase of Funds 6.00 % 1.00 % **SPORTS** Intercollegiate Athletics $24.00 $24.00 Recreation Services $34.00 $34.00 Board Budget $18.00 $18.00 COMMUNICATIONS OVER NATIONAL BORDER $ 9,268 $ 9,268 University Daily Kansas $ 72,540 $ 72,540 Vehicle deaths rise CHICAGO (AP) — The number of deaths from motor vehicle accidents increased by two per cent last year, the first such increase since Congress passed the 55-mile-hour speed limit, the National Safety Council said yesterday. Motor vehicle-related deaths totaled 51,511 in 1973 but dropped to 46,402 in 1974, in the year of the 85-mile-per-hour limit. The figure remained at 85,175 in 1975, before last year's rise to 47,100. The non-profit council said total estimated miles traveled by American drivers rose slightly in 1976 over 1975, a possible reason for the increase. Jot Spring! Alexander's Flowers Weekend Special Orchids Corsages $5.50 each Roses $3.50 a dozen Ten daisies $1.39 Cash and Carry 826 Iowa 842-1320 FINANCE AND AUDITING REQUEST ALLOCATION FINANCE AND AUDITING Student Senate Operating Budget $48,290 $48,290 ACADEMIC AFFAIRS ACAA 423 $171 Association of Civil Engineers 320 Association of Black Worker Workers 3,275 0 Association of Teachers 418 BASACS 1,555 6,185 BASACS School Council 1,255 Blocks in Community Aid Caucus 5,000 361 Chanley Club 312 186 Chanley Club 312 186 Dieta Organization 448 1,951 Conserving School Council 488 1,951 Entertropy 238 186 Eutrophy 338 171 **STUDENT SERVICES** Campus Veterans Health Center 1,903 738 Campus Veterans Status of Women 4,175 270 Consumer Affairs Association 8,607 8,557 Dougless County Legal Aid 5,400 6,300 Hillings University 10,741 1,072 Environmental Service 10,741 1,072 MECRA 3,000 2,000 MECRA Legal 3,000 2,000 Native American Alliance 3,255 2,180 Women's Coalition 3,255 2,180 Woman's Coalition 3,255 2,170 UK Pensioner of Student Social Workers 725 728 UK Pensioner of Student Social Workers 725 728 UK Student Art Education Association 35 35 UK Student Art Education Association 35 35 Student Association for 796 228 Student Bar Association 795 725 Kansas Defense Project 4,113 909 Undergraduate Phenology Association 210 165 Undergraduate Public Library Club 210 165 The Advancement of Engineers 2,000 360 VEHR 3,000 360 J. Watson's April 11-15 TONITE IS LADIES' NIGHT. 50c cover—Disco U "The Best of Ernie Kovacs" 8:30 E "Pueblo" 10:30 prices to rise gradually to levels set by oil exporting countries, now about $15 a barrel. Some domestic producers are now selling oil at more than $15 a barrel. Free Disc for Everyone— W on our 7' TV —*Star Trek* 7:00 *The Amazing Howard Hughes* D part 18:00 —*Columbo* 10:30 50c Disco—"Howard Hughes"—conclusion. "KOJAK"—10:30 in the Peanut Gallery — A heavy tax at the well-head on domestic crude oil, a hike that will be passed on to consumers. The increase on the taxed top of the tax paid at the service station. Live Music—Cover $2.00 & outer w/ Limosome. A night that's very different. Come T watch the show 9-12. Pleasur- Gallery free from 12-7 p.m. Live Music—Cover $2.00 Poor R Willy 9-12, also "Paint Your Wagon" 7:00 ELIO PETRI'S THE WORKING CLASS GOES TO HEAVEN Starring GIAN MARIA VOLONTE and MAX From BEST FILM Pearnt Gallery 7' TV Free from 1 sun to 10. Come watch the doubleheader—KC Royals vs. Seattle at 3:35 A - tax starting at about $400 per auto on cars that get low gas mileage. The tax, to be paid by the manufacturer and passed on to consumers when they purchase a vehicle, could gradually rise by as much as six times that amount. Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa "VOLONTE IS FIRST-RATE!" "BRILLIANTLY DIRECTED!" "ONE OF THE FUNNIES "ONE OF THE FUNNIEST SEDUCTION SCENES EVER!" —Some form of energy tax rebates, in possible lower Social Security taxes for low- and middle-income persons, to equities resulting from the program. Nolt/CUF —CONTINUED REGULATION of natural gas. The current federal price ceiling of $1.44 per million cubic feet would be allowed to rise gradually to encourage more exploration and force industry to shift to coal. - Some form of mandatory conversion from natural gas to coal for industry. The hike in the federal ceiling on natural gas would be passed on to homeowners, "ELECTRICITY, VIGOR & PASSION" - Tax incentives to homeowners who install insulation or improve already existing insulation. There also would be installations installing solar heating and cooling devices. THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 7:30 AND 9:45 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION A seemingly hidden operation, KU's vending Services probably affects as many customers as possible. Vending machines feed munchies "The campus consumes over 1,000 cases of pop a week," vending director Forrest Jolly said recently. "We serve the campus with items according to customer demand." Besides serving soda pop, the concession service offers chips, candy, fruit juices, cigarettes, cakes, pies, nuts, cookies and fruit. But the most popular items, Jolly Burger and junk foods; soda pop is purchased the most often, followed by other sugarary foods. "YOU CAN GET a completely balanced meal at any of our areas, however, if you know what to look for and what you should be eating." Jolly said. Jolly said the quality of the food in the vending machines was consistent and reliable. He said, "You would get the same quality of food if you went through the Wescoe Terrace line as you would from any of our snack and machine areas. "We don't use textured vegetable protein (TVP) in any of our sandwiches. We've had complaints that our hamburgers are dry. We can't just eat them without a real beef! If we used TVP, they it be moist." VOLUME BUYING and special contracts with companies help to keep the vending prices low, he said, and prices generally are the end of a semester if prices increase. "When pop in stores went from 25 cents a can to 35 cents, we raised ours to 25 cents—and it's a cold," Jolly said. Except in the residence halls, be said, all winding machines offer a choice between pellet stoves and electric stoves. Jolly said that the service was operating at a profit but that profits were low. He says that the service could be more profitable. said, particularly in the residence halls, when a full-time maintenance man is on duty. Jolly said that occasionally a competitor appeared on campus. "Once in awhile these bomb-pop trucks袭扰 us and we call traffic and security to be there." HARVEST PAN FRIED SOLE *3.65 DEVILED CRAB & OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL $4.95 50¢ off ON ALL OUR OMELETTES W/KUID 8th & New Hampshire in the Marketplace SANDWICHES Ford RENT-A-CAR LEASING 2340 Alabama FALS WORLDSC LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTOMOBILE LEASING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 "This is my kind of light workout." (Joe Palooka. Heavyweight Champ) Said to Light Beer in the Falling Wheat The Cream, Appreciated by 4.5 million carers worldwide and from quality beer SCHLITZ LIGHT BEER NET T 12 FL OZ 96 calories, approximately one third fewer than our other fine beer. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. © 1977 JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING CO, MIWAUKEE, WI. AND OTHER CITIES. 4 Thursday, April 14, 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 Time to shift gears When the Kansas legislature finally succumbs to spring fever and leaves its winter home in Topeka, more will be left behind than the discarded parking tickets the legislators have gathered during their stay. Much of the major legislation that, if acted upon, would have raised this session's state status above mere medicocracy, now lies gathering dust in subcommittee cubbyholes or awaiting Gov. Robert Bennett's almost-assured veto. Currently awaiting the governor's action are bills that would provide easier methods to enforce old-age home health standards, major state income tax revisions, specific guarantees by insurers as to product liability and the creation of a division within the Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services specifically for the aged. BENNETT COULD become both legislative and executive branches of Kansas government when the legislators go home, as he alone will have the power to decide the fate of these and other bills on his desk. Of course, Kansas legislators aren't dummies—a special three-day session, scheduled to begin April 27, is specifically designed to review a governor's vetoes. The problem is that this three-day session might have to be devoted to making up the time this session has wasted; the result government by veto. THIS SESSION has acted responsibly on a number of issues. Noteworthy is its efforts to exempt prescription drugs from sales taxes, action on bingo, public television and protection for those who report suspected use of child abuse. That, however, isn't enough. Unless the session puts itself in high gear—and soon—the only solution to make-up work in April would be a costly special session. And extra money spent on something that is sometimes the first time around is something few Kansas employers should be expected to tolerate. Senate action justified Tuesday night, the Student Senate approved a $1.50 increase in the student activity fee and a resolution calling for the end of funding of women's athletics after this year. Both actions were justified. The activity fee increase would help the University's underdeveloped intramural and recreational programs. The Senate also approved the allocation of $60,000 from the Senate's unallocated funds to help the same programs. The $60,000 would be used for improvements in recreational facilities, like tennis court lights. KU, As a Big Eight school, is very big-time when it comes to men's intercollegiate athletics. But when it comes to the average student, the program is small-time. The hours and the facilities are insufficient for the demand. By making money available to improve the recreational program, the Senate is doing what it originally was designed to do—provide funding for worthwhile activities that serve the average student and that have trouble setting funding elsewhere. The fee increase and $60,000 won't do that much, but they are something, and they may be more important. importance of the recreation program to students. THE SENATE's action on the funding of women's athletics may appear, at first glance, to be a slap in the face to the women's program. But it is nothing of the kind. The Senate is trying to get out of funnelled ethics because it figures that, under Title IX antisex discrimination guidelines, the University will have to provide the funding. And, the Senate figures, the University is the organization that should have been doing the funding in the first place. By acting now, the Senate is giving the administration money so it can include women's sports in the fiscal 1978 budget to be drawn up this June. Women's athletics will hardly be crippled by the Senate's move. In fact, it may be a stronger program in the long run for the change. And the change will face Senate funds for other, more needy groups that serve a small percentage of the population. Basically, they both actions were good ones. Ideally, they merely are steps towards a more consistent and student-oriented budgeting philosophy and, in the long run, toward better recreation and women's athletics programs. For how could be, when he invented baseball in 1839, realize the sport would become its own biggest joke. Pity Abner Doubleday Baseball throwing itself a curve If nobody's laughing, it's because we're paying ever-increasing prices to witness our national pastime. Baseball, largely because of enormous salaries paid to its players, is beaten by the NBA. According to a survey conducted by United Press International, this season's average starting salary is $54,19.19. Of course, there are those at the low end of the scale, such as John Paulson, about what a high school administrator can shoot for. There are those around the $35,000 level—some fortune college professors can hit that. A few earn about $25,500, the same annual salary as the Chief Audit Officer. And some earn what President Jimmy Carter makes in a year—$200,000. BUT THEN come baseball's real heroes—the multimillion dollar babes whose mouth-covered silver spoons are the size of halfway respectable baseball bats. Leading the list are Joe Morgan of Cincinnati, Mike Schmidt of Philadelphia and Gary Matthes of Atlanta, all raking in annual salaries approaching $400,000. If that's not enough to make a popcorn vendor blow his kernels, consider the antics of a man who signed his contract on the veil of Cincinnati's opener. He is like a kid threatened with a sound alarm if he doesn't eat it. That sounds like that they're too hot. The kid waits to complain, "Gosh, Morn, now they're too cold," and holds out just as Rose held out to get his meager $500,000 a day. POOR GUY. Sort of makes you want to give him an award or something. But, as the saying goes, those are the breaks of the game. But suffering through a quarter-million-dollar contract isn't all work. Heck, the guys would get bored stuff without Simple Get a few cronies who have lots of money, sink the money into player salaries, and volla; the New York Yankees. Can the players be held solely or probably not. After all, they must P. L. Bill Sniffen Editorial Writer more than one decade. So why not get it while they can? Want to win the World Series? residuals from shaving-cream, cologne or car-rental commercials. And then there are the play-offs. THE CRUX of the issue is the fans' response. It hasn't been positive. It hasn't been entirely hostile, either. Despite higher season and single-game ticket records across the country. One can only wonder how long it will all go on, whether an end is in sight. team in the league to stock sell and therefore the only one open to public inspection, faces a large number of signs of financial weakening. SALARY LEVELS probably have peaked. It shouldn't be too long before they're back down where they belong. Signs of that end are appearing. At least one major player has emerged, largely because of the exorbitant prices it has guaranteed its players, on the verge of losing Baltimore Orioles, the only Whether poor old Abner realized what would happen to his beloved baseball is debatable. But he was clever enough, and probably clever enough to realize its potential. Too bad he wasn't clever enough to have realized that baseball wouldn't be America's national pastime. Making money is. PLAY BALL! 275,000 325,000 200,000 310,000 395,000 NCAA seeks to aid both sexes An NCAA suit filed recently try to prevent the federal government from enforcing regulations against sex discrimination in college colleges isn't a battle of the sexes. Rather, it is an all-too-cool confrontation between those who think it is possible for someone other than federal bureaucracy. to make decisions that are none of their business and those who don't. Stories that begin "Scientists have discovered ...", or "Doctors know now that..." are almost certain to contain a reference to the letter i, it is the use of long, "official-sounding terminology when The reason that the NCAA is seeking separate treatment and education for universities is clear: if strictly interpreted, regulations of the Department of Defense and Welfare (HEW) would require athletic departments to provide as much in scholarship, salaries and expenses to women's athletics as to men's. ALTHOUGH THE motives of donate $1,000 to the Williams Educational Fund, which is administered by the athletic Department Shipped to the department be required. Science terms congest language One particular sign of our socio-politico-economic society and how far it has progressed or not, is how it communicates. you must impress it would seem that the general level of speech has risen from its former state, with fragmented sentences, punctuated only with frequent "you knows" or "like, I mean..." and the even popular exclamation "(exclamation point optional)." For want of a better term, the language of the literate has been dubbed "Sci-speak," short for scientific speech. It is a term coined by author Arthur Herlih, who wrote a book about something almost every college student employs—the B.S. Factor. But then again, a perusal of the word list here shows that almost all of them are results of overexposure to and influence of politicians, lawyers and scientists. Especially scientists. What has been happened to the language? In efforts to evade, impress, expose and people tend to gravitate towards the polysyllabic, the grandiose, to say what they mean. Know what I mean? EDWIN NEWMAN, NBC news correspondent, detailed a plethora of such verbose phrases: "The Strictly Speaking" and "A Tongue," where he assails (and word) abusers of the language. Sci-speak tries to render infallible the authority of anything 'scientific'. (i.e. test) scientific (results available on request). WHILE SOME scientific discoveries seem dubious at best, sci-speak overcomes this difficulty by sheer force of rhetoric. simple words would do—as when TV weatherwomen talk about a 50 per cent chance of Compare "name of the game" with "point", "waste management" with trash pick. precipitation, instead of an even chance of rain. Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer Executives revel in snappy endings, such as-is- , -ate, and -ize. When they "finalize" and "eventuate," they sound like a knife or a sharp, hard edge; sort of like a can opener or a rotolier. ANOTHER OF the tenets of sci-speak is its amelioration of the speaker's language. and, "authenticate" with verify, up, a "ball park estimate" with a rough guess. It means the same but says it better. Thanks to sci-speak, a great number of once technical or at least other areas of their meaning to the point that they are almost as inimical as you prove it yourself, choose any three-digit number, using the 1 2 3 1. evaluative 1. coalition 1. equilibrium 2. hyperbolic 2. power 2. relationship 3. functional 3. dance 3. structure 4. intuitive 4. status 4. attraction 5. interactive 5. role 5. gradient 6. negative 6. communication 6. contingency 7. operational 7. task 7. network 8. centralized 8. activity 8. matrix 9. interdependent 9. index 9. model 10. sociopolical 10. efficacious 10. decision numbered columns as a guide. Now put the corresponding words together and you have a sci-speak phrase. Number 343, for example, gives us functional language; something we all should produce has negative role relationship, probably another name for an enemy. the possibilities are endless. Soon, you, too, will be able to hurt an invertebrate, beguile and buddle your way into a hostile place your way into and out of the most sensitive circumstances. ASSASSINATION COMMITTEE © 1977 NYT Special Features If only someone could understand you. the NCAA in this case are necessarily pure, this case does raise an important question: government (in this case, HEW) go in the regulation of organizations and activities not financed by the federal bureau but related to ones that are? DOES HEW'S regulation against sex discrimination mean that the KUAC must provide, for each football scholarship given, a field hockey shirt in the case, the future of intercollegiate athletics looks bleak. The Kansas University Athletic Corporation (KUAC), for example, doesn't receive money directly from HEW. Most of its income is from ticket receipts of KU football and basketball games and private dance events given to support, two their programs. There is little evidence to indicate that the NCAA doesn't support women's athletics. In fact, the opposite seems to be true, a situation that would probably change if the courts decide degrees and universities to divide the controlled by their athletic departments equally between men and women. UNDER THE present structure, many of the women's athletic programs are supported by the financial successes of some groups. Assuming that a team's record is related to its financial success, and vice versa, the amount of money available for sports programs will probably decrease under a strict HWE enforcement of its sex discrimination regulations. Although that assumption isn't necessary, wouldn't be difficult to prove. A more practical argument, but much less popular, is that because athletic departments are supposed to spend money they should be able to spend it however they want. Brent Anderson Editorial Writer side with the NCAA on this issue is to oppose women's intercollegiate athletics. On the contrary, if the courts decide against the NCAA, both women's and men's athletic programs will be hurt, and HEW will have discriminated against all of us. SUCH THINKING in modern America is incredible, but it might be worthy of some comparison. You can get the alumnus of KU wanted to The issue here isn't whether the women should get as much money as men, but whether HEW has the authority to tell them how to spend the KUAC how they can and cannot spend their own money. OTHER LEGAL questions are involved, such as whether an athletic corporation is a separate entity from its college or university. There is no reason to think, however, that to because of existing HEW regulations, to use $500 for women's scholarships and $500 for men's? Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgement; assigned; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their address provide their address. Letters Policy THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published on the University of Kassar daily August 18, 2014 John Green and Jae Hyun attend Saturday, July 16 and June 12, and Jae假 Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. 60044 Subscriptions to mail are $3 a month or $18 a year outside the country. Student subscriptions are a year outside the country. *Student subscriptions* A Pacemaker award winner Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--684-1810 Business Office--684-1238 Editor Managing Editor Greg Hack Editorial Editor Stewart Bran Campus Editor Alison Gwinn Associate Campus Editor Lynda Scotsi Senior Director Barrara Bowser Copy Chiefs Bernel Johnke, Tim Pursell Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Drew Bairman, Photo Editor George Milneier Photographer Jay Kooler, Maurice Maranus Make-up Artist Mary Meyers, Amna Sigmund, Davood Yossef Wire Editors Larry Rourou, Carol Luman Entertainment Editors Michael Billus Contributing Writers Blind Stiffen, Keith Addison, Editorial Writers Jay Bennet, Jerry Schlull Staff Artists Business Manager Janice Clements Advertising Manager Tim O'Meara Advertising Manager Jobanne Jailore Advertising Manager Brian Klassen Classified Manager Assistant Classified Manager Pat Theurton Drafter Dennis Rowe National Advertising Manager Robin Gunter National Advertising Manager Robert Hickman News Adviser Publisher Business Adviser Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams ve e to sell stock only one open section, faces less ominous, al weakening. I$ probably not be too re back down g. old Abner uld happen to baseball is e was clever ent it, and enough to al- l wasn't clever realized that be America's A A on this issue women's intellies. if the courts NCAA, both men's athletic hurt, and discriminated ers edicare area should be spaced than 400 ars are edc condensed acima limita thejudg- must he academic newtown; invite their must pro- sss. Barbecue recipe inherited from Old South Although there are more than 50 restaurants in Lawrence, "there aren't many places around here that can get you good advice," he said. "Now also a restaurant owner, said recently." To Molesta (Mickey) Galloway, owner of G's Barbeuse, W30. 23r St., good food means barbecue - hickory-smoked the day it is on a plantation near Delta City, Miss. "I learned to cook from my father," Galloway said. NOW HE IS teaching his oldest son Devin, 14, to help him simultaneously barbecue 300 pounds of chicken, beef, ham and ribs, using hickory smoke. Oné difference between a rural Mississippi smokehouse and a Lawrence restaurant barbecue using hickory smoke is antipollution regulations, Galloway said. He had hoped to design his own barbecue he said, but found that his plans didn't meet government antitopulation specifications. He also complied with government regulations. While Galloway and Devin run the barbecue, his wife, Carole, keeps the books and helps him perfect his recipe for barbecue sauce. Yvonne, 13, works as a cashier. Patricia, 9, sometimes waits on tables, assisted by Keith, 7. THE RESTAURANT is open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. every day except Sunday, and business has been good since opening day, March 13, 1976, Galloway said. Z.Z. Top band to play concert at KU after all Country rock band Z. Z. Top will appear in an SAU concert at 8 p.m. May 7 in Allen Field House, despite an earlier report that the concert had been canceled. A spokesman for Amusement Conspiracy, which now is the concert's promoter, said yesterday that a squabble between two companies originally promoting the concert at the Kansas City Center in Denver and Kansas City, Mo., said they didn't want to jointly promote the concert. Z. Z. Top wants to play two concerts in Kansas, the spokesman said yesterday. Lawrence and Hays were chosen as the sites instead of Wichita and Manhattan because a Doobie Brothers concert will play in those cities. Reserved tickets will be $6 and $7. A ticket sale date hasn't been announced. Officials board boats for check WASHINGTON (UPI)—American observers this week began boarding some foreign fishing vessels that have permission to operate inside the new U.S. 200-mile limit, the Commerce Department said yesterday. The government agency said 160 observers will, among other tasks, "monitor compliance" with new fishing regulations which went into effect March 1. The regulations bar foreign vessels from catches in the waters off the coast on others caught inside the 200-mile limit. By the end of month, observers also will be working aboard ships from the Soviet Union, Spain, Japan, Italy, East and South Korea, United States, France, Romania, South Korea and Bulgaria. The Commerce Department also said the number of foreign fishing vessels sighted off the U.S. coastline in February declined by 18 percent, from 1976, probably because of the new rules. Ships from 13 nations were seen fishing inside the limit in February. The largest contingent, 148 boats, came from the Soviet and the bulk of those were spotted off Alaska. SUA Dir. Elio Petri. With Mariangela Melato. Co-Grand Prize winner of 1972. (U.S.)/subtitles. Film Society. Thurs., April 14, 1:30 & 9:45 p.m. THE WORKING CLASS GOES TO HEAVEN (LULU THE TOOL) (1972) FILMS THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR (1975) Dir. Sydney Pollack with Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway, plus short hours in New York, Friday, April 15 & April 16, 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m., $1 SALT OF THE EARTH (1954) Dir. Herbert Biberman. Mon., April 18, 7:30 p.m., 75c As a month of that day, Galloy has framed the first dollar he earns as a reward. Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union "We sold over 1,000 pounds of meat that day," he said. Since moving to Lawrence in 1982, Galloway has cooked in several local restaurants, including the Holiday Inn and where he was the assistant manager. GALLOWAY ALSO WORKED as a pipe fitter, a job that enabled him to travel to Africa, where he was hired to work as a pipe fitter in a sugar refinery in Dakar, Senegal. "I stained 18 days," he said, "There was too much fighting. The Arabs were fighting." JAZZ WEEK presented by the Lawrence Opera House & 7th Spirit balcony Thursday April 14 KU JAZZ BENEFIT Benefit for KU School of Fine Arts Jazz Scholarships The Tuesday/Thursday Band, The 12:30 Band & Tommy Johnson Experiment 9:00 p.m. 'till ??? $1.00 cover Friday April 15 LAWRENCE JAZZ COMBOS Fast Eddie Quartet River City Jazz Nairobi Trio with Johnny Moore on drums Tom Montgomery Quartet with Jim Stringer on guitar 8:00 p.m. 'til 3:00 a.m. $1.00 cover Because he loved to cook, he said, he decided to open a restaurant in Lawrence when he returned from Africa. His ability as a pipe fitter was helpful when he remodeled a building that previously had been used by Brown Plumbing, Galloway said. Saturday April 16 KANU FM 91.5 Concert Presents The Ralph Towner and John Abercrombe Band with special guests THE NAIROBI TRIO with Johnny Moore on drums Two Big Shows 7:00 and 10:00 Admission $4.00 7th Spirit Members will purchase $6.00 Tickets for the entire night. his menu and seating capacity. But to do that, he would have to move to another site. The present lot is small, and parking already is inadequate, be said. BUSINESS HAS BEEN so good in the small restaurant, which seats about 50, that they are one of the top restaurants in the city. Listen to KANU FM 91.5 FOR FURTHER DETAILS Summer Employment On a street lined with competing restaurants, G' Barbeque is so small and unpretentious it easily might be overlooked. Galloway isn't worried. "Good food will sell," he said. Royal Prestige needs students to supplement summer work force $250^{00}$ per week For further info., come to: Student Union - International Rm. Wed., April 13—12:30, 2:30 or 4:30 Student Union - Oread Rm. Thurs., April 14—1:00 or 3:00 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 14, 1977 PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES Fall Membership Program 1977 Informational Meeting Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union Registration materials will be distributed For more information contact: Panhellenic Association 220 Strong Hall 864-3552 Big 8 Softball Tournament at Holcom Sports Complex (Back of Park 25 apts.) April 15-16 MARINAS GAMES DAILY Friday 2:30-7 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Championships 5:15 p.m. Saturday ADMISSION Friday $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Saturday Early Session $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Championships $1.00 Adults $ .50 Childron 12 and under Tournament Pass $3.00 Adults $1.50 Children 12 and under "The coach likes me heavy,but I like me light." ( William Webb Ellis, rugby legend ) LIGHT 96 calories, approximately one third fewer than our other fine beer. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. 6 Thursday, April 14. 1977 University Daily Kansan Jayhawk soccer has international flavor By DENNIS MINICH Sports Writer Most Americans think of soccer as a foreign sport, played by foreigners in foreign places and watched by foreigners. But a look at the KU Soccer Club could help to change those ideas. When KU takes the field this weekend to defend its Big Eight crown, four of the 11 starters will be U.S. citizens. Of the 25 members of the Big Eight Champion Jayhawks, 13 are U.S. citizens from exotic such locations as Wichita, Kansas City, Mo., and Willingboro, N.J. KU COACH Berry Mullin said that most teams had either all U.S. or all foreign rosters, which makes the Jawhawk's blend of nationalities unique. He said that the diverse playing styles employed throughout the world made it hard for such a blend to play well together. "We have established a good temperment here," Mullin said. "Bad influences usually phase themselves out, or they learn to adjust to the team." Anchoring the team will be David Boyles, Wichita sophomore, who last spring defeated Rafael Perer in the goal for the keeper's position. Mullin said Boyles was one of the main reasons KU took the Big Eight crown last spring. "DAVE CAME in last spring and played tremendously. He showed without a doubt that he was the best goal tender in the Bie EULT," Mullin said. Boyles missed the fall season because financial problems kept him from enrolling. Mullin said Boyles came back with a great deal of enthusiasm, but readjusting to school and trying too hard on the field kept him from playing to his patient. "I've said before and still say that Dave is definitely of North American Soccer league caliber. All he has to do is get his confidence and concentration back and he again will do the job for us that he did last surnal." Mullin said. ANOTHER STARTER Mullin praised is John Nichols, Willingburg, N.J. junior. "He has weathered a lot of disappointment, not getting as much playtime as he would like and problems on Sports the field, but I really respect him for having the guts to stay in trying," Mullin said. He said that Nichols' problems were most obvious when he was playing forward, but that they were solved when he switched to backflow. on me mid-field, Mullin praised Roger Ebert, Kansas City, Mo., junior, who gets involved in every play. "Roger plays a commanding midfield," Mulin said, "challenging the onpoint constancy. "IF HE HAS a problem, it's that he is so enthusiastic that he gets on the other players." Mullin said that Ebert was the spark plug of the team and that it helped to have him on the field, shouting. Starting at left wing is Robert Allomare, Kansas City, Mo., junior. After trying for the squad three years, Allomare finds himself in a starting job different from the position he used to play. "A good soccer player should be able to play any position," Allomare said. "Before I had always played mid-field, I skipped to the front line not wearing trumpet. "Really I'm more comfortable there There isn't as much pressure." No signings announced Yesterday was the first day basketball national letters of intent could be signed, an announcement from KU's coaching staff. "They've signed they've signed may take awhile." According to the basketball office, there will be no announcements until the recruiting committee meets, and may be several weeks from now, all of the recruits that have signed with KU will be announced. This has been the long-standing tradition in the sports world, who is currently out of town recruiting. ONE REASON the recruiting effort hasn't been completed is that many athletes have yet to make their formal visit to KU. And, some athletes have only recently completed post-season tournaments and have shielded from college recruiters until now. The Jayhawks have a maximum of six full scholarships to award. Head track coach Bob Timmons, who has two full scholarships and one half scholarship available for recruits, said his program also had no signings to announce. Netters likely to be underdogs in today's meet When the KU men's tennis team meets Arkansas at 2 p.m. today on the Allen Field House courts, it will be trying to spruce up its performance. "I just don't think they can skunk us again," Captain Bill Clarke said yesterday. "I'll be different than 9-0 this time. That will be the worst match of the year, a poor effort." KU coach Kirkland Gates said that the Jayhawks would be "without a question definite underdogs again." But with the home court advantage and the improvement of his squad since the two teams' first meeting, he couldn't count his side out. "THEY MAY be one of the top-ranked teams in the nation at this time," Gates said yesterday, "but I'd have to say there's a one out of five chance we'll come on out." According to Gates, for KU to win today. No. 2 singles perform Mark Hosking will have to break out of a clump that has given him defeats in seven of his last 11 matches. The meet's most exciting match should be No. 1 singles in which Clarke faces Arkansas freshman Ronnie Hightower. If Clarke defeats Hightower, who has a record of 2-5, he would be the Midwest, he would almost be assured of a berth in the NCAA championships. Clarke faced Buddy Bowman in the No. 1 singles when the two teams last met in February. Since then, however, Highbower up from the No. 3 singles position to No. 1. Baseball Standings American League Kansas L W Pct. GB Cleveland 4 2 1.78 Toronto 4 2 1.67 Chicago 4 2 1.67 New York 2 3 1.50 Detroit 1 3 1.40 Detroit 1 3 1.40 Detroit 1 5 1.37 Dallas 1 5 1.37 Dallas 1 5 1.37 WEST Oakland 4 1 833 Kansas City 4 1 833 Tampa 4 1 833 Chicago 3 2 600 Minneapolis 3 2 600 California 3 5 373 Seattle 3 5 373 Chicago 7, Houston 10 Toronto 7, Detroit 6 New York 5, Kansas City 3 Cleveland 7, Texas 14 Enjoy Summer Detroit (Star 0-1) at Atlanta (Gavin 9-0) Detroit (Tamara 0-1) at Oakland (Ternal 1-0) or California (Tannahua 0-1) at Oakland (Ternal 1-0) or Medicago Minnesota (Redfarm) 0 at Seattle (Wheelock) 1.0 Cleveland (Flintman) 0 at Texas (Alexander) 1.0 The pool is very large. It has a large concrete basin and a few small pools in the background. The buildings are tall and have a lot of windows. The sky is bright, suggesting it might be a sunny day. - heated swimming pool For '197.50 a month, we offer the following for your summer enjoyment: AT JAYHAWKER TOWERS - air conditioned comfort - free utilities JAYHAWKER TOWERS - furnished apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 apartments Office hours: 8:30-5:00 M-F 10:00-4:00 Sat. LAW SCHOOL INTERVIEWS Counselors are available daily at the UNIVERSITY OF SAN FERNANDO VALLEY COLLEGE OF LAW Call or write USFV, 8353 Sepulveda Blvd. Sepulveda, California 91434. Tel. 231-894-5711 The College of Law offers a full-time 3 year day program as well as part-time day and evening programs. The school is fully accredited by the Committee of Bar Examiners of the State Bar of California. TUNE-UP YOUR CAR FOR SPRING Keep your car in good shape with parts from Larry's Auto Supply Full line of foreign & domestic parts 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 hape 52 sale SPRING SUIT SALE Mister Guy is offering a large group of vested spring suits at substantial savings . . . regular $ 120^{00} $ to $ 135^{00} \dots\dots99^{50} $ regular $ 135^{00} $ to $ 160^{00}\dots\dots115^{00} $ plaids, solids, stripes, pincords, cottons, wool blends WEEK ONLY THIS open thursday night till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 14. 1977 7 KU regains "touch" to win doubleheader The KU softball team overcame the effects of a disastrous weekend and took a double-header from Wichita State university yesterday in Broken Arrow Park. Rain delayed the starting time from 1 to 3,40 p.m., and the extra realt didn't hurt the car. In the first game, winning pitcher Shelley sanction struck out 11 WU batters and held out three. Sinclair got into trouble early in the game when she loaded the bases with just one out in the first inning. But she struck out the end to end the inning and end the WSU rally. THE GAME turned into a pitching duel and neither team could get to first base until the ball touched. KU put on a hitshow at that point, scoring four runs on four hits. Gloria Graves was the spark for KU when she two in runs with a bases-loaded single. The fifth through seventh innings were Sinclair's show. She struck out six of the last nine batters. The Jayhawks added two more runs in the sixth inning, and Sinclair retired the side in. KU LOADED the bases in the second mating with only one out, but a force out and a return. Graves was the star of the second game, collecting three RBI's and two doubles, and setting up a home run. Graves doubled in one run in the fourth and two in the fifth. After WSU scored a run in the sixth, KU came back and scored four in the seventh for the win. KU COMMITTED one error in the game and WSU had two. Graves struck out five times. Coach Bob Stunclift said the sweep was needed. "We'd been in kind of a morale slump, and this ought to give us a boost going into it," she said. Stancliff was unaware who his starting pitcher would be for Friday's tournament. Those who have indicated to Kansas head coach and meet director Bob Timmons that they will run are Ed Preston of Arkansas State, KU's Cliff Wiley, and former Texas Christian star Bill Collins, now running for the Gulf Coast Track Club. The field for the invitational 100-meter dash at the Kansas Relays is beginning to take shape, and so far it looks as if it will be a very fast field indeed. At the Texas Relys two weeks ago, all three ran in a very fast invittion 100 in Relays dash field taking shape which Collins finished second, Wiley third and Preston sixth. Freshman sensation Johnny Jones of Texas, who won the Texas Races race in an unofficial world record time of 9.85 seconds, will run in the invitational events at Kansas. Preston made last year's U.S. Olympic team as a member of the 400-meter relay team but didn't compete because of an injury. He is the defending champ in both the 100- and 200-meter invitational events at Kansas. George Segal & Jane Fonda "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Granadu VIVA LA VISTA DE SALUD (45) 218-0070 (21) 693-3535 Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" intelligent. Engaging. st.-Class Entertainment ART CARNE LILY TOLLIN 10 Academy Award Nominations "The LATE SHOW" Sat. 10:28 7:00 Sat.Sun.Mond 2:05 Hillcrest "BLACK SUNDAY" PG "ROCKY" *Starring* YLVESTER STALLONE! Eve. 7.30 & 9.45 Sat.Sun. 1.15 Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat. Sun. at 2:30 747 crashed at sea. Are trapped, are injured, are swept away. Hillcrest Varsity 924-717-3085 angela@vsit.edu AIRPORT PC 77 Eve, 7:40 & 9:50 Sat.-Sun, 1:55 Plus Small Town in Texas Hillcrest PG 7:20 show time Sunset W in W N in N E M in N E W at North M ROLFING appointments with Tom Path from April 11- April 17th Call 841-3145. sisterkettlecafe Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. gotarian Delights 14th & Mass. Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 Coffee House Fri. & Sat. 9 pm-Midnight with live entertainment Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES! 1024KB/s 16MB/s 8MB/s - Base ·Dustcover ·Cartridge SONY Complete Turntable PS-1100 SEMI-AUTOMATIC STEREO TURNTABLE SYSTEM $9900 - Wooden base with walnut grain vinyl exterior, and removable, smoked plastic dust cover - Arm lifting mechanism with viscous damped cueing - Automatic arm return and shut-off Open 'til 9:00 Thursday & Friday - Automatic arm return and shutoff - Speed selection for 33% and 45pm records - Statically balanced tonearm - Magnetic cartridge with diamond stylus included - 45mm adaptor included RMS ELECTRONICS BETTER CASE a record store audio 724 MASSACHUSETTS 841-2672 - Counterweight and sliding bearing - Magnetic catcher with diamond stylus included - Counterweight anti-skating compensation 图 Yanks end Royals' streak, 5-3 The Royals spread out 10 hits, including five doubles. The New York Yankees poured out 12 hits and used three Kansas City errors to end the Royals' four-game season-opening winning streak, 5-3, last night at Royals Andy Hassler, 1-1, took the loss for the Royals. He struck out seven battens, walked three and hit one Yankee batter before he made a bog Bird with two outs in the eighth inning. single up the middle by George Brett, White was thrown out trying to score. Students who wish to participate in the 1977 Intramural Outdoor Track Meet should entry in form by 5 today to Room 208 of Robinson Gymnasium. "It was a typical Royals-yankees game," an unperturbed Herzog said after the game. "If we lose one game a week, I'll be satisfied." Ron Gudiray, who relieved starter Edd Figueroa in the seventh innning, took the win for the Yankees. His record is 1-0. The Royals tied the game in the seventh with back-to-back doubles from Freed Patek and Frank White. Guidry was greeted by a BIRD CAME in to give up a double to Bucky Dent, and Karasas City manager Whitey Herzog immediately pulled him and pat in Steve Mingori, who finished the game. He vaulted the side in the eighth but gave up two and one run on a wild pitch in the ninth. Students may enter a maximum of three events, and there is no entry fee. Schedules for events are available in Robinson. The meet begins 8.30 Saturday Entry deadline STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00! THE NATURE AND CAUSES OF SUICIDE AMONG COLLEGE STUDENTS 3977 The major concern of this study is what can be done to halt the high rates of student turnover whether college students give warning signals in advance or just sudden signals. The clinical ecological view is presented, as well as a sociological view by Durkheim and Beale. Phobee Snow Steve Band Band Renaissance Flying Burrito Bros. Flying Burrito Quincy Jones Maryland Ferguson This, and 5,000 other unusually relevant research papers are described as above in our new 1977 mail-order catalog. Send $1 to: Pacific Research, P.O. Box 5043-FD Seattle, WA 89109. The same sound alternative you enjoy on KJHJ FM1! can be a part of your own album collection. For two weeks beginning April 14, KJHJ will give away free albums to listeners from 6 PM to midnight. Mon., thru Sat. Available artists include: Kris Hickerson Kristen Hickerson HARRIS RED Jason Hickerson Marshall Tucker Band Marshall Tucker Band JJBRK & JJ Hammaker JJBRK & JJ Hammaker B.B. King Bobbie and Rice Dr. Robert L.A. Express David Harding Philip Glass Manhattan Transfer Stone Hill Village Jason For all of the details, keep tuned to KJHK FM91 THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE KJHK FM91 Y FUNDED THROUGH KU STUDENT SEMINTE. FREE EAR PIERCING with purchase of Ear Piercing Earrings - 24 Kt. Gold Overlay at $7.50 - All For Piercing Done - Non-Allergenic - Surgical Stainless Steel Any Day Except Monday By Trained Specialist BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Massachusetts • 843-4366 OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS SPRING FEVER SALE! 30 to 50% off first serve Warm Ups By Head, Adidas, Winning Ways, and Loomtogs. Men's Shirts, Shorts, Separates By Head, Izod, Pacific Trails, Newcombe, No. 1 Sun, Borg's Fila, Fred Perry and White Stag. Women's Tennis Dresses, Shorts, Tops, Sweaters By Head, Iod, Tail, Cole of California, Fred Perry, No. 1 Sun Chrisie Evert, Pierce Cardin, and White Stag. Register-FREE RACKET NO PURCHASE NEEDED first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 1119 Mass. Lawrence Pedwin Several styles to choose from like: Sandals Pedwin BALBOA (smooth) Leather Hurrache style with long wearing tre-tread sole. Sizes 7 to 13. 15.95 Soft leather sandal with tire-tread sole. Sizes 6-13 13.95 Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here CHICO ism master charge THE INTERBANK CARD mcox shoes 813 Mass. 843-2091 APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR SUNFLOWER HOSTESSES The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is now accepting applications from students interested in assisting with the recruitment of prospective student-athletes for the Football Department. Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled KU student in good standing during the 1977-78 academic year. For further information and applications contact the football office, Allen Field House annex. Application deadline is 5 p.m., Friday, April 15. 8 Thursday, April 14, 1977 University Dally Kansan KU faculty tracks national titles Staff Reporter By JON SCHILLIE The men's track team isn't the only national track power at the University of Kansas. For the past two years, the KU Faculty Track Club has placed third in the nation among university and college faculty teams. The club comprises 63 faculty members who run several times a week, according to Larry Brady, research associate for the Kansas Geological Survey and club leader. BRADY SAID YESTERDAY that 30 schools would compete nationally this year, mailing their members' best times for 1977 to the National Clearinghouse for Faculty Running Competition at the University of Nebraska. Brady said that the more faculty members that participated, the better KU's performance. The clearinghouse will award points to the teams by combining each runner's time and finishing position. "We won't win this year," Jim Hamrick, associate professor of botany and a team member, said. He explained that not enough students were turning in their times this year. LAST YEAR. Stanford University and syracuse University placed first and second in the final round of the game. Six faculty members have been training to run in the KU relays marathon. "WE DECIDED AS early as January to run in it," Mike Kelly, associate professor of military science, said. Kelly and the others planning to run in the marathon have 35 miles a week, and on weekends, they usually take a long run of 13 to 20 miles. Harold Yarger, research associate for the Kansas Geological Survey and a club member, said members of the math department were 42 years ago. KU club members began corroding with the math department at Nebraska and formed the clearinghouse, he said. THE MATH DEPARTMENT'S 5 club members make up the largest University team. The club's one- and two-mile relay teams holds the faculty clearinghouse record in the division. Grover Everett, professor of clinical medicine at the University of Chicago in the half-mile, at a time of 1:59.8. Bodan Kuzmanovic, professor of civil engineering, has the best time in the quarter-mile, the half-mile and the mile in the 60 years and over division. "The whole idea of the club is to keep physically fit and enjoy the camaraderie of running with other faculty members," Brady said. On Campus BEST BUILT IN THE WORLD Events TODAY: THE KU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will sponsor a "Most Corrupt Official Contest" from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., outside the Kansas Union. KU will host a weeklong series of contests all day in the Union. There will be a PAYROLL PROCEDURES WORKSHOP at the Council Room. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 180 Blake Hall. **TONIGHT:** AALP will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Jyhawk Room. There will be an ARCHITECTURE MEETING at 7:30 in the Union's Forum Room. James Wiesman, Boston University professor, will speak on "STORIE: A CITY OF ANARCHY." The event is scheduled for Saturday, March 21, from 1:30 to 4:30 in CONCERT CHORI will perform in 8 in Swarovski Rental Hall in Humboldt Hall. TOMORROW: A CONFERENCE ON PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT will be held all day in the Union. THE ASSOCIATION OF BLACK SOLICIAL WORKERS will hold a conference all day in the Union. Don Marquis, associate professor of philosophy, will discuss death at the ENTPROY meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Meadowlark Room. THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOPLOGY will sponsor the film, 'Search for the Giant Apes', at 4 p.m. in p. 827 Fraser Hall. The museum will host the exhibit in the Museum of Natural History. THE CREATIVE FANTASY CLUB will meet on Mondays at Oread Room. MARCIA ANN GILLESPE, editor of Essence magazine, will speak on the 'Education Dilemma of the Blacks in the Professions' at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. Applications for KJHK staff positions are available from the bulletin board outside 217 Flint Hall and must be returned by April 28. Nonpaying executive and announcing positions are available. Contact Bob Moody at 841-5946 for further information. FBI, CIA actions topic of panel Announcement A chapter meeting of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union's Jayhawk Room will feature a panel discussion on "FBI and CIA Involvement with Universities." The meeting is open to the public. Panelists will be Robert Friauf, president of the local AAUP chapter and professor of physics and astronomy; Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy; Robert Casad, professor of law; Carl Lande, professor of political science. Presentations will include discussions on specific cases of FBI and CIA activity on university campuses and explanations of intervening intelligence operations of the U.S. government that are connected with university professors The four panelists will discuss FBI involvement in a dismissal of a faculty affiliation at Arizona State University, a 1976 AAUP resolution and a 1982 Operations of the United States Government* and a U.S. Senate report last spring of the Select Committee to Study Governance Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities (the Church Committee). HASHINGER HALL Extends an invitation to all past Hashinger residents to join the present residents at our Spring Arts Festival Pops Concert — 8:00 — Theatre Monday, April 18, 1977 More information on posters around campus. FREE BEER! NORML meeting at the Bierstube, 14th & Tenn. Get our latest information. 6:30 Tonight Convenience Is Hillcrest Shopping Center KU Bus Service Laundry Facilities Centennial Park Complete Maintenance Service Traibridge Apartments 2500 W. Sixth 842-7333 843-7333 The World's Largest Traveling Multi Media Production Tomorrow THE BEATLES: AWAY WITH WORDS In K. U.s. Acoustically Perfect HOCH AUDITORIUM 5 UNFORGETTABLE PERFORMANCES at 4 p.m., 6 p.m., 8 p.m., 10 p.m. & and 12 midnight Fri., April 15 K U STUDENT ADVANCE TICKETS ONLY $2.50 Available at SUA Box Office Only ALL K U STUDENT TICKETS ~ $3.00 AT THE DOOR Aandhi The KU India club is presenting the Hindi film "Aandhi with English subtitles. This film is co-sponsored by the International club and will be presented Fri., April 15 at 7:30 p.m. This film has been given a best picture award. It stars Suchitra Sen, Sajeev Kumar, A.K. Hangal, and Rehman Directed by Gulzar. CINEMAS ROOMS FOR RENT Sigma Nu House —Air conditioned Close to campus Temple county —Tennis courts —Recreation area Basketball courts Plenty of parking space Large sudeck -Kitchen available Two acres of grassy lawn -Quiet study areas —'75/month Coed living; Girls top floor; Guys first floor —Weight room. —Two month lease—June = August —Weight room —Charcoal grill FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Call Mrs. Mastin 843-5673 between 12:30-50 p.m. and 6:00-9:00'p.m. Regents From page one Regents will be asked to make final consideration of the fee schedule amendment, which was approved by the KU Student Senate Tuesday night. The proposed amendment would alter the existing schedule to provide an additional $1.50 per student for the student activity fee and a $1.00 per student for the new fee will be $11.00, up from $9.00. The increase would provide for maintaining the current number of open hours in Robinson Gymnasium next year and for improving recreational facilities. THE AMENDMENT also asks that the satellite union building fee be increased by 10%. Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, say yesterday "I don't think any of them are what could be called controversial. I don't think we'll have any trouble with them, but we have to be there to answer any questions." The Regents meeting will wrap up three days of activity at KSCP. James Appleberry, former assistant to the chancellor at KU, was inquashed as替任副校長. The Council of Presidents of the seven Regents schools was to meet this morning. The Regents Academic and Health Education committees and the Institutions Coordinating Council are scheduled to meet this afternoon. Four committee meetings are scheduled for the morning, by the Registrar at noon or the afternoon. The seven Regents institutions are KU, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Fort Hays State College, Emporia Kansas State College, Kansas State College at Pittsburgh and Kansas Technical Institute at Salina. OWL SOCIETY Junior Men's Honorary Organization Applications available in Alumni Association Office, Rm. 403, Kansas Union. Applications due Friday, April 15 Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1977 Forum Room, Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. SPEAKER: Marcia Ann Gillespie, Editor-in-Chief of Essence Magazine TOPIC: "Educational Dilemma of the Blacks in the Professions" NO ADMISSION CHARGE For more information, call 864-4353 PRO-Keds TENNIS SHOES Strictly to your advantage Because they're built that way. To give you that extra jump on the ball. Cool, comfortable, marvelously constructed—with PRO-Keds you'll feel surer every time. ROYAL COURT (Smooth leather) Master Charge BankAmericard McCall's Park View Golf in our Shores Downtown Lawrence Thursday, April 14. 1977 assistant to aaugurated as yesterday. wrap up three to answer any of the seven this morning, and Health se Institutions adduced to meet are scheduled swed by the ernpoon. are KU, Wichita State State College, lege, Kansas and Kansas Board hears tower height controversy Peter Whitenth, chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, addressed the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night to try to resolve a recent controversy over a proposal for an emergency communications tower. 11 15 In response to city commission objections to the height of the 180-foot tower. When planning commission members asked about moving the tower to another location, Whitengtown said such a move would cost more than the original $60,000-$85,000 cost. source and additional equipment. If the tower was built at the originally朽ed site in a parking lot adjacent to the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, the power source in the basement of that building could be used. Because of the additional expense, Whitenight said he didn't advocate moving "I don't feel this is an aesthetic nightmare," he said, responding to charges against him. the profession tower will be a bakeup for BY MOVING THE tower, the county would have to purchase another power University Daily Kansan IF THE POLICE center should lose power, Whitenight intercept trawler transport will be possible. the emergency Operating Center (EOC), would be available. Whitenied said the police would provide personnel for EOC in an emergency. The EOC would operate in any emergency, Whitleight said, whereas the network system would provide emergency service systems and enforce communication systems. Whitenight said the county commission had chosen the best type of tower possible. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, good, services and employ- ment. Minimum of 5 years exp in an academic or research position in the INLA/MAC region. Req's Master's deg. CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times times word ... AD DEATHS time in minutes 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word 01 02 03 04 05 Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These calls can be placed in person or by phone calling the UDK business office **481-4354** UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ENTERTAINMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe host trips, on the Illinois River. Special offers include a 4-hour trip ($20 per person), a 4-hour trip ($30 per person). Other trips available. Write or phone for free brochure. On board a boat from any of the four harbors on highway 10, Tableauhill, Oklahoma 74048, (956) 274-7500. Persons interested in joining a campus future research club call 814-0940 or 814-2171 evening. Don't miss Willow Wind, OFF THE WALL HALL April 18 4-18 I-3 bedroom apartments, rooma with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor. 842-506-7199 FOR RENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party! Large dance floor or large two- to three-person dance floor, large or 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to Tu, unities, utilizes parking, 843-957-09. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets, 843-5767. tf Sublease studio apartment for summer. Quit for dance class, central air, all kitchen, call 862-263-0751 Frontier Ridge-ade short term lease available. Room with study. H heated indoor pool • sliding carpet • pool deck • pool door • disposal • patio • laundry facilities • furnished and unfurnished from $135. Call 842-790-2650. CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX. Rent the Pro. 267-280. Residential rental. Call集 5-10 Gatcheous Apartment. Call Becky now, summer. Contracts on 1 Gatcheous apartment. Call B32- 8740 c Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center. Furnished and infirmed, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office 7 days a week for either call 912-836-7540 or 912-836-7487 4-21 Subletting furnished studio apartment, all uttties paid, for summer months! $100 Call 845-236-7302 Need to admit 2 bedrooms to downtown at Traffic Correction Court, reasonable rate. Call Chuck or Guay on (855) 671-3040. Pursured room, utilities paid share bath, refrigerator, close to home, 295 Indiana, 189 Wisconsin. Sublime--Furnished studio apartment. Mid May date. Parking available. Meadwood court, At Meadowood, next to pool, tennis courts and a dog park. Make your plants now. Applications are now giving fast key by for a larger and complete design. Sublime-Luxury townhouses, three huge bed- rooms, two full baths, fireplaces, central air, wet tile flooring. Live on air stations in a well-conditioned apartment 139 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10005. Open hours: 8am - 7pm, Monday - Friday, 10am - 4pm, Open hours: 8am - 7pm, Monday - Friday, 10am - 4pm. Sublease for the summer—1-bedroom apartment, furnished. Call 841-5284 4-18 Warren two girls to sublease Tralkle Towne Warner two girls to sublease Tralkle Towne Tower 68 girls to sublease Towers 68 Tower 12 girls to sublease Towers 12 Use Kansan Classifieds HEADQUARTERS for JAMES CANG Foreian Auto Parts Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m. 843-8080 304 Locust Craig Cainter Tape recorder final cut to $89 from Sotheby's Auctioneer of the Year (AUTO) for St. Helen's Island, 919 Main Street, Overseas, Tampa, FL 33647. For more information, go to www.sothebysauctioneers.com. Set of four new 135mm 15 steel beltsRadially only 24mm wide 6mm thick 170kg Capacity 699kg Bassam, '8299 Bassam, Open Top, till 30 m, 2999 Bassam 73 Mazda RX-8, X-Ace, Air. Stereo, 8 track, Low mileage, perfect shape—make up, 841-6660 To subluate—We must move. Beautiful 3 bedroom house with patio close to path, good location. Fully furnished. Walk-in closet. $159,000 Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid on. Room 1 $975.30 call. Call 845-6933 to come to 1623 Room 2 $1,270.30 call. Call 845-6933 to come to 1623 New 1 bedroom apartment being built for fall, on a great location by the stadium. Call 800-246-7353 or visit www.northbay.com. ROSALEA'S HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 67058. The hotel, with a forrest, kavalry pavilion, or come into the hotel for an evening of fun. 2-bedroom apartment, 2 blocks from Union, $165 plus utilities. #43-7038. Available immediately. 3-bedroom apartment. Spacious, near campus and downstown, until paid, furnished or unfurnished. Can be 4-dormroom, parking, laundry. 140-72 Men Ask for manager at 4.90 pm. or ends. 4-15 SUBLUEASE. 2 bedroom newly built apartment, with hardwood floors, enclosed by private pool and property on bus route. Phone 813-348-6488 Sublease for summer - 2-bedroom apartment 1-723-645-983, before 9; after 4-21 8-723-645-983, before 9; after 4-21 Apartment to publicize. Close to campus. June- August. Call 841-3562 after 4 p.m. 4-20 Individual rooms for rent immediately, for summer co-op,贮存 food, program free, laundry utilities included in economical rent (184 SALE 3 blocks from campus. Call Laurie H. 9421 4-20 Discount on summer suites one-bedroom Meadowbrook furnished apartment, pool, air-con kitchen, full kitchen, spa bath. June-Aug. 15 (lease expires); 2 bedroom, new- enlarged apartment, A/C $185/month; Cal- fornia $399/month. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—New un on Sale! Make use them—1) As study guide, 2) For Class preparation, 3) For Exam preparation. *New Analysis* Western Civilization available now at Troy City Store. Alternate, starter, and generator. Specialists. and exchange units. BELL AUF, ELECTRIC. We are the only Full Pack Prefected Queen of Media, and we will always be the first recorders of Audio Systems, 8th and 9th floor, in front of Audiox Studio, 8th and 9th floor. 64 VW with sunroof, new tires, fairly good condition. $225. $864-1337. 4-14 1970 Kawasaki 500, front face, electronic transmission. Fuel tank has latch, with luggage rack. real refrisc at $600. Call 800-423-3010. 1972 Opel GT, blue, low mileage, air conditioning, automatic, luggage rack, good tires plus snow, excellent condition, 25-30 mpg high highway without stover, $250, kit. Call: 4-148 6455. AIP 2000 Synthesizer, 15 months old also U.S. driver cisco link and register. Call, Nibc, 846- 398. 1975 Bulleau Protetora "36" Bottor Forks w/WKS Scale new palmtail, real felt, 180 Iberson Tennessee, $24,000. Honda 550F (super sport) 1925, 6,000 miles. motorcycle half-ton (1925) 812-523-3880, 24 hours. 4-14 (1925) 812-523-3880. 1974 Gold Dust-TRP -PB, DC AC, AM-MF, 3-team, pacifican I -MN, MLH, MN-I, MN-I, 4-team 6-14 Baltimore 841-7156 Medical students' microscope, Zeus Binocular. Excellent condition call 842-287-365. 4 - 15 3 - 10 8 - 15 20 - 25 30 - 35 40 - 45 1925 Honda CB-125 plus 2 helmets - only 600 cents. Call Cordy at 843-9841. 73 Plymouth (Duster) available 1 June. One excellent, condition kit. 842-0190. 4-14 Must sell Schwinn Continental 10-speed, JBL L-100 speakers, deluxe kick size waterbed, in fantastic elongated frame, Koss H.I. 3 headlamp, Mitsubishi EVO 4 model. Matches B4-8291@2.60.49. A-4-15 Planner XS62 receive ~$165, $30 to truck deck Pioneer XS26 receive ~$165, $30 to truck deck large selection of laptops Culver 81-425 Culver 81-428 4-18 HP 35 calculator like new, only $80. Please call Mike: 542-2584 4-19 10 speed Peugeot manifold, bi-cycle low mileage, many features. (850-434-1466, www.peugeot.com, trust funds, $10, 834-1466, www.peugeot.com) 1972 Vega Hatchback AT, AC. AM-FM 5G Good-reasonable price. BG 844-1838. 4-14 Final cut on C.B. Radio's and Antenna's "Earth Song," from 1976, by Ray Rockbush's 329 Mass, open thurs. (11 8-20). Dare Sale Fri and Sat, 15 and 16, 1138 Mitsu- We call all need tunk. Pourey. 4-15 RADIAL THE CLEARANCE. 145 x 135 x 155. HYPERGLASS. 200 x 200 x 200. FEET, MOUNTING and balancing weights. Ray and Terry. (DVD) (DVD) (DVD) - - - - featuring seclusion and quiet." AIRFRAME WATERBEDS AVAILABLE AT THE FIELDS STORE THE FIELDS Dodge Polear 71 full, power, excellent condition. Must sell. 812-8906. 8-13 1975 Yamaha Enduro 400, excellent shape 3500 4-18 Call 842-5253 Harley Davidson 350, 100 mi, just tuned mute $300, 842-8999, windows 4-18 Bard university new stereo am10 10 watt kit, $429.99; firmware Bard university new stereo am10 10 watt kit, $429.99; firmware Amy & Shenry's big sale! Masks 40% style clothing and blouses, pillowcases and other shirts, blouses, Penelope corduroy and other shirts, goods and old furniture including dressers, curtains, mats, hats and sun. April 16th and 17th must buy! Hat and Sun. April 16th and 17th must buy! Last days at last year's prices, Eureka temp. in January, $79.99 for a square foot,狸下阶 wise, up after merger sat. sale. Winter merchandise up after merger sat. only. Sunflower surplus, $44. Mass 26 Motobee record gcn disc record. Never been bought $75 new sell for $40 or best off $150 used sell for $10. 1970 Karmann Gli coupe. Rebuilt throughout (engine-clutch end -exhaust ahead) paint-cell belt raildecor-am fm fasceau in this Well-tuned vehicle to drive. For sale $2,500. fm - 841-1694 4-15 Alwa AD 6200 cessate telephone. Only one month must be immediately. Call 814-8522 ask for phone number. JV stereo cassette deck $200; complete with $499. For 16-inch or larger. Metals at $300; will sell for $275. Color TV 20 inches, good condition only $130, and padded cassette recorder $20; call Lerenze R. 978-643-5019. 1972 Medea RX-2. Only 22,000 miles, AM-FM high track truck, excellent, conditioned, driving school offered. $450-$600. Super clean契机 B, and O. turbilitary model power amp array DACS 1080 PACS, power amp kit, 1500 WA功率 amp and JAPX 5460 power kit. Dark Jacket 61 & TI receiver all allow also drive DC inverter. The Little Snowcoore With A Big Difference. Thorens YD 100 C turntable $135 with Stanton @kitees $175 Dail at Bai 841-4366 for more with kitees TechnaTECH SA-5220 Am-Pm Fm recorder 30 watt pics audio device BMI-645-1000Mp 1000 Mp Auk. Am Pm Fm 4-20 Am Pm Fm 4-20 RAY AUDIO. The Little Stereo Store, now has two locations in Chicago and New York. It will surprise your expectations. At 13 E. 9th Street, Suite 200, 265 W. 42nd St. 1941 Chevry, 8 cly, 3 speed. Excellent mechanism, condition, $200 or best offer. MX42547. 4:20 Ludwig Pro-Beat drum set w/cases, excellent condition, call 824-7169 3-40 Old books 1907-1933 mostly architectural design, building, construction-furniture decoration-Funk and Wagnall Dictionary 1965 (12 In., old Nathaniel Dickens) for $3.40. Call editions 8492. HELP WANTED CLASSICAL GUITAR CLEARANCE SALE, on Ahowee! Classic models will supply labs and guitars. Call us at 212-365-7040. Act now and get a free $70 case also. Lawrencer Music Center 9th and Hood Island. Located in the city of Orange County. Sell or trade, skylines mobile home, 40 food allowance, for good food for food supply. Call 842-9333 after receiving a deposit. DRUM NET FOR SALE. Lidlow drums and drum set new item at Lafarge Music Center, sitl and drum set available at Lafarge Music Center. Phone: 0123-4567-8901. Men or women. We need 5 people immediately. Do not send more than 10 people for work. No experience necessary. We will train. For personal interview call Hol Lawson, 842-3110. Lawson Kirby Co. Will lead to full time summary Information center support application for application design. Application for April 15. Apis in Strong. 4-15 Need intramural track officials for meet on Sat- tember 21 at Incarnation Resort in Bounty Bounce 20th Johnson Park. Avon open territory in Lawrence. Exam if you have a large collection of works that prove his profitability selling world famous Avon materials. SUMMER JOURS: Fired service. How where to apply to, PO Box 272, Box 727, Portland, ME 58600. **STUDENT CLERK TYPIST:** Responsibilities include training, filing, lettering, or as assigned. Require experience in the job and an interest in interact with other staff and visitors. Accurate attendance, no phone calls, and occasional Saturday meetings are currently enrolled student at the University of Kansas Elder University of Kansas Computation Center to assist with computer training. **AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYEE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY** **4-18** Part-time for $5 per week for 20 hours, male or female over 40 years. Call N84-762-4-14 4-14 30-60 3-60 DEADBOLTS INSTALLED MORRIS Lock & Key YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD Maitland 10:54 Mon - Sun 11:00 thursday Director - PHININTING SERVICE director, University of Kansas Printing Service, Kansas City, Missouri, providing plant support with annual volume about 1.2 million and, more than half of that volume using modern management systems for softening. Must have 6 years experience in managerial training and training for plants. Must have 6 years experience in managerial training and training for plants. Masters degree in printing plant management design or equivalent. Applicant should hereby send Dr. Russell Mills, M.S., Vice President of Plant Management, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS. Application deadline, May 9, 1977. An application must be submitted to the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS. Student architect engineer wanted to produce spores and working drawings for energy saving home from our ideas. Knowledge of poured concrete, Concrete Caulking, Call before 20, anytime. 913-415-2818. STUDENT PROGRAMMERS. two (2) positions available. One position will be primarily computer science, another will be interested in non-statistical programming, writing, documenting new programs, utilizing Requirements. Currently enrolled in a Master's degree or equivalent. Experience on the H6-600 course with FORTHAN; programming knowledge of statistics; understanding of computer communication; Defined Qualifications. Computer tree: knowledge of statistics, assembly language, microprocessor architecture. University of Kansas Computational Engineering: EAR, Euler University of Kansas Computational Engineering: EAR, Euler University of Kansas Computational Engineering: EAR. AN ISA AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER WHO ENCUMBERED TO APPLY FOR THIS POSITION. Did you Easter break turn into a summer work day? Yes. Call our counselor. 612-745-6077. Call our counselor for interschool work. LIFEGUARDS-Johnson County firm has several full time summer staffers for persons with pool access and/or a private room. TERMED. Send application to A.S.L. 8435 Quivira Rf. Lenaux KC. 6215 or call 1-888-4283-6950. LOST AND FOUND Pull and part time funhouse and caverber work. Worn and overtime. Apply in person at the office. Email info@caverber.com. TEACHERS WANTED West and other gater schools University, Westchester, NY N700-4328 Agency, Box B337, Allergan, NYM. N700-4328 CITY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG TEENagers The all new Appli Valley Farm of Lawrence is now taking applications for both full and part employment in the farming industry in person at 901 Indiana between 9 and 5. This affords an excellent opportunity for full-time work. Applications can be submitted online at www.applvalley.com. Load- Glasses in flushed case. Brown plastic box. Call Carhier. 812-351-0354 or 608-745-0354. Reward. Medium sized part Norwegian Elbhdur at Mark 1 Apartment. Call Al at 814-3681 after 5 hours. Lost-49 cooks. If found, please return to Cooker J. Anyone can Whale. April 14-17. Lost: Ladies yellow-gold Wylie watch. Hain, white, aquatic neck, with no interior. Sentinel- stock. 28-50mm. $49.95. Lost-Slipper bracelet with Tiger eyes stone. Please call 841-5086 or 842-4603 4-18 Found. Kodachrome slide in front of Strong Hall. Claim at 249 Science. Ask for George. Found: Frog Trophy, with Bran plaque. Call Gorjun or Juliennus *464-3338* and identify initials. Found-on the West bank of Potter's Pool, 4.8 & 12-foot necklace hook neckpiece. Identify it. 84-109-200 East-score on campus, small multilevelled thrive through a range of academic and driver- less programs. M54M if you have M54M if you have Lead: Eye glasses in tun can between Fraser and Leaf: Eye glasses around March 23. Call 845-8153. NOTICE Albers, Tel Aviv, London, Japan. You name departures on major airlines. Europe from $299 deepest departures on major airlines. Europe from $299 Arabic, Asia, Africa, Australia, Africa, special sales for Foreign Travel. Multilingual and specializes in foreign travel. Multilingual and Make our favorite album your own directly. The RIKE Music 01 record begins April 4. KARABE- Learn the ancient secrets of this marvelous school of self-defense, conditioning and learn self-defense. Saves you from potential threats. Vista Restaurants Fri, & Sat. 'til 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 843-9891 6:30:9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 9:5 Sun. 710 Mass. • 843-2182 Free albums from The Sound Alternative listen to KHF FM 91 for details 4-14 Needed: GAY COMPLIES who have been living in the United States and are planning to inactivate in an interesting study investigating male identity. The study will be on the positive and strength quality of men who have had sex with men, build their self-esteem, and complete COMPLETE CONSIDENTIALITY guaranteed, and course will be paid for $25 for each person. Contact Wagner, 811-6883, with conservation of Gay Society materials. Wagner, 811-6883, with conservation of Gay Society materials. Anneta Bryant: Suck An Orange, Gay services anitaetna. April 18, International Room of Union, Washington, D.C., and May 25, gay movement in Kansas City, discussing the current anti-gay backlash across the country. Graduate student seeks domicile for KU summer session. If you are leaving Lawrence for the summer, live near campus, and would like to stay in apartment in district of Call from 1-432-282-0000 4-18 Charity Dance—American Heart Association at Sanseghani's highest percentage from living group who two kegs Tuesday April 19-Demanding $25,000-advanced tickets from Union Booth 2. 4-19 Pipe show. We have now Merrimank pipe. Free pipes are available on Saturday, April 16th, all day. Town C 镇 Pipe Show. Free pipes at Town C镇 Pipe Show. MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Madison Man. DORM ROOM FOR SALE - Contract for some special special. Olive dorm room with two twin bedrooms on both sides, insulated door for you amokers and lights on lamps, insulated door for you amokers. No See-Me-No. 818 Olver Hall - 844 really nice room! Personized Marriage, cermenities, University Inquiries, Inquiries 600, Library Kannan, 60041, Lawyers KU RELAYS ATTENTION!! BEN WILL BE IN 4-14 AT THE RACES! Gay Counseling Service. Call 845-7055, 6-12 p.m. for referral. For socializing calls, call 845-7055 We put on a danced good show. Peggy. Anyone Can Wistle. Oliver Hall Lounge. 4-15 Wilfrid Friar for舱客 her fate? W. Will. 2. Robert E. Hornbein, Fla. First April, 1916; p.m. Houston bach h. 5. Fluid in. April 1917; p.m. Houston bach h. 6. Fluid in. April 1918; p.m. PJR-Shortstuck, Happy four years 4.12. We've had our ups and downs. Even though you are rough now, the good times outweigh the bad. And I hope you're doing things always well. Outsweat you are not. Wrong! LMJ. VIEWERS OF JESUS OF NAZARETH, If you want to call Dr. Callway, 842,570-7390, and claim that you have received it. Paragon: striving towards excellence. 4-14 Alcohole is the most prevalent form of destructive drug addiction. For help or info, 842-811-0101. Heart Fund NiGil- Sherianam-Biggest percentage thriving group in 2 key segments of beating 60% ANYONE can become in University Life Church (UNL) a minister. If you wish to ordain, order your友会 members as ministers, and pay an annual fee of $350. You will receive a mini-toury for one month. For official ULC ordination and training, please contact T. Miller, pastor of Multifamily Internship in Vail, T. Miller. Griselda—Meet me at Squeezers. 4-15 DGM Remember: Ethel Mermert is allergic to to wine. You have life for your drink; and 6-14 Biorthythm charted. Scientifically based technical music-making, emotional control and physical modeling of your 177 Biorthymm. Send your 177 Biorthymm to your local Lawrence envelope to 1734 Engel Rd. #235. Lawrences K 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 Pier1 imports associate store ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841-7946 M-5 10:5:30 Thurs. 8:00 "A different kind of bar" Open Daily 10am-11am/midnight Except Sunday TYPING The Lounge I did thank good typing. Fergus, 622-6476. **Compound:** Pheptane. **Discuss:** Discuss the secondary structure of compound Pheptane. SERVICES OFFERED - Feosball THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Udher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with 85% Massachusetts & phone #36-2534 Thank you. - Pinball Math tutoring—competent, experienced tutors help you through courses 000, 003, 102, 105, 111 and 116. For more information call 842-788-7888. Regular sessions or one line text preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-788-7888. Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, induc- tion, presentation. Send resume to as-0544, Mrs. Wright. Term Papers. Proofread. Spelling Corrected. Litho 1128. 950-4477. 1712 Alemany. 843-1322. 4-125 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bow Thesis, term paper, etc. Reasonable rates. Call Bethi, 841-6477. 4-14 Will your team jumper with TLT. Tennis patient and breast cancer specialist Call Kaven at 841-811-dll CONTACT US For details, visit www.nationaltennis.org Small house wanted to rent by faculty family, fall semester, 1977, 814-4667. 4-15 Your paper deserves the best Call Peggy for 842-851-4149, 842-851-4993 and weekends. Wide experience law papers, thesis, dissertations Quality work guaranteed. Responsible. Plus elec tructures. Excellent communication skills. No hunch. Just good typing at lower than averager. Then the most violent. The most severely shortest of deadlines. Hurry up. Nurse a patient with no reason to worry. WANTED Groups and I want you! Can We White, April 14-17 Half Hall Lunch, 8 p.m. FREE! Saturday Ten-speed rim, 26". Name price. Call 641-4820 between 1-8 inch. 4-14 Male or female requested needed for summer to be taken. Please call 215-429-6307, 215-429- 6315, 215-429-6325, calls 866-595-2141. *Two weeks prior to travel. - Pool - Bud on Tap Male graduate student seeking male female to work as a tutor in Earlham, NY. Gary Davis, 1962 *A* Lincoln, St. Louis, N. 68407. Susan A. DeGroot, 1962 *A* Lincoln, St. Louis, N. 68407. and Honda Cycles Female romance for summer and or fall; on $175 for entire summer. Jayhawk Towers. 4-18 House wanted to rent for summer. Call Brian, 842-0790. 4-25 Female romantine needed to share apartment for location located near KU Med. Cent. Phone: 797-6531 1811 W. 644 843-3333 My brother lost his heart, shortly舞. Bhumibol Arun Rinne, the 71st president of American Heart Association £170 proceeds as he to American Heart Association Female roommate needed for summer. Own West Hills, West Mt. $90. Must be straight. 814-4258. Harley-Davidson Virions NAISMITH HALL THE SECOND MARCH 1963 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. The Chalk Hawk I HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Ping Pong - Pool - Snooker Pin-Ball - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted 10 Thursday, April 14, 1977 University Daily Kansan Drv forces From page one places other than liquor stores, Sunday sales and credit sales. "IF LIQUOR BY the drink really brought to total social consumption, I'd support it." - Bill Clinton Taylor said he ignored statistics that indicated there had been fewer traffic deaths related to alcohol in some Kansas counties that prohibited liquor stores than in counties that allowed liquor stores and counties that counties could buy their luxury elsewhere. Taylor's careful to avoid publicity attacking alcohol on moral grounds. An edition of the Kansas issue bristles at a reference to liquor by the drink as a "sin" issue. "Alcohol is a drug problem, a health problem, a highway safety problem, a child abuse problem, a birth defect problem, a crime sentenceism problem, an economic problem. Why is it called a 'sin' issue?" the issues ask. He also said he ignored a HEW report from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism that said, "Most of the evidence indicates that flipper control laws) have not proven to be of over-riding importance in limiting alcohol-related behavior." The study, which found healthy attitudes toward alcohol will have a lower incidence of undesirable effects from alcohol than the unpredictable drinker with guilt and conflict about drinking. --only 1 39 THAT REPORT, Taylor said, was written by a man who worked for the liquor industry both before and after he worked for the government. The argument that restrictive laws give alcohol a tempting "forbidden fruit" image should only be listened to if one believes heroin, too, should be legalized, he said. Any possible economic advantages to liquor by the drink are far outweighed by losses related to alcohol production and health costs and accident costs, Taylor said. TAYLOR IS "anti-human suffering, not anti-alcohol", he said. Although the absence of alcohol would be the ideal, he said, a return to prohibition of alcohol probably would fail again. The ideal compromise, would be unforceable and unrealistic, would be to find some way to limit each individual to two drinks every 24 hours. Taylor, his voice now a gravely whisper after he lost a vocal chord to cancer, compares his own affliction with alcoholism. He said, "When I told one legislator you could prevent alcoholism by omitting from your diet alcoholic beverages, she said, 'That answer's too simplistic.' "I SAID, 'I wish I had that simplistic an idea of what a baby is made that make believing around the world.'" Alcohol is a far worse drug than marijuana, Taylor said. The United Dry Goods Company had to rep. Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, in reduce penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana because it would "reduce human suffering." The bill failed anyway in the Senate. A clause in the Kansas Controlled Substances Act that excludes alcohol from consideration as a dangerous drug is "real hocrysis," he said. When he appeared at a committee hearing to oppose the bill to extend tavern hours until 1 a.m., Taylor said, he faced a lawsuit by distributors and Lawrence tavern owners. "I'M THE ONLY opponent," he said. "When they gave me my time—and here's all the beer tavern owners in Lawrence and the Coors beer distributor from here in Topela, just loaded with beer puffers, see I—aid. "You know, this is ridiculous." "They want to find out who the marijuana pusher is for Mike Glover that supposedly gosses $2,500 a year. Every one of you probably grosses far more than that pushing a drug far more dangerous, and now you want another hour to push it." The United Dry Forces operate on a yearly budget of about $80,000, which pays for Taylor's salary and an office secretary, and costs an adio time and printing and mailing costs. The Kansas Issue usually contains appeals for contributions, as do other mailings sent to churches. United Dry Force's financial records supplied by Taylor indicate that most contributions range from $5 to $25, with some in the hundreds of dollars as received from church congregations. The average Taylor said, is about $10. TAYLOR IS REQUIRED to supply only expenditure summaries, not income sources, with the secretary of state. Taylor's recent expense reports in the WILLOW WIND WILLOW WIND WILLOW WIND Off the Wall Hall 737 New Hampshire presents Willow Wind Mon., April 18 9—12 1 cover --only 1 39 BROWN BAG SPECIAL Say Sea Gluten Free Vegan Milk and Cheese Sea Salt Bacon Graham cracker Pepperoni Tartar sauce Mint sauce Honey mustard Mayonnaise a Deluxe Sandy, French Fries, and Milk Shake all for only 1.39. Now thru Sunday, the 17th! Sandy's 9th & Iowa Taylor said the theory that he was supported by private club owners who want to maintain their hold on the mixed-drink market was disproved at a committee bearing this session, which was held by Club Owners of Kangaroo for liquor by the drink. secretary of state's office list several hundred dollars for radio and television "I'm probably literally the last of the lobbyists. That's where I work, the lobby," he said. "I haven't bought a meal this year for a senator or a representative." Taylor's job, he said, is to provide legislators with "the truth." Before an important vote, he will hand out printed copies of pertinent newspaper articles, statistics and the United Dry Forces' position on the legislation in question. OF CHARGES THAT he intimates legislators, Taylor said, "How could I intimidate anyone? You know the way most lobbyists work up there? They've got campaign contributions. We don't make campaign contributions to anyone." However, Taylor said the United Dry Forces supported candidates who took a stand against relaxation of liquor laws and who opposed one-liquor incumbents. He referred to one legislator who was defeated because the United Dry Forces ousted him. "I can say this in certain districts, you understand in Lawrence," he said, "we have "You know why the House is Democratic this year? I think if you asked the Democrats, they'd probably tell you we helped them." TAYLOR SAID HE was powerful only because he was supported by public opinion. "I represent public opinion, which I didn't create," he said. TAYLOR SAID HE was powerful only because he was suspended by public citing Dry Force works year-round for the United Dry Factors as a speaker and fundraiser. He quick to send letters to newspaper and magazine who he thinks are supporting alcohol use. Taylor wrote Chancellor Archie Dykes earlier this year after it was reported that University of Kansas officials condoned marijuana use in KU residence dykes. Dykes issued a statement that said the University wouldn't condone any drug law violations. TAYLOR'S LETTER chastised Dykes for allowing beer in residence halls while officially opposing marijuana use on campus. Taylor said Dykes' reply said Dykes appreciated Taylor's interest in the welfare of KU students. Although he doesn't think the liquor by the drink supporters will give up, Taylor said support for his position is increasing. Liquor by the drink would fail by more than the 3,000 vote margin recorded in 1970 if the public had rejected today, he said because the public is opposed alcohol consumption and common classification of alcohol as a drug. "They're getting mad about alcohol, really mad," he said. "The alcohol pushers' are the seed of their own rain." Tomorrow; The Rev. Taylor's main opponent. 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Levi's WE'RE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here KU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. 87, No.126 Reactions vary on drop change The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Friday, April 15, 1977 See story page 10 Local legislators disturbed about early adjournment Staff Reporter By DENNA KERBOW Local legislators have expressed concern about the Kansas legislature's early adjournment last week because several bills that would remove county maytees may not reach final action, this year. In addition, those bills that do reach final action, but are vethed by Gov. Robert Bennett, won't be reintroduced to the Senate. But whether to override the governor's vetoes. State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, said yesterday, "We'll just have to accept whatever he does, short of calling a special session of the legislature. "IN OD-NUMBERED years, we can stay in session indefinitely. We're not ready." State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, said. "There might be something in the way of a special session. It wouldn't surprise me if there still a awful lot of work to do vet. "Any time you have a major change like that," he said, referring to the first Kansas Hornets since the 1970s and Lakers since the process—not to knock the new chair man—but I think it just took awhile to ad-hist. State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, said he doubted that a special session would be held. "I THINK IT WOULD be a little embarrassing to both bodies," he said, "especially the Democratic party, because we did not do that much work this year." He said the delay had been a matter of conference committees getting together. "And they didn't seem to think it was of that much importance," he said, "but I'm not sure if it was." In agreement, Buzii said, "The big hang-up has been getting our conference committee back together and the much faster pace during these few days than we did during the last days of the first meeting." Burzi said he thought legislators were in a hamstring position about the governor's veto power, adding, "I personally feel we can do it better and approve appropriations, measures—at least that." BERMAN SAID, "I felt we left an awful lot undone, principally all of the appropriations bills, including the supplemental bill for this fiscal year." Berman said he questioned the wisdom of early adjournment because bills that would be considered between the 27th and the 28th session to the governor after final adjournment. "What can the legislature do about redline vetoes?" he asked. A red-line veto is one in which the governor can strike line of bills, nottingham bills, rather than veiling an entire bill. Vogel said he, too, had been disappointed that more business hadn't been accomplished before adjournment because, he said. "This won't give us an opportunity to come back and override the governor's veto on bills still pending." BUT, HE SAID, "I assume in the end, it will work out—normally it does." Buzzi said he agreed that all important business probably would be finished within the three days, but that they would be "three long days." Berman agreed that it would be hard to consider everything on the agenda in three But, he said, "Oh, hell, you can finish up all your business in an hour if you've a mind Former minister, now legislator, battles dry forces for liquor vote This is the second of two stories on liquor by the drink in Kansas. By STEVE FRAZIER Contributing Writer KANSAS CITY, Kan.—State Sen. Tom Brennan has criticized the north-floor window of the Kansas City, Kan. municipal building toward two nearby hotels that are trying to increase their capacity. "Do you know what you'd get around if we allowed liquor by the dep inkap in your room?" "in those houses, you see, there are good people; good people within walking distance who don't have jobs and would wash dishes or sween floors. "Up there you have black people, white people over here. They want jobs and are not happy." "That's my district." Fernando In his first session as a Kansas senator, Rehorn has emerged as one of the most vocal leaders in the move to let Kansas legislators vote on its constitution to allow liquor by the drink. REHORN, $3, says he is now ranked as "the leading drug pusher in the state of Kansas" by the Kansas United Dry Forces, led by the Rev. Richard Taylor Jr. Rehurn is a careful thinker. He tries to document all his arguments for liquor by the drink, but admits that some of his points need more backing. Liquor by the drink supporters, besides developing their own arguments for that issue, devote a large part of their work against the ideas of Taylor, who they say is the main reason Kansas is without liquor by the drink. REHORN CAN also explain two apparent paradoxes about his fight for liquor by the drink. He is a former Methodist minister, a pastor in New York and a moral ideal. And his current efforts center Rehorm has compiled statistics that, he says, destroy Taylor's thesis that increased availability leads to increased consumption and more human suffering. State Sen. Don Rehorn in a resolution to ban alcohol from the state of Kansas In an interview Wednesday, Rehman said he was bringing to order a Kansas lawsuit law firm. "But our laws are such that we don't have liquor by the drink, so therefore we'dry. That's makes people feel good. That makes us more comfortable, is being the conscience of the nation." "The liquor laws are absolutely slovenly in the state of Kansas. We could go down right now, walk right in and get a drink. It doesn't make much sense. You can do that anywhere in this state." KANSAS CITY, Kan., he said, is the poorest community in an eight-county area and needs the conversions and taxpaying for the poor. "The Mo., which allows liquor by the drink. One Kansas City, Mo., restaurant chain wrote Rehorn letters that said, "And I repeat to you what I have told you for some time, which is that we are not interested in a location in Kansas at the present time and not until we can get full liquor privileges. "Being in the restaurant business in Missouri with 11 restaurants, we continue to work in a company employing approximately 900 people in Missouri and pays many dollars in taxes. Somehow perhaps the state of Kansas is not the best place for a restaurant operators such as ourselves." REHORN SAID the American Cities Corporation, a development firm hired by Kansas City, Kan., listed Kansas' liquor laws as one of the city's problems. Rehorn introduced a resolution on the Senate floor this session to let voters decide whether to allow city-option liquor by the drink. "I realize there is great diversity in our surroundings, but what can't this city determine its destiny?" "Taylor says the people don't have the right to vote on constitutional amendments, and he's legally right. The legislature that gives the people the right to vote. Rehorm compared the number of liquor stores per capita in Kansas, Iowa, Oklahoma and Missouri to those states' liquor laws and per capita alcohol consumption. He found no correlation between availability and consumption. "but I say the people have a moral right to vote on the style of life in this state." REHORN SAID TAILED his opposition to a vote on liquor by the drink was based on the fact that he is a lawyer. Taylor is "intellectually dishonest" with his argument that increased availability of alcohol leads to increased consumption, he said. Each Kanan consumes, on the average, 3.02 gallons of alcohol a year, according to the Council's estimates. Each Kanan consumes, on the average, 3.02 gallons of alcohol a year, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce See LIQUOR BATTLE page 12 BENNY SCHULZ Ticklish? Elise Willems, Lawrence junior, can't seem to keep a straight face as she and her partner, Tom Hawner, Lawrence senior, go through part of a dance routine during a Tau Sigma rehearsal last night. The dance group will perform May 5, 6 and 7 at the Tau Sigma recital in the Kansas University Ballroom will canvale the group to purchase a portable dance floor. Hall rates to increase $35 next fall Students will pay more for housing next fall if they choose to live on the University of Michigan campus. Scholarship hall rates also will be increased slightly, Julie Gordon, assistant to the dean of women and scholarship hall adviser, said yesterday. Residence hall contracts for the 1977-78 academic year show a $33 increase over the current year, Kip Grosshans, assistant to the dean of men, said Wednesday. Both Gordon and Grosshans said the biggest reason for the increases was higher costs for food and utilities, as well as employee raises. The increase in residence hall rates, Grosshans said, is smaller than in previous years because of the elimination of a $50 credit for continued occuancy. IN THE PAST, if a student had occupied a residence hall at least two years and had fulfilled contract agreements on time, $500 were credited to his last contract payment. Grossahans said the purpose of the credit was to encourage students to continue to study. "We're not really sure that the credit served its purpose," he said, "and by eliminating it, we're able to come up with a smaller agreesthe-board increase." Despite the increase, Grosshara said, residence halls are filling up quickly and is likely to remain empty. Corbin and Gertrude Sellards Pearson hall are filled. Lewis Hall is close to capacity and Ewellsand McColum halls are filling faster than they did last year. Gordon said the 63 spaces available for next year in scholarship halls had been taken. She said more students had decided to attend the next year, making fewer spaces available. GROSSHANS SAID some students could still get their first choice of residence hall accommodations. There is no deadline for applying for residence hall space, he said, but students who submitted applications should have chance of getting their preferred hall. To encourage students to plan ahead, residence hall contracts were available at the end of February—earlier than last year, Grosshans said. He said it was too early to determine whether there would be a shortage of energy. "We do expect a slight increase in enrollment, but we're sensitizing students to apply for space early," Grosshans said. "It's difficult to project whether there will be a shortage, but we'll be prepared if there is." Watson's future to be disclosed Mayor Marine Arsgersinger scheduled a press conference for 10 a.m. this morning to discuss the future of top city ad- ministries, including Burford Watson, city manager. "It was a good meeting," Commissioner Eames said last night. But the commissioner requested the topics of the closed meeting and will wait for the official statement to be released. The conference was planned to release the results of yesterday's 3%-hour closed meeting between city commissioners and Watson. Complaints about Watson during the recent city election are thought to have caused the commissioners to evaluate his performance. HILTON COUNTY FARM CENTER The North College building on the old KU campus. Campus beauty result of efforts by many throughout history By DIANE WOLKOW Staff Reporter The University of Kansas campus wasn't always so rich in flowering trees and shrubs. The campus now has approximately 150 buildings shaded by tall trees, but originally had a single building- Old North College-perched on a lonely, barren hill. When Chancellor Frank Olin Marvin first arrived at KU in 1874 he was appalled by the alien appearance of the University. THE NEW CHANCELLOR appeared to the Kansas Legislature, saying, "the new University grounds, beautifully located and easily accessible," he added. Chancellor Marvin decided to improve the campus. His first initiative was the establishment of a Historical Society in planting hundreds of trees. On the north side of the grounds were graded and a stone retaining wall was built. A gate was added, both for ornamentation and to keep out the cattle that roamed there. A year later, Marvin sponsored a drive to beautify a raven north of campus. He obtained a bushel of black walnuts from a local farmer and led students in planting them in an area that was later named Marvin Grove. Potter Lake was constructed in 1911 to serve primarily as a THE ORIGINAL WALNUT trees are still standing near Potter Lake, along with younger walnut trees in all stages of growth. Harold Blitch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said the most recent trees sprout from seeds planted by snirrels. reservoir in case of fire. The lake was named in honor of State Sen. T. M. Potter, a former member of the Kansas Board of Regents. A regatta was held on its surface as a feature of the 191 commencement program. BESIDES BEEN an emergency water supply, Potter Lake was a recreational area. Swimming was allowed there until 1927, when a public pool was completed. A nine-hole golf course, for which the lake was named, followed the lake, a highway over its surface provided a water hazard. In 1917, the KU administration took what the late W. C. Stevens, professor of botany, called "the first effective step toward the planting of the campus according to a comprehensive and unified plan." The administrators had hired an architectural landscaping company from Kansas City, Mo., to plan the campus. Soon, berry-berries, evergreen, cottonwoods and elms dominated the campus, prompting one of Steven's colleagues to ask him whether the new HOWEY, THE REAL impetus toward campus beautification began in 1940, when an advisory committee was appointed for a long-range landscaping program. The committee consisted of Mrs. John Henry Nelson, wife of the associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the time; Cora Dows, professor of bacteriology; and Irving Hill, a local banker. A landscape architect, W. D. Durrell, instructor of botany, was LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 19. 2 Friday, April 15, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Saccharin sales pondered WASHINGTON—The Food and Drug Administration, which is banning saccharin as a food additive, announced yesterday that it would allow the continued sale of saccharin pills and powders if shown proof they are effective in controlling obesity and diabetes. Under the approach announced by FDA Commissioner Donald Kennedy, saccharin, which has caused cancer in laboratory animals, would be banned from soft drinks and other foods sometime in the United States. Such use accounts for 90 per cent of the sugar substitute consumed in the U.S. "Our intention is to eliminate the risk of cancer from unnecessary use of sack-chair while continuing its availability for people who need it for medical purification." Bennett to undergo surgery TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett is scheduled to undergo Monday to remove a kidney stone, a spokesman from his office reported late yesterday. Bennett was admitted to St. Francis Hospital, Topeka, on Wednesday complaining of flu-like symptoms. The governor underwent several medical tests and examinations yesterday. Nice said he expected the surgery to be routine. Bernett was reported to be resting comfortably yesterday and spent the day working on hills passed by the legislature. He is expected to remain hospitalized about a week after the surgery. Carter's plan would raise gas tax COLLINSVILLE, Ill. Ill. (AP)—Americans may have to come up with a nickel a gallon more in gasoline taxes every year for at least four years if President Carter's energy policy is approved by Congress, a federal energy executive said yesterday. Sources at an energy conference here said the tax increase could reach a total of 50 cents a gallon more than current levels if Americans don't learn to conserve. "It's about time we faced the facts of life," said Ivan Maple, director of marketing and industrial relations for the Federal Energy Administration. "Over 50 per cent of the American people don't believe there's an energy crisis." Maple provided a peek at President Carter's energy proposal, which is to be delivered next month. panies and heavy fuel users in industry could be taxed at $1 per cubic foot of gasoline or fuel oil if they don't switch to coal. WASHINGTON (AP)—Americans won't be getting those $50 tax rebates from Uncle Sam after all, because President Carter has decided the economy is doing well enough without them, the White House said yesterday. Taxpayers who spent their rebates in advance and economists say there may be many of them—apparently will be out of luck. But Wall Street, worried that the rebate has inflated inflation, reacted with criticism, and stock prices rose 10 points in early trading. Carter says economy doesn't need rebates Carter is to announce his anti-inflation program at a news conference today. The decision to scrap the rebate was made Wednesday night and obviously caught some advisers by surprise. Both Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal and Labor Secretary Ray Marshall made comments in recent days arguing for the rebate. Also scrapped was a proposed two per cent increase in the investment tax credit The rebate would have put about $10 billion in the pockets of taxpayers, and the credit would have given business about $2 billion. An average family of four with income below $10,000 could have expected $200 in benefits. "That's not enough for a down payment on a new car," one government economist said, "but it will buy a television set, a washing machine or a new suit of clothes. The cost of these items and credit were major elements in the $31 billion, two-year economic stimulus Alexander's Master Charge BankAmericard Lay-a-Way Alexander's 826 9ewa 842-1320 Mother's Day—May 8th Alexander's Gift Botique has a special gift for your mother. We will gift and mail wrap free. (K.U.9D) Gift Certificate Master Charge BankAmericard Lay-a-Way program that Carter proposed to Congress soon after taking office in January. Women's Recognition Program 2017-2019 WEEKEND @ THE NEW YORK CITY ZOO "Dimensions of Excellence" Both Blumental and Budget Director Bert Lance led the move to convince Carter to withdraw the rebate plan, one source said. Monday, April 18, 1977 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room Kansas Union Speaker: Deanell Tacha Professor of Law The rebate plan was in trouble in the Senate, largely because of fears it would fuel inflation and do little to help the economy. But administration spokesman Dan Cline said he wanted to scrap the rebates was made for economic reasons, not political considerations. Reception following the program—Everyone is invited to attend! Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women. Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee. Fifty or more years ago a news item told of a man who ran afoul of law in Canada. At that time Canada used a "whipping post" and a certain fellow due on that post escaped to the U.S.A. it was reported that he stated he would rather remain in this country and be tried for murder than go back home and take their medicine! Gadmy Alimighty a Words say his anvil man — not more than forty strapes — and boys, and if still uncontrollable put them on the ground. Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 The first recorded words of the Lord Jesus Christ after his baptism by John Baptist were: "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." The second recorded word is and live by 'EVERY WORD THAT PROCEEDETH OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD ALMIGHTY" you ought to have integrity enough to resign and get out of His Church. If in a church you do not want to eat your Communion elements, John Calvin said the one who eats and drinks unprepared "swear the wrath of God." "Beware meddling with God" The Apostate Paul tells us there is no secret about what the spirit might be saved in the Day of the Lord Jesus! "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" If we find out — and we will — but maybe too late, that a shipping pad and gattles faultfully used will soon cut crime in half. The Prophet Daniel speaks: "MANY OF THEM THAT SLEEP IN THE DUST OF THE EARTH SHALL AWAKE, — AND SOME TO SHARE AND EVERLASTING CONTEMPT!" Daniel 12.2. "We may give our children everything that money can buy, position, popularity, influence, ease, education, pleasure, and so on. We want them to be able to rather die than be alive, where they prefer poverty to duty dishonored, where they would rather go hungry than tell a lie, shriveled than steel, wear rags than be arrayed at the price of duality and duplicity; we are only a cheap counterfeit of paren- If your parents do not bring you to the place where you would rather die than be false, where you prefer poverty to dishonor dismianed, where you would rather go hungry than tell a lie, starve that steal, wear rags to be arrayed at the price of duty and duplicity. The Lord Jesus Christ will surely do so if you hear Him call: "They told him the economy was looking strong without it . . . Most economic COME UNTO ME, ALL ME that LABOR AND ARE HEAVY LADEN, and I WILL GIVE YOU REST. TAKE MY UPOKE UPON YOU, AND LEARN OF ME: FOR I AM MEE AND LOYLOW IN HEART, AND EYES SHALL FIND REST UNTO YOUR SOULS, FOR MY YOKE IS EASY, AND MY BURDEN IS LIGHT: "Matthew 11:27-30." **of whose** "TAKE MY YOKE UPON YOU," AND LEARN OF ME!" P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 Greeting cards you cannot send home to your folks! "We can't even print them in the Daily Kansan!" AT LAST!! indicators except for the stock market are looking stronger," the source said. Provocative little messages guaranteed to bring your boyfriend, girlfriend neighbor, or close acquaintance fits of laughter . . . Whatever the reason, the reaction in the Senate was swift and favorable. Carter called key senators Wednesday night to inform them after the decision was made. Senate Majority Leader Obama said the decision" because "the justifications that seemed apparent for the rebate last December have less validity at this time." Unless they're just too embarrassed! HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. • 843-0871 Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Donn., a member of the Senate Finance Committee, said, "I comment the President for being an honest citizen to recognize changing economic conditions." Sen. Carl Curtis, R-Neb, said he was "delighted" because the rebate plan "was a gimmick for sending out about $10 billion in money we didn't have. I believe the President became aware that his plan would be beaten in the Senate." Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open 11.a.m.-9.p.m. Daily APRIL'S FOOLE Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION APRIL 26 SUNDAY, APRIL 26 Reserved seats only! Get your tickets now! AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas TICKETS — Reserved Seats Only $5.75, limit 10 at SIA Box Office, KIEF's in Lawrence --featuring "ON TAP" TUNE-UP YOUR CAR FOR SPRING Larry's Auto Supply Keep your car in good shape with parts from Full line of foreign & domestic parts shape J '2 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 --featuring "ON TAP" T. G.I.F. LIVE MUSIC FRIDAY AFTERNOON 2:30-5:30 No Cover 714 Mass. ] The Brewery Friday, April 15. 1977 3 Conn., a Committee, t for being e changing id he was plan "was a 10 billion in elieve the ; his plan , J --or trial and error research rather than on scientific data. KU professor receives award for water treatment research By RUTH BENIEN Staff Reporter The water you have to drink 20 years from now may be clean because of the research of Ross McKinney, N. T. Veatch and Ralph C. Barrick in Engineering at the University of Kansas. McKinney was elected to the National Academy of Engineers last week for his research in water sanitation. Election to the national academy required a professional distinction on an engineer cat call. In the past 25 years, McKinney has shown engineers how to use fundamental microbiology and biochemistry principles to develop methods for waste water dixual treatment systems. McKinney became interested in biology and how it could be applied to engineering design when he was working on his doctoral dissertation at the University of Utah Institute of Technology (UTE). "PRIOR TO 1950," McKinney said, engineers were designing waste water systems. At its annual organizational meeting, the Council also elected new SenEx members and an assistant presiding officer for the Council. The University Council yesterday elected Peter Turk, acting assistant professor of journalism, presiding officer for the 1977-78 academic year. Turk elected by Council as officer Westerbeek was nominated as SenEx chairman by the newly elected SenEx members, and the Council made it official by a voice vote. Samuel Zweifel, Lawrence special student, will be the new SenEx vice chairman. The SenEx members are Hobert Jackson, associate professor of architecture and urban design; Carl Leban, associate professor of art; Carl Strohmar, Marquis, associate professor of philosophy; T. P. Srinivasan, professor of math; Evelyn Swartz, professor of education; and William Rapp, professor of history. Steve Owens, Salina junior, was elected assistant presiding officer of the Council. Program offers dark museum for the curious Anybody who has ever wondered whether that is what actually occurs when a museum reopens or even changes to find out tonight when the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall presents its exhibition. Wolf hows fluff the air, an snakes are busy eating and, if one looks closely, the stuffed animal looks like a sheep. From 7 to 9:30 p.m., the museum will be open to anyone who has a flashlight, the desire to browse around a dark museum and the price of admission: 50 cents for Museum Associates members and $1 for游客. Tickets will be available at the door. Gennrich said that visitors would be encouraged to wander around and that films and tape recordings would be playing throughout the evening. "It was a childhood fantasy of mine that museum things probably move at night," Ruth Genrich, public education director at the Museum of Natural History, "I think it's a pretty universal fantasy." On every floor, Gennrich said, there will be recorded sounds of different animals, including Russian fish, elephants and toads, a few birds and drums at a Native American exhibit. Films on bat navigation and the adaptations of nocturnal animals will be shown during the event. The museum's live snakes will be fed dead mice to eat just before the program, Germenich said, and she predicted that whatever would be eating throughout the program. The museum will be open to people of all ages, but children under 10 must be accompanied by an adult or responsible teenager, Genrich said. The University of Kansas chapter of the Association of Black Social Workers will present its second annual conference, en- titled "Black Social Workers Revisited," today in the Kansas Union. The program is presented in cooperation with the KU School of Social Welfare, is presented to provide a setting where minority social workers and minority workers in related fields of the social services can share their ideas with others. Robert Allen, associate professor at San Jose State University, will be the featured speaker. Allen has degrees from Howard University and the University of Vienna Research and the University of Vienna. Black problems topic of meeting The conference will consist of several workshops dealing with psychological, sociological and educational problems in the black community. The cost for the all-day conference will be $10 for professionals, $5.50 for community members. "I became concerned because, in order to understand how to deal with the microorganisms present in waste water, you have to understand and use them." For many years biologists wrote research only for other biologists." Most water sanitation systems today use three stages of water purification: primary, THE SECONDARY stage of a water purification plant filters out soluble organisms still in the water. These organisms, which are bacterial organism that lives below 30 milligrams to meet Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards. In the primary or first stage, the solid particles in the water are removed with filters. Most water, especially that used by fish and humans, can be removed if it can't be removed by this first stage only. University Daily Kansan If the EPA standards aren't met, a third or tertiary stage of water purification is required. This stage removes the microbes in the wastewater, and is used as phosphorus and other soluble organic. Through the use of biological waste water treatment, the third stage of purification often can be eliminated, making the system cheaper and more economical. Biological waste water treatment, now being used in more and more cities, involves the use of microbes, which are grown on plants. "RIGHT NOW!" McKinney said, "we're helping the Grand Island, Neb., sanitation department, which had the wrong kind of enforcement," she added. They couldn't meet EPA permit standards. "Through application of fundamental microbiology, we helped them to shift from bacterial to fungal cultures." McKinney also helped another sanitation system to develop a type of microbe that would eat penicillin bacteria in the water. This helped kill some bacteria killed the other bacteria-aquatic microbes. "WE USE the findings in our classes, and our students tend to get the results much faster than if they waited for them to be printed in textbooks." McKinney said. One site of McKinney's work in biological waste water treatment is the Lawrence Sewage Treatment Plant. Lawrence recently finished a secondary system, and McKinney is now helping to train its operators. The research gives KU engineering students an advantage, McKinney said and says it is the most important step in the research. McKinney puts his research results into the engineering program at KU. McKinney said he hoped the biological waste water treatment systems would give new insight into operational problems. He said he thought that eventually all current treatment plants would be able to meet EPA standards. A professor must work with cities, consulting engineers and industries, explaining the causes of pollution. If the use of such system is expanded, it will allow engineers to keep the water clean. If this is done before the water supply drops, it helps in maintaining the level of usable water, according to McKinney. MCKINNEY'S ELECTION to the National Academy of Engineers was for his contributions to the development of such facilities. He also contributed to the environmental engineering profession. Robert Smith, Deane E. Ackers Distinguished Professor of Civil Engineering, is also a member of the Academy. McKinney, a native of San Antonio, Tex. came to KU in 1861 after seven years on the faculty of MIT. He has held the KU Parker Professorship of Civil Engineering and Director of the Environmental Health Research Laboratory at the University. Among other honors, McKinney has received the Eddy Award for research and the Rudolph Herring Award from the American Society of Civil Engineers. He recently was reappointed by Gov. Robert R. Osborne to the Advisory Commission on Environment. KU Republicans pick most corrupt official Jimmy Carter lost an election on campus yesterday by one vote. He was nosed out, 40 to 41, by State rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, in a race to determine KU's favorite "corrupt public official." The election, sponsored by the KU College Republicans, used nonsecret ballots, which cost a penny a piece. Students could vote more than once. The polling place in front of the Kansas Union was open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. yesterday and Wednesday. Anyone could cast a vote for his favorite corrupt public official, even if the official was a Republican. By yesterday morning, Bufford Watson, lawrence city manager, had comfortable downstairs chair. AS WINNER of the election, Glover will receive a letter notifying him of his victory. That victory wasn't assured until the last vote had been counted. Carter took an early lead Wednesday morning when one voter expresses how he express his displeasure with the President. But when the votes were counted at 3 p.m. yesterday, the results were Glover, 4; Carter, 40; Curt Schneider, Kansas attorney general, 72; Watson, 26; Robert Bennett, 25; John Schoenig, 19; Scott Anderson, Courtney, 21; and Brian Anderson, Treasurer of the Kansas College Republican Federation, 18. Other candidates received less than five votes. VOTER TURNOUT was light and one dollar. Club member blamed it on the weather. "It's rained during every in-between-class rush," he complained. A check of the polls at 2 p.m. Wednesday showed they had been closed because of rain. Even yesterday's sunshine failed to increase voter interest. Between 9 and 11 a.m. Total receipts were $3.75 Club members said the money earned would be used to bring prominent political leaders and officials to the club. At TEAM,before you listen,we listen. Three Fraser Hall kevs stolen A University of Kansas staff member reported to KU police Tuesday that her bifIdle, containing three University keys, was seized at Gibson Discount Center, 2258 Iowa St. All three keys were to Fraser Hall. One opened the outside doors of the building, one was a master key to all the inside doors of Fraser, and one was to the staff member's The buildings and grounds department has duplicate keys to all campus buildings. Hit the Deck Sale! Launch your recording career with big savings on popular tape equipment. 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N.A.V. $12.75 $1088 $10^{88}$ TEAM ELECTRONICS We Listen 2319 LOUISIANA We Listen STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday 12-5 p.m. 4 Friday, April 15, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessitate the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism Carter critics rash Since 1933, when Franklin D. Roosevelt stormed into office carrying a rash of radical programs, there has been a fascination with the first 100 days of a President's first term. Those first days are viewed as an indication of the man's abilities and as a peek at what will come during the remainder of his days in office. The danger in this practice is that Americans have come to expect that of their presidents in those first days or office. AFTER ALL, America isn't usually in the midst of a depression, and the man taking office usually doesn't have the abilities of a Franklin Roosevelt. Jimmy Carter is now in the 85th day of his 100-day testing period, and many observers have again fallen into the premature judgment trap. There are those who are upset because Jimmy Carter has been in office several years and hasn't heard of the inflation, the high rate of unemployment, the arms race and the common cold. Carter has been criticized for listening to classical music in his office, going to too many plays and letting his daughter build a tree house. He has been criticized because of what his brother says and does and what his wife says and does. PERHAPS that is what happens when Americans, drained from the days of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, look to a newcomer for a bit too much. Bill Clinton has a more good things Brian had to be said for Jimmy Carter's presidency at this early stage. Carter has endured the strongest criticism for his most recent downfall: the failure to reach an arms limitations agreement with the Soviet Union. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance had hoped to begin constructing an arms limitation package while he visited the Soviet Union earlier this month. But the Russians shoved Vance's proposals back in his face, scowling that they were too silly to discuss. So America's conservatives, who had been forced to admire Carter's human rights stance earlier this year, saw their chance to get back to more comfortable ground. They said, with enviable hindsight, that Carter's stance on human rights had been too strong and hinted that, on second thought, he had no right to tell other countries what to do. THAT'S AN easy enough stand to take. But anyone who was surprised to see the Soviets use their first chance to strike a counterblow has forgotten his lessons in international politics. The Soviet rejection of Vance's proposals was a public relations move, pure and simple. The Russians made their point, in banner headlines, and quickly used quieter routes to tell Washington they really are interested in reaching an arms limitation. Meanwhile, the Carter administration's stance on human rights remains as valid as ever. In the end, there will be an arms trade that will not be unjustly unaffected by the human rights issue. In the economic arena, Carter is proving to be a fiscal conservative, much to the relief of businessmen. Except for his $50 tax rebate proposal—which is shaping up as the major blunder of his early days in the White House—Carter has approached the economy with a rational, sound view that has relaxed some of the fears of businessmen. PERHAPS THE MOST ludicrous criticism of Carter is the on-going gripe that he is in George Meany's hip pocket. If anything, Carter is in Meany's doghouse now, and any fears that labor leaders would walk a red line to the Oval Office should have been laid to rest. Carter has taken the hard-line, right-wing approach to two crucial labor issues, the minimum wage and the right to work laws. Labor leaders have grimaced all the way, yet Carter is still pictured as a lackey of labor. The criticism makes one think that Carter's detractors are determined to picture him as a free-spending, big-dealing liberal who has no grasp of foreign policy. And the critics aren't going to let the facts get in the way. The point to remember is that Jimmy Carter has barely been in office long enough to get the furniture arranged. If, a year or so down the road, Carter's critics haven't changed their minds, they feel free to make mistakes in the office. In the criticism for the sake of criticism makes for good conversation but it doesn't make much sense. It didn't take a clairvoyant to see that when Andrew Jackson and his mud-spattered troops attacked the Union in 1829, and promptly disposed of the predecessor's aides, that some sort of political immunity was a necessity if the D.C.ocracy was to be effective. Hatch Act squelches nepotism That protection came shortly after, in the form of the U.S. Civil Service. Gone, its proponents hoped, were the days of nepotism and cronyism; now they have been the interruptions of the careers of government officials who were just beginning to become proficient at their jobs. And gone, too, were the days when a small group of elite economic life or death spilled the lowly public servant. THE HATCH when he overtly civil servants from overt political support of national candidates, served to back up that insurance policy. The reasoning behind the passage of the Hatch Act was sound. It correctly assumed that a government interest in seeing to it that their chief was re-elected, or that their champion was elected, to preserve their own jobs. It was further reasoned, with equal validity that the Hatch Act forced to campaign for their bosses, thus depriving the nation of their expensive and, more-often-than-not, necessary services. The Hatch Act may have seen its last days. President Jamaica, after and Congressional leaders are seeking its demise. Their arguments center on the contention that these same civil servants, because of the Hatch Act, constitutive guarantees of freedom of political affiliation and expression. They contend the Hatch Act, now affecting about 2.8 million civil servants nationwide, denies fundamental rights. questionable. Under the Hatch Act, civil servants are prohibited only from running for political office while still employed, making speeches are other overt public gestures or for particular candidates and participating in poll-watching. THAT CONTENTION is sanitation workers and teachers. And that, as is so evident in Kansas, are important to the happening. The legal community's response? They have no right to strike—they are public serv- Civil servants can belong to But so are U.S. Civil Servants. The similarity—that of denying D. M. P. K. R. S. 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. Bill Sniffen Editorial Writer political parties and make financial contributions like their non-governmental counterparts. If the opponents of the Hatch Act are to carry their reasoning further, it's also a denial of that. The defense has prevent strikes by police, supposed rights to selected groups-is a matter of practicality, more to the point, a matter of common sense. It basically is, a question of the greatest good for the largest number. Cities effectively can be shut down by strikes. process can be effectively screwed up by the introduction of 2.8 million political participants whose jobs are at unstead of repealing the Hatch Act, Carter and his buddies ought to consider the problem of muddy, be a notorious failure. The mere mention of one name—Richard Daly, former Chicago mayor—highlights that fact. Chicago's public servants, who have many local "mini-Hatch acts" dotting the country, were required to contribute to Daley's political machine or more than the loss of jobs. He has billed the other major U.S. cities. MANY FEDERAL and city government employees favor retention of the Hatch Act for precisely the Carter Carter opposes it, when approached by candidates for political support, they need only reply that legally, they cannot comply. As if to make the Hatch opponents' argument even more ludicrous, they state that federal employees already are entrenched and active in government, but privileges to already active participants, won't make much difference They conveniently forget that the Hatch Act was passed in 1839, when there were far fewer servants than they are now. All of which bolls back down o the issue of clairvoyance—whether Carter and his fellow Hatch Act opponents are capable of foretelling the future That's a bit hard to swallow. WESTPHAL THE LONG BRANCH CASE? SURE I REMEMBER...OPEN AND SHUT. AL CARICATURE AFRICA Peace Corps rebirth laudable LAWRENCE P.D. WESTPHAL The Peace Corps, one of the last remnants of President John Kennedy's "New Frontier" and President Lyndon Johnson's "Great Society" programs, has, like some other things in Washington, been reborn. The youth-oriented program captured the imagination of not only the United States, but also much of the rest of the world its bevy in the mid-1960s. BUT THOSE were the days of unlimited American self-assurance, when there was a strong feeling of manifest destiny in the country and a belief that the Peace Corps could make its greatest contribution to the more uncleavened warfare of the world by imposing on them our values, technology and way of life. To a degree, it was a success. Then . . . Along came President Nixon, with his suspicions about the "typical" Peace Corps volunteer; a college graduate with art arts degree, coupled with a liberal political viewpoint. Nikon was prohibited by law from eliminating the program entirely, but he restructured the program in a way that severely reduced the use of such "generalists" in the Corps. He replaced them with middle-aged, technician specialists from education and industry—the kind of people who wouldn't cause any political trouble after they returned from their experiences. WELL, AS any Sixties' kid remembers, the trouble came anyway, the Peace Corps notwithstanding. But these events, followed closely by unsettling revolutions in areas of civilized societies and general disillusionment in retirement by enlisting in the program. Carter's concern for human rights has ignited new interest, and young and old alike are PETER MURRAY The thought of spending two years in an "uncivilized" foreign land that had grown increasingly hostile to immigrants and Americans in general proved an anthem to many. with the Vietnam conflict, caused many to take an isolationist view of the world because because they were too beset with their own. IN 1969, the Peace Corps had approximately 15,000 volunteers in the field. Today, they have 6,000. The number of refugees in our country is drastically down from a high of 48,000 to its present 18,000. But conditions for the rebirth of the Corps are better than ever with the advent of the president of the President's 78th cohort, mother Lilian Carter, proved to be a model for many older Americans as she was a Peace Corps volunteer in India for two years. She is a teacher, teachers, doctors and many lay persons are finding new careers Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer providing the Peace Corps with a necessary shot in the arm. The appointment of Sam Brown to the head of Action, the federal agency that runs the Peace Corps, will volunteer programs, is signaling the return of the Peace Corps to its former headquarters. A poised, articulate and talented organizer, Brown is best known for his leadership of the 1969 Vietnam "Moratorium" in Washington—the largest single protest against AIDS (A. A. III), Brown is no stranger to politics or political office. He is a former state treasurer of Colorado. BROWN SAID that he had some "serious intellectual concepts" in the concept of the Peace Corps, because it had the potential to become the "the vanguard of American cultural im- technology, Brown wants to make the Peace Corps more relevant to the host countries it is supposed to serve. This could be accomplished by what he calls the "solution" of locally available materials, large quantities of labor and small amounts of capital. The Peace Corps should be used to help other people become self-sufficient, but not by imposing our own demands on them as a service as a catalyst to help others make the most of their own potential. Among other things, the Peace Corps has been accused in the past of being a refuge for radical developers, and CIA agents. IN DESCRIBING his vision of the revitalized Peace Corps, Brown said, "The places where the Peace Corps goes are not post-conflict civilization and host landmarks and traditions that have survived far longer than ours and are often deeper and richer than our own. We have a great deal to learn from the rest of the world "Fifteen years ago, filled with hope when the Peace Corps was initiated for this 'new' mission in America, thought that America had all the answers. Five years ago, divided and discouraged, we thought it had none. We were shocked when we journey through this period, individually and as a nation, has both tempered our arrogance and deepened our appreciation that make our country unique." This is today's argument: first, that in promoting a healthy economy, a restoration of confidence is the most important goal; second, that Carter's $50 rebate plan won't achieve that aim; third, that a permanent tax cut probably would. THE PRESIDENT'S costly rebate plan is in trouble. No one in either chamber–virtually no one-has any keen enthusiasm for it. The plan survived in the Senate Finance Committee by a single vote, and if it had not been for some misguided partisan loyalty, the plan would not have survived at all. the Democrats' 'feeble thinking is that what Jimmy wants, Jimmy ought to believe they will go along with the rebates, but they will hate themselves in the morning. Permanent cuts promote confidence sides of the aile share the same conviction: A stable, healthy recovery must depend primarily upon the creation of jobs in the private sector. The rebates will contribute little or nothing toward that end. Neither will the elaborate programs of government provide adequate incentives for private industry are seen as too mild to do much good. As a package, the administration's Tax Reduction and Sim In place of a program that emphasizes sophisticated The curious thing is that spokesmen on both James J. Kilpatrick [c] 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. So Sam Brown is in back in Washington, but this time he's on the other side. Let's hope he goes to Peace Corps live up to its name. KEMP AND Roth are pleading for something better. The two Republican wants a permanent tax cut, benefiting taxpayers in every bracket. This would put spendable money in the pockets of wage earners everywhere. Their approach would permit the marketplace to plan for the long range. They feel strongly that only the bold stroke of permanent tax relief will stimulate the capital F plification Act of 1977 is a flimsy product—as worthless as a plastic Christmas toy that falls apart by New Year's Day. That mystical thing called confidence is the key. It is the finest medicine ever contrived for economic ills. In the ordinary household it stimulates demand; in the business community it promotes the taking of risks. One has only to glance at the stock market to comprehend the realities of the economy. Carter's Vegetable Compound is a kind of quick conception that -bic -can achieve no lasting good. The objections to the Kemp-Rath plan are largely, perhapsWholly, political. It is, first of all, a Republican plan. An overwhelmingly liberal group of Democrats, President, is not about to accept a Republican plan. Second, there is much concern that the revenue losses from a permanent tax cut would spill the wind from the Democrats' spending salals and increase the burden for Carter to produce a balanced budget by 1881. KEMP AND ROB argue persuasively that their permanent tax reduction would help the revenue stream and provide them with a larger base. 1 2 investment that means jobs without the risk of inflation. President Kennedy's tax reductions 15 years ago. The Kennedy people figured that their tax cuts would cast the treasury $2 billion in the first year and $8 billion over six years. To the contrary, the Bush administration just calculated that the treasury gained $7 billion in the first year and gained $4 billion over the six years. True, the economic conditions of 1962 and 1977 are not identical, but economic principles do not change. If the people could look forward with reasonable confidence to a permanently lower level of taxation, they would react positively. They would senselessly increase their earnings and the first of the month. A $40 rebate, by contrast, is a one-time thing; it is gone with the summer wind. My guess is that the Democratic leaders are pursuing not only bad economics, but poor politics also. They look at Carter's high popularity ratings, and they come down with the jitters. They fear the consequences of defying their business but. There is a huge difference between what we advocate as such. Smart politics, in my own view would see the Democrats' kidnapping the Krug-Roth plan and trapping it for all their own. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 18, 2014 *New York Times* July 7, 2014 June and July expire Saturday, September 1 and Sunday, October 3. Subscriptions by mail are $9 or $11. Subscriptions by phone are $6. A year outside the county. Student subscription rates are $50. Editor The Editor Managing Editor Greek Hack Editorial Editor Stewart Brann Campus Editor Alison Gwinr Associate Campus Editor Lynda Smith Associate Campus Editor Bartra Bowersow Copy Chiefs Bernett Jubakeh. Tiphir Pimpinelli Sports Editor Associate Sports Editors Courtroom Thompson Business Manager Janice Clements Advertising Manager Anti盗贼 Management Manager Randy Hagebe Assistant Classified Manager Pet Treurnor Dana Dunlap National Advertising Manager Brian Groinder National Advertising Manager Friday. April 15. 1977 5 broached by sal support, reply that comply. Hatch op- even more state that are already active in loving more body active make much much forget that passed in we far fewer there are back down ervoyance I his fellow nents are selling the to swallow. n wants to Corps more countries it re. "This could by what he does materials, bj labor and capital. ips should be other people, but not day of living on serve as a makers make the potential. his vision of Peace Corps, places where goes are not important, cultures and cultures and have survived and are our greater deal to the world. ago, filled with new corpses "new Americans," a military had seven years ago, encouraged, we were. We were. This period, this nation, has an arrogance appreciation at make our n is back in this time he's. Let's hope he face Corps live Profs cite harassment by officials '9Shea rasulie Higbee anton Connor mender strand A separation of covert intelligence operations and academic freedom was the main theme of a panel discussion at the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) chapter meeting last night. Entitled "FBI and CIA Involvement with Universities," the program featured a panel of four disclosing documented cases of harassment of academicians because of outside activities and lack of compliance with wishes of intelligence organizations. The panel comprising Robert Friau, president of the chapter and professor of physics and astronomy; Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy; Robert Cassid, professor of law; and Carole Lande, professor of political science, spoke to about 20 persons. One of the harassment cases, presented by DeGeorge, concerned injury exerted by the FBI on the Arizona Board of Regents to have a professor fired for outside activities from Arizona State University in 1970. The FBI had connected Starsky with the "new left" movement in Arizona and thought he was dangerous to have in an academic institution, DeGeorge said. According to the documents that DeGeorge presented, the Phoenix office of the FBI had been investigating Starsky since 1968. THE PROFESSOR, Morris Starsky, was connected with the Young Socialists on the island. In 1970, Starkey canceled a class so he could attend a rally in support of arrested prisoners. After an investigation into why Starysk canceled the class, the reorgs ordered the president of the university to press formal charges. DeGeorge obtained his information during an investigation by another AAPM nurse. According to DeGeorge, litigation is still pending on the Starks decision. After the DeGeorge presentation came toward me, I wrote letters written to George Bush, director of the CIA. AUP president William Van Alstyne, law professor at Duke University in Durham, matters. The 'letters asked Bush to use his power to stop the use of academicians in covert infections.' VAN ALSTYNE stated in the letters that the use of missionaries and journalists for cover operations had been ended and that the same should be done for academicians. The final part of the discussion, presented by Mr. Lester, was those conversations connected with university professors. Lande, who was lainely accused of being connected with the pressure applied by government organizations giving grants to universities. He said that professors often passed on information to the CIA in exchange for material. Früfud had earlier said that no KU professor was known to have been connected with the CIA within the last 25 years. Lande said during his segment of the interview the department wasn't the only source of harassment. senators that do research on committees connected with covert organizations are subjected to harassment by private individuals." he said. The meeting concluded with the reading of a resolution ratified at the national chapter meeting last year which concerned covert intelligence operations of the U.S. military, and which was similar to a code that lawyers follow, directing the actions of AAU members. On Campus TONIGHT: THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB t will meet at 7:30 at the Potter Lake Pavilion behind charnel O'Leary Hall. In case of unexpected arrival, United Ministries Building, 1904 Eread Ave. TODAY: THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS will meet at 3:30 in 2002 Learned Hall to elect next year's officers. Events TOMORROW; JAYCEES will meet all day in the Kansas Union. DISTRICT 17 NURSES will meet all day in the Union. The Museum of Natural History will sponsor a SNAKE HORK WORKSHOP from 9 a.m. to noon and WORKSHOP FROM 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. There will be a HEART OF AMERICA SPECIAL LIBRARIES luncheon at noon in the Union's Sunflower Room. Correction A table that accompanied yesterday's Kansas story on Student Senate allocations incorrectly listed the budget request of the University Association for the Advancement of Women Engineers as $2,000. The allocation was actually $1,112. Continuing Ed teaches firemen Who teaches Kansas firemen how to fight fires? The answer, in part, is the University of Kansas Fire Service Training; a division of KU's Division of Continuing Education. In 1952, the State Fire Fighters Association asked the Kansas Legislature to authorize a new training course. The funds were given to KU and, for the past 25 years, firemen across the state have University Daily Kansan be taught about fire fighting techniques, new fire fighting equipment, fire prevention and inspection and hundreds of other fire fighting topics. J. Watson's April 11-15 TONITE IS LADIES' NIGHT. Teaching the classes at night leaves the instructors free during the day for fire prevention seminars in schools or rest homes, he said. Max Thomas is the director of the fire using seven officers and Fred using nine. The other officers are David, "We're usually about 50 requests behind," Boughton said. T 30c cover -Disco U "The Best of Ernie Kovaac" 8:30 E "Pueblo" 10:30 firemen. Because most of the firemen are volunteers, the classes are at night. Kansas firemen learn about the training service by a monthly newsletter, service all fire departments in Kansas. The fire department division publishes the magazine. Free Disc For Everyone on our 7 TV* 'Star Trek' 7 *The Amazing Hogwhes Hogwhes* Part 18: 8:00* 'Columbo'* 10:30* 50c Disco—"Howard Hughes" conclusion. "KOJAK"—10:30 in the Peanut Gallery Live Music—Cover $2.00 Jash & Gitter w/ Limosine. A night that's very different. Come T watch the show 9.12. Peanut Gallery free from 12-7 p.m. F Live Music—Cover $2.00 Poor R Willy 9-12, also "Paint Your Wagon" 7:00 Peanut Gallery? 7 TV Free from 1 s. p. to 10. Come watch the doubleheader—KC Royals or Seattle at 3:35 Lawrence's Newcast 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Glenn Boughton, one of three mini-me- nium instructors in the fire service training program, teaches students who have re- quested instruction to instructors who to explain new methods and equipment. Big 8 Softball Tournament at Holcom Sports Complex (Back of Park 25 apts.) April 15-16 Boughton said that each training session usually involved 15 hours of class for the KARADAS GAMES DAILY Friday 2:30-7 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Championships 5:15 p.m. Saturday ADMISSION Friday $2.00 Adults $1.00 Children 12 and under Saturday Early Session $2.00 Adults $1.00 Childs $1.00 Children 12 and under Championships $1.00 Adults $ .50 Children 12 and under Tournament Pass $3.00 Adults $1.50 Children 12 and under CHRISTIAN MURPHY Now comes Miller time. er time. Miller RUMO LIGHTWEIGHT BEER © 1977 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis. 6 Friday, April 15, 1977 University Daily Kansan A. We can do it The truth finally come out in the final act of "The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild" as both lipstick and topee are sacrificed for a Staff photu by MARIANNE MAURIN fresh start. At left, William Kelly, professor of law in Roy Wild. Mary Lynn Davidson, Lawrence resident, is mildered Wild. The play *Mary Wild* was directed by Robert H. Smith. Comedy a good beginning By JULIE LENAHAN Reviewer Arts & Leisure If the Lawrence Community Theater's first offering, "The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild," is any indication of the potential for a play at the theater, then Lawrence theater-goers are in for a real treat. As viewed at last night's final dress rehearsal, Paul Zindel's three-act comedy is both whimsical and amusing, outrageous and ridiculous. THE PLAY deals with a middle-age couple who live in the rear of their candy store and is told by Wild, a fanatic demi-heroin, is obsessed by movies, Hollywood and stardom, but sacrifices all that. Mildred is most happy with her television, movie magazines and theater tickets her paradise complete. Her husband, Roy, desperate for companionship, becomes involved with the psychotic On Stage nymphomanical landlady who keeps telling him that her analysis group says the time is right for her seduction. This crumbling team is compounded by Roy's sister, Helen, who lashes out with biting personal attacks and crumbs on everyone and every opinion in whom he is a real antagonist in the play, always managing to push Roy into action against Mildred. CONSTRUCTED in a unique way, the play uses both reality and fantasy in a series of movie- related dreams. Each dream weaves around the reality that preceded it. The dreams, however, are nonreality seen as an escape from reality. Each dream casts characters in the actors as fantasy characters. The first dream involves the Invisible Man who enters Mildred's bedroom and forces her to dance for him. In subsequent dreams, the audience sees Scarlet O'Hara and Rhett Butler, the famous "Dancing Wilds" team, the team, and the King and Kiss me finale teaser where all characters hoop it up to "The Good Ship Lollipop" as Mildred woes the fans. THE DREAMS are truly refreshing and add just the right element of (dare to) wonder in the dolldrums in the reality scenes. WILLIAM KELLY, professor of law, characterizes Roy Wild with a kind of detached sympathy and an unexpressable fear of loss. Karen Christian-Hammer among the characters for her crisp and emphatic portraital of Miss Manley. Steve Silver, New York graduate student, portrayed several lesser characters, but nevertheless added an innocence to each lightened the humor of the dreams. 'Dick and Jane'slow to steal the show Mildred Wild, played by Mary Lynn Dean, Lawrence resident lacks polish but does the same. Her character exaggerations. Director Mary Doveton uses灯光 and sound effects to well illustrate the transitions in dream and reality in the play. By CHUCK SACK HOWEVER, an inanimate character who simply exudes "stage presence," regrettably is the star of the show. King Kong (with both eight-foot heel and hand) brought the playfulness of the show to a new height. King Kong was one of the fair Mildred. Kong is on loan to the theater company from Wichita State University. Reviewer For the price of a single ticket you can see George Segal and Jane Fonda in half of an entertaining comedy, and also catch the same stars in half of a hollow, dreary movie. Okay, that's not much of a bargain, especially with the good half and the bad half together in the same film. But "Fun with Dick and Jane" isolates most of its irritating deficiencies in the first portion of the story, but weather the opening act, you feel doubly rewarded by the virtues of the second. DICK (SEGAL) and Jane (Fonda) are a respectable couple living what seems to be the upper middle class American Dream. He's an aerospace engineer who works on the team "who tied the laces on the boot that took the giant or mucked." She's a contented suburban home-maker. Suddenly, Jane is not so contented. Their house has a double mortgage. They haven't paid the contractor who is building their swimming pool or even the firm who did their landscape. Dick has invested foolishly, they owe on their cards and that he already borrowed on his insurance. Then Dick gets fired. 'Aces' to play here makes several false starts at social comment. You can almost peel away a layer of hairs or shave them off. But you were tried in various rewrites. The Cinema Jazz will give way to country and western next week at the Opera House as the Amazing Rhythm Ascents, a six-mm group of ten musicians, on Monday. There will be two shows, at 7:30 and 10 p.m. The Aces, who combine country, rhythm and blues and rock in their music, have toured with a variety of country stars such as Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson. The Aces have had two values with soulless middle class directing? The back-up act will be Brian McKinney, local promoter and musical entrepreneur, on guitar. McKinney, who scheduled the Aces' show, said recently he planned to tell about the state of live music in Lawrence during his act. FORTUNATELY, Dick and Jane give up trying to balance their budget by buying domestic wines instead of imported champages and turn to a life of crime. When this happens, the women often dress in layered liners, and the pace picks up considerably. AS JANE accuses her husband of being 'the Typhoid Man' to whom she script promises to satiate the masculine work ethic. Instead, this disintegrates with a series of expletives that end with Jane's being fired. Only the talents of Segal and Fonda keep the film affloat to this point. Jane Fonda is a capable comic actress, a rare Next the writers attempt to say something about the welfare system before lurching into the upper-upper and lower-lower classes. Even Jane's parents and usurious loan-sharks have been explored for years, but their houseplants are repossessed. Of the 11 actors in the company, most present their characters with the amateur ability one would expect from an amateur community theater company. Several per-operators, however, do show polish of a more professional nature. Many of these scenes might have worked with a director who was capable of organizing and shaping the scattered material. Ted Ketchoff's style works against the intent of the screenplay. How can one spoof slofess middle class "The Beatles: Away with Words," a computerized film and sound show, will play today midnight in Hoch Auftorium. Film on Beatles at Hoch today The film—which the Beatles had no hand in making—begins with 1986 rock 'n' roll, goes to the early 2000s and features Sallivan performance and then to the Beats's "turned on" drug and transcendental meditation period. It ends with the group's "Let it Go," Abbey Road" and "Let It Be." "The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild," is totally ridiculous. But, it is also great fun. And for the Lawrence Community Theater company, it's more than fun. It's the beginning of a focus on community theater arts. The production boasts a 360-degree sound system, 29 slide projectors and four movie projectors. Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA box office and $3 at the door. Highlights Weekend Theater 'ANYONE CAN WHISTLE' Oliver Hall production. 8 tonight through Sunday, Oliver Hall Lounge. 'THE SECRET AFFAIRS OF MILDRED WILD.' Lawrence Community Theater production, a tonight and Saturday, 2 p.m. or Sunday, Arts Center Performance Hall. 'JUDY-A ' GARLAND OF $6500 on the title and music by Jersey Garland, B. p.m. Saturday, M.Cain Baltimore, Kansas B. mcttum Tuesday LAWRENCE CIVIC CHORI; Mozart's "Requiem." 7:30 tonight, First United Methodist Church. MARK ALMOND BAND AND CRUSADERS, 8 tonight. Up town Theater, Kansas City, Mo JERRY JEFF WALKER with Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Air Men 8 tonight. Historical Hall, Kansas City, Mo. THE RALPH TOWER AND JOHN ABRERCROMBIE BAND, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Saturday. The Opera House. GORDON LIGHTFOOT, 6 and 9.30 p.m. Saturday. Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Mo. KANSAS FOLKLORE CENTER TRAVELLLING FOLK FESTIVAL! 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Off the Wall Hall. Recitals Hall, KU Medical Center Kansas City, Kan. JOE HULSE, violin, Student Recital Series; 8 tonight, Swarthout Recital Hall. ALBERT GERKEN, carillon. 3 p.m. Sunday, campanile. 3 p.m. Sunday, campanile. SUSAN DICKERORG, organ. Student Recital Series, 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Swarthout. INCI BASHAR PAIGE, soprano, and NORMAN PAIGE, tenor, Faculty Recital Symphony 8, tonight, Battelfield CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH BELL CHOIR and Summer in Lawrence, sponsored by the Newcomers Identity Women's Club. 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Union's Wake Room. LAWRENCE JAZZ COM- MERCIAL GROUP River City Jazz, Nairobi Tri- tom and Montgomery Quartet. 8 to 3 a.m. tonight, the Opera BRETT MITCHELL, piano. Student Recital Series. 8 p.m. Sunday. Swarthout. THE JOE UTTERBACK Paint midnight tonight, tonight, Paul Grau CLAUDE "FIDDLER" Paint midnight tonight, midnight Saturday, Paul Grau's ON TAP, 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. today, the Brewery. POW WILLY, rock band, 9 to midnight tonight, J. Watson's. FLASH AND GLITTER WITH WILLY TO MIDNIGHT midnight Saturday, J. Watson's. FORT DODGE, 9 to midnight tonight and Saturday, Off the Wall Hall. Nightclubs Lectures GREG TROOPER, folkinger, 9 to midnight tonight, Sister Kette Cafe, MARTINA BAR AND GRILL, BAR AND GRILL, folkinger, 9 to midnight saturday, Sister Kette. "THE MUSEUM AFTER "SEARCH FOR THE GIANT APES", movie sponsored by the department of anthropology, 4 p.m. today. 427 Fraser Hall. DARK", sponsored by the Museum of Natural History, for all ages, by reservation. 7 the Museum of Natural History. BLACK SUNDAY—The Super Bowl becomes the target of a terrorist plot, and director John G. Miller joins an action than the 1976 game which serves as background. Starring Michael K. Marler and Bruce D. Russell. "EDUCATIONAL DILEMMA OF PROFESSIONS," Marcia Ann Gillespie, minority affairs Associate for Kansas University's Forum. FRIENDS OF KANU FILM PRESENTATION, sponsored by KANU Radio, 2 p.m. Sunday, Wesco Hall Auditorium. Films AIRPORT 1977—A second "airport" sequel that drew inspiration from the real Adventure. The twist is that when the passenger laden plane flies in the ocean inside the plane, the flipped flips upside down. Naturally, almost everyone is saved after a waste of cast, time and money. ROCKY—The champion has lost a little pouch at the box, but the team is strong enough for a few more rounds. Sylvester Stallone, Borges Meridith all star and Burgess Meridith all sparkle as frustrated players. (PG) and Bruce Dern. He is the director Robert Benton has crafted a spaced out tribute to the 'ads detective fiction. It firmly identifies itself as a wacky logic perfectly counterpoint the serious, aging Carney. The 'Show' is a fine mystery in its own right, unnerving. ELIZABETH M. WATKINS COMMUNITY MUSEUM—"An American Sampler A Look at the 1800s," through April. LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER—"Four Printmakers," the printmaking burglar, Collette Bunkert, Evanne Bogert, Jey Goer Kellas, Exhibit Hall; Kathryn Clark, photography, Conference Room, through Exhibits THREE DAYS OF THE DONOR-- Redford and Five Dunay headline Sydney spy thriller. There are plenty of plot twists to provide intrigue, but the fact that it isn't much of a thriller. Redford and Dunay won't notice. (R) KANSAS UNION GAL- LERY—Department of art faculty study, paintings and sculpture, through April 18. 7E7 GALLERY—H. J. Bott, maquette and monumental sculpture, through April 28. **SPENCER RESEARCH** North Gallery; "Kansas Portraits." Kansas Collection; Organizations Archives Galleries LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY—Lawrence Junior High art show, through April. THE MARKETPLACE GALLERY—Ann Nunley, painting and silversmithing, through CORNUCOPIA RESTAU- RANT—G. J. Matyas, pen and ink renderings, through April. TAKEN AS a whole, though, the film is less satisfying. When Jane tries to dissuade Dick from holding up a drugstore, he justifies his actions by saying, "He money, it's the principal." combination of sensuality and sophistication. Her political views have kept her out of favor and off the screen in Hollywood lately, but aside from some appropriately arch remarks she plays dane strictly for lain Seal is basically a comic actor, but like Fonda he has the range and intelligence to handle serious roles. He plays Dick in wonderful form, alternating between relaxed ambiability and frantic flights of panic. With the aid of a dog from the outfit in the later scenes, the two are delightful. SPOONER-THAYER MU- SEUM OF ART -The Sailie Casey Thayer Collection, Main Gallery, through May 9. No wonder the second half switches to amoral entertainment. The Hollywood mentality sees no need to reconcile the two issues. It panics in the face of serious, regardless of the moral content. I've got a white collar mentality. I panic in the face of death." "What principle is there in robbing a drugstore?" she inquires. This is the second most revealing line in the film when related to the split structure. When Dick and Jane stick up the telephone company, the three cheers aloud in the theater. BUT THE cheering isn't prompted by the social thrust of the earlier scenes—people just like to see Ma Bell getting ripped off. What is disturbing is that the filmmakers don't care, understand their own moral; money is their principle, too. Little production packs a lot of entertainment "The money is the principle," he cries in frustration. Thus, the most revealing line is Dick's later protest: "I'm not cut out for blue collar crime Thirteen years ago this month, "Anyone Can Whistle" opened on Broadway. The show, billed as a "musical fable" by Stephen Sondheim, closed after nine performances. Last night, the members of the Oliver H Drama Guild opened their production of the ill-fated musical comedy. The fatality and exuberance of the playful character of the script's weaknesses. Revlewer The group made a little production into a lot of entertainment freshman, leaves the audience longing to see more from the talented performer. Laura Beth Davidson, Overland Park freshman, is saying that she's "downs town's" *mayores* who will do almost anything to hold on to her power. Davidson holds her hands weak in the musical numbers. DIRECTED BY BRUCE Schentes, Westwood, N.J. junior, "Anyone Can Whistle" is not a first choice for yourself, even when everyone else thinks you're a little crazy. It's the story of a town where success has gone stale and the city has locked up in the Cookie Jar, an Music, under the direction of Lori Malon, Plainville senior, is nearly flawless. Group scenes, choreography, Scherites, come off very well. Actually, it's the people on the outside who are pessessed by the "cookies," whose only crime is stealing cookies, other people, persons. asylum for the socially pressured. When the cookies endanger the new prosperity, gaining through miracle, self-serving city officials try to put them back in the jar. Their problem: how to lose cookie, or who's crazy now? Sondheim writes songs that make you wish you could sing. The Oliver Hall production makes you wish for consistently better songs. However, Sue Smith, Long Island, N.Y., freshman, as Fashion Media Maker, sophomore, as J. Bowden Hapagd; are outstanding with their slightly naughty "Come Play Wiz Me." But the major problem is the selection of the script—certainly not one of Sondheim's best. A BRIEF solo by Jerome Dabney, University City, Mo., The cast and crew of "Anyone Can Whistle" have taken on a sizable task in mounting this production. Their love and enthusiasm for the project are apparent, and if the show leaves something to be desired—that's the way the cookie crumbs. Nelson's 'Sacred Circles' to open The object is part of "Sacred Circles; 2,000 Years of North American Indian Art," the largest exhibition of Sacred Circles in India. The art ever assembled, "Sacred Circles" opens to the public tomorrow at In 1883, Prince Maximilian of Germany made his famous trek up the Missouri River and he continued with a painted buffalo hide. this year, for the first time, the sheer size of the shores from which it came. A figurine of a seated woman. She is wearing a headdress with large earrings and a facial mask. The sculpture is made of a light-colored material, possibly ceramic or stone. The Adena pipe the Nelson Gallery-Aktins Museum in Kansas City, Mo. for a museum showing in North America showing in North America. "ONE OF the fascinations of The exhibition, named for cosmic shapes such as sun the exhibition," said Robert T. Martin, the project's director, "is that there are things coming back to the United States that have been out of the country for centuries." At the Gallerv finest pre-Colombian effigy figures. "Sacred Circles" is expected to outdraw its previous attendance record of nearly 180,000 visitors in London, a showing that lasted 13 weeks. Nelson's 1975 "Exhibition of Archaeological Finds of the People's Republic of the People's Destroyed recently 280,000 visitors." circles and medicine wheels repeated in Indian art forms, originally was compiled as a British tribute to the American Civil War over 90 projects from 90 separate lenders in six countries. The result was a collection of COLLECTING objects for the exhibition took over four years of work by Larry Atkins, director who initiated the British showing. IN THE exhibition are two shell and porcupine quill wampum bells, made by the Abeniak and Huron Indians in Quebec and collected by French missionaries in the 17th century; and a Northwest coast camel warrior, collected by Cara James Cook on his third voyage to the Pacific in 1776. OJ be North American Indian and Eskimo art that dates from 1500 B.C. and ranges in geographic origin from Alaska to Florida and from Greenland to the Northwestern United States. Authentic Indian dancers from Alaska, British Columbia, California and other parts of the United States and Canada are scheduled to perform during the showing. Craftsmen of Indian and Eskimo heritage will be present in ivory carving, mat weaving, ribbon work and other traditional crafts. Warrior mask Abou McKinbetwe later St. Village Mask 'KSAN DANCERS of the Gitksan Indians from Hazeiton, The suppo comm April Co of cap largel by th merci H The profess press p.m. British Columbia, formally opened the exhibition this Wednesday to international dignitaries and the media. They will begin a series of performances by Atkins Auditorium Monday. A 9 tor for At 1 p.m. Sunday, a 17-foot-totem pole, carved by the Giksan Indians, will be raised on the gallery grounds as a permanent monument to the exhibition. Those planning to attend the ceremony are invited to bring a pebble to toss into the base of the fortress, of luck, according to Martin. Memorial Day weekend, the Heart of America Indian Center and the Kansas City Indian Club will co-sponsor a national powow at Riverfront Park in Kearney. 20,000 Indians are expected. JOHN K. WHITE, an Indian, educator and anthropologist, was the director for the exhibition and spent three months traveling thousands of miles to elicit the responses of the Indian and Pakistani tribal groups. White has planned lecture programs, slide shows, film strips and educational packets to teach children about the Bible. Children visit "Sacred Circles." When the show closes in June, the objects go back to their owners Indian Dance groups scheduled so far in conjunction with (the 'Sincere Cretens' from King Island, Canada) April 29 to May 6 The French Indians from Northern Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 The French Indians from Ontario, Canada. May 23 to 29 A series of lectures related to the exhibition are to be announced. Friday, April 15, 1977 7 e ng University Daily Kansan professor Roy Wild scalped sym- pressable Courtman hurts for her sortral of ed by Mary Lawrence sh but does character New York portrayed factors, but added an ino each and minor of the maniinate explex exudes regrettably showing. King ft-foot head to show a show to s. suf tschaking Kong is on r company University Affaires of is totally also great Lawrence cr company, in. it's the us on com- mands. he audience are from the. Davidson, deshman, is ooperer, the who will do to hold on to on holds her weeks weak in ers. direction of ville senior, is group scenes, y Schentes, l. problem is the e script— f Sondheim's of "Alyne takes on a amounting this her i love and project are show leaves that's crumbles in crumbles en ia, formally nibition this in interna tional media. They per les of peri the Atkins cav. to attend the to bring a to the base of good luck, acn. a day, a 17-foot- carved by the will be raised grounds as a ument to the weekend, the Indian Center Indian Club national pow- park in Kauver 20,000 Ink TE, an Indian, anthropologist, educational examiner traveling es to elicit the an Indian an indian announced lecture shows, film schools before schools before circled "Circles", closes in June, back to their scheduled so far in Baltimore 24. Dolphins 20. Dolvers Missouri State 队 from Northern State 队 to Atlanta. May 19. Oklahoma. May 27. Oklahoma. May 27. res related to the announced. Off the Wall Hall to close because of business debts About a year and a half ago, Brian McKimsey and Steve Mason, with $300 between them, opened a music store and a concert hall at 757 New Hampshire St. The music store is doing fine -it's being supported by a musically-enhusiastic community—but Off the Wall Hall will close April 30. Co-owner Mason said recently that a lack of capital to start the business venture was largely responsible for the debts incurred by the firm. The firm commercial development in the area, Mason said, more profi can be made from sellin the hall than from continuing to operate it. So with some interested buyers—the Community Mercantile being one of them—the sale of the hall will eliminate the business' debts. The hall didn't even have a sign in front. Mason said, because the business couldn't afford it. The sign is up now, but it's still not lit. he said. Much of the live music that appeared at Off the Wall now will be booked at the Opera House, according to both McKinney and Mason. Hartford ballet here in May The Hartford Ballet of Connecticut, a professional classical ballet troupe, will present a special one-hour performance at 3 p.m. May 1 in the University Theatre. A shortened program from the company's 'Tasteful' disco at Union tonight A dance for the sake of dance will start at 9 tonight in the Union Ballroom as a benefit event. Frustrated with sound-the-same music currently offered at dance clubs, Tau Sigma performs in "tasteful" disco; reague, Jamaican music popular in England; salsa, Puerto Rican music popular in New York and on the West Coast; jazz club; aid; rhythm and blues; and some rock. "It's just to give people a chance to really get out and move," according to Tom Hewlett. Money raised from the dance will be used to purchase a portable dance floor for the Tickets are $1.50, available at the door. SUA FILMS THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR (1975) Concerns for Young People, Inc., a Lawrence organization, secured a grant from the Kansas Art Commission and the University of Kansas for the Arts to underwrite the program. Dir. Sidney Pollock with Robert Redford, Fay Dunau. Plus short books by K.U. students. April 16, 3:30, 7:00 and 9:00 p.m., $1. A limited number of advance $2 tickets will be sold for KU students at the SUA box Office. Other tickets are $2.50 for adults and children, available at Dallors and Rusty's. regular tournage repertoire is designed to appeal to children as well as adults. It features "La Malinche," a modern dance work; "Little Improvisations," a classical pas de deux; and "Leggieros," a comical work. Acceptable media are paintings, prints, drawings, ceramics, glass, fabrics, weavings, quilting, silver-smithing, jewelry, wood-carving, sculpture, wood-carving and photography. Sheila Immel, a member of the fair public committee, said yesterday that the exhibits must be original creations of her work, patterns or kits not to be accepted, she said. Dir. Herbert Biberman. Mon., April 18, 7:30 p.m., 75c SALT OF THE EARTH (1954) Entry deadline for artwork fair set for Monday Dir. Clarence Badger with Raymond Griffin, Classical Film Series. Wed., April 20; 7:30 p.m., 75c A Monday deadline has been set for students to enter their artwork in the 16th annual Art in the Park fair scheduled for May 1. HANDS UP! (1926) The spring fair in South Park is an annual event sponsored by the Lawrence Art Guild and the city parks and recreation department. Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Entries should be sent to Sheila Immel, 621 Riverway St. or to the South Park Rink. The entry fee is $2 for members of the Lawrence Art Guild and $5 for non-members. Checks payable to the art guild company the applications and photographs. Photographs or slides of the type of work to be displayed should accompany the application, Immel said, to eliminate noprevocative work from the show. For more information, contact Immel at 841-4661. BROWN BAG SPECIAL --only 1 39 Su Sandwich sauce French fries Milkshake Breaded sandwich Peanut butter Soda drink a Deluxe Sandy, French Fries, and Milk Shake all for only 1.39. Now thru Sunday, the 17th! Sandy's 9th & Iowa --a benefit dance for Tau Sigma (not a fraternity) Dance Ensemble Give your Car a New Spring Coat! Come by for an estimate - Major Damage Repair - Minor Damage Repair Have your car completely repainted in the only heated drying booth in Lawrence - Frame Repair - Insurance Repair Welcome - Minor Touch-up - Estimates No Charge John Haddock 23rd and Alabama FORD INC. Phone 843-3500 SECOND GENERATION SINCE 1914 The Lawrence, Topkea and Kansas City areas' offering of folk talent will be showcased from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Folkore Center Traveling Festival, which will be at Off-the-Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St. Folk talent will be showcased at festival. Admission is $1, and children may get in free. The Kansas Folkore Center is a nonprofit organization that promotes the preservation of folk arts. Gloria Throne, founder and director of the center, said recently that the festival's goal was to showcase the local talent available to the center. Kappa Sigma Stardusters Car Wash University State Bank 9:00 1:4 p.m. 955 Iowa Sunday, April 17 Sixteen acts, all coming from within 50 miles of Lawrence, will be featured. Thorea said that she had been planning an Eastern Kansas folk festival for this summer and that chances were good that it would go as planned. There is a surprising number of songwriters in the area, Throne said. Acts to be featured are the Lerming Family, the International Folk Dancers of Lawrence, the Poverty Pocket Pickers, the Second Alliance, Greg Trooper, Martha Healh, Steve Grayg, Prairie Grass, Fly by Carlsbad, Jim Schoenfeld, Kurt and Lynn, John Snyder, Rosey's Bar and Grill, the Carlssons and the Little Bluestem Prairie Grass Band. HOTEL Ride-On SPECIAL PURCHASE Pirelli 27" Gumwall Tires Reg. 4" $1.99 THIS WEEK 1401 Mass. OPEN TUES OPEN TUES.—SAT. Are you tired of hearing only disco when you go somewhere to dance? We're offering a variety-not only disco, but reggae,salsa,calypso,rock and r & b. So for a change come and DANCE Tonite 9:00-1:00 Admission $150 Union Ballroom Beer will be sold. No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. $ \Delta\sum\Theta $ $\Delta \Sigma \Theta$ ; $A\Phi \Omega$ ; $A\Phi A$ Charity Dance For Heart Fund Reduced Pitchers $1.70 Shenanigan's Tuesday, April 19, 1977 7:30-12:00 P.M. Donations $1.00 Advance tickets starting Wednesday Booth 2, Union Proceeds go to American Heart Association 8 Friday, April 15, 1977 University Daily Kansan Big Eight baseball season begins at Quigley today By GARY BEDORE Sports Writer When Karaes and Iowa State meet in a doubleheader today, it'll be like opening day for a championship. It's true that KU has already played 26 games, but today's doubleheader, which starts at 1:30 p.m., marks the opening of the Big Eight conference baseball season. A new divisional set-up matches Kansas and Iowa State with Missouri and Nebraska in the conference's Eastern Division. The division's top two teams will meet the top pair in a championship Division, or the championship tournament, May 18 and 19 in Oklahoma City. Last year, all eight teams were invited to the post-season tournament, which Missouri won. KU COACH Floyd Temple said he was in ku of the divisional grouping. "last year we didn't have conference play, and the games didn't mean a lot," Temple said recently. "This year it's going to be more competitive." be more competent Today's two games match the Jayhawks. 14-11-1, against the Cyclones 9-14 Bran Cyclone Sutafilim, Sutafilim A-3, are scheduled to match for Yemen. In his last two outings, Rhodes gave up only one run in 14 innings. Last Saturday, Sports Sutcliffe gave up only five hits, in a 4-1 victory over Kansas State. KU'S PITCHING depth has been tested recently. The Hawks, after Tuesday's doubleheader split and Washburn, had six games of three days and used every pitcher on the staff. Temple said the pitching would have to be more consistent to beat Iowa State. In a doubleheader last Saturday against Kansas State, KU pitches were rocked for 20 runs, but on Tuesday, the pitchers allowed only four runs in two games against Washburn. The difference between good and bad pitching, Tempel said, is only a few inches. "If a pitcher gets the ball up just a matter of one or two inches, he'll hit it," Temple said. "One day a pitcher can throw one or two and the next time he knocked out." KU'S HITTING has climbed to a team average of 276. Five players are hitting above 300. Lee Ice leads the team (.384), and is followed by Andy Gilmore(.361), Ron MacDonald (.344), Carl Heinrich (.317) and Brian Moyer (.315). Three starters are hitting below 200, where they have been most of the season. The hitting should be bolstered by the return of leftholder Mott Hobbs, who may play this weekend. Hobbs has been out almost a month with a knee injury. iowa State brings a .362 team batting average into the series and a .48. E.R.A. RIGHTHANDER Kurt Kaufman (1.3, 2.8, E.R.A.) and lefthander Kevin Schulz (1.2, 3.18 E.R.A.) are slated to pitch for the Cyclones. First-baseman Greg Foley is hitting two home runs, and Larry Luccihei (.324), who have four and three home runs respectively. The series continues on Saturday at 'Hawks and Cyclones play another week.' When the Big Eight Conference women's tennis tournament begins today, the KU team will be one of the favorites for the team title. KU tennis coach Tom Kivisto said yesterday that his team would be favored to win the conference meet along with Oklahoma State and Nebraska, the host Women's tennis team favored Kivisto said that his team had good workouts this week after easily winning its first game. "We had two-a-day practices this week and the girls are ready," he said. "Our success depends on the team and the coach, so think that we are best team in the conference right now." Oklahoma State is led by Lisa Berry in No. 1 singles, Kivito said. Berry was ranked nationally before beginning college competition. Nebraska lacks a strong individual leader on its team, Kivisto said, but is consistent enough through its lineup to provide a challenge for the title. iowa State, Missouri, Kansas State and Okahanna also will be entered in the two- weekly bingo. KU, 11-1 in dual meet this season, has been defeated latest State (6-5), Missouri The Jayhaws participating will be Carrie Fiprofoulos, No. 1 singles; Astrid Dakksen, No. 2 Maitre Sauffier, No. 3 Tracy McMurray, No. 4 Marie Cook, No. 5 and Kathy Murry, No. 6. The Jayhawks will have to come up with a big team effort to win the Big Eight softball tournament being held this weekend, according to KU coach Bob Stancliff. KU and Missouri are scheduled to play at 3:45, as are Nebraska and Oklahoma. The tournament starts at 2:30 this afternoon when Oklahoma State and Kansas State begin the competition at Holcom Sports Complex. 'Hawks need togetherness to win softball tourney Stancliff said yesterday the Jayhawks got the touchest draw in the first round. "Missouri and Iowa State are the two toughest teams we might face in the tournament," he said. "That first game is going to be a hard one to win." MISSOURI BEAT the Jayhawks last Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W 1 W 2 Pet. GB Cleveland 7 2 748 Toronto 5 2 714 Montreal 3 2 609 New York 3 2 400 Boston 2 1 393 Detroit 1 1 143 Indiana 1 0 143 Oakland 4 1 357 KANSAS CITY 4 1 800 Tampa 4 1 800 Chicago 3 2 600 New York 3 2 604 Minnesota 3 2 429 St. Louis 3 2 433 Today's Games Toronto 5, Detroit 3 Milwaukee 5, Baltimore 0 Oakland 8, California 7 Seattle 4, Minnesota 3 Atlanta 2, Washington 1 Oakland (Territorial) at Minnesota (Themedmogard) 10 New York (Firmers) or Galletta 10 at Milwaukee weekend in the Southwest Missouri State Invitational, but Stanciff said he thought it would be a good fit. Toronto (Sask.) 91, Chicago (Milwaukee) 108, Minneapolis (Minnesota) 124, San Diego (California) 136 Adelaide (Australia) 51, Calgary (Canada) 113, Melbourne (Australia) 127, Toronto (Canada) 131, Seattle (USA) 152 "We have as strong a pitching staff as anybody, and I think that's going to help us." Graves, a senior, has a record of 43, 52 strike outs and 1.56 ERA. Sinclair, a sophomore, has six wins and no losses, 39 strikeouts and a 36 ERA. Stancliff said he wouldn't know until just before game time which pitcher would start. The call could go to either Gloria Williams or Alex Rodriguez, and showings against Wichita State. The Jayhawks will also be counting on Graves for her hitting power. Her 11 RB's and 50 batting average lead the team. She has a 62 strike-out batting 490, and Donna Sullivan at .333. “IF WE BEAT Missouri, I’ll feel pretty confident that we can take the tournament,” Stancliff said. “Of course, if we lose, things will be different.” ime tournament will be double elimination, but Stansfield said that it would have been much better. The defending champion, Iowa State, returned all of its starting lineup from last year, and Stancill said it probably would be among the final top three teams. The Cyclones beat the Jayhawks in the championship game last year. Play tomorrow will begin at 9 a.m. with a losers bracket game. Winner's bracket play The championship game will be tomorrow at 5:15 p.m. Kappa Sigma Storlusters Car Wash University State Bank $1.00 9:55 9:00 Sunday, April 17 SPRING FEVER SALE! 30 to 50% off Walmops By Head, Adidas, Winning Ways, and Loomtogs Men's Shirts, Shorts, Separates By Head, Izod, Pacific Trails, Newcombe, No. 1 Sun, Berg's Fila, Fred Perry and White Stag Women's Tennis Dresses, Shorts, Tops, Sweaters By Head, Izod, Tail, Color of California, Fred Perry, Sun Chrissie Evert, Pierre Cardin, and White Stag first serve Register-FREE RACKET No purchase necessary first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 1119 Mass. Lawrence Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. In doubles, Fotopotas and Staffu will pack No. 1, Spellman and Cook, No. 2; and No. 3, Spellman and Cook. Apartment Hunting? Special Summer Rates Reduced Security Deposit 842-2348 Call or come by. 841-3800 WEST HILLS • AVALON • HARVARD SQUARE LOUIE ARMSTRONG rare films of his performances in Denmark and other European countries (1933-1940). These films have never been shown in the U.S. before. Kivisto said he would be watching Daksa occur during the tournament. She played through the entire series of games. COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA—rare films of the "Count" in concert (1953) Academy Award Winner (1944) from the collection of Bob Deflores with host Dick Wright more than two hours of rare footage including films never before shown to U.S. audiences CHARLIE "YARDBIRD" PARKER WITH DIZZIE GILLESPIE The Downbeat Awards—the only known film of Charlie Parker in concert (1953) SUA Presents RARE JAZZ FILMS JAMMIN' THE BLUES—with Lester Young and Joe Jones Woodruff Auditorium $^{1.25}$ Admission Tuesday, April 19 a month since cutting a finger on her playing hand. "If she gets seeded first in her bracket I think she can win it," he said. "If she had to play more than two matches I would be a lot less frustured because her hand isn't full strength." Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts All the Tostados you can eat for $2.00 Opened 6-8 p.m. daily Expires May 30, 1977 QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE GOLD IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER CINEMA CLUB JUAREZ TEQUILA 50% ALC./VOL. 475 ml. (16 fl. oz.) JUAREZ 80 PROOF TEQUILA WATERPROOF TERRAIN JMESCO SK WATERPROOF BOY! D HAVE WE GOT A DEAL FOR YOU! Tr All this week, for our Grand Opening, we will discount our entire selection of pipes, papers, clips, coke accessories and other smoking aids. THE RUGSTORE NOTICE: We do not employ a registered pharmacist or sell prescription drugs. 706 MASS. ST. The Stillw Okla! "All you need . . . Except the weed." ALL BONGS 25% OFF. NEW YORKER 1021 MARSACHETTS ST NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS 51 $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS "The original thick crust pizza from New York" The coupon regularly 4/30/17 The company experts 4.2012 MILK JUG NEW YORKER 1021 MARSHESBETTS ST NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Coors Pitchers 95¢ With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th ROAST BEEF DINNER Generous serving of choice hot round includes homemade mush potatoes and homemade grout and homemade fresh bread, and selections from our relish tray. Coupon expires April 20, 1977 $1.95 Reg. $2.50 with this coupon Friday, April 15, 1977 University Daily Kansan 9 on her r bracket d. "If she nees either e trouble strength." Bnor RE RE 95 ★ ★ ★ Sports Roundup ★ ★ ★ ag. $2.50 with this coupon Track team to OSU The KU women's track team will travel to Stilwater, Ohk, today for the two-day event. Although the Jahyahs finished fourth as a team last week in the Wichita State Relays, several individuals turned in their event and three KU records were broken. At Wichita, the Jayhawks got most of their points from five events, and they will be strong in those events at Oklahoma State. CHARMANE KUHLMAN will be going for her third straight victory in the 400 meters after her record-breaking performance last week, Sheila Calmeze, who qualified for the AIAW nationalals along with Kuhlman, will be a contender in the 100. This weekend KU hosts the Big Eight Soccer Championship tournament. Defending champion KU will meet strong teams in Missouri and Missouri in the battle for the title. Big Eight soccer KU enters the tournament with a 6-1-4 record, but KU coach Bernie Mullin said "We have played many varsity teams who are national powers, and have shaved away from much Big Elight play," he said. KU also has suffered from injuries and scholastic conflicts which had many star players out of the line up. Forward Monsour Taberzadeh will return after missing most of this spring because of scholastic conflicts. He will team with Mohammed Alt-Ameur to re-form what Mullin last fall called his one-two strikingunch. WITH THOSE two on the front line last fall, KU won seven of its last eight games hail, it won't work for us in tough games. "It is hard to have them back again," he said. "The team is one of the few forwardes Felipe Santos and Jairo Ruz, and instead of a one-two striking punch, we now have a one-two-three punch quite capable of scoring goals. Colorado enters the tournament with the best record, 7-0, 2-1. Mullin said the record didn't insure a win for them. Teams that have won in the past haven't necessarily had the best records coming into the competition, he said. All preliminary games tomorrow and the seventh- and fifth-place finals Sunday will be played on the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The third and first-place finals will be in Memorial Stadium. All games are free to the public. The schedule for the tournament: DIVISION A a.m. Kemas vs. Okhaoka St. 10:00 a.m. Okhaoka St. 11:00 p.m. Okhaoka St. 12:00 p.m. Okhaoka St. 13:00 p.m. Okhaoka St. 14:00 p.m. Okhaoka St. Division B Drittsbaum 10:25 m. Missoura to K. State 10:35 m. Colorado to K. State 10:45 m. Colorado to K. State 1:30 m. K. State to Missoura 1:30 m. K. State to Missoura 1:30 m. K. State to Missoura KU loses recruit KU lost a possible basketball recruit yesterday when the University of Colorado signed 6-foot-8 Brian Johnson of Cherry Creek. Colo. Sunday Sunday 9:45 a.m. Seventh place final 10:00 a.m. Third place final 10:00 p.m. Big Eight Championship game 10:00 p.m. Big Eight Championship game Yesterday was the first day high school prospects could sign letters of intent to attend college. The others who attended the dinner, Vinnie Johnson of McLennan, Tex., and Jay Hart of Allgayhju in Cumberland, Both are junior college products. Both are junior college products. Johnson was one of three recruits who visited Kansas during the annual Jayhawk wrestling tournament. KU' cannot expect to announce any announcement until recruiting has been completed. Rugby club away The KU Rugby Club will try to snap its two-game losing streak Saturday when it travels to Topeka to play the Topeka Rugby Club. The Jayhawks will once again be playing without several starters who, because of injuries, have been out of the line-up since the beginning of the spring season. The KU A-team is 3-6 for the season after week 12-0 loss to Kansas State, and the week 14-0 loss to Minnesota. Awards speaker set Women's track and field star Oliga Cornilly will be the featured speaker at the KU women's third annual Athletic Awards Ballroom. April 24 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Connolly won the gold medal in the women's discus in the 1966 Olympics when she represented Czechoslovakia. She competed in the next four Olympic Games for the United States. Connolly was captain of the 1972 Olympics team and flag bearer in the 1972 Olympics. Connolly studied medicine in Prague, Czechoslovakia, and has done work in heart disease research. The KU men's tennis team's attempt to repay Arkansas for a 9-0 loss suffered to them earlier this season failed yesterday afternoon. one nazezback defeated KU, 7-2. Lonnie Taylor, playing at the No. 6 singles position, picked up KU's only singles win. He beat Arkansas' John Bailey, 7-6, 7-6. Tennis team unable to repay Arkansas Bill Clarke and Mark Hosking, playing at the No. 1 doubles position, defeated Arkansas' No. 1 team for KIT's second point They beat Mike Vogel and Brian Sake, 6-3, 7-4, 7-6, in a match that was deadlocked until the final tiebreaker point. A slam down at 8-6 allowed Clarke broke the tie and gave KU the edge. Despite KU's loss, coach Kirkland Gates praised his team's efforts. "We pushed them at every area," he said, "and Mark Hosking showed that he is coming out of his slump. It was the first time we two weeks that Mark has played well." The loss to Arkansas dropped KU's record to 14-10. The Hawks play again this afternoon against Missouri Western at 2 on the Allen Field House Courts. Bull Grape Plant Company Ltd. 16 260bda7b TONITE: Joe Utterback Trio Great West Coast Jazz Admission $2.00 Kuala Lumpur SATURDAY: ATURDAY: Claude "Fiddler" Williams Just back from Europe! Admission $3.00 Includes Free Beer!! at PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 ♪ GET HUNGRY AT NIGHT? And who doesn't? Here at Naismith there is a complete line of vending machines with a wide selection and variety of choices available 24 hours a day. That may not sound important now, but come this winter when it's cold and blowing it will be mighty nice to be able to get a hot sandwich or a pack of cigarettes at 3 in the morning without having to leave the building. Relax next fall—move to Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features. 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 MARILLA Get There with famolare Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop FAIRDANCE FAIRDANCE The following items will be checked out and graphed, on over $10,000 worth of testing equipment. THE WIZARD IS BACK Due to the large response we had on the last Amplifier & Receiver Clinic, Team is having another one this Saturday, April 16, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. ● Total Harmonic Distortion Frequency Response - During the clinic the following brands of receivers will be on sale, while supply lasts. Channel Separation . . Sensitivity . Actual Power Output TEAM ELECTRONICS 2319 Louisiana Mours: 10-8 Mon.-Fri. 10-6 Satdays 12-5 Sundays Phone 841-3775 So bring your receiver or amplifier down to Team and have it checked out, absolutely free. All Yamaha Receivers 30% off All Pioneer Receivers 20% off - ● All JVC Receivers All Rotel Receivers - 20% off 20% off All Technics Receivers 20% off 10 Friday, April 15, 1977 University Daily Kansan Landscaping From page one appointed, and plans were drawn up to show how the University should look in 160 years. AMONG THE PROPOSALS made by Durell and his committee was removing all streets from the center of campus and replacing them with pedestrian walkways. The construction of Watson Library also was proposed. Then the class of 45 gave 12,000 flowering crab trees to the University as their class gift, reportedly because the class was so crabbie. The same class later gave the plantings in front of the Kansas Union as its 25-year reunion gift. In 1947, the graduating class followed suit and donated money to landscape Lindley and Marvin halls. By then, Chancellor Dudley was active in the beautification project. She and Mrs Nelson personally supervised the planting of the crab trees. They enlisted the help of Mary in Grove, planting trees by themselves. Although some people laughed at the two women's efforts then, the crab trees still survived, flowering crab trees and redbuds on campus. ALTON THOMAS, THE University's landscape architect and site planer, said that most of the planting on campus was done before he arrived at KU in 1947. He said he came with the idea to not only land-scape but also to plan the campus. Iromas said his primary job now was site development. The number of buildings on the island was growing. In the early '50s, the impetus in planting continued, Thomas said, and the Malotts gave a large gift of money to KU for crab trees. "The the rate of planting crab trees downed in Thomas's field at Limewood, in 1804, after the early 1800s." LANDSCAPING AND RELANDscaping still keep Thomas busy. He said he relandscaped the Chi Omega Fountain a few years ago and is now rejuvenating plants in front of Strong Hall. New buildings, such as the School of Law, the Visual Arts Building and the Helen Foresman, Spencer Cohn, and Thomas, who is working with Spencer's architecture on plans for the new museum. Blitch said he hoped it would be partly landscaped in time for its opening. Thomas said there was no real uniformity or consistency in the landscaping on the property. --plant elm trees because of Dutch Elm disease WHERE PLANTINGS WILL be permanent, Thomas said, he tries to stay away from high-maintenance, intensive plantings. He will try to get rid of steep slopes that can't be mowed. "Now, in view of a potential lack of water," Thoms said, "we're trying to put in hardy material that can stand drought more easily." Thomas said he also was trying to simplify maintenance problems by putting in water lines where there were large-scale plantings. NOW, THE FLOWERING trees and shrubs on campus range from Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Malot's flowering crab trees and redbuds to various types of flowering fruit trees. Bilch said the flowing fruits included peach trees by Summerfield Hall, pear trees south of the Chi Omega Fountain, persimmon trees and plum trees. There are tulip trees on campus, Bitch said, which shouldn't be confused with magnolias. He said there were also many daisy flowers, xylitsa, lilac and several types of spirea. Exactly how many types of flowering trees, shrubs and just plain flowers are on earth? Let me count them. "Inmumerable," he said. "I couldn't even tell you. There must be at least 20 varieties." RUFUS THOMPSON, PROFESSOR of botany, said that most of the species on campus had been planted since the University began. Thompson said the cottonwood trees on campus were natural, as were the hackberry, honey locust, hedge apple, dogwood and black willow. Although both Thomas and Biltch said that most of KU's chancellors had been strong supporters of campus beautification, many students' plans have to be pushed aside for others. For example, Watson Library has been constructed since it was proposed in 1940, but the University still has streets running through campus. THOMAS SAID THE plans hadn't been scraped, but lack of funds and other problems made it impossible. "One day, we day... maybe," he said. Another of Thomas's dreams is more sitting areas such as the one outside the library. "I like to plan more terraces, outdoor classrooms and even kiosks, which are open pavilions." Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:30 George Segal & Jane Fonda Granada 781-4720 Engineering 35-2600 "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" 10 Academy Award Nominations Intelligent, Engaging, 1st Class Entertainment ART CARNEI LILY TOLLIN "BLACK SUNDAY" PG "ROCKY" "THE LATE SHOW Eve 1.20 8:30 Sat 4:30 Mau 1.20 Hillcrest Starring YLVEST STALLONE Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Eve. 7:30. Sat. 1:45 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped underwater. Hillcrest AIRPORT 77 Eve, 7:40 & 9:50 Saf.-Sun, 1:55 Ends Friday The great Scout & Cathouse Thursday. Hillcrest Plus Small Town in Texas Plus PG 7:20 show time Restrictive drop policy draws varied opinions in survey of faculty members and students Sunset 516 724 3870 | sunset.com or angelo.mc By JOHN BARBER Staff Reporter "It's another ___ sunrise" Fill in the blank MEISNER MILSTEAD Retail Liquors Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 842-4499 Sunny Day faculty members and students voiced differing opinions on a more restrictive drop policy in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in an informal Kansan survey taken this week. About 100 students and 20 teachers participated. ACCORDING TO **Robert Friauf**, professor of physics and astronomy and the main backer of the new policy, the change was needed because the Assembly had gone too far two years ago when it accepted the present policy. Jeff Thompson, Paola sophomore, said he didn't drop classes and he didn't see how the new policy would affect him. two years ago and now we are changing some back," Friauf said. The policy, developed last month by the College Assembly, would allow a student to drop a class until the seventh week of the semester. After that week, a petition would have to be submitted to a committee in the Assembly in order to drop a class. The policy change is a result of a survey, taken one year ago, in which 300 faculty members in liberal arts and sciences responded that the change was needed in the drop policy. Now, a student can drop a class until the semester. The new policy will go into effect. "We decided to change things greatly Opponents of the new policy thought that being able to take a mid-term test before the drop deadline was a plus to the current system. J. J. HALL, Charlottesville, Va., senior, said the new policy was unfair to students in classes that had only mid-terms and finals because they would have to drop classes "We haven't received any response this semester, but last semester we sent a questionnaire to the heads of all the departments in liberal arts and sciences and the response was five to one for the change," he said. Jim Carson, Topeka junior, said, "I think I go along with it because it was decided by the Assembly. We elected them and we show some support for their policies." STUDENTS THAT back the new drop policy agree that some change is needed. Dawn Harris, Wichita sophomore, said, "This might stop some of those students that enroll in a class simply to find out what it is like." "I know if I had to decide to drop a class before the milder, kern. I would think twice before doing that." outere they knew how they did on mid- terms. Shelley Coder, Lakin junior, agreed. "I came to this University not knowing what profession I would like to go into when I graduated," she said. "If I can't drop a law degree, I need interest in, then I think the policy isn't fair." "I'm paying the money to come to this school and I think I should have the choice of which classes I stay in and which classes I don't." She said that appearing before a committee to get out of a class was不 fair. ALTHOUGH MANY students voiced opinions either for or against the new policy, most were indifferent to the change. More information on posters around campus. HASHINGER HALL Pops Concert — 8:00 — Thea Monday, April 18, 1977 Shenanigan's Extends an invitation to all past Hashinger residents to join the present residents at our Spring Arts Festival. sponsored by Time: 7:30-12:00 P.M. Price $1.00 OU CAN HELP MEND A BROKEN HEART "I don't think that it's going to make that much difference," Jeff Hirst, Hutchinson sophomore, said. "People who are going to work in the office are going to mark is right at mid-term anyway." All 20 teachers questioned thought the new policy was a good idea. All except one agreed. Although all of the students who were indifferent to the drop policy either didn't drop classes or weren't aware of the change, some thought the new policy wouldn't stop students from dropping classes. A $ \Phi $ A ; $ \Delta\Sigma\Theta $ ; A $ \Phi\Omega $ When: Tuesday, April 19, 1977 Processes go to America Heart Assoc. Portionally funded by Student Activities. Fun 9s Gas Patio Grills Congenial Neighbors Tennis Court Cool Blue Pool Living at Trailridge Traibridge Apartments 843-7333 GUARANTEED AVIATION TRAINING NOW! KIL SENIORS KU SENIORS For further information, write or call collect: As a graduating KU senior, you can reserve guaranteed training in Naval Aviation by entering the Aviation Officer Candidate (AOC) Program. ALL K U STUDENT TICKETS-$3.00 AT THE DOOR 2500 W. Sixth GARY BAKKEN, Kansas City, Mo. 64108 214-571-0371 2420 Broadway Navy Information Team NAVAL AVIATION. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB,IT'S AN ADVENTURE. K U STUDENT ADVANCE TICKETS ONLY $2.50 Available at SUA Box Office Only Special MISS STREET DELI MASSACHUSETTS CHEP SALAD (1) 4 kinds of cheese, 3 kinds of meat, your favorite salad dressing and crackers. 150 e Reg. $1.85 Offer expires 4-30-72 Monday April 18 Third-Rate Romance Dance starring Grammy Award winners Amazing Rhythm Aces 7:30 and 10 The Lawrence Opera F Fri., April 15 The World's Largest Traveling Multi-Media Production ... TONIGHT THE BEATLES: AWAY WITH WORDS U.K. Its Acoustically Perfect AUDITORIUM 5 UNFORGETTABLE PERFORMANCES at 4 p.m., 6 p.m., 10 p.m. & 12 midnight wichita Another Great Show - Century II I- Wietha - April 24 From 12:30 Noon to 12 Midnight Featuring JAZZ festival THE THAD JONES / MEL LEWIS BIG BAND McCOY, TYNER & GROUP MCOCY TYNER & GROOF FUN FESTIVAL ALL STARS THE FESTIVAL ALLEY Mit Hinton, Zool Sam, CAlg Hank, John Kane, Carl Fontana, Alan Dawson BROOKLYN TERRY JERRY HAHN AND SONS THE MEDICARE 7 – Playing Great Dixieland Smash hit of last year KENT MERIDIAN HIGH SCHOOL BAND LOU DONALDSON AND GROUP KENMEDUCK HIGH SCHOOL WINNERS FROM THE COLLEGE COMPETITION TICKETS: Advance Reserved $8 General Adm. II Central Ticket Center - Century II (Combos and Big Bands) Argus = Budget Tapes - Calavan - Davis - Nichols Electronics S & S Sales Aem-SA-Ramp - Gpt. Poppers - Starkery Music At the Door: Reserved $9 General Adm. $7 At the Door. Reserved 30 Wichita Arts Festival is funded in part by the National Endowment of the Arts, the Karen Wichita Foundation and the Metropolitan Art Board. KICK-OFF PARTY – HOTEL BROADVIEW Saturday, April 23, 8:30 to 11 p.m. The Festival All Stars – The Medica 7 – Kent Meridian High School Band Tickets $5 each at the door Riggs Accem ment are ol sex, e BRING Cold Imported & Domestic Beer New Selection of Domestic Wines 2247 Louisiana (23rd & Louisiana) Open till 11 p.m. Retail Liquor WINE BOTTLES ns University Daily Kansan Friday, April 15, 197 11 e, said he e how the KANSAN WANT ADS who were e her didn't ne w policy dropping make that mutchinson be going to sevenweek away." A ners 03:00 ought the All except Beer Wines V Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to a student without regard to race, color, religion, sex or nationality. BIRL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 113 FILLHALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES 15 words or fewer Each additional 0.00 $2.25 $1.50 $3.00 $3.00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 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 to run Monday Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday Saturday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 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. 864-4358 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the UDC website business office at 864-3538. ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special offer: 6-hour boat trip $30 per person. Other trips ship 4-hour boat trip $90 per person. We are available with WIFI or phone call. Distance (m) near highest in Tableau, Oklahoma 74464 (9 miles) on highway 10, Tableau, Oklahoma 74464 (9 miles) ENTERTAINMENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 860 sq. ft. it available. No group capacity. Includes Kitchen and har facilities located. Located in San Francisco, CA. Call 842-8664 for information. 5-13 don't miss Willow Wind. OFF THE WALL HALL. April 18. 4-18 FOR RENT Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, pets: nqrs 845-7567. tf 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to union, utilities paid, parking. 835-979- Frontier Ridges~short term lease available with study. Hasted interior pool containing curved tubing. Hasted exterior pool containing curved pool - disposal - pallet luxury facilities. Ridged outdoor pool furnished and unfurnished from $25. Call 801-269-4030. Gahlee apartment--Call Becky now. Summer contracts on all Gahlee apartment. Call Becky contracts on all Gahlee apartment. Call Becky CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX Rent the Pro. 2017-2018 Req. Rental locations. Call 267-2980 5-10 Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center. Furnished and unfinished, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open space, computer information please call either 912-583-9020 or 912-583-7401 - 4-21 Make your plants now. Applications are now available for you by for a yard and complete system installation, giving fast form by for a yard and complete system installation. Farmed room, room, utilities paid, share bath, frigerator, close to campus, 959 library 4-15 4-16 Sublease for a bedroom - 1-bedroom apartment furnished Call 841-5044 at 9:00 p.m. 4-18 Sublime-Luxury townhouse, three huge bedrooms, luxury baths, fireplaces, central air conditioning, 841-305-2655 4-18 Warren two girls to subdue Trailside Town- wash $6 Mo plus 4 utilities; Call 815-388-2188; Call 815-388-2189. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 813-495-990 or stop by 10am. Open house 8:20 - 3:30 Monday, 10a - 4f Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid on, 2 bathrooms, 1.5 bathrooms, $179.20 per month. Call 845-6933 to come in at 1605 447-8211. 1 new bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 800-769-4528. 2-bedroom apartment, 2 blocks from Union, $165 plus utilities. #431-7038. Avail immediate room. ROSAKALA HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 67504. The hotel will fit with fireplaces, ambiance, or com- fortable rooms. Call 812-326-9346. 3-bedroom apartment. Spacious, near campus and downtown, until, paid, furnished or unfurnished. Can be 4-bedroom, parking, laundry. Asks for manager after 4:00 p.m., or weekend. Ash for manager after 4:00 p.m., or weekend. 4-15 Eykndocker Optical DISTINCTIVE EYEWARI Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen Sandwich Shop Sublease for summer 3-bedroom apartment 420-821-5644, furnished 420-821-5644, 9:25-5644, before 9:25-5644 Wait, the numbers in brackets are definitely 9:25-5644. The letters are 420-821-5644. Let's re-read the whole thing: Sublease for summer 3-bedroom apartment 420-821-5644, furnished 420-821-5644, 9:25-5644, before 9:25-5644 Yes, that's it. SURELEASE 3 bedroom newly built apartment, with furnished basement, soundproof ground floor on bus route. Phone #342-8988. For more information call: (800) 742-1234. Apartment to sublease. Close to campus. June- August. Call 841-3652 for 4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Individual rooms for rent immediately, for summer/fall, cop food situation, food program, free laundry utilities included in economic, rent allowance 3 shocks from camp. Call Laura 8421 8420 4-20 Discount on summer sublease of one-bedroom Metroadway bedrooms (post, post, post). M53-8390 4-20 M53-8391 4-20 June-Aug. 15. (lease expires); 2 bedroom, new unfitted apartment, A/C 1850 sq.ft. Calif. a-bedroom apartment $140 per pm plus elec. after 5 p.m. #82-8231. 4-21 Sublease 3-bedroom apartmntft, hffdthfh $160, plus utilities. K1-841-6544 4-21 Sublase for summer = 2 bedroom apartment. 4-21 Sublase for summer = 2 bedroom apartment. 4-21 Sublease June 1 to August 1, 45-4 bedroom, house close, busidage 843-3104 4-19 Nice 2-bedroom apartment 10 min walk to center of campus | 515-792-6331. Call 842-3433 or 842-3436 for details. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization by attending a seminar, or taking a course. For Exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" is available now at Towson University. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialty. BALU, BELU, BLU. BELL AUU. ELECTRIC 843-9009, 8009, W 6th. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, and tape recorders at Audio Systems, 51st St., Kansas City, KS. 1970 Kawasaki 500, front brake bleak, electronic throttle, 4x4, rear suspension with luggage rack, real sacrifice at $490. Call 800-263-1870. Medical students' microscope Zetia Binocular. Excellent condition, call 842-857-68 5-415 1975 Honda CB-125 plus 2 helmets - 26 headsets - 26 bicycles - 26 calligraphy cards - Calliope at 843-9941 4-15 Pioneer SK2-620 receiver -$165, $130 Btk decke Pioneer SK2-620 large selection of tape recorders - 411 841-7258 411 841-7258 HP 35 calculator like new, only $80. Please call Mike, 542-2548 4-19 Yard Sale Fri. and Sat, 12 and 1638. Islam Mizzil Year sold good, good junk. Peggy. 4-15 10 speed Freestyle men's tricycle, low mileage, many hand held transceivers, $100, 84-164, evening hand held transceiver, $100, 84-164, evening Craig Caspiet Tape recorders final cut to $298 from **$359**. Ray Stonehouse $399. Mass Open Records, thurs., 10am. (714) 692-1150. Set of four new 15cm M32 laser bolted radial only with a 40mm optical tube. Prices are the $925 the 892M, Open aperture 8 mm 4-25 and 4-25mm. T3 Madurex RX-3-XAO, Air Serio, 8 tkacz. T3 Madurex RX-3-XAO, Air Serio, 8 tkacz. Must sell. Schwin. Continental 10, waterbed, JBL L-100 speaker, deluxe king size waterbed, in fantastic elevation. Koss H I 1 headphone and Yamaha CA-640 stereo amplifier. Reasons 4-15 final cut on C.B. Radio's and Antenna's. Some of the many other stops included: Rocky Bay Storehouse 929 Mass. Hall, till 8:30 a.m. Friday through Sunday. RADIAL Tire CLEARANCE, 145 x 15 x 15mm. RADIAL Mudguard, 75 x 75 x 20mm. Mounting and balancing access. Ray mounting bracket. Mounting kit. Bren new stereo amp, 110 watts, RMS, fantasie specs joint verified by BMU, 842-996, evening Harrison Davidson $20, 1500 ml, just tucked mint indication. $300, 845-939, events. 4-18 & Shery's big sale! Much 40% style clothing, dresses, shoes, hats, blouses and blouses. Perfume, corduroy clothing and other stuffs. Good goods and old furniture including car seats, much more mattres, sat and sun, April 17th and 17th. $39-$59. Last days at last year's prices. Eureka temp. 2-person. Umbrella up to 8''. Downtown, parking area. $65.00. Sail tarp. Winter merchandise. Super sail. sate. Winter merchandise. super sail. down on. Sunflower surcharge. 4-15 1970 Karmann Glia coupe. Rebuilt throughout (engine-clutch front -exhaust old-paint steel belt radiator-am/fm casheter in-dash). 30-45 AES drive to drive 35. 814-4604 Alwa AD 620 cassette recorder. Only one month must be immediately call. Call 841-8422 ask for help. Color TV 20 inches, good condition only $190, and castette cassette records $20; call LoveTower 560-347-3681. 260 Motorbike grant record bike. Never been 340 Motorcycle grant record for $50 or more 4-154 Motorcycle grant record 4-14 4-155 Motorcycle grant record 4-14 RAY AUDING. The Little Shero Store, now have a 10-year warranty. It will insure your expectation. At 15 K.C. Coffee & Bread, 407-829-3555. 846 Illinois Drive-in Clinic TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUIN for most imported cars "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" IVAN'S 66 SERVICE Suring elevator sale. B and O turntable models. Power supply (24V), 15A power amplifier, DYNAT-P SAM-6 preamble kit, 360W power supply, 700W case, 760 Case, Desk Sam-6 and 771 receiver models. E and F turntable models. AUDIO, 15 E - F Kit, The Little Silene Store With a DAB, JVC stern cassette deck $200 complete with complete accessories. will for sell $381-841-5022 4-20 1975 Yamanaba Enduro 400, excellent shape 3500 call. M42-3563-303 4-18 Technix SA-3520 Am-Fm Receiver, 28 watts功率 Am/Fm receiver, 24 watts power, 64-bit 864-1922 @950 mHz, ak for LXK 4-20 LXK 4-20 Old books 1907-1933 mostly architectural design, building, construction-furniture design; Punk and Wagnal Geographies 1885 (15 in.), National Geographic 3 for $1.60. Call evening hours: 4-19 1973 Mazda RX-2 Only 20,200 miles, AM-FM eight tree kia cars new trees, excellent condition, good mileage **245** **86** **91** **95** **101** Ludwig Pro-Best drum set w/ cases, excellent condition, call 842-7169 - 10 4-20 Thoures TD 160 C turntable $15, with Stanton @GOLFE $175. Hire Dailer at $41.99 for 4-20 1941 Chevrolet, 8 cyl. 2 speed. Mechanical mechanical condition; $200 or best offer 842-5422 4-20 DRUM SET FOR SALE: Ludwig drums and slam drums at Lawrence Music Centre, 401 Meadowhill Avenue, Bristol, BS30 9RU CLASSICAL GUFAR CLEARANCE SALE, on Alvarez Valveri classical models while sugaring. We also have 10 new guar clearances now and get a free $70 case also. Lawncare Music Centre dsf and Hinde Island. Located at 4-200 Sawyers Ave. 62 Rambler, 3 ap. 6 cyl., good shape! $275 81-41 274 after 6 p.m. $69 Yard sale! Notions, rich-mick and junk. Freudian hair-love coach featured 140 Tennis席. $295-$350. 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 1977 W V. Sutroze, only 5000 miles, air breezer, Michelin tires, Reasonable prices. 4-23 4-23 1976 Firebird Formula, every available option, incessional condition, light blue with hairspray. 82-350-4222. www.firebirdformula.com 19th & Mass. 1976 Monte Carlo, maroon with white Linda vinyl roof. Maroon interior with softer glazing. Interior lined with wood. museum cap, super black 30 day guarantee. price negotiable. please call 843-723-700 between 7-10 p.m. and 5-6 p.m. *43.9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8:8 Sun Pocket gold wallet (Circa 1941~$180) Tom. 841- 5270 or leave message B1-4604-481 4-21 1. Chevrolet Impala 4D, PS, PB, AC. Very clean. Must sell. Call 861-646-1921. 4-21 HELP WANTED Volunteer Clearing House is selling T-Shirts for $2.50 each. All clothes and children are accepted. Order one, other two, or all three. 100% white cotton shirts-red letters shirt. Volunteer clearance. Mail to: B. H. Kaiser, 141 W. 37th St., a141 b. 148, Kansas City, 864-3800. BALLOON RIDES - Make a date to fly the dives! A BALLOON RIDES experience includes a commercial baloon pilot OZ-BALLOONS or a private baloon pilot. 72 Pintos - Good condition, low mileage $1110 best offer. 841-3796 4-21 1970 Honda SL-320. Good condition. $475. 841- 4-21 a good part time job till school's off. Apply in person at Heavy Eddy's 527. Pizza WI. Delivery in p.m. must be with car. Delivery must be on car. Will guarantee $25 hour tips. Will train. WI. 4-15 Information center accept applications for kids in grades 3-12 Application deadline: April 15 at 10:00 a.m. 4-15 **STUDENT CLERK TYFIST.** Hospiceabilities include inpatient care, filing, other duties as assigned. Beginning January 2015, residents will be required to interact with other staff and visitor. Accredited Bach deg or同等学历; at least two afternoon, and occasional Saturday morning appointments; currently enrolled student at the University of Kansas College of Arts and Sciences, Euler University of Kansas Compound Center, Akron, Ohio; or Bachelor's degree from Euler University of Kansas Compound Center, Akron, Ohio; or Bachelor's degree from Euler University of Kansas Compound Center, Akron, Ohio; or Bachelor's degree from Euler University of Kansas Compound Center, Akron, Ohio. OPPORTUNITIES CENTER AFFILIATE: EASTERN OPPORTUNITY CENTER AFFILIATE: ENCOURAGED TO APPLY FORTRAN PROGRAMMERS—two 1b-3 positions available. One position will allow comfortable computer use; the other will be concerned with non-statistical applications areas. Hepatoma patients receiving new programs, assisting in maintenance of program libraries, conducting research at University of Kansas with undergraduate students, or (or other HIS large scale system); experience with FORTRAN programming; ability to communicate. Desired Qualifications: Computer science; knowledge of statistics; assembly language HILLCREST BILLIARDS Pool Pin-Ball Snooker Air Hockey Ping Pong Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa -West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week One Under 18 Admitted Avan open territory in Lawrence. Kev if you were you, would be calling to tell the world famous Avan for an appointment. He's a world-class lawyer. Open the image to see the text. Director--PRINTING SERVICE director, University of Kansas Printering Service, Lawyers, KU. Provide technical support with annual volume about 1.8 million, and 60,000 copies a month. Design modern management systems for estimating production must have 3 years experience in management. Must be certified in printing plant management design and/or technology. Send application to Dr. Russell Mille, KU Office of Management, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Ky. Qualify as an employee of the university equal opportunity affirmative action employer. Qualified men and women of all races are equal opportunity affirmative action employer. 4-18 SUMMER JOBS: Forest service. How where, when to apply. Can be answered by phone 217-896-3500 or mail 217-896-3500. Mont. 39800. Student probation engineer, wanted to translate engineering into technical terms. Req. Bach in Comp Sci, Comp Engg, Comp Electrical, Comp Computing, Comp Info. Call: Benjamin April 8th at 614-327-2500. I Did your Easter break turn into a summer week? Do you want to relax? Go east this summer. Go far into winter. Go out early. Get for info later. LIFEGUARDOS-Johnson County firm has been aral summer summons for persons in WS1. Send application to B.S.L. N435 Quivira Lincex Ks. 6215 or by email 1-848-423-1950 Pier1 imports LOST AND FOUND Full and part time foundation and cashier work. Work in person at Vassar Restaurant, 127 W. Washington St., New York. The all new Apple Valley Farm of Lawrence is now taking applications for both full and part-time positions in the farm, as well as person in position at 901 Indiana between 9 and 5 and summer work. An equal Opportunity Employer, in August. An Equity Opportunity Employer. 20 hr week Tues. through Sat. Secretary and Assistant to Director of new fine art gallery openings; lead discussions on topics interested in working with the public asLEASE is intended in working with the public asLEASE is desired, but most important the desire to learn more about the subject must be communicated formation告84-7991) after 4 p.m. Send 3 references and resume in P 'O' Keech SNW Lawyers. Phone: 841-7525 Summer employment (part time during school if desired). Emission forewars for Lakewood, Lawrence and observation to front work. Busem, giving work on behalf of the company. Trainer, Trainer and Company, P1 100, Box 100, Lakewood, CO 80235. Downtown Lost- 49 cookies. If found, please return to Cookie Jar. Anyone Can Whistle. April 14-17 Lost-Silver bracelet with Tiger eyes stene. Call please 841-508 or 842-4602 4-18 Found. Rodachrome片状 of artwork in front of Strong Hall, Claim at 249 Snow. Ask for George. Found. Frog Trophy with Brass plaque. Call Greg or Julienne at 646-359 and identify initials. Found on the West bank of Pond Point. 4/8 s god, got to the necklace holder. Identify a necklace holder. 841-2097. Lost—somewhere on campus, small multicolored last place, parked by a bus and driver passed by 842-3722 if found. Lost: Eye glasses in fun case between Fraser and Summerfield around March 23. Call 843-8135. *BOMBER* Found..Medium sized nor Northwestern Elbison A Mark 1 Apartment at A1 at 841-6434 or fax 841-6434. Gold initial necklace on mass St. Initial on necklace is "B' Call Masa at 844-206. 4-19 Found 1 pair of gold glasses in black case 841-2634 4-19 Found a watch at Cordray Grade School, Saturday after the basketball courts. Call 443-8580. Led-Prescription glues in brown case. Lord Leod Prescription glues in brown case. Lord Leod Prescription I can't see please phone. Tortoise 612. Lord Leod Prescription I can't see please phone. Tortoise 612. ARMADILLO BEAD CO NOW IN THE 8TH STREET Lost most month ago, red notebook in Wescow Very important. Call Melissa. 841-3771. 4-28 NOTICE Athens, Tel Aviv, London, Tokyo ... You name it. Budget hotel abroad almost any week of the year. European Week (round-up to Chicago). Avis, $199, Africa, specials in foreign travel. Multilingual and specialist in travel. Swaps Shop, 620. Maxs. Used for furniture, dishes, swaps. Lots of televisions, open daily 12-5. [841-7946 M-S 10.5:30(Thurs. 8:00) AIRFRAME WATERBEDS AVAILABLE AT THE FELDS STORE 712 MARSH Foreign Auto Parts HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts Pigeon show. We have now Newtown Pixie Fire Squad, which will be on Saturday, April 16th, at all day Town Council meeting, at 5pm, at the Town Hall. KARATE—Learn the ancient secrets of this martial art, which combines physical conditioning and learn self defense skills. Nested: GAY COUPLES who have been living together in an inter-ingest study investigating imprinted应inate in an inter-ingest study investigating imprinted study will be on the positive and strength qualities of couples in an inter-ingest study often held them in the same room. COMPLETE GAY COUPLES are guaranteed, and couples will be paid for 2$ per week. Gay couples are guaranteed, and couples will be paid for 2$ per week. Wauters, 941-6800. With cooperation of Gay Servi-ces, Wauters, 941-6800. Graduate student seeks domicile for KU summer session. If you are leaving Lawrence for the summer, live near campus, and would like to attend a apartment in good condition from Call 1-422-380-6758. 4-18 Mrs. Magon- Thanks for a july 19th, best of friends never past. The Bear. 4-15 Chairty. Dance—American Heart Association- t of Sheeniganan highest percentage from living group with two Legs-Tuesday April 19-Demian- ce of Bennett-2018-admitted tickets on Unito Booth 2 **4-19** Dear slim… I know a very good looking Italian man. He's a chef, and he's great! He has mastered the difficult art of cooking you. We wants to meet you in room 140 if I can find it. I'll give you a free taxi ride. You have never let me down before, and I'm ready to help you. A day without Gay rights is like a day without sunshine on the ground. Gay U.S. Day, 7:30 p.m. Guest speaker is Gerry Young with the gay movement in Kansas City, discussing the current anti-gay backlash 4-15 MISCELLANEOUS Babecee~ Wake up and get into the Spirit, but it too不让太早,Happy Birthday, Dallam- 4-15 Baseball team forming in K.C. with player coming from Arizona, San Diego, Chippewa Field, Sird and Argentina. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Able at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Able is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, at Mast. DORM ROOM FOR SALE - Contract for something special. Olive drom room with two twin beds, wood desk and chair, switch on lights, insulated door for you smokers with fireplace, insulated door-No. 4B-45 H-641-684, really nice. PERSONAL 843-8080 304 Locust Personalized weddings, ceremonies Universal Lawrence, KS 69045 Inquiries: Box 500 Lawrence, KS 69045 Gay Counseling Call; **Call 822-7505**, 8:12 p.m. for referral. For socializing calls, **Call 841-7505** PIR-Shortcut, Happy four years 4.12 We had our updns and downs. Even though you are rough now, we do good times outweigh the bad. This week, I worked on the things I always works out, I not worried. LML We put on a dammed good show. Piggy, Anyone Can Whistle, Oliver Hall Lodge. 4-15 Wil Friedl Fox escape her fate? Will J. Browden Hoppe join Kate in the investigation? Hoppe Hosts part 12: Foul out April 14, 6 p.m. Friday at 10 a.m. on HBO's "Nightly News." PEACE CORPS AND VISTA are looking for volunteers. Please call the website at www.peacecorps.org who is迎接 you by the RUY-180 Union Corps. Griselda—Meet me at Squeezers. 4-15 Atheloism is the most prevalent form of depron- tion or drug addiction. For help or info, 840-819-2800. ANYONE can become a Universal Life Church Minister—even athletes! Legally perform marriages, teach courses, take taxation (Now over 25,000 tax-exempt ULC members nationwide!) Don't delay—became a credential of Ministry, send $3 and a self-addressed stamp envelope to the ULC office #6, K6044 4-19 Biblythoms charted. Scientifically based tech-based methods for the creation of biblythoms—making, emotional control and physical adaptation of your 1927 biblythoms, send your newborn to a doctor's office envelope to 1734 Engel Rd. gz33. Lawrence Kornbauer Heart Fund Night - Shenanqiang's highest percentage 10-10% purchase 2 legs of kegs 4-10 10-10% purchase 6 legs of kegs 4-10 HELAY PARTICIPANTS BEWARE: BEN WILL BE THERE. 4-19 You can mend a broken heart at Shenanigan's 4-19 American Fisher 8-198 Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30p.m. Home of VISIONS has the eyeglasses has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 Goods • Vintage Clothing HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand - Furniture - Antiques - Imported Clothing 730B Mass. 841-7070 Typist editor, IBM Pica/elite. Quality work. Designed by Amy Krasnicki. Discussions welcome. Former IBM 4250. SERVICES OFFERED Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. Math tutoring, computer repair, apprehended hackers and other professors. Send resume to HR, Attn: Lisa McKinnon, Insurance Agency, 12345 Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Best preparation is required for job. STEREO BROKEN® Receiver, amplifier, turntable, tape decks Preventive Maintenance (turn table clean and tube, etc.) Custom Solutions Wireless Electronics Warranty. Jawer Electronics 734 Mass. 841-5335 TYPING : Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6658. 75c a page. tf Expertized typist—term paper, thesis, mime. Experienced layout师—typing, spacing, spelling credited. 843-5044. Mt. Wright TV's, stereos, and radios repaired. Most make- kets, with a few others. 851-269-7200, Pine's Radio, 1109, 1009 Corp., or 851-269-7200. TYPING Will type your paper with TLC. Terr papers and paper with TLC: 481-3431, 481-1780, 481-1780, evenings and winters. TLC: 481-3431, 481-1780, evenings and winters. You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only THIRES BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for copying & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 838 Massachusetts or phone 382-7580. Thank you. Icelandic No hesitant, just good typing at lower than average rates. Experienced professional. We can匀 meet the shortest of deadlines. Harvey or Linda. 842-9190. 4-26 Wide experience law papers, thesis, dissertations. Qualified. Knowledge. Responsible. Plenarye eles. Mweli. Weldel. Experienced typist-term papers, thesis, etc. or elite type (manual) Marburg, 742-2763 4-21 WANTED Small house wanted to rent by faculty family, fall semester, 1977, 841-667. 4-15 scheduled airline. All you have to do is be brief then. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details Formula room for summer and or fall, 15 for extra summer, Jayhawk Towers, 4-18 Groups A and I want you! Anyone Can Whistle, April 14-17 Ice Hall Lounge, 8 p.m. FREE SUA Maupintour travel service House wanted to rent for summer. Call Brian. 842-9709 4-20 Male graduate student setting male/mobile to Male graduate student setting female/mobile. in THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire Kansas Union 843-1211 Female roommate needed to share apartment for Female Roommate Located near KU Med. Center. Roommate Needs to have a Bachelor's degree. ... Mourn our broken hearts, shurity舞. Bemani- tured. He is survived by his wife of 45 yea- rs, 710; proceeds go to American Heart Associat- ion. Female coach inneed needed for numm West Hills, $90. Must be straight. 4-20 1-125 Su Casa 745 New Hampshire Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522 Someone to clean cabinets and paint states in new weather. April 16, 20th; January 16, 20th; Saturday, April 16, 20th; Monday, April 18, 20th; Tuesday, April 19, 20th; Wednesday, April 20, 20th; Thursday, April 21, 20th; Friday, April 22, 20th; Saturday, April 23, 20th; Sunday, April 24, 20th; Monday, April 25, 20th; Tuesday, April 26, 20th; Wednesday, April 27, 20th; Thursday, April 28, 20th; Friday, April 29, 20th; Sunday, April 30, 20th; Monday, April 31, 20th; NAISMITH HALL Male roommate for roomy, professor's home until July 1. 873 alum. university; 862-9233. 4-21 Onky, wood and bone chin rest armrests. Advertise it Need help? in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358 --different kind of bar "A different kind of bar "sturing seclusion and quiet." featuring seclusion a - Bud on Tap - Pinball Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa 843-7612 12. Friday, April 15, 1977 University Dally Kansan Liquor battle From page one there is one liquor store for every 1,211 persons. Iowa has one liquor store for every 43 persons and liquor by the drink, but the liquor store in Kansas is slightly less than in Kansas, 2.97 gallons. Missouri has liquor by the drink and almost three times as many liquor stores per capita as Kansas. Its per capita alcohol consumption is about 30 per cent more than TAYLOR OFFERS HWE statistics that indicate Kansas' per capita alcohol consumption is 12.16 gallons a year, 16.22 gallons in the District and 4.76 gallons as a whole. Rrehon said those statistics were meaningless. what can we learn from them? The Washington, D.C., figures amount to 5.4 ounces of alcohol per capita each day. That means that every man, woman and child over 15 is a lush. It ignores tourists and outside employees. Black education to be discussed in minority talk "The Kansas figures mean that each person consumes 75 ounces per day. Then with these figures Kansas doesn't have any real competition is, you don't learn anything from them." Gillespie became managing editor of Essence in November 1970 and editor in chief in May 1971. In 1974, she also was the executive director of directors of Essence Communications, Inc. Marcia Ann Gillespie, editor in chief of Essence magazine, will discuss the "educational Dilemma of the Blacks in the Kansas University light in the Kansas Umpire's Forum Room. Essence, which has a current circulation of $50,000, is the only magazine designed specifically for women. Gillespie has said that she had wanted to be editor of Essence to destroy the false imagery that had been created against the black woman. "I didn't want little back girls growing up as I had, thinking only white women were beautiful," she said. "I wanted them, through Essence, to see and feel what black women really are; beautiful, courageous and incredibly vital, blooming people." Gillespie first was a researcher for Time-Life Books, where she worked on "An Illustrated History of Black America." She spent five years on an article on black history for Life magazine. In 1974, *Enterprise Magazine* magazine garrisoned Gillett one of the most important publishers in the world. Gillespie's lecture is the final event in the 1977 Cultural Enrichment Program sponsored by the KU Office of Minority Affairs. It is open to the public and is free of charge. REHORN ALSO said Wyandotte County had more liquor stores per capita than Johnson County, yet from 1973 to 1975 there had more traffic deaths related to alcohol. "There is no relationship between availability and human suffering. His injuries are too great, his lacerations are too simple, his fractures are too simplicial. You can't take complex human social problems and analyze them in that simplistic way. Nothing is proven with Taylor's knowledge." "If his thesis is correct, he has to push to dry up the state, which he won't do." Reburn said he was serious about his move to bring prohibition back to Kansas. If it passes, he said, it would mobilize enough people and officials to make it the necessary constitutional amendment. Taylor realizes that, Rehorn said, so he calls himself a moderate, says Rehorn is his best. Taylor says he is a moderate. MORE IMPORTANT, Rehorn said, legislators who now vote dry would find that their constituents don't support prohibition, and they want a rational discussion of Kansas liquor laws. Although Taylor, a Methodist minister, is careful not to call liquor by the drink a moral issue, Rehorn said Taylor's efforts are "moralistic tvnanny." "Some people know what is best for you, and they'll violate you to force that on you." "Taylor comes out of the old school, the Carrie Nation school. If you drink, you're bad. He has an inability to assume any good will on the part of people who oppose him." REHORN SAID he learned while in seminary that the worst attitude a minister could take was Taylor's, because it drove alcohols who needed help. Rehorm said when Taylor referred to the fact that Rehorm was a former Methodist minister, he says, "Rehorm is a Methodist, but the church is with me, my mishap is with "He is so involved in his moralistic trivia that he can't really understand what's going on." But Rehon says, "I just make it clear the Church is wrong. The Methodist Church has total abstinence as a moral ideal, but notice it's not a mandate. Has the Methodist Church refused to accept social drinker? Has the Methodist Church ever refused the money of a social drinker?" "So if the Methodist Church can make money off the social drinker, why can't the Church do it?" "TAYLOR DOES not do, my church does not, what the state of Kansas does to help" *** "I made the mistake of trying to be open with him, trying to establish a colleague relationship." "I was trying to talk to him and I started out saying, 'OK, now, Dick, I'm divorced, right?' and he said, 'No, that's not right. You shouldn't be divorced.' "The guy is a minister! I'm trying to lay open my gut to him, and he just wants me to eat." liquid, I deal with the people. If he would love people more and preach at them less, he'd have to be very quiet. "Taylor is the rudest, the most unmanned laborer in the state of Kansas. "THE WILD MAN with you, which is his way of saying, 'I'm talking now, don't interrupt.' "He has called senators on the floor of the Senate, telling them how to vote. He walks into people's offices and interrupts. He has been accused by one senator of walking in his office and Taylor opening up his notebook to look through his stuff. "when I was testifying at the Federal and State Affairs Committee hearing, the Rev. Taylor was told that you gave me permission to speak. I just turned my head on him and said, 'Senator Reilly (R.Lewenworth and J.K. Dodd) gave me the Boot'." And Reilly appreciated it. In another incident, Reharn said that Taylor who was testifying at a hearing, said he had been "sloppy" in Rehorn said Taylor ignored the fact that two candidates had filled out Taylor's prelection questionnaire last fall in acceptance. The two candidates supported their onceptions until he's considering not allowing him to tell you any more, because Taylor says the same every day and Ed (Reilly) has been told that he and he doesn't want to hear it any more. "Reilly is so angry with him right now "IF HE WERE HENE, he'd say, 'Here are two candidates who on this issue are equally qualified.' He printed that Bill Morris' (R-Sedwick) opponent was against liquor by the drink, but it was Morris' option. "And the primary, he screwed it up that badly." "He's got some real swat, and he knows it and uses it. The people are who are afraid of him." "A person can be concerned in every area, say, 'right' in every area, but, according to the Rev. Taylor he's for liquor by the drink. Taylor will cream him. That's the problem with one-issue people, they don't like you on that one issue and you're dead. Race safety class offered The annual Midwest Division Crash and Burn School, this weekend at the University of Kansas, will train car racing personnel in track safety. The crash and burn school is a requirement for people who work at the corners of race car tracks during road races, according to Roger Williams, vice president of the Kansas division of the Soorts Car Club of America. Williams said the course was required for corner workers because most accidents involve corner workers. Techniques of fire fighting, first aid and rescues drivers from burning cars will be taught in the training course. the course would be able to practice those techniques on different types of road racing cars, including one that will be set on fire. "Carmenging is the most exciting race." "Corner working is the most exciting race activity, " Williams said. The course, open to anyone interested in becoming a corner worker for road races, is being conducted by the Kansas division of the Sports Car Club of America, the KU department of firefighting, Division of Firemainttenance Training of the KU department of continuing education. The $12.50 registration fee may be paid at the beginning of the course. It starts at 8 tonight in the Apollo Auditorium of Nichols Hall. OWL SOCIETY Junior Men's Honorary Organization Applications available in Alumni Association Office, Rm. 403, Kansas Union. Applications due Friday, April 15 Aandhi The KU India club is presenting the Hindi film "Aandhi" with English subtitles. This film is co-sponsored by the International club and will be presented Fri., April 15 at 7:30 p.m. Wescoe Auditorium—Room 3139. Admission Free. This film has been given a best picture award. It stars Suchitra Sen, Sajeev Kumar, A.K. Hangal, and Rehman Directed by Gulzar. Athlete's Foot 919 Massachusetts 841-2995 Lawrence Open Evenings SPOTBILT • CONVERSE • BETA • BROOKS • TRETOUR • NIKE • PUMA • ADIDAS • TIGER • FRED PERRY • PROKEDS BUY ONE BURRITO GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON BUY ONE BURRITO, GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON! The burrito is a soft flour tortilla covered with a thin layer of beans, taco meat, garnished with cheddar cheese, sauce and rolled. One offer per customer. Offer ends April 17, 1977 TACO TICO 2340 Iowa TACO TICO TONIGHT starting at 8:00 The River City Jazz Band Nairobi Trio with drummer Johnny Moore Fast Eddy Quartet The Tom Montgomery Trio featuring Jim Stringer Admission JazzWeek at The $1.50 TICI Laurence Opera House & 7th Spirit balcony KANU 91.5 public radio and the Laurence Opera House Ralph TOWNER & John ABERCROMBIE and featuring Nairobi Trio TICKETS: available at Saturday April 16 Two Shows 7:30 and 10:00 Klefs Better Days $4.00 Because there is no slot, most area stores don't include the $2 bill in their change banks when they start the day. So, unless you're planning to pay cash during the day, cashiers don't see them. "Sometimes we go days without seeing one," Lila Switzer, cashier at the Kansas Union bookstore, said, "and when we do we have to keep from confusing it with other bills." The lack of a slot for the $2 bill in cash requires that the bill be circulated in the Leveraged area. $2 bills printed last April celebrate birthday alone But confusion with other bills has discouraged some other cashiers from using the credit card. Verna Shorton, head teller at the First National Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts, did not ruin the $2 bill for change because it was easily mistaken for a $5 or $20 bill. PAT DURICK, assistant manager of K-Mart, 31st and 1st avenues, said that the store's cashiers didn't try to pass the bills because they were afraid to avoid confusion when they make change. The reluctance of retailers to exchange $2 bills has been cited by U.S. government officials as a key factor in the bills' failure to circulate. Of the approximately 415 million bills that were printed, about 222 million actually went into circulation and millions of the $2 bills were hoarded in bank vaults. The bank closed April 13 last year. The purpose in reissuing the $2 bill was to replace some of the $1 bills in circulation. The government had also hoped, by reducing the number of bills printed annually, to save almost $7 million each year in printing costs. BUT THE public has been slow to accept the bill. Horton said that the First National Bank has had customers refuse to accept the bills. "They're practically non-existent as far as the public is concerned," she said. Despite the public's reluctance tellers at Dougson County State Bank, 9th and Kennyville streets are encouraged by mennocky officials as possible. Deanna Dman, head teller, said that she thought the public resisted any change and that some Americans thought it would be a good idea. However, since the U.S. Treasury Department has increased promotion of the bill and emphasized that it was to be a tax on corporate income, the bill for the bill have increased, she said. THE SMOKE SHOP THE SMOKE SHOP PIPES AND ACCESSORIES OF ALL KINDS GLASS·WOOD·STONE· ALSO: A Large selection of papers and holders LOVE RECORDS (in the back) 15 W.9 842·3059 Minority Affairs TOPIC: "Educational Dilemma of the Blacks in the Professions" Cultural Enrichment Program FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1977 Forum Room, Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. SPEAKER: Marcia Ann Gillespie, Editor-in-Chief of Essence Magazine NO ADMISSION CHARGE For more information, call 864-4353 SUA POPULAR FILMS P HIS CHA CODE NAME IS CONDOR IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS ALMOST EVERYONE HE TRUSTS WILL TRY TO KILL-HIM DRNO DE LAURENTES PRESENTS ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY CLIFF ROBERTSON MAX VON SYDOW IN A STANLEY SCHMEIDER PRODUCTION & IN WICKET POLLACK FILM 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR Plus Short Films by K.U. Students FRI., APRIL 15 AND SAT., APRIL 16 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 3:30 MATINEE EACH DAY *1 Tickets available at SUA Office WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION 'il e billies that actually of the $2 in morns soon st year, ill was to be duped, be duped, be duped anteach year nal Bank the bills as far as d. to accept KU softball team wins Big 8 title meeters at and Ken give as possible. She said stayed any thought am THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Treasury of the to be a requests she said. See story page five DREARY KANSAN 53 Vol. 87, No.127 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, April 18, 1977 staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Porsche Hot practice While simultaneous keeping a safe distance, Dean Thompson, Overland Park, tried to extinguish a man-made fire yesterday morning near Raymond Nichols Hall on West campus. The fire was set to give stock car track worker们 who were meeting here this weekend experience at putting out car fires. Track workers came from far as away as Jacksonville, FL. Watson, commission agree to evaluation plan Buford Watson will continue in his position as city manager will be subject to an annual evaluation, Mayor Marnie Arersinger said Friday. Watson said, "I'm pleased with the confidence the city commission has shown The Lawrence City Commission and Watson met in closed session last Thursday to discuss guidelines that Watson and the newly elected commission will follow in the Argersinger said that in addition to Watson's job evaluation, the mayor and the city commission would take greater political roles in city government. flack," she said. "As elected people, now we should that hail me" blame and the credit for anything that happeed. "THE CITY manager takes so much The commissioners will meet later this week, Argersinger said, to write out the goals and responsibilities expected of the city manager and the commission. A set of priorities for the city will be established, Argersinger said, and Watson will be expected to carry them out. Complaints should be addressed in the guidelines for handling citizen complaints. THREE CITY commission members, Watson, the assistant city manager, University of Kansas officials and some members of the press left yesterday for Norman, Okla., to attend a Big 8 cities meeting. The meetings were first begun 10 years to discuss common problems to discuss common problems. She said all complaints would be put on forms so that all commissioners would be notified were to be handled, and would also know what irritated the other commissioners. "ITS TIME to set up some standard operated procedures." Argersinger said. "We're all after efficiency in city government." She said each new commission had the tendency to fall into the same patterns of the previous commissions instead of analyzing problems in new ways. Watson said the evaluation of him was appropriate because he evaluates many other city employees. Watson is in charge of hiring and firing city officials. The Lawrence contingent will return tomorrow evening. The regular Tuesday city commission meeting has been canceled. Initial O.K. given on KU fees raise By LEON UNRUH Staff Reporter The Board of Regents gave initial approval Friday to a request that would tack an additional $2.50 onto KU student fees next fall. The request asks that the KU activity fee be raised by $1.56, from $9.60 to $11.10, and that the Kansas Union building fee be boosted by $1, from $14 to $15. The increases will be up for final approval at next month's Regents meeting in Topeka. The Regents require 28 days for deliberation after an initial presentation. The KU Student Senate approved the fee increases Tuesday. STEVE LEBEN, student body president who attended the Regents meeting, said Saturday that the request met little opposition. "Considering that the senate had voted for it and the administration wanted it, it The additional money generated by the activity fee would fund the improvement of some recreational facilities at KU and Robinson Gymnasium. Of open hours at Robinson Gymnasium, The Regents also approved a new fee schedule to raise the cost of parking permits next fall. A year's rate will increase by as much as $120 per vehicle, and by $10 on the Lawrence campus. CONTRACTS WERE approved for two sterilizing equipment companies to equip a new 20-acre Med Center hospital, American Sterilizer, Erie, Pa., will get a $787,86 contract, and Kentex, Leneza, will get a $64,445 contract. The Regents also approved a plan under which students entering the Med Center starting in 1977 will pay fees directly to the National Board Examination. Previously, the Med Center collected the fees and forwarded them to the examining company. A reshuffling of funds in the University's maintenance and remodeling allocation will be done. "WE GOT no new money," Keith Nilcher, director of business and financial affairs, said. "We don't want to be the worst." reallocate between projects the money we already have." Buildings benefiting from the relocation will be Haworth Hall, where air conditioning tubes will be repaired, and the KU Printing Service and the east addition of Watson Library, where new roofing will be installed. Money was reallocated from other repair and maintenance projects. The promotions of more than 100 faculty members at both KU campuses were approved by the Regents, Nitcher. Thirty-four faculty members became full professors, 56 were named associate professors and 10 were named assistant professors. FORTY-FIVE Lawrence professors and FORTY-FIVE Center received sabbatical for next year. Nitcher said that the Regents favored a new KU proposal changing some qualifications for sabbaticals, so that people who have terminal degrees and the ability to teach, but don't, also were made eligible for the sabbaticals a year from now. All seven Regents schools were granted a week's delay from May 1 to prepare and present 1978 fiscal year budgets, Nichter said. The delay was granted because the Kansas Legislature hasn't decided allocations yet. Nine KU faculty members received emeritus status by the Regents. They are: Nachman Aronzak, professor emeritus of Theology; Jacob Egan, professor associate emeritus of the Kansas Geological Survey; William Griffith, professor emeritus of Geography; Fred Kurata, professor emeritus of Engineering; Emily H. Smith, professor emeritus of design; George B. Smith, professor emeritus of administration, foundations and higher education; Rayan Sahu, professor emeritus of performance; and Edgar Wolfe professor emeritus of English. THE UNIVERSITY'S Low Temperature Lab was named in honor of Fred Kurata, professor of chemical engineering, Kurata, who is retiring this year, founded the lab. Congress fight likely over energy package WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress is embarking on what may be the fiercest legislative battle in years as it returns from its Easter recess to receive President Jimmy Carter's complex program of staff education, remediation remedies and new energy taxes. The President is set to highlight the dimensions of the nation's energy problem in a televised "fireside chat" to the nation tonight and then to formally unveil his energy package at a joint House-Senate session on Wednesday. members of Congress who have received briefings on the energy program predict that the President's program will touch off that will extend through most of the year. Several congressional leaders have suggested that the President will have so much difficulty getting his proposal through Congress that he may have to resort to making his appeal directly to the people—in order to prevent a fistful of fideis chat —in order to hould support. many elements of the package, especially those that would cost consumers the most in added energy costs, may never make it a good deal. A company modified some concessionaires' aides say. The biggest battles are certain to be over the proposed new taxes on gasoline and diesel. But there are also economic benefits. one president's energy message. Least controversial will be conservation incentives, such as proposed tax benefits for homeowners who improve insulation in their houses or install solar energy devices, according to key congressmen and aides. Forms for staff now available The energy issue will clearly dominate congressional action this week. Little else of consequence is scheduled for floor action, especially with the President's withdrawal last week of his proposed $50-per-person tax rebates for most Americans. White House aides said that in his televised address to the nation tonight, Carter would draw heavily on a new Central Intelligence Agency report that concludes that the world has far less oil and natural reserve than has been generally believed. According to published accounts, the CIA report claims that in less than 10 years the world will be using more oil than it produces, resulting in scarcities that will boost the price of U.S. gasoline to more than $2 a gallon by 1990. Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansas are available in 105 First Hall, the Student Senate office, or at the offices of the deans of men and women. Although the plan is subject to last-minute refinements by the White House, drafts of its key components have already been prepared by government agencies and on Capitol Hill. Carter has called the report deeply disturbing and said that he hoped to convince the American people of the truth about energy shortages. Summer and fall editors and business managers will interview candidates next Monday and Tuesday. Interview sign-up may be posted outside 111 and 141 Flint Hall. Positions are open on both the news and business staff. Applications must be turned in by 10am on Monday. —new taxes of several dollars a barrel on domestic crude oil, which would further drive up gasoline prices, and new price increases in gas prices which would allow its price to rise also. —A gas tax starting at $121 for fuel-efficient automobiles, possibly as high as $2.500 for the worst offenders, with off-highway vehicles for cars that get the most miles per gallon. - tax credits to partially offset the cost of residential insulation and solar energy devices and for industrial fuel-saving measures. "A standby gasoline tax of up to 50 cents a gallon that would begin in 1978 if U.S. government taxes increased." The program is likely to include: 'Jazz' concert pleases listeners By BILL UYEKI Entertainment Editor Saturday night's KANU-FM Jazz in the Night concert at the Lawrence Opera House seemed like a giant puzzle, with several distinct pieces. There were the Jazz in the Night staff and its respected following it has built in the area; the managers and operators of the Opera House, and their acoustically concert hall; local promoter Brian McKinney and his popular sound and lighting system; two virtuoso guitarists on the ECM label, Ralph Tower and John Abercrombie; and, alas, a definite clique of local musicians matching to suit their tastes in a comparatively dry concert season at the University. A HERCULEAN task, but the pieces all fitted as nearly as could be expected. The sound, lighting and quality of music were appropriate to the imperative an conditioner that made the balcony uncomfortably balyne, the two shows Saturday were produced well and provided a perfect setting for an attentive audience, the talents of performers and Aber crombie. when two guitarists, playing nothing more than their instruments, can keep a rapport with an audience of almost 600 with only their music, then there must be a common respect flowing from both the audience and the performers. The crowd seemed to sense that here are two musicians, with backgrounds in classical and jazz, playing something that could be heard by keyboards and/or formal structure. IMPROVED LIKE jazz but lacking its beat, rhythms and chord patterns, the pair's music so captured listeners that the near-capacity of the drum set for both shows sat in silence -silence only broken by applause between numbers. Strangely, a similar form of music last fall hardly drew more than 100 people in Hoch Auditorium. Towner, who actually started in music on piano, studied guitar in Vienna before he joined the Paul Winter Consort in 1970. He has recorded albums with Weather Report and vblist Gary Burton, and is now a member of the group Oregon. ABERCROMBIE is a product of Boston's Berklee Music School, and played around the club circuit in Boston and New York. He became a seasoned session guitarist while backing Gil Evans and Gato Barberi, and later caught notice in the jazz world with his work on the bands of Chico Hiberton and Billy Edwards. Abercrombie has been playing with Jack Denhottie's Directions. Together Towner and Abercrombie released their album, "Sargasso Sea," last fall. It seemed the slightly dissimilar styles of the two guitarists were essential in Performance making them the perfect match for each other. Abercrombie, who also played electric mandolin, opted for a more electric, amplified sound. He reverbed again playing electric guitar. He picked gentle and medited melody lines and strummed chords emotionally, often humming to himself contemndly as the notes streamed TOWER, HOLDING his guitar like Sergivia while finger-plucking outsturbs of ideas, complemented his cohort's soft singing. He plucks the chordings on six, and 12-string guitars. The Nairobi Trio, with Johnny Moore on drums, was assigned the difficult task of entertaining the audience while playing between Tower and Abercrombie's two acts. But this talented trio, who included MacKenzie group groups Tide and MacKenzie-Lynch, also provided the evening's dose of mainstream and progressive jazz. It was fortunate that some 'jazz' was heard because, except for a Miles Davis tune played during an encore, Towner and Abercrombie hardly approached the musicians played in its place was music impressively executed and fully appreciated. JOHN WILSON John Abercrombie Staff photo by JAY KOELZER 2 Monday, April 18, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Rabin to leave Jerusalem JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, topped from power by a family financial secant, announced yesterday he was taking an extended leave of absence. Earlier in the day his wife was fined $28,825 for illegally maintaining U.S. bank accounts. Rabin, who announced April 4 he was withdrawing as a candidate for re-election, would step down Friday and turn the Israeli government over to Defense Minister Shimon Pinon, his successor as leader of the ruling labor party. Immigrant policies revised HOUSTON-Emphasizing human rights at home, the Carter administration is shaping new immigration policies that would include amnesty for hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of foreigners (most of them Mexicans) who are illegally living in the United States. The amnesty plan is expected to be one of the more controversial parts of a package of immigration proposals that differ sharply from the policies of previous administrations. Officials involved in drafting the package said last week it would stress humane treatment of the illegal, or undocumented, workers, a crackdown on employers who exploit them and efforts to insure that those suspected of entering the country illegally were afforded their full legal rights. Concorde landing protested NEW YORK-Hundreds of demonstrators opposed to the Concorde supersonic airliner landing in New York staged a noisy "drive-in" protest at Kennedy Airport yesterday, but failed in their pledge to cripple airport operations. Police estimated 600 cars participated in the protest in dozens of a court order, than 4,000 autos that had been probed around roads around the airport. The din from the horn blasting caused by the driver for several miles. Police had promised he would be camera whistler to Nock traffic by the airliner broken down. There were no arrests and no reports of any motorists being ticketed or towed away during the 2% hour demonstration. Screw publisher retrieved KANAS SITY, Kan—Screw magazine publisher Al Goldstein will go on trial today for the second time on charges of mailing obscene publications in Kansas in 1974. Goldstein, his former partner James Buckley and their company, Milky Way Presses, were convicted in Wikestate last June of 12 felony counts of conspiracy and using the mails to send Screw and Smut magazines into the state. They are being tried on the same charges this week but with one important difference—the move of the trial's location, which had been sought by the defense since a Wikestate federal grand jury indicted them in December 1974. The lawyer who moved to New York, where Goldstein lived and where Screw was published and most of its circulation, Kansas City or Topeka was their second choice. Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts 1105 Massachusetts All the Tostados you can eat for $2.00 Opened 6-8 p.m. daily Expires May 30, 1977 Shenanigan's YOU CAN HELP MEND A BROKEN HEART V sponsored by A $ \Phi $ A ; $ \Delta\Sigma\Theta $ ; A $ \Phi\Omega $ When: Tuesday, April 19, 1977 Time: 7:30—12:00 P.M. Price $1.00 Proceeds go to American Heart Assoc. Partially funded by Student Activities. COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES! SONY PS-1100 SEMI-AUTOMATIC STEREO TURNABLE SYSTEM Complete Turntable - Base ·Dustcover ·Cartridge THE TIGER 843-7333 2500 West Sixth $9900 DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT sponsored by KU BRIDGE CLUB Open 'til 9:00 Thursday & Friday Admission $1.00 - Automatic arm return and shut-off - Speed selection for 33% and 45pm records - Statically balanced tonearm - Arm lifting mechanism with viscous damped cueing - Counterweight anti-skating compensation - Magnetic cartridge with diamond stylus included - 45pm adaptor included - Wooden base with walnut grain vinyl exterior, and removable, smoked olastic dust cover April 24, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. in Sign up in SUA office For further info. SUA office 864-3477 Everyone Welcome A Livability Is . . . Central Air Conditioning Front Door Parking • Walk-In Closets • Outside Storage Sheds • All Electric Kitchens TRAILRIDGE Apartments Parlors A and B of Student Union Apartments 724 MASSACHUSETTS 841-2672 RMS ELECTRONICS ENTER DATE a record store audio STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00! RMS ELECTRONICS BETTER DAYS a record store audio Off the Wall Hall 737 New Hampshire presents Willow Wind Mon, April 18 9—12 1 cover WILLOW WIND WILLOW WIND WILLOW WIND WILLOW WIND Registration at SUA office or 9:00 a.m. Saturday at tourney site Heart of America Frisbee Tournament ... Entry Fee: 1.00 Saturday, April 23 O-Zone Field Sponsored by SUA, Miller Brewing Co., Rec. Services. Competition will begin at 10 a.m. Trophies awarded in all events. Everyone Welcome! HEART OF AMERICA FRISBEE CLUB NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS 'The original thick crust pizza from New York' This coupon expires 6/30/17 This crustless pizza is MUST-READ NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. BOTTLE NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Coors Pitchers 95¢ With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th ROAST BEEF DINNER Generous serving of choice top round includes homemade mush potato and homemade crayon and homemade fresh bread, melt adhere from hot pork chop tray. $1.95 Coupon expires April 30, 1977 Reg. $2.50 with this coupon AVONDER WHEEN VRE • ST. LOUIS When do you say Budweiser? □ Now. □ Later. □ All of the above! Actually, anytime's the right time to say Budweiser. And when you do, you've really said it all! [ ] - RING OF BEERS $\textcircled{2}$ * ANNUSER BUCH INC * ST LOUIS All of the abc. Actually, anytime's the right time to say Budweiser. And when you do, you've really said it all! Monday, April 18, 1977 3 all a. m. University Daily Kansan UB Services. Boar 19th R hot homemade hot homemade fresh 195 Reg. $2.50 with this coupon New oil recovery methods could yield an additional 10 billion barrels of oil in Kansas, G. Paul Willincox, professor of chemical and mineral engineering at the University of Kansas, said recently. Willhite said that new tertiary methods would be used to recover oil normally left behind. Tertiary methods involve the induction of chemicals or heat into an oil reservoir. KU program starts oil recovery experiments OnCampus MONTREAL Events TODAY: TONY MANN of Tufts University, Medford, Mass., will speak at "Roots of Pion Production of Very High Energy Collisions" at 4:30 p.m. in 322 of Malotl Hall. ROGER WALKER, guest lecturer from McMaster University, Ontario, will speak on "Sandy Braided Fluid Systems" at 4:30 p.m. in 428 Lindley. TOMORROW: There will be a HUMAN RELATIONS WORKSHOP sponsored by Central Personnel at 1:30 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. There will be a College Assembly STUDENT SUPPER at 5:30 p.m. in the Union's Kansas Room. There will be a luncheon and informal discussion of SOLAR ENERGY from no to 2 o'clock on the Union's Meadowlark Room. There will be One-on-One interviews. Seminar on "BYCLEC MAINTENANCE AND SAFETY" at 4 p.m. in 205 Robinson. TONIGHT: THE KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Kansas University Big and Jayhawk meetings MEETING at 7 in the University Big and Jayhawk meetings MEETING at 7 in the University Big and Jayhawk meetings Proposals and applications for the ALL-UNIVERSITY UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH AWARDS COMPETITION are due by April 26 in 201 Numeraker Center. Applications and additional information can be obtained from the College Honors Office, 201 Numeraker Center, or by calling 864-4223. Grants & Awards "Are You the Type?" POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES, which are joint student and faculty committees that consider questions concerning KU: Libraries Financial Aid Financial Aid Human Relation Foreign Students Human Relations Foreign Students —Calendar PARKING AND TRAFFIC BOARD UNIVERSITY JUDICIARY HEARING BOARD HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union Applications must be returned by Fri., April 29, 1977. You've Got It Maid at Naismith Woman using vacuum cleaner. Your room and private bath will be cleaned polished, and vacuumed, as you like it, once a week! Relax Next Fall-Move to Naismith Hall Private baths-Fully equipped darkroom-Comfortable, carpeted rooms-Heated swimming pool-Good food with unlimited seconds-Lighted parking-Color TV-Close to campus-Many other features 1800 NAISMITH DRIVE LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 913-843-8559 The Tertiary Oil Recovery Project has been established as a cooperative for the Kansas oil industry for research and development of the project's tertiary recovery. The project involves the KU department of chemical and petroleum engineering, the University and the Kansas Geological Survey at KU. Willhite said, "Primary (simple pumping) and secondary (water flooding) methods of oil recovery only produce about 35 per cent of the available oil in a field." Last year, Kanaas, the seventh largest oil-producing state in the nation, showed a 1.3 drop in output. Nearly all of the 58 million barrels produced in Kansas were produced by independent drillers. Willhite said that the oil producers wouldn't be able to increase production without a price increase. "If the price of oil goes down, there won't be any incentive for the producers to make new recovery attempts," he said. The United States consumes about 18 million barrels a day. Kansas" is nearly 60 million barrels would supply the United States with oil for only three days. SUA Presents RARE JAZZ FILMS LOUIE ARMSTRONG rare films of his performances in Denmark and other European countries (1933-1940). These films have never been shown in the U.S. before. CHARLIE "YARDBIRD" PARKER WITH DIZZIE GILLESPIE from the collection of Bob Delflores with host Dick Wright more than two hours of rare footage including films never before shown to U.S. audiences The Downboat Awards—the only known film of Charlie Parker in concert (1953) COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA—rare films of the "Count" in concert (1953) JAMMIN' THE BLUES—with Lester Young and Joe Jones Academy Award Winner (1944) Tuesday, April 19 REDKEN Woodruff Auditorium '1.25 Admission Super Cuts for Guys and Gals only $6.00 Blane's SALON Malls REDKEN Phone 842-1144 Shopping Center BUY ONE SANCHO GET ONE FREE Taco Shell The Sancho is a soft flat tortilla shell filled with Taco meat, lettuce, cheddar cheese, tomatoes, and your choice of sauce. One offer per customer. Unprotected Magnified, you can see record vinyl wearing away With Sound Guard With same magnification. record vinyl above no noise. TACO TICO Offer ends April 24,1977 2340 Iowa Before Sound Guard the only way to prevent your records from wearing out was not to play them. While "pops" "hisses", and other surface noises began making their appearance on your favorite records, high frequency sounds—like violins and flutes—began disappearing. If you've played any record often enough, you've heard the inevitable occur. It wore out. The villain behind this destruction is friction. (If a diamond cuts through steel, you can imagine what a diamond stylus does to vinyl records.) Fortunately, from outer space has come a solution to record degradation. It's called Sound Guard* A by-product of research into dry lubricants for aerospace applications. Sound Guard record preservative puts a microscopically-thin (less than 0.000003)"dry film on records to protect the grooves from damage. Yet, remarkably, it does not degrade fidelity. Independent tests show that Sound Guard preservative maintains full amplitude at all audible frequencies, while at the same time significantly retarding increases in surface noise and harmonic distortion** In other words, when applied according to instructions, a new record treated with Sound Guard preservative and played 100 times sounds the same as one in "mint" condition played the first time! Sound Guard preservative comes in a kit (complete with non-aerosol pump sprayer and velvet buffing pad). It is completely safe and effective for all discs, from precious old 78's to the newest LP's including CD-4's. Recently introduced to audiophiles, Sound Guard preservative is now available in audio and record outlets. while at the same **For complete test results write: Sound Guard, Box 5001, Muncie, Indiana 43702. Sound Guard Record Preservation 2 fl. oz. 500 ml Sound Guard. Record Preservation Kit Sound Guard keeps your good sounds sounding good. $ ^{*} $ Sound Guard is the registered trademark of Ball Corporation for its record preservative. $ ^{*} $ 1976 by Ball Corporation. Ball 4 Mondav. April 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 Jobs or rebates? The prospect of receiving a $50 tax rebate check this summer withered away last week when the Carter administration decided to move plan in its economic-stimulus plan. We can only hope that that is true. President Carter reportedly changed his mind on the subject because he thought the economy would improve enough without the stimulus. The immediate reaction to Carter's change of attitude--among older taxpayers anyway-seemed to be one of, "Aw, it wasn't worth it," and bought one week's worth of groceries." To the college student however, the tax rate brought rays of hope. After all, 80 bucks. CARTER'S AIM when proposing the tax rebates was to give the economy a quick stimulus by handling $1 billion to consumer-minded Americans. One might prefer a larger rebate, per student, but the student who has only summer months in which to earn any income. An investment tax benefit totaling $2 billion also is withdrawn by Carter. As Press Secretary Jody Powe explained last week, "I don't need the one, you don't need the other." It is hoped that Carter substitutes new proposals for the plans he has so suddenly discarded. But it also is hoped that the President doesn't succumb to the wishes of a Senate Republican caucus has called for a permanent tax cut instead. That proposal would enhance purchasing power only through a tax increase, which stimulus that the rebates were designed for. A PERMANENT tax cut also wouldn't bottle customers don't pay any taxes—the poor and elderly. Americans can only hope, therefore, that the Carter administration replaces the tax rebates with something that's been needed much too long now—the creation of jobs. Unemployment in this country has hovered between the 7 and 8 per cent margin too long. Administrations seem to keep coming up with promises and slogans—“Whip Inflation Now” immediately comes to mind—to battle the steady rate of inflation. The recent administration concentrated its spending efforts toward the creation of jobs. THERE are those who content that public service jobs are too temporary and are wasteful because of mismanagement by the city governments that supervise them. A temporary job, however, would be just as quick a stimulus as receiving a $50 tax rebate check. As for the mismanagement part, that's a good problem for the reorganization-minded Carter administration to tackle. President Carter made a sudden decision in scrapping the $50 rebates. Just maybe he'll suddenly decide that jobs were always the better answer. Writers of angry letters to the editor often like to throw in a few shots at an the Kansan's reputation as an "award-winning" college newspaper. The digs usually occur in lines like "I don't know what kind of awards you get," which is an award-wining paper, "I sure hate to see the ophers." As an avid and experienced reader of other college newspapers, I feel fairly secure in saying that most people who scanned such papers would have a higher opinion of the Kanans or at least a lower opinion of college journalism. The Kanans isn't the only good option, but it can be compared favorably with just about any school newspapers we get in the mail. BUT THAT does not justify the adjective "award-winning." For that term to mean anything one has to know something about the award that was won. Any two people can get together, then themselves a committee and give each other an award. The main awards that Kansan degraders (and boasters) refer to are the Associated Collegiate Press' (ACP), All American and Pacemaker awards. The Kansan is awarded by the acedemic-the ACPI's top rating- for the last 15 semesters or so. And it also won a special Pacemaker award, given to the two college Garbage goes to the dogs The Revolution mightn't be caused by the Republican Party, after all. It is entirely possible that a major revolt against the government of the people in the United States be caused by dogs insanis, the crazy canis Lawrence. What has caused so much concern is a letter that was sent today to members of the Lawrence City Commission. The letter, which is probably the work of radical students in California, does deals with what most experts consider the most important problem facing the new city commission. The group, which called itself the Bloody April Boys Movement (BABM) in the letter to the commissioners, warned of action if the city continued to refuse to enforce existence leash USING TECHNIQUES not unfamiliar to the Symbiontes Liberation Army, the group is so strong that several demands that must be met so that the city won't be perilous a potentially perilous situation. Kansan has award-winning habit and confinement laws in Lawrence. Said BABM: "We will execute, in accordance with the sacred rites of the Bloody April Boys Movement, one dog, caught in the act of turning over a tran can, chewing into a has been so much trash in the streets of Lawrence. The problem came about as a result of the inability of the city's sanitation employees to pick up the trash. Despite the help of then-Mayor Barkley Clark, the city employees were Brent Anderson Editorial Writer --- plastic garbage bag, or otherwise cause trouble in this city, until the city of Lawrence enforces the leash and confinement ordinances now in existence. THOUGH THE reaction of the city commissioners to the demands of BABM isn't known at this time, it is clear that the implications discussed about the implications of the demands BABM has made. There is little doubt that the city has been through the most serious trash crisis in its history. What has caused division among the citizens of the city, however, is why there unable to keep up with the garbage. Smith was unsuccessful, however, and the dogs and the trashed continued to rule the city. Then the city had elections, and the make-up of the commission changed. IN A LAST ditch effort to keep the workers caught up with the trash, city worker Dennis Smith and a security guard in city's two trash trucks. Although Smith's doctor had ordered Smith not lift a finger for six months, he sacrificed that time, so that the city might be saved. The new city commission has been in power for only seven days, but we hope they realize that the dogs have the power. When it comes to keeping of the city can only command authority. There is no reason to think that BABM isn't serious in its demands. Not only has it made its demands known but it has shown its ability to enforce those demands. Unless the city is able to control the dogs of this BABM and the dogs will rule. THAT AUTHORITY, regardless of how unimportant or insignificant it may be, is the power of words with groups like BAM. Unless they react, they will most likely have the blight of hundreds of We can only hope that Watson and the city realize that unless we enforce our leash and confinement ordinances, we will be faced with a bad situation. THIS AFTERNOON, the commission met withBuford Watson, our city manager, to discuss management problems and, most likely, to discuss the BABM demands. Individual Kansan staffers have won numerous awards in the William Randolph Hearst prize, and the prizes are given for published news stories, editors, photos, sports stories and features. Editor's Note Jim Bates Although framed certificates on the wall are certainly very nice to look at, their real im- newspapers in the nation, in 1971 and 1975. aren't necessarily the same as the editor or news adviser. Journalism isn't a science, and there are no absolute wrongs. The Kansan has come close to missing an opportunity because he judge didn't like the way we set our outlines, the kind of cartoons we ran or the size of our type. IN GENERAL, then, the Kansan can be considered an award-winning newspaper. And the people who work on the paper are proud of this tradition and want to see it continue. Awards have also been won in the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi, Ministry of Excellence competition. FURTHERMORE, journalism is a competitive field, but it isn't an athletic event. College papers can compete for prizes and envy or degrade the one another, but they can win or lose. are nothing but a guide to point out weaknesses and strengths. They shouldn't be taken too seriously. My general opinion of awards and rating services is that they I will admit, however, that every time I've won an award I've enjoyed it immensely. And I also will admit that I'd love to see the Kansin win another Pacemaker award. Because the Kansan has had a nasty tendency this semester of ruining a fine issue of the paper with one silly mistake (like leaving off the date or writing an inaccurate reply, perhaps they won't win one. But, still, it would look nice on the wall. DAVID-- DON'T BOTHER ME! CAN'T YOU SEE I'M SLAYING GOLIATH! I THINK WE GOOFED ON THE CHECKING ACCOUNT! YOU WHAT!? © 1977 NYT Special Feature Letters We are naive champions To the Editor: They asked who the crazy man was. Delighted that the question was finally asked, I'm moved to respond, even from I don't normally find that much of interest in the pages of the University paper, or the journal someone (like me) of a conservative bent. But my interests have even been sparked to a reply by the most recent ad of Association, a parable in which the Soviet Union was a scheming scoundrel exploiting his good-natured, rich and nainly educated course, us, the States. the depths of my normal, hopelessly conservative attitude of "What difference does it make anyway?" The answer is that we are the crazy men. When I say "we," I don't mean the U.S. government or Carter or Vance, I mean "we." The public opinion. We, who stay silent in the face of this mad policy movement, we do naturelly" allow our goodment to try to appease Russia with "detente." Political crazies cook up recipes The book's main subject was security and international perspectives of crazy or irrational behavior, and ways to detect and prevent it. Because Dror didn't wish to stimulate the thinking process of children, he didn't mention that did not mention the ways in which crazy behavior might be carried out. In 1971, Yehezekel Dror, professor of political science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, published a book entitled "Crazy States." RECENTLY, HOWEVER, an anonymous international terrorist organization (AN-TER) collected various methods concocted by the early, imaginative crazy states. AN-TER published its findings in a book, "The Terrorist," and called it "The Terror." It should be on newsstands by mid-August. We've had readers from as far away as South Africa and the U.S.S.R. write in their own regional variations on this recipe. No one is quite sure where or when the pie originated, but variations of one sort or another have been used for thousands of years. For our "Joy" readers we've simplified the recipe. Only spices are needed to give it an ethnic flavor. Alack, potentially crazy political states, political organizations and individuals were temporarily thwarted in their research for methods of craziness used to reach ideology claims and had to rely on their imaginations. The following are excerpts from "Joy" Readers should keep in mind that, though AN-TER received recipes for terrorism from all over the world, they have a variety of the more illustrious contributors for parts of this release. LAW AND ORDER PIE 1 dictatorial government 1 bushel active political dissidents 1 basket innocent persons vaguely connected with political dissidents (Relatives twice removed will do) Y Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer 1 supply root-control equipment 1 supply torture equipment (ff) (remains twice removed will do) 1. supply riet-control equipment MIX TOGETHER in a country, and let rise. The reaction of the ingredients should produce a catalytic effect. Riots will form, and bombs will ensue. Arrests will occur, and torture will follow. Done when government bolls over and falls. a captivated news media Here's a recipe that's very popular this year in the United States. We've received copies from as far away as Columbia, Mo., and Cincinnati. This particular variation has been adapted by Abdul Khalis, of Washington, D.C. Idi Amin, a noted African leader who uses the recipe frequently, said it worked well only with innocent people. He serves it for dessert. your local store doesn't sell it, try A.L.D. 1 slightly demented individual HOSTAGE BROCHETTE 4-36 innocent bystanders TAKE DEMENTED individual and commit an aggrievance against him. Let simmer slowly until it burns. (Bubbles should form on brain.) Place innocent bystander in a closed area. Unwed mothers' homes are particularly good for this. Enter the individual and 42 caliber pistol. Wait for phone call to news media. Wait for aggrieved individual to negotiate through news media. Wait. Meanwhile, keep scooping it up and giving it to the news media. Serve hot. It provides delightful conversation at cocktail parties. CHOPPED LIVER a la P.L.O. Wait a little longer. Set TNT in an old ice box. Place in crowded area and wait until large group of people congregates. Light fuse and run. 1 large group innocent bystanders preferably children 1 crowded public area The liver is chopped when the explosion is over and the smoke has subsided. Test to see if done by reading next day's newspaper. a long fuse SKYJACK AIRPORT 1 minimal security airport (May we recommend Greece, Turkey or France?) SKV.IACK-APPLES 1 airline corporation (Avoid E! Al and TWA—they are hard to work with.) 1 plane with large gasoline reserve 1 large group innocent passengers 1-4 skijackers with innocent-looking faces, handguns and explosives SLIP SKYJACKERS with explosives and handguns hidden in their clothing past airport security and onto plane. Wait until plane lands to get out. You have skyjackers detain air hosts and hostesses by pulling guns on them. At the beginning of the most recent talks, the irritated Brezhnev "warned" Vance that continued American criticism of Soviet human rights abuses and be it constructive development of relations between the two countries." Demand to speak with pilot. Order him to change course and fly to Antarctica. Wire plane with ex-vehicle. Order order passengers to back of plane. When plane lands, hold its human contents hostage (see second recipe) until demands are met through news media negotiators. Jackie-on-the-Spot Happy Cooking! Food editor, The Morning Flash News Letters Policy Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edified and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed by the editor to provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address. Vance's response? A quick assurance that we will not single out the Soviet Union in what we say about human rights and "that our concerns are universal in nature." Later, after Brezhnov had rejected our proposals, news releases by presidential spokesman Jody Powell "generously" excused the Soviets by saying it is "important to be patient with us." We were not instrumental in forming the basis for further discussion." The parable is clear—at least in the head of a sane man, that Jesus sends to the champions of naivete to believe that the Soviet stockpile of arms, paid for by us (the good people), is easy to way to peace. Mary Maspassan Mary Passman 1246 New Hampshire I must disagree with the stand that Roy Earle took on the Title IX issue in his April 8 letter. Although some of the Title IX requirements may be somewhat unrealistic, if universities are to mahail athletes, women are still entitled to their fair share of the funding. Earle's arguments about who should pay are somewhat illogical. He states that the University should be paying for this rather than having it come from the student activity fee. Everything else would come from the taxpayers of this state? Women need funds To the editor: Earle says that women's athletics can't support themselves; this is probably true, but they don't demand directors recognize this. As such, they don't demand completely equal funding. Instead, they only desire an amount consistent with the developing a competitive women's athletic program. I also believe that his crack about the quality of women's clothing has perhaps Perhiza it isn't as exciting as the men's game (which was of doubtful quality itself this year) is still plenty of competition. Tom Cadden Glenview, Ill., senior Ad deplorable To the editor: And besides, I think Ida Lupino is a fine actress. I am shocked and concerned about an advertisement that I noticed in the Kansan April 13. The University of Michigan (KUAC) is running an advertisement for Sunflower Hostesses for the next academic year. This advertisement is not in compliance with Affirmative Action policy. University policy requires that all correspondence related to employment contain the equal opportunity clause, enforcing gender and minorities to apply. Persons with disabilities also ought to be included in the equal opportunity clause; this is mandated both by federal law and by the dictates of conscience. The advertisement in question contains no such afterthoughts or purposeful conclusion for priority clause. The Hostesses presumably will be acting as representatives of the University and will deal with football recruits and their families. As representatives of the University, they should be recruited and should be chosen from a pool of qualified candidates. I didn't think that the KUAC was beyond the reach of University policy. S I also am concerned that the advertisement is directed at "hostesses," which I take to mean that only women will be considered. Is there any reason why male students also couldn't attend this year's representatives in this regard? Surely being female isn't a bona fide occupational qualification for dealing with football recruits and their families. The question is whether young thing will be more productive in recruiting football players, but surely the KUAC don't expect the pretty young thing to offer additional information would be a bona fide occupational qualification. And if so, the KUAC is engaging in deplorable and reprehensible conduct that appears to the Corporation is in violation of Title IX. I realize, or rather I assume, it was meant to be a joke, but it didn't. Gentlemen, and I use the term losely, please do not repeat this performance. It says more about you than it does about me. Kathy Pruessner Wichita law studen Who's to judge? To the editor: Recently I witnessed something which has left me with a combination of contempt and disgust. I refer to the exhibition of rating females with cue cards by a group of males. That this is an accident should also infantile cannot be argued. It is a tragedy that a University would be the scene of this stundacy. Women are not cattle. Many of them resent being treated as packages of goods or brands of objects to be rated, and judged by their foliolishness is a source of potential senseless hurt to those women not meeting the standards of the “judges.” It behooves us to minimize the hurt in the world, not to add to it. Robert Gorton department of entomology THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Punjab University at the University of Kansas daily August 14th, 2023. Registration is online until June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday from June 7 to August 6. Subscriptions by mail are a $5 fee or $18 a year at a certain county. Student subscriptions are a year at a certain county. Student subscriptions are $18 a year at a certain county. Editor Business Manager Jim Rates Janice Clements bit Monday. April 18. 1977 guide to point and strengths. he taken too however, that on an award intensely. imit that I'd Kansan win r award. man has had a *semester* of the paper (like write or writing) (theadline), the win one. I do look real. SUNY ATMANUEL MINTENGE pecial Features ns which I take to women will be here any reason it also couldn't University in college isn't a bona al qualification with football ir families. The university will be more recruiting football the KUAC really the KUAC he pretty young additional in education fole ode obafication. And if i is engaging in i reprehensible that appears the机场 is in KUAC ny Pruessner mita law student o judge? witnessed someone left me with a contempt and to the exhibition as with cue cards that makes. This is that and absolutely be an audience at a University scene of this not cattle. Many being treated as gods or brands of beasts are rated, and they receive a source of less hurt to those meeting the stance "judges." You omit the minimum the rid, not to add to I rather assume I also be a joke, but it holly poor hissiness too. I do not repeat ice. It says more in it does about orton instructor int of entomology August during the late e. Kan or $18 or $30 are any fee. are its. By PATSLATTERY Sports Writer Softball squad wins Big Eight title The KU softball team put on a bunting demonstration in the final of the Big Eight tournament Saturday night and came away with a victory over defending champion Iowa State. The bunting demonstration came in KU's half of the second innings after pitcher Randy Johnson was struck. Three perfect bails flung the ISU inflict as they committed four throwing errors and lost six in a game. KU catcher Pawlworth scored the trial run of the inning when she reached home. The Jayhawks took advantage of two more ISU errors and scored two runs in the fourth inning. One of the errors came on a turnover on second and third with one out. ISU MADE its only serious threat of the game in the bottom of the seventh. The Cyclones got two runners on base with no outs. After a force out at third the Cyclones scored a run on an error. The error came on—what else—a hunt The rally was cut short by two infield outcets, and KK's victory celebration was on. After the trophy was awarded, KU coach job Sullivan took his team that they could join. "Attitude is a big part of it," he said, "and all 18 of you won this trophy." THE TOURNAMENT won a team the Tournament were some sparkling individuality. Pitzer Shelley Sinclair and centerfielder Pitter Koleber were the stars in KU's opponent game, which ended 12-4. Sinclair hold the Tigers to just two hits in winning her fifth shutout of the season. She struck out four and allowed only one runner to get next first base. Boleer went on a hitting rampage going 2-for-2 and driving in six runs. She drove in two runs with a triple in the fourth inning and connected for a grand slam in the fifth. KU's second round game belonged almost solely to Gloria Graves. She struck out 15 and walked none as the Jayhawks downed Nebraska 2-1 in 10 innings. One goal costs KU title Oklahoma captured the Big Eight Soccer Championship by defeating Michigan 32-2. KU, the defending champions, ended up in third place. Jamie Ruiz, KU forward, scored five goals in the tournament to pace the "We scored 11 goals in the tournament and we had to win. That much cost us the tournament," Marcia KU coach Bernie Mullin expressed disappointment with the final standings. Saturday KU defeated Nebraska 6-0 and Oklahoma State 3-0. KU NEEDED only a tie to advance to the championship game and with 30 seconds remaining in the game, it appeared they had achieved a scoreless tie. Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Day Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT Before the third place consolation game yesterday, Mullen told his team that he had to play like champions to prove they should have been the champions. At that point Oklahoma's offense came alive, put in its first goal and, 1-0. They defeated Colorado, the team that entered the tournament with the best record. and left a total of 12 runners on base in the tournament. They committed only two The final standings were: Oklahoma, Missouri, Kentucky-KState, Oklahoma State, Iowa State GRAVES OPENED up the tenth with a pen and scored the winning run on a basketball. An error on Graves gave the Cormhaskens their only use, so she had her second no-contact. Koleber added to her RBI total when she drew in the winning run against ISU in the 2015 season. The Jayhawks scored 18 runs on 33 hits Final tournament standings were the yawns at a=4, followed by the yawns at a=5, a=6 and a=7. Yawns at a=12 and OU 0-2; Sinclair take her umbrella string intact and graves in now 6-5. The team record boots. The team record boots. Women fourth in meet Rv ANDY RILEY Sports Writer Sheila Calamiese and Charmre Kuhman combined to lead the KU women's track team to a four-place finish in the state contest last weekend in Stillwater. "WE'RE STARTING to show some good team scoring." Lionvale said. "More people are scoring points for us now and we're not saying that we haven't scored in so far this year. The Jayhawk-fourth for the second straight week—were edged out by Wichita State for third place in the final event Saturday. Kansas State ran away with the meet with 138 points. Nebraska was second with 134 points. KU 64. There were 10 teams at the meet. KU coach Tom Lonvale said he was happy with his team's performance and its leadership. "This is the third meet in a row that times have come down significantly and the team is improving as the individual's times are improving." Kuhman won her her second consecutive quarter-mile she ran a 35.6 in the finals to win the U.S. IndyCar Championship. 图 ROOMS FOR RENT Sigma Nu House Air conditioned —Tennis courts —Close to campus —Basketball courts —Larae sudeck —Plenty of parking space Kitchen available —Huge living Fast starts aided her victories in the 100 with a 1.9 and in the 246. Both have scored a 24.6. Both are top scorers at a 246. —Recreation area Two acres of grassy lawn —Quiet study areas —Coed living; Girls top floor; Guys first floor —Two month lease—June = August —'75/month —Weight room 843-5673 —Charcoal grill Call Mrs. Mastin FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Calamse, a junior, has her best meet of season as she won both the 102- and 220- rallies. between 12:30-5:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00 p.m. Sunday, April 24 6:00 p.m. BOTH KUHLMAN and Calamaree ran a leg on the 40-relay team that finished second. They were joined by teammates Kathy Kenney and Jo McMillion. guest speaker... KU Women's Athletics Awards BANQUET Olympic Gold Medal Winner in Women's Discus Participant in Five Olympiads Writer, Lecturer, Leader in Women's Sports OLGA CONNOLLY ALL ARE WELCOME PLEASE MAKE RESERVATIONS BY '2.50 Women Student-Athletes buffet supper tickets *6.00 Parents and Guests THURSDAY, APRIL 21 IN THE Room 6, Allen Field House WOMEN'S ATHLETICS OFFICE University of Kansas The Jayhawks were also impressive in the distance races with Brown taking third in the mile, turning in a personal best of 5:13. Lawrence, Kansas 66045 Bunita Bassa placed fourth in the 100-meter hurdles. And the mile relay team of Connie Lane, McMillion, Jennifer Howe and Kuhman was also fourth. Among the surprises for Lionade were Cindy Salter and Shelly Michelle Brown. Skillman took fourth in the high jump, her highest finish thus far, with a five-foot-effort. Ryden placed in the discus for the first time as she finished sixth with a throw of 149. APRIL'S FOOLE SUNDAY, APRIL 24 at Kansas University Roch Auditorium Reserved seats only! Get your tickets now! AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas TICKETS — Reserved Scores Only $5.75, Limit 10 art: SAx Box Office, KNs' in Lawrence What about dinner tonight? I like all kinds of food, but one I like best . . . Italian, ITALIAN Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park 843-9111 Italian, ITALIAN What do you want from an apartment? 105 Spacious, comfortable living? On campus convenience Free utilities? Then come by and see us at Jayhawker Towers 1603 W. 15th apartments Office hours: 8:30-5:00 M-F 10:00-4:00 Sat. 6. Monday, April 18, 1977 University Daily Kaansan Women's fidelity theme of comic opera 'Cosi' A comical trick to prove women's unfaithfulness to their lovers will be featured in the University Theatre's final performance this year. The University Theatre and the School of Fine Arts will present the opera "Cosi Fani Tutte," by Wolfgang Mozart, at 8 p.m. April 23, 23, and 30. The opera will be performed in English, rather than its original Italian. Stage director Torn Rea said Saturday that the opera is light, funny and easy to understand. The strong element of comedy comes from its use of character names for those who weren't used to opera, he said. IT'S MELODRAMATIC to the point of being ridiculous." Rea said. The title, "Cosi Fan Tutte," has several approximate English translations that reflect the comic theme of infidelity including "Women's Tragedy" and "School Girl" from *Do They All?*. Don Alfonso (Carl Packard, Lawrence graduate), a middle-aged bachelor, summarizes the theme when he says, "Pitting one's trust in women is to fully swerving up the sea, planting seeds in sand, or catching fish." Alfonso bets two young officers, Ferrando (Thomas Harper, Oklahoma City graduate) and Gugeltoff (William Glinklyn, Lawrence University) that he remains a faithful if the men leave for war. THE BET IS accepted, and the men attempt to trick their lovers, Dorabella (Julie McSorley, Lawrence graduate) and Dana Lowe, who are entrusted with advice into being unfaithful. The maid Despina (Nancy Atkins, Lawrence graduate) helps the men carry out the plot. The men conclude that women are women, and in matters of love, they all want to win. George Lawner is music director of the opera. Arts festival begins today LITTLE FEAT, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Uptown Theater, Kansas City, Mo. POPULAR MUSIC concert, Spring Arts Festival, 8.1onight, Hashinger Hall, This Week's Highlights Concerts DANCE CONCERT. Spring Arts Festival. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 6:15 p.m. Thursday Hashinger Hall's annual Spring Arts Festival, featuring both visual and performing arts produced by hall residents, starts today and runs through April 24. CHICK COREA AND RETURN TO FORUM on Wednesday, Memorial Kansas City. A Popular Concert at 8 tonight features ragtime, Broadway and soft rock. At 8 p.m., Tuesday, a musical poetry reading takes place, followed by a musical comedy revue. A dance show at 8 p.m., Wednesday and Thursday features 20th century dancing styles interpreted through YOUTH GOOODWILL MISSION OF THE DANCE, martial arts demonstration, fashion show and painting and calligraphy demonstration, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Union's the theater, where all other events take place. Resident's art work will be displayed all week on the Dance Floor, one flight up from Edgar Lee Masters’ “Spoon River Anthology,” a reader’s theater play, will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday at the Altoona Opera event is a classical music lecture at 1:30 p.m. m Sunday. SYMPHONIC BAND SPRING CON- fliction. Elemnts of the Bands of Symphony Op. 32 by James Barnes and solists incl Bashar Paige, soprano, and Norman Paige, tenor. 8 p.m., Thursday. Admission to "Spoon River Anthology" is 50 cents. All other events are free. BAILES MESTIZOS, a Mexican folk dance company from Topeka with W. K. Gould's *LOS TORITOS*, a touring instrumental group, 8 p.m. Thursday, Hoch Auditorium. Recitals CLEANERS 20% OFF WITH THIS COUPON HILLCREST 925 KNAB KINGSTOWN, 100 WAYS MALLUS 71 W 3200 MAIN OFFICE Please Bring Coupon with Order Good April 18-21 衣架 KATHY KELLER; piano, Student Recital KATHY KELLER; violin, Student Recital FRIEND BIKB, clarinet, Student Recital FRIEND BIKB, cellist, Student Recital Rainbow Kindness "MEN'S WORK," musical comedy, and Bailes Mestizos Bailes Mestizos of Topeka eses MEXICAN FOLKLORIC DANCERS In Concert Featuring other poetry and song, Spring Arts Festival, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Hashineer Hall. 8 p.m. Thursday, Hashineer Hall. MARIACHI INTERNACIONAL Direct from University of Guadalajara, Mexico Thursday, April 21, 1977 Hoch Auditorium 8:00P.M.-Donation $2.50 University of Kansas Presented in part by the Kansas Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts. Tickets at SUA and at the door. Special MISS STREET DELI CHEP SALAD COOKING BOOK 4 kinds of cheese, 3 kinds of meat, your favorite salad dressing and crackers... 1.50 £ Reg. $1.85 Offer expires 4-30-77 VICKI BURKHARD, piano and in-strumental compositions. Student. Recital Series. Women's Recognition Program 827273495494 THE MARINER Lectures "Dimensions of Excellence" Monday, April 18, 1977 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room Kansas Union Speaker: Deanell Tacha Professor of Law "URBAN DESIGN IN THE COM- MUNITY" Meyer R, Wolfe, urban planner and designer, School of Architecture and Urban design lecture series. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Reception following the program.—Everyone is invited to attend! CHARLES BAXTER, poet, SUA Con- temporary Writers Series, 8.p.m. Tuesday, Union University, 10 a.m. Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women. Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee. SOPHOMORES! (Class of'79) Here's your chance! Sign up now for Publicity Social Special Events DEADLINE-FRIDAY, APRIL 29 Committee positions are open to all. Submit names to BOCO office, 1138 Union between 10:30-3:30 "JEWISH LITERATURE," Edward Alexander, department of English lecture series, 8 p.m. Thursday, Union's Forum Room. "THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE HOLOCAUST," Edward Alexander, professor of English at the University of California, p. p.m. Thursday, Union's Forum Room. Films THE OUTLAW—Directed by Howard Hughes, this stars Jane Russell and the controversial bra that Hughes designed for her. Watson's April 18-24 All televised KC Royals baseball games can be seen on our 7" TV screen. Another trip to the Bahamas! M Disc 8-12.15, Cover $1.50 O Peanut Gallery—Reds vs. N Dodgers Ladies Night—Disco 8:12-15 Specials on beer throughout the night 7" TV open 7:00 p.m. Free Disco for everyone 8-12:15 7' TV open 7:00 p.m. Laides Night—Disco 8-12:15 On our 7' TV—Frank Sinatra Special Special Specials on beer throughout the night Live: "Millionaire at Midnight" 9-12:15. 9.20 $Cover Peanut Gallery—NBA Playoffs, 10:30 p.m. Rock & Roll with Roxtar, 9-12:15 Come watch all games on our 7' TV Free 12 noon to 7 p.m. S U Peanut Gallery open 1-10 p.m. for N your sports enjoyment Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Hillcrest Shipping Center 9th & Iowa HASHINGER HALL Extends an invitation to all past Hashinger residents to join the present residents at our Spring Arts Festival. Pops Concert — 8:00 — Theatre Monday, April 18, 1977 More information on posters around campus. STAKE A CLAIM ON ONE OF OUR STEAK SPECIALS STEAK-A-BOB STEAK-A-BOB Served with rice, tossed green salad, rolls & butter. $4.50 Holiday Inn of Lawrence 23rd & Iowa Streets Phone 843-9100 Hearty 12 oz. TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Served with choice of $5.50 potato, cottage cheese or vegetable; tossed salad, rolls & butter. PACIFIC WATER SYSTEMS CO., LTD. SIZZLER SPECIALS MONDAY NIGHT — Ground Beef Dinner for only '1.19I Monday Night Only TUESDAY NIGHT — Steak-A-Bob Dinner for only*1.291 Tuesday Night Only WEDNESDAY NIGHT — Top Sirloin Stoak Dinner for only $2.191 Wednesday Night only Dinners include choice of potato and toast. Specials good from 5 p.m. until closing 1516 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Kansas SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE --- $\Delta \Sigma \Theta$ ; A $ \Phi $ $ \Omega $ ; A $ \Phi $ A Charity Dance For Heart Fund Reduced Pitchers $1.70 Shenanigan's Tuesday, April 19, 1977 7:30-12:00 P.M. Donations $1.00 Advance tickets starting Wednesday Booth 2. Union Proceeds go to American Heart Association Portially funded by Student Activity Fee University Daily Kansan Monday, April 18, 1977 7 residents Festival. eatre teak $5.50 HOTEL *2.19! light only ZZLER STEAK HOUSE KANSAN WANT ADS --time times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional $0.60 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their financial situation. BRIANG ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIREL HALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 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. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS THIS 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 items can be placed in person or be called the UB office business office at 804-8538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special trips from Chicago include a 4-hour trip, $36 per person, other trips with a 4-hour trip, $36 per person, other trips Swarrow Hawk Camp, Loop Route (2 miles north on rugged 10). Tableau, Oklahoma (74464, 9 8665) "Incredibility of the Holocaust" (Nazi mass murder) in a 1938 lecture. University, Washington, Thursday, April 21, 8:00 p.m. Forum Room. Kansas Union. History, English Department. History, 6-21 ENTERTAINMENT Don't miss Willow Wind. OFF THE WALL HALL. 4-18 4-18 FOR RENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 680 sq. ft. available. No group requirements. Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in New Jersey. Call 842-8644 for information. 5-13 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Uluon utilities paid, parking. 843-9579. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, pads, nets, 843-7367. tf Frontier Ridges—short term lease available with study. H heated indoor pool. Flood carpets and with study. H heated indoor pool. Flood carpets. free Sabbie service to KU. For summer school, furnished and unfurried from $139. Calgary, Australia. 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- sions, possible rent reduction for labor. 486-507-9788. 486-507-9788. Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky new, summer accommodations at Gatehouse apartments, contacts on all Gatehouse apartments. CARPET CLEANING STEAMAX. Rent the Pro. 267-290. Enquire for rental calls. Call 5-10 267-290. Make your plant now. Applicators are new growing fast! Go by for a tour and complete the installation. Sublubez-Luxury townhouse, three huge bed- rooms, balcony, fireplace, basement, 841-352-6000, 4-138 Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center, Furnished and unfurnished, laundry facilities, swimming pool office open 7 days a week with a fee of $250. Room rates call either citation 913-292-990 or 913-374-7697. 4-21 Sublease for a bedroom - 1-bedroom apartment, farmhouse Call 841-5844 at 9:00 p.m. 4-18 Wanted two girls to subdue Trillidge Townhouse. $86. Mo plus 1/4 utilities. Call 843-582-1011. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 604-325-980 or stop by 16th. 15th. House 803-320-30. Monday thru Friday at 7:45. Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid, on rent. 1920 sq ft. $750 per month. 1920 sq. $750 per month. 849 - 693 or come in 212-232-7395. 1 new bedroom apartment built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 847-296-4000. 2-bedroom apartment 2. blocks from Union, $165 plus utilities. #433-7038. Available immediately. BURLEASE. 2 bedroom newly built apartment. 60' x 120' space. Wet, dry and warm proof on this route. Phone 843-298-5898. Address: 764 North Avenue, New York, NY 10022. ROSAKAYA HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 61058. The hotel has a spacious infinity pool and come for a week with breakfast (value: $340), or come for two nights with breakfast (value: $720). Sublease for summer. 2-bedroom apartment. 5-21, 5-23, 5-24, 5-25, 5-29, 5-31, 5-32, 5-643, before 9, after 5. 4-21 4-22 Individual rooms for rent immediately, for summer fall/coo operation, food program, free laundry utilities included in economical rent $84.5 average) 3 blocks from campus. Call Laura 842-459-8260 Apartment to sublease. Close to campus. June- August. Call 8413-5625 after 4:00 p.m. Discount on summer sublease of one-bedroom Meadbrookway apartment, pool, amenities, 4-20 June-Aug. 15 (lease expires), 2 bedrooms, unfurnished apartment, A/C; B/S/m². Call: 620-398-4700. HEADQUARTERS for 2-bedroom apartment $140 per plow, plus elec after 5 p.m. (843-8331) 4-21 Imported Auto Parts Foreign Auto Parts JAMES GANG 843-8080 304 Locust Sublease 3-bedroom apartment, furnished, central air, $165 plus utilities. Call 841-6054 - 621 Sublease for summer - 2 bedroom apartment Cash. Call 842-8510. Keep trying. 4-21 Sublease June 1 to August 1, nine 4-5 bedroom house, close to campus. 843-510-34 4-19 Nice 2-dedroom apartment 10 rooms, walk to nice of campus $475.175. Call 843-642-863 +21 +21 Mark I and II apartments for summer and fall occupancy. Two separate, full apartment (car or regular) dormal drapes and wallpaper; two double-door storage facilities 7 minute walk in Strook, 14-acre lot with 4-5 bedroom townehouse, with 2 baths, pool, tennis courts, and reasonable rent. Call 843-648-4292 4-429 Sublease for summer. Two bedroom unfurnished quarantine room. Rent to rent call. Fall 841-690-1 dormitorio. To rent to rent fall. Call 841-690-1 MOHLE HOME RENTALS. We offer 1, 2, and 3 bedroom units off an street parked, swimming pool, free pool pickup, storm shelter, laundry room, Master's Water's Home Homes. 3409 W 6h. 842-7300. 829 Summer sublease, two bedrooms partly furnished to campus and township. $110; *Call* 482-204-8692. Summer subway, 1 bedroom apartment, furnished. AC, near campus. Call 841-517-9880. Excellent condition, condition two-hydrogen, air-condition, dimmable light, non-switching non-luce call 841-741-2635 Sublease over summer, Traitiance 2 bedroom apartments (call John at 1-800-457-3921) 1-469-1687 4-428 Sublease 1 bedroom apartment through July 31. Lease term 5 years, payment June 1. $1700 + GST. Room rates payable by 8/31. $425 per month. FOR SALE Sublease for summer-furnished 2-bedroom aquatil. Call 841-301-00 for 2 p.m. 4-298 841-301-00 Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization. Makes sense to know about Western Civilization, including duration. 3. For Exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Topeka Books. Alternator, starter, and generator. Speakal BELL AUTO ELECTRIC, 3409-3609, 5000-W ELECTRIC, 3409-3609, 5000-W We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, and tape recorders at Audio Systems, 5th floor. Pioneer XS62 receiver -$105, $130 or truck deck Pioneer XS62 large selection of tapes -4 bites 811-2500, 811-2518, 811-2538, 4-18 HP 35 calculator like new, only $80. Please call Mike, 542-2584. 4-19 10 speed sprint motorized bike, low mileage, many features, high-end grade equipment, hold transducers, $100; $83-144, evening hours. Craig Canette Tannere recorders buy out to $25 from Craig Canette. Tannere recorders buy out to $25 from Kirk Showbush, 92nd St. Mass. Open Air Tunnels, 400 West 12th St., Mass. Set of four new 135w 13x steel belts radially only for the 750mm ROHM motor. With radial only the 920mm ROHM motor. Open Port 8 w 4-25 mm. Final cut on C.B. Radiúz and Antenna's Sonne Station. From S.A. Radiúz 929 Mass. opened, till 8:35, Ray Stoneback 929 Mass. opened, till 8:35. RADIAL THE CLEARANCE, 145 x 15 x 158 mm. PET. MOUNTING and installing available. Hay mounting available. PET. MOUNTING and installing available. Hay brand new staircase amp. 110 watt, RMS, mantis spec just verified by B25. 842-9399, evening Hurley Davidson 250, 1000 ml, just tinted medium mold, 3200, 842-999, eurexpress 4-18 Color TV 20 inches, good condition only $130, passive cassette records $20, call Layton 4-20 ADW. AEd 620 cassette player. Only one month needs to be installed. Call 811-435-6000 Michael 4-20 4-20 RAY AUDIO. The Lattie M stereo store, now has a wide range of audio equipment that it will surprise you expectations. At 18 ¥95.00. Call (866) 723-3222. 1975 Yamaha Enduro 400, excellent shape 3500 4-18m. Call 642-5263 JVC staircase center deck $200 complete with furniture will cost for $75. 811-2002. 4-20 or call for savings. 1973 Mazda RX-5 XL Only $22,000 miles, AM-FM air pickup truck, 4x4. Sell for $28,695. Sell for $28,695. Bid for $28,695. Sying clearance base. B. and C. o Turbulent model 600 amp; D. o Turbulent model 1500 amp; a. Power amplifier DATP S-9 preshp kits. 700 Cass. Deck. Cassin 681 and 714 receiver. 13. E. 681. Little Stereo Store With A Big Magnifying Glass. Technics SA-3250 Am-Fm receiver. 30 watts功率 station. Built-in in excellent condition. 20 channels. 16-bit/12-bit A/D. Thoreau TD 165 C burnt in Hammond with Stainton 841EE 175 C. Dave at 841-236-9000 4-20 Old books 1067-1933 mostly architectural design, building, construction-furniture design-Funk and Wagnall Dictionary 8 to 2499 Hardcover 8 for $1.00 Cave savings 843- 4892 4-19 1964 Crayon, 8 cyl. 3 speed.机械高效机械盘,$200 or best offer. 842-5472. 4-20 4-20 Eyelooker Optical sell or trade, skyline mobile home. 40 foot aloft- air walk-in closet. 650 sq ft. trade or trade for good pickup. Call 843-2891 after a few days to receive quotes. Lidwig Pro-Bat演床 set w/cases, excellent call, call 872-169-7158 4-20 DRUM SFT FOR BALE Loudwire drum and zildjian bass at Lawrence Music Center, music studio, and rehearsal space. CLASSICAL GUIFAR CLEARANCE SALE, on Alvarer Valver classics. Loaded with a lifetime guarantee. Act now and get a free $70 case also. Lawrence Music Centre 6th and Hood Island. Located 1-420-235-8000. 82 Ramacher, 3 ap., 6 cyl., good shape! $275. 841- 7248 after, 6 pcm. 4-21 1976 Firebird Electric, every available option, Firebird Electric, light blue with honeycomb 442.90789. http://www.battery-electric.com 1709 Honda SL-350. Good condition. $475. 841- 1850 4-21 1977 W V Selloise, only 5000 miles, alf, leather Interior, Michelin tires. Reasonable price. 4-21 Pocket walletch (Cirau 1904)-810 Tum. 841- 5270 or leave message. 811-6044 4-21 1976 Monte Carlo, maroon with white Landau vinyl roof. Maroon interior with swerten window and gilt-fronted doors. 15,000 square feet, super shary 30 day guarantee. Price negotiable, please call 843-727-807 between 7-10 p.m. (Saturday) to place an order. Mobile home, 1751 Blush House, 23668 2 bedroom furnished, fire alarm, furnished, airfridge, dried down, must sell, 841-2460 furnished, airfridge, drying space, 841-2460 172. Chevrolet Impala 4D, PS, PB, AC. Very clean. Must sell. Cali 864-984-0984. 5-421 BALLOON RIDES.-Make a date to fly the skier on a balloon ride. See BALLOONS. *commercial commercial pilot* BALLOONS 72 Pintie good condition, low mileage $1,100, best offer - 841-3798. 4-21 70 Karran, Ghia Convertible, 4-speed, 28 mp3 mp3 Converter. Call 81-453-2299 for call. Cell Call 81-453-2299 during daylight hours. Volunteer Clearing House is selling T-Shirts for $25 each. Available in adults and children sizes. Includes 100% white cotton shirt -red letters saying, "Volunteer Clearing House," and 100% black cotton shirt -green letters saying, "Order at 114 B. Kansas Union, 843-369-3890." Pennsanion AM-FM w/tunable, speakers, $100 or best offer; hf-181-5390 4-22 Acoustic guitar with pickup Great shape, only 4-20 Mills w/Tawei M51, *M59*, *M88* 1975 Buffalo Frontier "360" Burger Worsks w/NEW pint, new piston, real fast. 130 Tennessean. For more info call (212) 428-5000. 2. Penguin for sale. Excellent condition. $85 hr-$45 per month. Call: 945-1039-1089. 4-22 Flat 72, 128 green, good condition, tape, 841-3614 after 5 p.m. 4-20 Must sell 72 pickup. Good condition. Best offer call Dip. 841-203 anytime. 4-22 Camera, Petri PT 35 mm, SLR, S-Famm 1.3-1.8 lens, exposure meter, haze filter, sun shade 4-12mm. Honda 360CB, New 5-20-75, windshield and backrest. p. 841-8055 *** Lawrence teacher must sell 1374 mobile home 64 x 14; 2 bedrooms, this carpeted, fenced yawn house with a master bath. All appliances and washer and dryer. Anchored and roofed. Call 8-6 p.m. (512) 323-8000. 323-8000, #1252 4-29 10-speed Metoblee (Super-Miraga) . In excel. Use only a month and a half. 4-656 . In excel. 4- 422 Unicycle, $60. Best the best. Never used. Sells now over $60. Will sell for $45 for BMW 814-3236. Fender Mutang Electric guitar and earpiece. Good condition, must sell. Call 842-6700. 4-20 HELP WANTED FORTRAN PROGRAMMERS—two 1/2-¾ positions available. One position will be held in the library, the other will be concerned with non-statistical application and writing, documenting new programs, assisting in maintenance of the university's research work, and newly enrolled student at University of Kansas with undergraduate degree (or other HSI large scale system); experience working on a well-developed program area; ability to communicate. Desired Qualifications: Bachelor's degree; knowledge of statistics; assembly language HALF AS MUCH **STUDENT CLEER TYPET.** Responsibilities include: reception, typing district data, maintainer copy, documentation. Please and help/allow to effectively interact with other staff. Work 3-4 hours each afternoon, and occasional Saturday morning, and enrollment of currently enrolled student at the University of Kansas Computer Center, Summerfield, Akron, Ohio. Elder, University of Kansas Computer Center IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. **4-18** Aven open territory in Lawrence, even if you don't have the world records. Their profitability is world famous. Are they worth it? No, they're not. - Imported Clothing Selected Secondhand SUMMER JOB 108: Forest service. How where, when to apply? Call 727 Book 727, Muster 96889. Phone: (342) 525-1234. Goods • Vintage Clothing Full and part time fountain and cashier work. Special services: Via Restaurant, 125 W. 6th B. 4-20 - Furniture - Antiques 7308 Mass. 841-7070 Director--PRINTING SERVICE director, University of Kansas Printing Department, Kansas City, Md. help support with annual volume about 12 million and 60 million pages annually. Proven modern management systems for sultimating print operations must have 3 years experience in management, control, and cost analysis. Must have 3 years experience in management, control, and cost analysis. Must be 25 years degree in printing plant management degree in printing plant management degree. Send application to Dr. Russell Milke, KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, UKM is a state认可 opportunity affirmative action employer. Qualified men and women of all races are encouraged. 4-18 Student architect/engineer wanted to produce space and working drawings for energy saving home from our ideas. Knowledge of poured, prefabricated steel, Call before you arrive 1-866-431-2511 1-866-431-2510 4-18 LIPKEUARDAS-Johnson County firm has several full time summer positioners for permanent positions. WSI preferred. Send application to A.S.L. 8433 Qulvira LD Renxus K6215 or call 1-848-833-4093 4-19 The all new Apple Valley Farm of Lawrence is now taking applications for both full and part-time positions in the farm business in person at 901 Indiana between 9 and 5. This affords an excellent opportunity to enjoy a comfortable employment. 30 hr. week Thurs. through Sat. Secretary and Assistant to Director of new firm for gallery openings. Supervise artists interested in working with the public as receivers, interns, and volunteers. Desired, but most important the desire to learn about our work, and to understand the importance of 825-999) after 4 p.m. Send 3 references and resume to P. O'Brien 332 Lawn, Lawyers Ave. Summer employment (part time during school) if desired. Work with a company to create advertising, HR and company transportation from front bench. Req's bachelor's degree in commerce through June Will train, shaper and Company, RPID 3. Bott 4.19 - July 15 Hotels, fine area restaurant and club, prefer over 21st, past time, evenings, available summer. 4-22 LOST AND FOUND Lost-Silver bracelet with Tiger Eyes stone. Please call 841-508 or 842-469. 4-18 int class F.C.C. ticket holder for part-time. Send recruite to Lee Yazell Zoo X280 Topkappa. 60044 Found on the west bank of Pond's Pore 4/8 a girl in a christian necklace. Identify 4/16 Lost—somewhere on campus multi multicolored change packet. Please contact us at 842-6742 if found. **4-20** **电话:** 842-6742 if found. Gold initial necklace found on Mass. St. Initial on necklace is "B." Call Mass at 864-203-4. 4-19 Found 1 pair of gold glasses in black case. Call 841-2634 4-19 round a watch at Cordley Grade School. Satur- day, the basketball courts call 843-7631 and identifies Late-Prescription glasses in brown case. Last Wine: I can't see a case. Please room. Tom, 844 Lace: I can't see a case. Please room. Tom, 844 Last over month ago, red notebook in Wescoe. Very important. Call Melissa. 814-3771. 4-21 Found—Suit of 3 knees on a leg, sidewalk beside Ribbon Gym Call 864-3170 and claim them. NOTICE Wash Shop, 620 Mass. used furniture, clothes, clock televisions. Open daily 12pm-8p. 638-2577 KARATE. Learn the ancient secrets of this martial art, which has been used for physical conditioning and learn self defense. Gear included: karate pads, karate socks, karate shoes, karate gloves, karate sticks, karate belt, karate apron, karate shoes, karate socks, karate glove Graduate student seeks domicile for KU summer session. If you are leaving Lawrence for the summer, live near campus, and would like to move in an apartment in gym room. Call 1-432-589-600. 4-18 Pier1 imports associate perr YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 16.5 Moon Sat Till 8 on Thursday Charity Dance—American Heart Association—Sheenigan's highest percentage from living group wins two kegs Tuesday April 19-Donatella and a couple advanced tickets on Union Booth 2 Save our Children (From Anita Bryant) Inc. Gay Services Meeting, April 19, 2014, p.m., int'l room of Union Guest speaker in Gery Young with the Women's Refuge Association to anti-gay backlash across the country. 4-18 ARTTUEGE AND COLLECTORS SHOW AND BANK ADMINISTRATION Hours 11am to 9pm $0.00 Bank Admission $0.00 Tickets 11am to 9pm $0.00 Graduates plan now for car and gown photos Graduates plan now for car and gown photos bald-faced #4 - 84 - 32798 bald-faced #4 - 84 - 32798 5 - 10 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 6 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8 a.m. Mass. PERSONAL Gay Counselling Service. Call 842-7505, 8:12 p.m. for referrals. For socializing activities, call 842-7505. Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of destructive drinking addition. For help or info, N82-019 or 82-024. PEACE COPIES AND VISTA are looking for vistas you'll be interested in receiving. You're year-round drop by the KUVC, 190 Union Ave., Biorhythm charcted. Scientifically based技术, incorporating emotional control and physical movement-making, emotional control and physical planning of your 1927 biorhythm, and your vocal envelopes to 1734 Engel gd # 323, Lawrence envelope to 1734 Engel gd # 323, Lawrence ANYONE can become a Universal Life Church Minister—even athletes! Legally perform marriages or on behalf of a parent or tenant (Now over 25,000 tax-exempt ULC members nationwide) did not delay—become a member of the credentials of Ministry, send $3 and a self-addressed stamp envelope to Rev T. Miller of the National Association for the Caregiving of Ministry. Heart Fund Night-Shenamian 2kg highest percentage insurance package 2 kg of insurance 4-19 10-PICKERS 1.5kg RELAY PARTICIPANTS BEWARE BEN WILL BE THERE. 4-19 You can needd a broken heart of Shearengamn Charles Woolley $170 Pilchers Pichery $1.70 4-18 Hornburch, have a high time with #2. Happy Birthday! Love your blue-eyed cup. 4-18 ENJOY LIFE Experience Spoon River Ambul- ート Theatre 24, 24 8 p.m Hobart- ート Theatre 4-22 Jennifer B. The Fire hues Are they sweet? Love DB. 4-18 SERVICES OFFERED Math tutoring, computer repair, apprenticeship tutors test preparation. 150 students in the 197 math tutoring class and 150 students in the 187 math tutoring class. Test preparation. Math test preparation. Math test preparation. STEREO BROKEN BROKEN | amplifiers, turntable, tape decks | Preventive Maintenance Customizations | Customization TV's, stereos, and radio-repaired. Most mkters have 100+ TVs. Pine's in Detroit, 110, Connecticut, 843-647-5755. www.mktersd.com 1 correct spelling and grammar and improve writing skills; discussations; interviews; thorax before 6 p.m. 4-20 Need a resume done professionally, confidentially? Call Kathy 842-8015 4-20 has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS ARMHVILLE BEAD CO. NOW IN THE STREET MARKETPLACE 841.7946 M-S 10:5:30 (Thurs) 8:00 843-9891 "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 19th & 8th Restaurants Vista TYPING: Lynn 843-8756 or 842-6658. 72c file. ff Open daily in 14 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 2 f 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th 745 New Hampshire in THE MARKET PLACE WANTED Experienced typist—term paper, tissue mask, cardiac monitoring, spilling epiphenyl, 863-904-5644 Mr. Wright ... Typist editor, IBM Pica/cite. Quality work. Designer, Dissertation. distributions welcome. Mail: 442-3192. MH-1234. Will you type your paper with PCL. TLM papers and papers with 400-sheet format 411-329 841-170, evening and weekends. Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for 864-3431 days, 864-8285 evening and weekends. Wide experience law paper, thesis, discussions. Quality manual, accessible, amenable. Fees: $10.00 Mileage 842-9724. $15.00 Fees: $20.00 Home of The Chalk Hawk No hands—just good typing of lower than averaged wrist size—more shortest of deadlines. Harvey, a 10-year-old, can type much better. Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen Soudad Sklar TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf Experienced typist, call-term paper, thesis, etc. or elite type. Call-terminus 842, 768-273. 4-21 Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts Male graduate student seeking female formal, college education. *Excellent communication* *Diaryctic* 1982 *Street Lincoln*, Nebraska. *Attention: All applicants* THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Ubick's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us handle $83 Manhattan cash or phone 842-7884. Thank you. 846 Illinois Female roommate for summer and/or fall, only 4 to entire summer. Jayhawk床位 4-18 NAISMITH HALL House wanted to rent for summer. Call Brian, 842-0790. 4-26 Our broken heart, shattered hearts. Shami-Neel $170, proceeds to give American Heart Association programs to children in need. Female roommate needed to share apartment for phone 671-5642. Located near KU MD. Cent. Phone 671-5642. & Crafts 841-3522 Female roommate needed for summer. Owl room. West Hills. Must be straight. Call 212-345-7890. Female to share apartment for fall and spring winters; student non-smoker- not preferred 4-20 Female roommate wanted to share apartment next year. Prefer upper class, non-smoker. Male roommate for roomy, furniture home until July 1. 75plus $ plus utilities 842-3233 4-21 Onyx, wood and bone chess sets available Female to share comfortable two-bedroom house, yard, AC $100 monthly 841-7478, 843-5158, LIFE SHARE $129.95 per month The Chalk Hawk Roommate needed thru summer 2 bed dorm room in school 3 bed dorm room in school 80 plus utilities 282-820 4-19 843-7685 SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES SERVE AWARDED - Ping Pong TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Pinball - Pool - Snooker - Ping "A different kind of bar The Lounge 9th and Iowa Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl A different kind of sigh "featuring seclusion and quiet." - Pool PLETE SELECTION OF BEF' COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcress Bowl - Bud on Tap - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foee Ball Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted --sell your unwanted items with a classified in WHY NOT the UDK 8 Monday, April 18, 1977 University Dally Kausan Baseball team batters cyclones By JASON NUSS Sports Writer The Kansas Jayhawks used last-lining heroics and good pitching to defeat the Iowa State Cyclones three out of four games this weekend at Quigley Field. Brian Moyer's two-out two-run homer in game one Friday gave the Jaahwys a 43-victory. In the nighttime, Terry Sutcliffe dug out nine hits as the Hawks won, 7-1. Lee Ice was the hero Saturday. Ice's two-out single scored Moyer with the winning run from second. Dave Rusch allowed two hits in his fourth win of the season. In the series finale, the Cyclones picked in their only win, defeating KU, 4-1. "We took three out of four, and that's what we were looking for." KU coach Floyd Temple said. "We would have to win." The game was difficult to win four games from anybody in our conference." The Jayhawks were in danger of losing game one, trailing the Cyclones. 3,2 with two out in the seventh. But shortstop Jeff Kendricks was on the stage for Moyer's dramatic home run. "I was looking for a fast ball, and he gave me one right over the plate." Moyer said. "I thought it was weird." Left-bander Brian Rhodes picked up the win, his second in three decisions. KU was in complete control in Friday's nightcap, jumping to a 2-1 lead in the first imminent Carl Heinrich's third home run of the season. Freshman Terry Sutcliffe allowed a leadoff infield single to John Crivaro, then set the Cyclones down without a hit the rest of the way. But Sucilie, 4-1, was bothered with control problems throughout the contest. The Cyclones scored first in Saturday's opener on Greg Foley's run-scoring double in the second inning. KU tied the score in the sixth with a single by Andy Glmore and a double by Heinrich. KU starter Rush set the Cyclones down in order in the seventh with the score still In KU's half of the seventh, Moyer walked with one out and stole second. Ron MacDonald filed to center for out number two, which brought飞 to the plate. Ice, KU's leading hitter, drilled a fly bail over the right field's header. Moyer scored on an early drive by KU. "I wasn't really worried about losing," Irusch, 4-2, said. He had he said "Pudley" (Brian Moyer) was coming up, and that he followed him, which he walked, and then Ice came through." Iowa state jumped to KU starter Clay Christiansen for three quick runs in the last few minutes. 3577 The major concern of this study is what can be done to help students gain the awareness whether college students give warning signals in advance or just suddenly give warnings. A ecological view is presented, as well as a sociological view by Durkheim and Weisman. This, and 5,000 other unusually relevant research papers are described as above in our new 1977 mail-order catalog. Send $1 to: Pacific Research, P.O. Box 5043-F2, Seattle, WA 80189. Weekend Sports Roundup Backup QB injured second-string quarterback Bainthek suffered a broken bone in his left hand during practice last week and his return to spring football drills is questionable. Bethke, a transfer from Mount San Antonio Junior College, broke this third metacarpel when it struck against a defender's helmet. Bethke, who is right-handed, may still be able to throw to receivers in practice. Golfers in triangular The KU men's golf team will host Nebraska and Kansas State in a triangular meet at Alvamar Hills golf course tomorrow. The Jayhawks' last action was in the Great Plains Invitational in Wichita. They finished eight out of 14 teams, behind both Nebraska and Kansas State. Ruggers finish third THE NATURE AND CAUSES OF SUICIDE AMONG COLLEGE STUDENTS The Jayhawks were the surprise team in the two-day round robin tournament that won the regular season title. The KU Rugby Club finished third in the national tournament. Roundtown played in Epping that week. The Jayhawks lost to K-State, 14-6, in the first game Sunday and then Emporia edged KU, 12-9, in a hard-fought battle for second place. Baseball Standings Today's Games Toronto (L曼克cyk 1-1) at New York (Figueros 0-1). AMERICAN LEAGUE Syracuse (9-0) at Boston Jenkins 11-11, 11-mm. Minnesota (6-0) at Kansas City (12-5), 7-0. Milwaukee (6-0) at Kansas City (12-5), 7-0. A 10-9 victory over Wichita State in the second round enabled the Jayhawks to climb into the winner's bracket and gave Kansas a first-round championship before K-State ended their bid. Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat-Sun.Mat. 2:30 Women netters 2nd Individual titles by Mary Stauffer and Marlene Cook paced the KU women's tennis team to a second place finish in the Big Ten tournament this weekend at Lincoln. Neb. "THE KU opened the tournament with a flair as it trounced Benedictine, 49-7. Intelligent, Engaging 1st Class Entertainment ART CARNEY LILY TOMLIN George Segal & Jane Fonda "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE' Staffer won the No. 3 singles title, and faucher cooked the No. 5 crown. Carrie Chicago 4, New York 9 Boston 4, Detroit 10 Boston 3, Boston 3 Minnesota 5, Oklahoma 8 Baltimore 2, Baltimore 2 Dallas 6, Denver 5 p.m. Cleveland (Doha 0-0) at Baltimore (May 0-1). 6:30 p.m. Yesterday's Results Granada Tel. 532-640-7890 www.granada.com The University of Nebraska, the host school, won the meet with 18 points. KU and Oklahoma State tied for second with 16 points. LATE SHOW Elc. 1700 & 9:30 Sat Sun Mar 205 Daily Deals Fotopoulos, No. 1 singles, and Tracy Spellman, No. 4 singles, both lost in the finals of their respective brackets. W L Pot. GB 3 7 154 Cleveland 4 3 271 Cincinnati 4 3 268 Baltimore 3 4 429 Houston 3 5 308 New York 3 5 308 KU's men's tennis team won a rain-ain- dation Friday afternoon, defending Mu- sica Wouters. Tennis squad wins 10 Academy Award Nominations Mark Hosking, Jeff Thomas, Mats Hosking improved all won as KU's record improved to 105. Robert Shaw—Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" W L Ft. GB Chicago 7 3 700 Dakarland 7 3 700 Kansas 7 3 489 Texas 4 3 571 Minnesota 4 3 376 California 4 3 417 Colorado 4 3 417 "ROCKY" "BLACK SUNDAY" PG *Starring* YLVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7;30 & 9;45 Sat.-Fun. 1:45 Hillcrest Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat. Sun at 2:30 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped underwater. Varsity DIEKLE ... September 16, 2015 AIRPORT Eve. 7:40 & 9:50 Sat. Sun. 1:55 The Sundance Kid —Plus— Mash Hillcrest Sunset Visit us at sunset.com. More on Sunset.com. Concerts for Young People, Inc. in cooperation with SUA presents the HARTFORD BALLET in a one hour performance SUNDAY, MAY 1, 3 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE K. U. Student tickets in advance at the door K. U. Student Fickers in advance at SUA Box Office $2.00 Children 1.00 Adults 2.50 Michael Stanley Band STAGE PASS Agora Entertainment "It happened on a cold October night in Cleveland—where thousands of devoted fans braved whirlwind rain to line up for The Michael Stanley Band's sold-out engagement at the Agora Ballroom. They came in soaked. And they went home thoroughly drained. Because The Michael Stanley Band put on the kind of show that rock devotees anticipate—and even dream about—for years. This is it. "Stagepass." The Michael Stanley Band recorded live, in a specially-priced two-record set. On Eileen Records and Tapes. Produced by The Michael Stanley Band, Bill Szymczyk, Allan Blazek, and Ed Mashal for Pandora Productions Ltd." "Stagepass." It will get you anywhere you want to go. AVAILABLE AT KIEF'S RECORDS and Stereo Supplies, Inc. Holiday Plaza Center—25th and Iowa SUA FILMS SALT OF THE EARTH (1954) Dir. Herbert Biberman. Mon., April 18, 7:30 p.m., 75c RARE JAZZ FILMS Over two hours of rare jazz films from the collection of Bob de Flores. With host Armick Wright. Featureting Louis Armrick, Charlie Parker, Count Basie and his orchestra. Tues. April 19, 7:30 a.m., 8:125 HANDS UP! Dir. Clarence Badger with Raymond Griffin, Classical Film Series. Wed. April 27; 7:30 pm. 75c ECSTACY(1933) Dir. Gustav Machafy, with Hedy Lamarr. Complete, uncut, uncensored plus THE OUTLAW (1943) Dir. Howard Hughes with Jane Russell, Walter Huston. Film Society. THE STORY OF ADELE H. Popular Films Series. Fri, April 21 & Sat, April 23, 3:00, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., $1 MIDNIGHT COWBOY Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight. plus PAGE MISS GLORY Art Deco cartoon by Tex Avery. Midnight Movies. Fri, April 22 & Sat, April 23, 12:00 midnight, $1 Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Place on ad Call 864-4358 GET INVOLVED IN UNIVERSITY GOVERNMENT 5 Student Positions Available for Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board: The Memorial Corporation Board of Directors is a 36 member board composed of students, University and Union admini- drators, alumni, and faculty. Its purpose is to determine financial and operational policy for all facces of the Kansas Union. While the board itself meets approximately five times a year, involvement in Union governance is only limited by the board member's initiative. Applications must be returned by Thursday, April 21, 1977 Vista RESTAURANTS Chef Salad Lettuce, Tomato, Cheese, Ham, Eggs, Crackers •MONDAY •TUESDAY •WEDNESDAY 139 Reg. 1.60 Vista RESTAURANTS Leftoe, Tomato, Cheese, Ham, Eggs, Crackers Q: Chill-Lagering is: THE DEAN OF BEER'S QUICKIE QUIZ. a) A popular German country and western singer. b) A Scandinavian winter sport played without clothes. c) A new ethnic TV comedy about the owner of an ice cube factory. d) The right urge to see how d) The right way to age beer. A: (d) Sorry, Chill-Lagering is not Olga and Svend running around in a snowstorm in their birthday suits. Chill-Lagering is the way Schlitz ages beer. They age it cold. Very cold. Down to 29.5 degrees. The result is a beer with sparkling clarity. A beer that's crisp, clean and bright. I suggest you look into one right now. TOM SEE Schlitz Campus Rep. 843-3058 SCHULTZ THERE'S JUST ONE FOR BEER. AND YOU KNOW IT. Siglinda Steinfüller Dean of Beer THE DEA OF BEER HUD grants enable local owners to upgrade homes By JANE PIPER Staff Renorter npus Ruth Estelle, 67, worries that her grandchildren could get electrocuted by the wiring in her house at 629 N. Fourth St. Because of the lack of adequate outlets, extension cords run through several upstairs bedrooms and plug into a single outlet in the living room. Several blocks away, water stains line Victoria Wright's kitchen ceiling at 418 Elm St. Both women will have their troubles solved within a couple of weeks. They have two of 35 houses that will be fixed to meet Lawrence's minimum housing code with community development grants. THE HOUSING rehabilitation grants of up to 85,000 a house are administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to Lawrence's community development department. For many families that meet income guidelines and live in one of the city's target area neighborhoods—north, east, far east or Pinkney—the grants are a way to return to decent living conditions. "It's a great program," Estelle said recently. "I really appreciate what they've done for me because I couldn't have done it." In addition to getting new wiring, her house was covered with new siding, which replaced the original siding damaged when the Kansas River flooded in 1926. The house also has windows will help cut down her $80 a month winter gas bills. HER HOPES are echeoded by Ron Marsh and Gene Shaughnessy, rehabilitation specialists of the community development department. Under their direction, the housing rehabilitation program has expanded in recent months and is now awaiting $215,000 in federal funds. According to Shaughnessy, the houses are being fixed in five main areas-plumbing, electrical wiring, heating, foundation structure and roof. We will meet the code before the money is spent elsewhere. "Basically, what we want to do is make these houses safe, sanitary and decent," he said. "We work hard on the projects." IF ANY OF the initial $6,500 ($5,000 under the first book) is left after the first steps, it will be used for "continuing" reading. ting, bathroom fixtures, paneling or perhaps new appliances. "We use the money where it is needed and try to cover as much of the area as we can," Brent McFall, temporary community development director, said. He said the purpose of the grants was to make the funds available. Muriel Puts, 333 Elm St., moved back into her home last week after it was renovated. "It was just unbelievable—you couldn't imagine the change," she said. HER HOME of 32 years received new floors, wiring, plumbing, ceilings and other improvements. Donations from the community, her church and friends enabled workmen to go beyond the $5,000 grant limit and install carpeting, paneling and new bathroom fixtures. "Her's was really a community project," Marsh said. Marsh said that high on the list of the grant program's priorities was an attempt to remedy high utility bills. Furnaces, insulation and storm windows are installed when needed. "TD STAND by the window when it was cold out and just feel the air blowing in." Wright said. The record-low temperatures of last winter placed a heavy burden on families with limited locoons. Wright's house in north Lawrence, where most of the work is now being done, will receive a new roof, furnace, storm windows, doors, plumbing and paint before workmen finish in about two weeks. She said she had applied for the grant at the urging of neighbors, even though she didn't think she would The grants are for owner-occupants (of at least one year of single-family houses only). They may be used only to bring the houses up to minimum city standards. McFall said. Some applicants work through the neighborhood associations, but most approach the city in-person. IN ADDITION, the house must be in one of the target neighborhoods and the owner must meet income guidelines. For example, after certain adjustments, a family of two isn't eligible if they earn more than $5,760 and a family of four can't earn more than $6,910. Eligible families are then put on a waiting list which becomes shorter in recent months. "It's set up on a first come, first serve basis." Shaughnessy said. The community development department makes the initial inspection of the property, determines what needs to be done, helps the applicant to select a contractor and oversees the construction work. "OUR BIGGEST problem is the money." Marsh said. "We're really limited." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY The private contractors are usually used on a bit basis, Marsh said, but the applicant can choose a flat surface. RAIN Federally backed three per cent loans are also available from the community development department for more extensive housing rehabilitation in the four target neighborhoods. There are no income restrictions on persons applying for the loans, which can be for as much as $17,400. Both Marsh and Shaughnessy are contractors and they often negotiate lower prices within the grant limits. The actual construction work usually takes less than a month. KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Tuesday, April 19. 1977 See story page eight Collector hunts rare jazz films Women's sports increases sought By JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Renorter The University of Kansas will request additional funds for the women's intercollegiate athletic program for fiscal year 2015 to executive vice chancellor, said last night. The amount of additional funding and its priority in the fiscal 1970 budget requests will be determined from a separate basis. He said these decisions would be made during the next three weeks as requests for the trip to Japan are finished. The budget must be submitted to the Kansas Board of Regents by June 1 The University now provides about $120,000 to the women's program. The Student Senate provides the program fee and allocates the allocation from the student activity fee. HOWEVER, LAST week the Senate passed a resolution stating it wouldn't fund the women's program after this year. The resolution stated that funding of women's intercollegiate athletics should be the availability of the University, not the Senate. SHAKENL SAID that it would be difficult to determine budget priorities now and that the final decisions on priorities would be made by Chancellor Archie Dykes before he presented the budget requests to the Regents. Speaking to the Senate last week, Steve Leben, student body president, said passage of the resolution would serve notice to the University that the Senate would no longer be responsible for funding the women's program. He also said the University should continue its efforts to insure passage of the request by the Regents and the Kansas Legislature. He said it would be difficult to rank Forms for staff now available Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansan are available in 105 Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, 875 Fifth Avenue, or the offices of the deans of men and women. Summer and fall editors and business managers will interview candidates next Monday and Tuesday. Interview sign-up will be posted outside 111 and 141 Flint Hall. Positions are on open on both the news and business staff. Applications must be turned in by Wednesday. Nation asked to sacrifice to meet energy challenge funding for the women's program a high-priority item because the University must consider other special programs, such as improvised library and recreational services. "WE'RE TAKING about a lot more than $54,405," she said. "That not the budget I felt we needed for this year or next year. We拿来 much more than that to be competitive." Marian Washington, women's athletic director, and it would be a challenge to the team in front of the state championship. She also said she would explore every possible avenue to find additional funding. One possibility would be the Senate's reconsidering its policy if the administration doesn't provide the additional funds. She said she understood the Senate's position and hoped the Senate and administration would both be responsible for the program. IF THAT amendment passes, a Senate majority vote must before Jan. 1 would restore the program's funding. After Jan. 1 a two-tails vote would be needed to restore the funding. Leben, however, doubted either would happen. Leben said the Senate would consider at its May 4 meeting an amendment to change the Revenue Code by withdrawing the women's block allocation. CARTER WARNED that the nation's oil and gas supplies are running out and that reservoirs in other parts of the world won't be able to supply the demand for more than a few years longer. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Jimmy Carter asked the nation Monday night to make sacrifices and support what be called his painful, unpopular programs to conserve energy because "the alternative may be a national catastrophe." "It would be very difficult for us to reintroduce funding," he said. "If we don't say no to the program at some point we would have to fund it infinitely." Washington said another possibility would be more alumni donations, although it would not be enough. "It's so hard to get ourselves established. But that I'm not sure we're solid enough to ask for advice." "With the exception of preventing war," Carter said in a television address, "this is the greatest challenge our country will face during our lifetimes. The energy crisis has not yet overwhelmed us, but it will if we do not act quickly." SHE SAID THAT without the funds the program surely would decline. He said his energy proposals "will cause you to put up with inconveniences and to make sacrifices. Many of these proposals will be unmacular." A draft of White House proposals obtained by the press showed that Carter was seriously considering a 'standby' gasoline range as high as 50 cenders a gallon, taxes ranging from $2,000 to $2,500 on gas-guzzling automobiles and price hikes on oil and natural gas in general. "Unless it's decided we should no longer be competitive there is no way we could supply everything we need. We'll have to do it." The client will have to be cut," Washington said. Jill Grubaugh, student senator and member of the Women's Intercollegiate Athletics Advisory board, was upset with the Senate's handling of the resolution. However, he stressed, the energy crisis will "get worse every day until we act." "THE SENATE really rushed this through," she said. "I asked them to send this to the Sports Committee for more study and discussion. That's why we have the committee structure. At least we could have studied the resolution before voting on it." Leben explained to the Senate last week that the resolution needed to be voted on by the administration would have time to be implemented in its budget requests for next year. "We must be fair," he said. "Our solutions must ask equal sacrifices from every region, every class of people, every interest group. Industry will have to do its part to conserve, just as consumers will. The energy producers deserve fair treatment, but we will not let the oil companies profiter." CARTER DECLINED to unveil the details of his program. He plans to do that when he addresses Congress on Wednesday. Instead, he cited specific goals to be achieved and the principles used to formulate his program. [Blank image] Enticina dance Staff photos by GEORGE MILLENER Dressed in a home-made bellydancing costume, Janet Powell, Lawrence graduate student, teaches a bellydancing class every Thursday night in the Lawrence Community Building basement. Some of Powell's students, about half of whom are KU students, claim they bled-dance because it's good exercise. See story page three. Survey to be used in library budget request By SUSAN HUME Staff Renarter Administrators at the University of Kansas intend to use a recent survey that indicates a need for improvement in the library system to compile next year's budget, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday. The survey, conducted by Wallace Johnson, associate professor of East Asian studies, was completed by 322 KU students. Of those, 41% were students that 200 of the respondents were students. SHANKEL SAID that the problem of a shortage of materials would be partly alleviated by a "reasonable" addition of $189,000 to the library acquisition budget for JOHNSON SAID last week that he decided last semester to conduct the survey because he thought many people at KU were affected by shortcomings in Watson Shankel said that although the University was already aware of library problems, the survey would be additional evidence to regulators ("the crucial needs of our library." The second major complaint, made by 203 respondents, was that too many books were written about the topic. "This problem is not unique to KU," "The library is simply inadequate in everything at once." Johnson said. "A university is a library, and it ought to be doing more to serve the students." The problem most commonly cited in the survey was a lack of needed books and journals. A lack was cited by 211 of the 322 respondents to the survey. Shankel said, "High acquisition costs and inflation rates are hitting everyone." Requested money for additional student help in the libraries hasn't been granted by the Board. The need for more student assistants is the reason the library isn't open more hours, according to Jim Ranz, dean of the library. MOST BIG EIGHT schools' libraries are open an average of 100 hours a week, Ranz said, but Watson is only 86 hours a week. "Library not open sufficient hours" was marked by 171 respondents to the survey as a problem. It was the third most common Shankel said that the need for more student wages had been given high priority in recent years' budget requests to the legislature, along with requests for other staff additions, more list acquisition money and capital improvements. "SOME YEARS back, for several years, the library wasn't getting the share of resources it should have had, and it fell badly behind," Shankel said. "But for several years now we're really tired to catch it up. The Board of Regents, the governor and many legislators are more aware now of the problems in the library system, Shankel said. But because of a limited supply of books, the library also faces "wrestling with priorities," the library still isn't getting as much money as it could use. Concern about the library has increased since the latest report by the North Central Library. See LIBRARY page eight Indecision stalls school finance bill By DEENA KERBOW Staff Renorter Two members of a House-Senate conference committee considering Kansas public school finance questioned last night whether the Kansas Legislature could agree on a compromise school finance plan this session. According to Kansas law, if the legislature fails to pass a finance plan the state will be required to increase next year's school budget finance to 105 per cent of this year's—a change that would automatically increase property taxes. "THERE'S LITTLE agreement at the moment between the Senate and House Committees on the job." One committee member, State Sen. Jack Steinerg, D-Kansas City, said the finance plan bill probably won't receive final legislative action this year. committee was pretty well deadlocked when we convened." "There's been no attempt by the Senate to sit down and really work it to what we can do." Another committee member, State Rep. Daryan Sandy, R-Wichita, said, "You'll have to talk to the Kansas Senate about how much we want to help their version of the bill with no changes. "WE'RE IN A world of hurt because we have no school finance plan," he said. "We could be in serious problems as far as armor is concerned, but we are distracted, abilities suffer on their own shows." "If senators refuse to reach an agreement, simply by the act of refusal they will not be able to work." Duncan agreed that the Senate and House weren't near a compromise on the bill and that it probably wouldn't receive final action this session. Duncan explained that the standing law requiring an increase to 105 per cent in operating costs also includes a higher Local Effort Rate (LER), the method of determining property taxes. A higher LER means higher property taxes. He said that the proposed House version of the bill would set the LER at 1.77, which translates into about $44.5 million in property taxes. About $49 million in property taxes would be required under the 105 per cent increase. DUNCAN SAID the property tax portion of school SAIDing was figured by multiplying the LER by the district wealth that from the total school finance budget. "And the state kicks in the rest," he said. However, he said a mistake made in the governor's budget would prohibit the state from contributing in case no decision is See FINANCE page three 2 Tuesday, April 19, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Classes resume, talks stall KANSA CITY, Mo.—Classes resumed yesterday at junior high schools for the first time since a teacher strike began 25 days ago, but there were no indications that the teachers would return. A school district spokesman said the district wouldn't negotiate with the Kansas City Federation of Teachers until striking teachers returned to work. said. "The district is going by that. Don't we feel as if we have any other choice?" Judge Lewis Clymer of Jackson County Circuit Court has ordered teachers to end the strike, which is illegal in Missouri where state law prohibits public employees from striking. The judge also ordered the school district to resume contract negotiations. Norman Hudson, president of the teachers union, has said the strike could end sometime this week if the school board resumes negotiations and cancels the teacher certification. Black-rule talks approved SALIBURY—Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith won a mandate from his ruling all-white party yesterday to negotiate for black majority rule, but a guerrilla leader called for stepped-up fighting and said the only settlement would come through a bazooka. In Angola, Rhodesian nationalists joined African leaders to plan strategy against the white regime. Nearly 500 members of Smith's Rhodesian Front party, at an emergency congress in Salbury, passed two resolutions calling on the prime minister to seek a political solution to the nation's racial conflict but to stand by the party's principles. 5 The party congress accepts the need for a settlement and urges government to insure that the rights of all communities are meaningfully guaranteed, 6 the first Smith said that the resolutions passed by an overwhelming majority and that his party had given him a free hand in peace negotiations. Bennett operation 'easy' TOPEKA—Gov. Robert Bennett was reported recuperating satisfactorily yesterday for 2½ hours of surgery for removal of a kidney stone the size of a James McClure, a Topaek urologist who performed the surgery on Bennett 'kidney', said the operation went smoothly. He said the stone "came out well". The urologist did not need to repeat the procedure. "It was more or less a routine kidney stone operation," McClure said at an afternoon news conference. The governor was expected to be able to resume signing bills and attending to correspondence within three or four days, McChure said. He said Bennett would be able to attend at the state capitol. Soviet backs Mideast rights MOSCOW—Soviet Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev welcomed Syrian President Hafez Assel daily after a declaration that all states and peoples in the Middle East, including the Israelis, have a right to independence and a secure existence. Speaking at a Kremni banquet in Assad's honor, Brezhnev said the Soviet Union favored a new session of Middle East peace talks in Geneva with the Palestine government. "We are for the unconditional return to Syria and the other victims of aggression of their age-old lands seized by Israel," Breznev said. "Equally there can be no lasting peace that would flush the vital interests of any state or people in the Middle East. *This refers, above all, to the Arab Palestinian people . . . (and) also to the other peoples of the region including the area of the state of Israel. They all have the same language.* *They are the most important population group in the world.* 'Roots' wins special Pulitzer NEW YORK - A Texas newspaper, The Luffin News, has won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for public service. Alex Haley won a special award for his book "Roots." The Lufkin award was for the paper's investigation into the death of a Marine at a San Diego training camp. Acel Moore and Wendell Rawls Jr., of the Philadelphia Inquirer, were named winners of the Special Local Report Award for their investigation into a Pennsylvania institution for the criminally insane that showed the facility "had been a place of murder, brutality, falsified medical records and corruption." Walter Mears, of the Associated Press, won the award for national reporting for his coverage under deadline pressure of last year's 32 presidential primaries and the Democratic primary. Shenanigan's YOU CAN HELP MEND A BROKEN HEART sponsored by When: Tuesday, April 19, 1977 Time: 7:30-12:00 P.M. Price $1.00 Proceeds go to American Heart Assoc. Partially funded by Student Activities. "Are You the Type?" POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES, which are joint student and faculty committees that consider questions concerning KU: —Libraries —Human Relations —Foreign Students - Financial Aid - Human Relations Libraries Financial Aid —Calendar —Financial Aid PARKING AND TRAFFIC BOARD UNIVERSITY JUDICIARY HEARING BOARD HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3. Kansas Union Applications must be returned by Fri., April 29, 1977. Report suggests cut in postal deliveries WASHINGTON (AP) — Mail deliveries should be cut back to five days a week and taxpayer subsidies of the Postal Service increased, but even these actions won't keep postal rates from soaring, a federal study commission said yesterday. The commission said the first-class rate could be "held" to around 22 cents by 1985 if reduced deliveries and higher taxpayer subsidies were adopted. The rate was 6 cents in 1971 when the Postal Service was established. The Commission on Postal Service said mailing a first class letter would cost about 28 cents by 1985 if mail service continues on its present course. delivering the mail would go up rapidly no matter what the Postal Service did. THE REPORT is expected to set off a debate in Congress on what to do about the defect-ridden Postal Service. There has been considerable opposition in Congress to previous suggestions to eliminate Saturday delivery or to increase subsidies. The commission told Congress and President Jimmy Carter that the cost of The commission said public opinion surveys that it had ordered found "that the public is willing to forego some postal services and increase its demands and limit congressional approval." The commission found 'the public generally satisfied with the Postal Service but concluded that the service faced a crisis of future' if it continued on its present course. Work to begin in summer on satellite union tunnel A 400-foot-long tunnel carrying heating pipes from the new University of Kansas School of Law building to the proposed satellite student union will be laid this summer, even though construction on the union will not have begun. Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning for the Lawrence campus, said last week that about half the length of the tunnel would be under law school grounds and that the other section would be under satellite union grounds. The law building, located northwest of Allen Field House, is scheduled for completion June 7. Construction on the satellite union, which will be just south of the law building, will start in late summer or early fall. An earlier construction plan called for digging the tunnel in two sections. The section under law school grounds would be excavated and the construction of the law school was under way. built when construction started on the satellite union. The remaining section would have been Instead, KU's office of facilities planning decided to dig the entire tunnel at once. Lawton said construction would be easier to handle under one contract. In the next few weeks, Lawton said, the service drive at the law school site will get a vehicle from the construction team, making it usable until construction is complete, relatively inexpensive covering will be torn up where the tunnel crosses the. The entire drive will remain in the concrete asphalt when the tunnel is finished. Original plans for tearing up the road during tunnel construction called for tearing out both layers of covering. Because of new terms in the contract, KU will get a credit voucher for not putting the surface on now. "We decided to take a rebate on the top coat for now," Lawton said. "We're working it out in a different manner, but it'll accomplish the same things." GET INVOLVED IN UNIVERSITY GOVERNMENT 5 Student Positions Available for Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board: The Memorial Corporation Board of Directors is a 36 member board composed of students, University and Union administrators, alumni, and faculty. its purpose is to determine financial and operational policy for all facets of the Kansas Union. While the board itself meets approximately five times a year, involvement in Union governance is only limited by the board member's initiative. Applications available at Student Senate Office. Applications must be returned to Senate Office by Thursday, April 21, 1977 SUA Presents RARE JAZZ FILMS from the collection of Bob Deflores with host Dick Wright more than two hours of rare footage including films never before shown to U.S. audiences LOUIE ARMSTRONG- rare films of his performances in Denmark and other European countries (1933-1940). These films have never been shown in the U.S. before. CHARLIE "YARDBIRD" PARKER WITH DIZZIE GILLESPIE COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA—rare films of the "Count" in concert (1953) The Downbeat Awards-the only known film of Charlie Parker in concert (1953) Academy Award Winner (1944) JAMMIN' THE BLUES—with Lester Young and Joe Jones Tuesday, April 19 Woodruff Auditorium $1.25 Admission Carter urges Congress to kill 15 water projects WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Jimmy Carter said yesterday that Congress should kill 15 water projects and cut funding for the National Park Service, money and help preserve the environment He also urged Congress to delete funding for three additional projects, but said he might recommend full or partial funding for them after further analysis. The President recommended full funding for the two real estate projects that had been on his "bit list." Congress has the final say over how much money each project gets. Stuart Eizentzat, Carter placed 30 of the projects on the list last month, saying they should be reviewed to ensure they meet requirements for environmentally unsound. Members of Congress in whose states they are located have indicated their support. THE TWO KANSAS project, at Grove Lake and HILLEHILL Lake, were among those that received grant funding. Carter urges delay The standards are "tough but fair" and wouldn't reduce fuel mileage, Douglas Costle, Environmental Protection Agency administrator, said. WASHINGTON--The Carter administration recommended yesterday a one- to three-year delay in enforcing automobile emissions standards. However, in a statement from Detroit, General Motors Chairman Thomas Murphy called the standards "unnecessarily drastic," and said that they "can only result in more gasoline consumption on the very day the President will be calling for less." the President's domestic policy adviser, declined to say whether Carter would veto any projects Congress funds against his recommendation. IN ANNOUNCING his decisions, Carter also urged "major policy reforms" in dam safety, project evaluation standards, cost sharing with beneficiaries of the projects, water conservation and the use of dams, reservoirs and waterways to create jobs. The project will help others. Carter said he didn't intend to stop reviewing the nation's water policies and the state's environmental laws. Longshoremen return to jobs; talks to begin The announcement came as the wage committee of the union met to consider proposals from the seven shippers who were affected by the strike of about 35,000 longshoremen on East and Gulf coast ports. Gleason made the announcement after U.S. Department of Labor officials agreed to establish the Federal Mine Commission and the National Labor Relations Board in an effort to settle areas of disagreement which the longshoremen's association claims have cost union workers thousands of jobs. NEW YORK (AP) — Longshoremen enden their strike against major shipping lines and will return to their jobs today, International Longshoremen's Association President Thomas W. Gleason said yesterday. There Is a difference!!! 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Tuesday, April 19, 1977 3 ects policy adviser, tter would veto ids against his visions, Carter informs” in dam standards, cost of the projects, of the dams, of jobs, unintend to stop policies and men obs;gin ooremen ended shiping lines obs today, Inns Association Gleason said as the wage to consider who papers who were about 35,000ulf coast ports.incarment afterofficials agreedthe Military Industrial Laborto settle areaslongshoremen'sunion workers TIES! wetter a sign Also made here made in the air for two in quality and sound and made massess only have high frame heightage and price to a service the 7000 are motion in new car time to drive to park and audio behind you experience will then will you to ring free -2672 -2672 Bellydancer teaches exercise, feminity By RICK THAEMERT Staff Reporter The enchanting beauty and fluid grace of the Arabic heroine, Shechezahara, is difficult to recruit inside four bare walls in her small basement. But Janet Powell is try- Powell, a Lawrence graduate student, teaches two belydancing classes in that they practice the grace and bertage of the dance, as well as fascinating, often misunderstood. Her ornamented finger cymbals clink to the bongo-laden Arabic music. Her body, too, is in harmony with the music as she is dressed in a pair of slikers like dizzyingly rapid shimmers. "Middle Eastern dancing (as professionals call it) runs the gamut; its power." Powell said. "It makes you feel greedy, and it makes you feel feminine." MODELING HER bellydancing costume, including flowing gold silk and lace, she is a red-haired Cleopatra. There are no jewels in her naval, no bells on her toes, but the hundreds of gold coins tinkling around her hips sound her every move. She said, many bldyendants found it a way to trim down and stay fit because it uses every part of the body and demands physical temperance. Powell is smooth, light-footed and extremely nimble as she demonstrates the tance to her students each Thursday evening. However, no matter how unrestrained her movements, her head remains perfectly Two beginning bellydancers, Shelly Wasson and Lucy Whidley, Topeka freshmen, said they liked the dance because it felt fun. "I wouldn't have given would give them to 'sparkle open,'" "THE DANCE IS just an inherent exercise," Powell said. Powell said the dance unfortunately is often associated with slackness and low self-esteem. She said the dance originated in the Middle East as a ritual during pregnancy. Many of the dance steps, such as the shimmy, hip thrust, stomach undulation, pelvic roll and dancing on the knees, were muscle exercises that made childbirth easier. Today, because of the sexual revolution, such terms probably contribute to the negative sexual image the dance evokes, she said. Even the traditional "bare stomach" costume of the bellydance was at one time considered immoral in this country, Powell said. "THE SHIMMY can really look gross if the posture isn't good." Powell said. Lazy belydancers who do the dance incorrectly form the reputation of the dance, she said. She explained that there usually were three sections to a bellydance: a gay, fast section that portrays love for life by approaching members of the audience; a slower section that offers a more serious look at life and features floorwork, or dancing on the knees, back or stomach, and another more lively section. "TRADITIONALLY, and according to the experts, the dancer should enter with the veil on during a full performance," Powell said, wrapping herself in the opaque, white fabric. "The veil is an extension of the body," she said. "It can look like something floating." Powell said that interest in bellydancing was growing and that people were becoming more professional-minded about it. "I'm surprised Arabic music hasn't caught on more in the United States," she said. "Arabic music is lyrical, it hands-on and interactive." And with your soul's "Powell said the driving rhythms and floating meiodes provided an excellent background for anyone to express themselves." Because the dance originated in the Middle East—once considered the crossroads of the world—she said the dance today was a melange of cultures and dance ideas, including folk steps, ballet and modern dance. Many types of people show an interest in the classes, including blacks, Oriental, whites, the young and the old. About one-third of the class are University of Kansas students. KU Police said that the lock on the door to the room had been broken since last Tuesday night and that the department of security around the buildings had planned to fix the lock yesterday. Some men even beldance professionally, she said, although there isn't much demand for them except in the big cities. POWELL SAID she could even foresee that become popular among men, a Drafting tools and equipment valued at $470 were taken from a room in Marvin Hall sometime between 5:30 and 9 p.m. Saturday. Because the lock was broken, police watched and checked the room periodically. They found it undisturbed during a check at 9 p.m. and returned at 9 p.m. and found it ransacked. Drafting tools taken Police have made no arrests. Local man charged with drug violations A Lawrence man has been charged with possession of heroin and marjuana in connection with a traffic violation early Saturday morning. KU Police arrested Terence Mode, 2401 w. 25th St., when he ran a stop sign at Missouri Zone parking lot. When police searched Mode's found bags of heroin and marijuana. Mode was taken to the Douglas County jail. Lawrence police dropped the firecracker. Mode posted a $15,775 bond and is scheduled for arraignment April 22. Duncan said, though, that the Senate's attempts to lower the LER had been extreme and definitely wouldn't be approved by the House. Finance ... Casual or Dress . . . Busken Sandals Brown with a tiered crepe sole 14.95 Horizon A dressy strap in brown 24.95 Peggy Cotton Low heels in rope or leather 14.95-15.95 Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CLAD M.C.OX shoes 813 Mass • 843-2091 Horizon "STEINEGER proposed that we add another $10 million to $13 million in new state money," he said. "Apparently the good senator is unaware of where that state money comes from, because that's tax money too." From page one made by the legislature and the standing 105 per cent increase is adopted. For Peggy He said Steingeron had not offered a method or financing other than new state money, but he said he would take action. "The mood in the House," he said, "is to do anything you want within reason to that bill, as long as you put only $8 million in new state money into it." DUNCAN SAID the host probably would agree to other Senate requests on the bill. "If I lower your property taxes $100 and increase your income taxes $100, I fail to that that's any kind of relief," he said, referring to money at a different time of the year. Duncan said the taxpayer eventually would pay the difference, even if not in cash. Cotton master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Your BANKAMERICARO welcome here master charge THE INTERNAL CARO mCoX shoes Duncan said he would agree to a Senate amendment to restrict school districts from switching money from general funds to capital funds. If a legislative decision isn't made on the school finance bill this year, Duncan said, the state will have to do something. Timetables for the summer session will be available during final examinations, Mt. Berman said, "The school boards say, 'We'd like to give you an increase, but we don't have the money—we shifted a large budget to digital improvements for bricks and marbles.'" State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, said the school districts' ability to shift money from one fund to another upset teachers. "Those 44 are the real problem," he said, "because they're stealing money out of general funds when they have the ability to raise it locally." "Teacher contracts could be delayed until May," he said. He said the switching wasn't necessary because each district had authority to levy fees. HE SAID THAT 140 districts in Kansas levy nearly the maximum amount allowed and that 114 levied about one-half of that amount, he said, 44 districts make no levy, at all. Enrollment for summer classes will be June 10, although enrollment in classes starting after June 18 can be done on the first day the class meets. second will start July 9 and end August 6, and the regular eight-week session begins Before last summer, there was one continuous session. The system was changed to add more flexibility in training and shorter intensive study classes. Open house to focus on alumni services KU has increased the number of courses to see whether students need the wider selection in the summer. Ralph Christopherson is an academic for academic affairs, said yesterday. Advocates of shorter summer sessions said that some classes could be taught better if they met for a longer time each day but for fewer weeks. He said summer enrollment would be equal to or more than last summer's because of the "modest expansion in the program." THIS SUMMER, the first shortened session will start June 13 and end July 9; the CHIRISTOFFERSON also said summer school was set up to be as flexible as possible. As with last summer's session, students had a week session and two four-week sessions. May graduates will have a chance to get an inside look at the KU Alumni Association at Senior Open House from 2 to 5 p.m. on Thursday in room 403 of the Kansas Union. More courses and a flexible scheduling system will be offered in this year'ssummer program at the university. KU plans expansion in summer session The open house is an attempt to give May graduates an opportunity to learn about the services of the Alumni Association, B. J. The director of the association, said recently, Persons attending the open house will receive free memos and refreshments. You're graduating. What happens then? What happens to all the people you knew in school? What happens to all the groups and activities you were involved in? Where do all the graduates from the Class of 77 go? There's a way to stay in touch. not just with the past, but with the present and future as well. Find out now* The University of Kansas Alumni Association invites all recent graduates and seniors to with and future as Open House Wednesday and Thursday Stop by, have some refreshments and pick up your free KU memorabilia. Meet the people, find out how they help you stay in touch, find out about the activities and programs they coordinate, learn about the services they offer. Your Alumni Association Friend raisers 4 Tuesday, April 19, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessary affect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism The sky is falling After more than five years of hesitation, oil company commercials and farcies like former President Nixon's "Project Independence," the United States is finally going to consider adopting an energy program. Last night, President Jimmy Carter tried to prepare the nation for the storm that will inevitably come when he announces his energy program tomorrow. Rumor and news leaks have it that the program will include more than 10 percent of the sizeable increase in gasoline taxes; more use of that pollution-prone energy source, and a large tax on big cars. IN WHAT some are calling his "The Sky is Falling" speech, President Carter tried again and again to get the American people to realize than the harsh measures he will propose are necessary. He talked about the need for sacrifice, shortage and about the need for sacrifice. The question is: Did anyone believe him? Polls indicate that most Americans believe that finding new sources of oil and natural gas—not conservation—is the solution to the energy crisis. They also increasingly believe that there really isn't an energy crisis, except one artificially created by the big oil companies and the Arabs. Carter is not a charismatic speaker. He was not telling people what they wanted to hear. It is far from certain that his Monday was able to sway these people's opinions. AFTER ALL, this is America, and this is the 20th century. This is the land of plenty, and this is the age of miracle technology. People are accustomed to having a lot of everything and more of it all the time. Progress just keeps coming, and science has come up with ways to solve problems. The only problems we have seem to come from growing too fast. And this President has the nerve to tell us that we must conserve? and gasoline prices comparable to those paid in other lands? What gall! Yes, these people are very likely to not believe Carter's whole Monday night talk and are likely to scream bloody murder when they hear what he has to say tomorrow. AND A lot of politicians are going to be screaming bloody murder along with them. A whole lot of them. Enough, in fact, that it isn't that difficult to envision a long and heated session of Capital Hill tooth-pulling and political-infighting that won't end until the energy crisis becomes an energy disaster and the whole thing crumps down around our heads. But such, one supposes, are the risks one takes in a democracy. But it is easier—and a lot better for one's sleep—to take a more optimistic view. A view that figures there will be changes and compromises in the plan, but that the people who will realize this is a very important game they are playing and will act accordingly. THAT THEY will disagree on solutions, but agree on the problem and the lack of time. Gasoline prices are artificially low, and keeping them that way will cut our collective neck. Something—a big tax, deregulation or rationing—must be done. Nuclear power is not a miracle solution. The supply of uranium is far too limited to ever make fission plants an important energy source, and fusion plants are easy prey for terrorists. Solar power and wind power are still in primitive stages of development, with little time to grow. Coal is comparatively plentiful, but pollutes. Things—incentives or government programs—must be done to make the most of all of them. AMERICANS are still wasting energy in their cars and homes. Something—taxes, regulations or tax incentives—must be done to make them conserve. The form of an energy program is debatable. Its necessity is not. It was disappointing, but not very surprising, to learn last fall that the federal Office of Education will render Kansas' beneficial new student loan program virtually useless for next fall's The case is a classic example of federal mismanagement. In February, Gov. Rob Bennett sent a letter to the state Education to approve a Minnesota nonprofit foundation as the administrator of $23 million in student loans in Kansas. In August, the governor wooed into guaranteeing student loans made by commercial banks and lending money to students refused loans — all at no cost to the state. Federal mess stalls fall loans LAST WEEK, Bennett signed in law legislation that established a state guaranteed priority for education in the organization, the Higher Education Assistance Foundation. But it was to no avail. The Office of Education has no position on the foundation, and financial aid officials in Kansas have been left to speculate that the request "has been sitting on somebody's desk" for years, weeks and weeks." By preactinating this way, the Office of Education has blocked the way for an estimated $10 million increase in the amount of guaranteed student loans available to Kansas students next semester. The state that new money provided by the Minnesota foundation will be available in October—three months after it can be of any use in Kansas. THERE IS no plan for deferred payment of tuition funds in Kansas. In other words, you have to pay at enrollment in August simply won't be a student. Money in October won't be of much use. Officials of the Minnesota foundation say they will pay the number of Kansas students receiving loans would more than double under the new state law. Education has slimmed shut the door to new, easily accessible funds for those students. The Office of Education's action—or lack of it—would be understandable if it had been necessary to spend a lot of time sured student loans. The loans aren't very profitable, and there is a lot of messy paperwork because of the federal connection. The result is that banks often Jerry Seib Editorial Writer investigating the Minnesota foundation. But it wasn't necessary—Kansas officials had done that before they submitted the plan for approval. As under the present system, students from households with an annual income of more than $25,000 would pay interest from the start of the loan. Students from households with lower income wouldn't have to start interest payments until graduation. BUT THE real benefit of the program would be the avenues it would open to students who now have difficulty getting loans. Commercial banks are reluctant to give federally in- ON ITS FACE, the Minnesota plan sounds too good to be true. A nonprofit organization, which has a proven track record and which is now guaranteeing $80 million of loans annually, would allow students in lower-interest guaranteed student loans in Kansas. Kansas banks would still be free to write federally insured banks with the maximum interest rate of 7 per cent. The Minnesota foundation would guarantee those loans, a task now performed in the bank's office. refuse to write student loans. The banks' money can be invested elsewhere for more profit and less trouble. The Minnesota foundation would be able to help students who were refused money by commercial banks. Student loans would become more available and more visible, and it is estimated that the amount of money in insured loans in Kansas was rise from less than $10 million to $20 million. STATE OFFICIALS looked on with a high-sophistication program with appropriate skittishism. The Minnesota organization to Kansas and grilled them in search of a catch. They had to conclude finally that the snow is "pure as the driven snow." So word went on to Washington, where progress came to a screeching halt. This is a series of events not unfamiliar to people on college campuses. The federal government, which in this case would have no more responsibility than supplying a stamp of approval, has constructed an insurmountable roadblock to progress. THE FEDERAL government performs many admirable functions for colleges and universities, the federal government's offering of help, schools have to endure affirmative action policies, stacks of forms, threats of fund cut-offs—and desks in the Office of Education. The paperwork that new loan programs are lost in the shuffle. The latest turn is event is, if nothing else a graphic argument or the reinforcement in the presshe by President Jimmy Carter. ship! BUREAUCRACY spoiling! spmouth! BUREAUCRACY BUREAUCRACY BUREAUCRACY Letters Liberal hash unpalatable To the editor: What? The St. Thomas More Association unseaths its flaming sword of good sense once again? I thought for sure it Beatles show mirrors change Friday night, SUA pulled a fast one on Beatle lovers in Lawrence by showing five "unforgettable" performances of a Beatles multimedia production. Aside from being lousy from every technical and artistic experience, we have few psychological merits. It showed the students of the post-Woodstock generation how much the times really have changed. A case in point is the nulty in the production, of which there was a pointless overabundance. A few years ago the men in the audience would have hooted or gaped at shot after shot of beauty (all female, of course) and grumbling to the derriers. Instead, the men sat and grumbled along with the women. A few walked out. got "porn" a la 1960s, it knew it was being biked, and with lousy "born" at that. NO LONGER can nudity cover up mediocrity. The movie-going audience of the '70s is much more sophisticated than that, thanks to the artistic eroticism of this decade. When the audience that came Friday night to see pictures of its idols Then there were the psychedelites. Though a few people said they wanted to die, the girl and the grief that splashed across the screen, the so-called ministerial credentials of the Universal Life Church, showing anyone who does not personally person to whom the fee is to be and work shirts. Not even law students wore suits. Now the women are wearing skirts; the men have washed and cut their hair. The aging freak with a ponytail and Ben Franklin glasses is an anarchism; talking acid and Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer most groomed in self-revelation How old we are, and so far past the drug cult of the '60s. The times, they really are achangin'. Just look around campus. It's quiet, and the people are well-dressed. A FEW YEARS ago, banning a guitarist from Wescoe's lawn would have caused an all-campus protest in front of the band. When it stirred only a few rate cuts to the editor of the Kansan. A few years ago, the standard evening wear for a typical college student was holey leans quaaludes is out of tune with the times. PART OF the change is nice. It's refreshing to once again be able to tell the boys from the girls where they are from backside. It also feels good to wear makeup and a dress without being stared at as some strange apparition from Mars. We're all in the party and discovering that 50 per cent of the people there are speaking coherently because they're straight. Or else finding someone who is staying home on Modern times is the cleaner cut student of the 1970s, the one who worries about finding a job in the music industry is discovering that all your girl friends aren't husband-hunting and that all your boyfriends aren't wife-hunting. Modern times are celebrating with a toast instead. Saturday night, because all your friends are also loaded with homework that they're trying to get in on time. ALTHOUGH SOME of the superficialities of the times are commendable, those of us who reached the age of awareness in a bygone era miss some of the qualities that are lacking today. The quietness on campus of one university is unlike one wonders when the protesters will be here if we were them. An interest in the world has been replaced by interest in self and finding a job and making money in this era where recession hovers like impending doom. Conversation, which was once sparked by that urge to change the world and make it a provoking articles. It is a most welcome change of diet from the steady run-of-the-mill, to the clever and even distracting) better place in which to live, has been reduced to trivier and more self-centered interests by the problems of modern times. With modern times, we've come a long way from the drugs and turbulence that marked the late 1980s and even the early 70s. Now we should remember some of the ideals that that other era stood for. We should never become so concerned with our own interests that we forget there is in the world that needs protesting and change for the better, even in modern times. would be devoured by those hungry dragons Liberalism and Humanism that run rampant in Lawrence when they had the audacity to claim that the death penalty was just. And now they dare to suggest that the death penalty worked with the Soviets might possibly be "mad!" (A Parable, Kansan, April 13, page 5). This leads me to believe (hope) they might even defend the rights of private property, individual freedoms and family over state. Would they go so far as to denounce homosexual "rights," and man the battlefield with opponents to government, and finally, strike on the massive slaughter of innocents generally referred to today as abortion. If such be in place, I tip my hat (or perhaps sword would be the more appropriate word) to such a bold punch. I am hopeful the association will provide more thought- Readers Respond Key Bello 813 State Kansas City, Kan articles that pass for "editorial" material; material that seems to be spoon fed from the liberal-minded source of the libelary, then rehash it in varied styles and forms, but all unpalatable to anyone who still maintains an interest in the moment of an appetite for good sense. Identity cleared up To the editor: For several days a "personal" classified advertisement in the Kansan has been peddling sent is a "Rev. T, Miller," who is otherwise unidentified. This advertisement has caused me considerable embarrassment because a number of individuals believe that I should not have anything to do with it and have never had any involvement with the Universal Life Church. Although on civil libertarian principles I can support that group's right to exist, I am rather interested in nor amused by any group of its kind. Thank you for the opportunity to set the record straight. Tim Miller assistant professor of religion Somewhere Along a Kansas Highway, 1980-It had been a hot, frustrating day for Jane and Jill, two girls just graduated from an Alabama high school. They were on their way to the University of Kansas—where Name game is confusing people in his hall smoked marijuana. We'll have to try to live there. And guess what the name of it is?" "Tell me," Jane said. "Hashinger Hall . . . tee bee!" "It looks as though this might MERELLY HAVE THE BOARDING PARTY STAND BY... USCG FISHABUINCH BUTTIISKI Jay Bemis Editorial Writer Jill's brother Jack had been a graduate student to get a first-hand view of the campus. They were potential students. Jane had been yelling at Jill most of the day because he had given them a hug and then given them. Jane calmed down some, however, when they were able to get free directions from an attorney's calling station in southern Kansas. Jill tried to get Jane in a better mood by reiterating some of the great features at KU. Jack apparently had a good time when he went to school there "THE CAMPUS is on top of this mountain . . . Mount Oread I think they call it, "Jill said. "Then there some bakeery where you can get hot doughhouses. They are supposed to be a lot of students there, especially late at night." "And, ooh-h-h ... the dormitories. When Jack lived there, the student newspaper said that 80 per cent of the be it according to the directions," Jane said. THEY PULLED off the interstate and began to cruise the town. Once they were near the bridge, they thought something had gone wrong. "Hey, this campus isn't on a mountain," she said. "Jack had better not have been lying to us." "I'm hungry," Jane said. "Let's go get some of those hot doughnuts." The girls saw what appeared to be a student and pulled off to the side of the road to find out where the bakery was. The student told them there wasn't a doughnut but they had doughnuts and that they have to settle for a Dunkin' Donut or Mister Donut instead. WHEN THEY stopped at the next gas station, Ijask asked an attendant, "Why isn't the campus here on a mountain. and where's this bakery that sells hot doughnuts?" "Maybe we ought to stop at another gas station and see whether we're in the right place," Jill suggested. colleges and to make them more specialized. "Mount Oread," the attendant muttered. "Why . . . you must want the University of Kansas at Lawrence. This is the University of Kansas at Emporia." "WELL, it sounds pretty darn confusing to me," Jane said. "Maybe we just ought to go to Kansas State instead." Jane slammed her car door shut and sped her car down the road. The attendant then explained to the girls that the state legislature had passed a bill that changed the names of all the colleges in the state. The purpose of the bill, he told them, was to eliminate duplication of programs at the seven state "Hey, wait a minute," the attendant shouted after them. "Did you want the Kansas State University at Fort Hays or the Kansas State University in Manhattan?" THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 28, 2015 *The Kansas City Star* June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday Subscriptions by mail are $1 or $1.95 a month. Subscriptions by call are $6 or $14 a month. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $7.95 a month. Editor Jim Ritter Managing Editor Greg Hack Jim Bates Campus Editor Alison Gwinn Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Barbara Bowman Copy Chiefs Jim Cobb Bernell Junkke, Tim Pursell Sports Editor Associate Sports Editors Doyen Browman, Connie Thompson Photo Editor Photographers Mike Campbell Jay Keeler, Amara Suiphew, Jim Cobb Make-up Editors Business Manager Janice Clemente Advertising Manager Tim O'Meara Advertising Manager Claudia Garrison Claudia Garrison Assistant Claudia Manager Pat Theorion Dominic Dawson National Advertising Manager Robin Gunter Robin Gunter in this case o more respon- applying a stamp as constructed an e roadblock to RAL government any amenable colleges and universities the government's offers have to endure action policies, is threats of fund in the office in the week before new loan oust in the shuffle. mn of events is, if a graphic in the reform in preached by my Carter. www.artbyjulia.com SUNDAY AUGUST 25TH 2019 ble ed ministerial of the Universal allowing anyone used" for $3. The fee to be is Tuesday, April 19. 1977 ond . T. Miller," who identified. urtirement has considerable amenable because a number believe that I legitimely, I had with it and have with it. I should lift Life Church. civil libertarian can support that to exist. I must rested in nor any group of its for the opportunity cord straight. ng to make them zed. essor of religion I sounds pretty to me," Jane we just ought to State instead." nursed her car door her car down a minute," the followed after them. the Kansas State Fort Hays or e university in 5 y August during Holiday, Kan or $88 or $20 darees ity fee m O'Shea v Jarsille higbee Thornton O Connor Gruender enstrand al Editor Brann Ja Smith Arly Selb. Mary Cobb. Pat McCormick Vice Wecerman, Hansonpier Campbell Maurin Maura Vobleri Outstanding KU women honored Four University of Kansas women were named, one posthumously, to the KU Women's Receiving Program in the eighth annual Women's Recognition program last night in the Kansas Union. the program, "Dimensions of Ex- cellence," also honored KU women faculty, staff and students for outstanding achievements in a variety of categories The honors program was sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women and the Women's Foundation. THE WOMEN named to the KU Women's Hall of Fame were Beverly Boyd, professor of English; Frances Ingemann, professor of linguistics; Bennie Ritter, director of Kathleen Doering, Action, and posthumously, Kathleen Doering, who was professor of entomology. She was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, a charter member of the Kansas Entomological Society and a member of the Entomological Society of America. Doering, who was associated with KU for almost 50 years, was elected to the Women's Hall of Fame for her outstanding work in entomology, in which she named and described more than 60 species of insects previously unknown Boyd has been on the faculty of the department of English since 1962 and was founder of the KU Medieval Society. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1969 and was named Outstanding Educator by Mortar Board for 1976-77. In addition, she published several books and articles on Middle English with an emphasis on Chaucer. Ritter is listed among Outstanding Young Women of America. She played a major role in the passage of KU's Affirmative Action plan and is included In Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. She was a member of the faculty of the speech department from 1966 to 1971 and COOPERSTOWN On Campus TONIGHT: There will be an Outdoor Recreation Seminar on "BICYCLE MAINTENANCE AND SAFETY" at 7:30 in 268 Robinson Gym. Meyer Wolfe, urban planner and designer will lecture on "URBN DESIGN IN THE COMPREHENSIVE PLANNING PROCESS" at 7:30 in the Union's Forum Room. The KU ART EDUCATION STUDENTS ASSOCIATION meets at 8 in the Union's Parlor A. TODAY! There will be a luncheon and informal discussion of SOLAR ENERGY from noon to 2 p.m. in the Kansas University's Meadowlark Room. Central Personnel will sponsor a HUMAN RELATIONS WORKSHOP at 1:30 in the Union's Pine Room. Paul Adrien, of the Inter-American Development Bank, will speak on APPLICATION OF REMOTE SENSING TO LATIN AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT: At 1:30 the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. The Anthropology Colloquium will begin at 1:30 in the International Room at 3:30 in the Union's International Room. There will be a COLLEGE ASSEMBLY STUDENT SUPPER at 5:30 in the Union's Kansas Room. Events Two assistant professor positions are available in the department of design in the School of Fine Arts. The positions are in industrial design and color theory and design. Announcement Grants & Awards The Hutchinson News has won the 1977 Kansas Enterprise Award from the William Allen White Foundation. The New York Times gave for three stories during this year's competition. Correction A story in Friday's Kansan incorrectly said that 63 spots had been available in scholarship halls at KU for the 1977-78 school year and that all had been filled. There were actually 63 spaces in women's halls and 73 in men's halls; they have not been filled. The spaces will be notified if those selected for the halls don't submit contracts by May 1. IN ADDITION to women named to the Hall of Fame, 13 women were recognized for outstanding achievement in 10 categories and were awarded $100 each. was named Outstanding College Speech Teacher of 1973. The categories and those honored were: outstanding woman in athletics, Tracy Spellman; women's rights and awareness, Teresha Teko; community services, Evelyn Cape; contributions to a minority culture, Nanette Roudiebaux; outstanding international woman student, Lupita Saman; Marianne Wilkinson; outstanding women in politics, Marilyn Kent and Dee Nee Wagner; outstanding women staff members, Lorna Grunz and Kathy Hoggard; and outstanding women teacher, Karyn Kolhs A special award for contributions made to women's athletics by a staff member was PERSONS SELECTED for Mortor Board, a senior honor society, and those selected to Lambda Sigma, a sophomore honor society, were announced at the 2013 Several schools, departments and KU several groups honored women who had women's rights. Also announced were the new Watkins-Burger scholars, new members selected for Phi Beta Kappa, new members for Phi Kappa Phi, women semifinalists for the HOPE Award, and the names of outstanding educators selected by Mortar Board. Students show artwork variety A variety of works by KU students will be featured in the annual department of art show, "Tennessee Wear," at the Kansas University Gallery. The display will include paintings, sculpture, prints, and mixed media. This is the only opportunity for students to display their work on campus this year. Members of the art faculty selected works work for the show from approximately 500 Mike OiK, chairman of the department of art, said yesterday that because the faculty had not been allowed to hold, the exact number displayed wouldn't be known until before the show opened. Ott said the display was particularly exciting because of its diversity. "There are many personal, individual interpretations in the show," he said. The pieces represent national and local art trends and are done by students working in a variety of media. COST CUTTERS Meal items sold as advertised. None to sold dealers. Quantity Rights Reserved. Right to Limit, Please NOW OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Good thru April 24 Kroger FOX CUTTER SPECIAL Clover Valley ICE CREAM Full Gal. 99c With $10.00 in purchases and coupon. BEER 12-12 oz. $2.29 FALSTAFF... Cans COST MARKET CUTTER SPECIAL Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE Country Oven POUND CAKE COST CUTTER SPECIAL Buy 1 - Got 1 FREE Johnson Fruit Pies Apple, Dutch Apple or Peach DONUTS...doz. 89c COST COUPTON MENY SPECIAL Mixed FRYER PARTS 35c lb. DONUTS...doz. 89c CHIPS HEAD LETTUCE...3 for $1 University Daily Kansan MADDEN COST COURT COURT Clover Valley Ice Cream gal. only 99c Limit 1 with $10 in other purple ice cream or beer Good morning and beer Good午前 April 26, 1977 Supper Club pacific skis and local tax SAVE $11.10 POTATO SALAD... 69c KROGER/COST CUTTER COUPON KROGER/COST CUTTER COUPON KROGER/COST CUTTER COUPON KROGER/COST CUTTER COUPON KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON Clever Valley Ice Cream gal. only 99c Limit 1 with $10 in other purchases. Expires on April 24, 2024 and the货期 ending April 24, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON Johnson Fruit Pies 26 oz. Buy1-Got1 Free Apple Dutch Apple, or Peach Subject to applicable state and local tax. KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON Seven Seas Salad Dressing 8 oz. Limit 1 per coupon. Good they April 24, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON Dial Bar Soap On the purchase of 4 Dials Good they April 24, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax. KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON SAVE $1.10 KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON SAVE $1.09 KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON SAVE 12C KROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON SAVE 28C Seven Seas Salad Dressing 8 oz. PROGRAM COST CUTTER COUPON Dial Bar Soap On the purchase of 4 bars Dial Soap, limit 4 per couple. Gift card number 1877 Subject to applicable state and local tax. SAVE 286 USD Charity Dance For Heart Fund Reduced Pitchers $1.70 Charity Dance For Heart Fund ΔΣΘ ; AΦΩ ; AФΑ Charity Dance For Heart Fund Reduced Pitchers $1.70 Shenanigan's Tuesday, April 19, 1977 7:30-12:00 P.M. Donations $1.00 Advance tickets starting Wednesday Booth 2, Union Proceeds go to American Heart Association Partially funded by Student Activity Fee Let yourself go to Pizza Hut. 49¢ George Brett. John Mayberry. Mark Littell. Tom Pougette. Hal McAfee. Whitely zerogz. A different Kansas City Royals special glass at Pizza Hut. Just get a 16 oz. glass of your favorite soft drink at any participating Pizza Hut restaurant, and keep the glass! Give it a special glass last hurry ... cause everybody's got stal gazing at Pizza Hut. Pizza Hut ★ ★ ★ ★ GEORGE BRETT Third Baseman-Kansas City Royals George Brett With these glasses you'll see stars. 804 Iowa • 1606 W. 23rd • 932 Massachusetts 6 Tuesday, April 19, 1977 University Dally Kansan Gilmore's realizing goals By JASON NUSS Sports Writer It may be a good thing for opposing piters that Andy Gilmore didn't set his goalars. Gilmore, KU's starting catcher and designated hitter, leads the Jayhawks in RBIs (22), triples (4) and slugging percentage (608). In addition, the 6-2 junior from Arkansas City has hit two home runs and is batting .348, third on the team. Last summer, Gilmore decided to set some goals to shoot for in his third year of collegiate baseball. He said that he wanted to hit .300 and become an "RBI man." "I DIDN'T really assign any particular numbers to my goals except batting average," Glimser said recently. "I felt I could hit, 300, and I also wanted to drive in." "At the end of last season, I looked at the RBI leaders in the Big Eight and saw that they drove in 40 to 45 runs. I guessed that I would shoot for that neighborhood, even though some of the other teams in the conference played more games than we Gilmore decided to set a more reasonable goal because the 'Hawks play only 46 games, in contrast, to as many as 70 games played by Missouri and the Oklahoma "IF I COULD drive in 35 runs in the number of games we play, I would be happy," he said, "that is, if we are winning." In spite of missing three games early in the year because of a suspension for violating curfew, Gilmore has driven in 22 runs in 30 games. He is only six short of the KU single season record set by Dick Fanning in 1962. "That suspicion," he said, "was almost a blessing in disguise. I had to all out three men to get the job done." "LIVING WITH "Pudley" (the team nickname for Moyer) gives us a chance to review the game and the pitchers in our own way." Gilmore said. "We can discuss the performances of the pitches and know who is showing well and what they're throwing." KU pitches have been very complimentary toward the two KU catchers. "Andy is really something else," Dave Rusch, a left-hander from Fargo, N.D, said. "I shook him off only four or five times last game. He really knows the game and keeps my rhythm going. So does 'Pudley.' They're both something else." GILMORE HAS accepted another role on the GIL team--keeping the players loose with them. "It's not a conscious thing," Gilmore said laughing. "I'm just the type of guy who likes to cut up all the time. If I wasn't playing, I'd have always been laughing, so since I'm playing, why change?" Like most college players, he would like to have the chance to play professional ball, but it's not always easy. "I KNOW MY chances of playing in the pro's are slim," Gilmore said. "Even if I do get the chance, I know I can't play for the rest of my life, so getting an education now is important. But then again, I'd jump at the chance to play professional baseball." Gilmore decided to come to KU after an impressive high school athletic career at Arkansas City. He was an all-league selection in both basketball and baseball. Gilmore suffered through a disappointing freshman season with KU, hitting only 198. "I HAD MORE trouble adjusting to college pitching than I thought I would. Plus I broke an ankle and missed 12 games and tried to come back to soon. I didn't have a He bounced back last year with a .254 batting average and led the team in fielding percentage with a .687 mark. The left-handed hitter was one of six Jawahws selected to the honorable-mention All-Big Eight team. This year's team, according to Glimore, is the best KU squad in his three years with the team. "We have a real solid club—the best Ive been on up here," Gilmore said. "One big difference is that we all are close, and everybody puls for everybody else." Staff photo by JAY KOELZER KU's catcher-designated hitter Andy Gilmore is tearing up pre-season goals Emporia State's hitting machine to battle 'Hawks in doubleheader By GARY BEDORE Snorts Writer The Kansas Jayhawks face a hitting machine called Emporia State in a doubleheader starting at 1:30 p.m. today at Emporia. The Hornets, 26-5, are tearing apart opposing pitches, hitting .357 as a team. In Sports felt bad. I guess then I realized how much baseball meant to me." FOLLOWING HIS reinstatement, Glimore went on a hitting streak, which culminated with his play in the Kansas State Baseball Tournament two weeks ago. He was one of six Jayhawks selected for the all-tournament team as KU swept three games to win the tournament. Gilmore drove in seven runs in the three-game affair. Despite his impressive hitting credentials, he remains more valuable to the team on the other ways. Gilmore is an excellent defensive catcher, and committed only two errors in 76 chances this season. When he doesn't catch, he serves as a designated hitter, and his roommate, Brian Moyer, handles the catching duties. the last two weeks, they have beaten two Central State Conference opponents, Marymount and Missouri Western, by more than 15 points. A lineup of nine batters batted .300. In a game played earlier this year in the semi-finals of the Kansas State Baseball Tournament in Manhattan, KU pitchers held Emporia State to two runs, and had a 7-2 victory. That win snapped Emporia State's 18-game winning streak. COACH FLOYD Temple is undecided on whom he will pitch against the hot-hitting Hornet. Because the Jayhawks play four conference games against Nebraska at home, and because said he is reluctant to use his regular starting pitcher against Emporia State. "We always want to win, but we won't jeopardize our startling pitchers for Nebraska," he said. "Td normally start Brian Rhodes and Terry Scliffe against "You never know who will win until the last out," Temple said. "Last year we scored nine runs with two outs in a game, and seven with seven runs with two outs to beat, Missouri." Empricia State, but then they might not be ready for Friday." The 'Hawks, 17-12-1, go into the doubleheader hitting 274 as a team. Five players are hitting over 300, and Lee Ice is scoring 85. The next turn part of the order is hitting 313 or lower. TEMPLE SAID he hoped that the return of leftfielder Monte Hobbs would add some punch to the bottom of the order. Hobbs played Saturday against Iowa State after being out almost a month with a knee injury. "We need more hitting from the “ware” temples,” Temple said. "Hobbs hit the ball well Saturday, but it’s tough when you look, looked at pitching for three or four weeks." TEMPERLE SAID the rally proved that a team should never give up in baseball. Yesterday's rain presented the possibility that today's games would be rained out. If the games are canceled, Temple said, the doubleheader sometime in May. SO YOU THINK YOU'RE SPECIAL?? Well, we're looking for special people to work 1977-1978 Special Events Committee Publicity Hospitality Ushers POSITIONS OPEN: SUA He said he would probably test his pitch depth and possibly pitch Stan Messner, 2-0, in one game against Emporia State. Security Secretary Sign up for interviews in SUA office Deadline 4/27 TEMPIE IS concerned about conference games because KU is battling Missouri, Iowa State and Nebraska for first and second place. Division. The top two teams in the division go on to play the two best teams in the tournament. May 18 to 19 in Oklahoma City. CLIP OUT THIS COUPON 2 Fish & Chips for $200 With Coupon 2 Offer Good Thru April 24,1977 $2 Against Iowa State, Kansas won two games in the last inning. In the first game of the series, the Jayhawks were trailing Iowa State, 3-2, with two outs and nobody on base during last inning. Jeff Walton played and Brian Moyer hit a two-inning homer to win the game. Kansas started conference play this weekend and beat Iowa State three games out of four. Kansas is currently in second place, one game behind Missouri. The Tigers swept four games from Nebraska this past weekend. 00 $200 With Coupon Pirate's PEPSI Cove 6th & Maine PEPSI Offer Good Only With Coupon MISS STREET DELI Special CHEP SALAD O 4 kinds of cheese, 3 kinds of meat, your favorite salad dressing and crackers... 1.50 Reg. $1.85 Offer expires 4/30/77 The Hawk Presents- Early Bird Night Tonight April19 Schoolers start at 40c at 7:30! | | Bud | Mikelob | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 7:30 | .40 | .50 | | 8:00 | .45 | .55 | | 8:30 | .50 | .60 | | 9:00 | .55 | .65 | | 9:30 | .60 | .70 | | 10:00 | .65 | .75 | | 10:30 | .70 | .80 | | 11:00 | .75 | .85 | | 11:30 | .80 | .90 | Be an Early Bird and Save The Jaykawk Cafe 1340 Ohio "A Campus Tradition For Over 55 Years" KU Physical Therapy Club Meeting Thursday, April 21st Watkins Hospital Cafeteria 7:30 P.M. Mr. Robert Scott, director of physical therapy education at K.U. Med Center will speak. Elections of officers for Fall 1977 POLKA!! MUSIC PROVIDED BY JOE SCHIEFELBEIN AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN ALL THE BEER,& POLKA & POPCORN YOU CAN TAKE!! DATE: April 22nd TIME: 8 p.m. - 12 p.m. PLACE: Knights of Columbus Hall 2206 E.23rd, Next to Don's Steak House PRICE: $3.00 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. Spoon River Anthology - E.L.Maste Hashinger Hall Theatre April 22,23 & 24 8:00 pm 50c Donation University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 19, 1977 7 ting RN BEIN Hall Don's house enter luring 631 tasters neatre By the Kansan Staff 00 pm nation KU signs top KC player, looking at other recruits KANSAS CITY, Mo.-John Crawford of Kansas GNORT-Northeast High School has signed a national basketball player of intent to play for the University of Tedowsen told the Kansan last night. Crawford was named to the all-metro and all-state teams his senior year at Northeast. He led the Interstateshole League in both scoring and rebounding. Crawford also led his team to the Intercollegiate League title and averaged 23.8 points. Owens said Kansas needed to improve its quickness in the front line and Crawford was the man who could help the team do that. CRAWFORD'S COACH at Northeast, Chuck Sanner, describes Crawford as a craftswinter. "John is the type of player to have and tries to manage." Said he. "Is coachectable and has good quickness for his size, 6-8, he shoots with a real high, quick release." Crawford said he had his eye on KU for a "First of all, I like the tradition of the Kanasas basketball program. It was also really close to home and rated high academically." long time. He cited a number of reasons for siming with the Jayhawks. CRAWFORD SAID he liked the way mascara worked the hall on the court when it was raining. Before making his decision to sign with Kansas, Crawford was considering the University of Missouri and Tulsa University. Other high school and juco basketball players Kansas is actively recruiting include Jay Hurtt, Vincent Johnson and Ernie Banks. Jonelson, a 0-1 guard from McLeen Juece in Waco, could provide an important tool to keep the team safe. At McLennan, Johnson averaged 29.9 points per game with 12 rebounds. He was a first-team All-America Juco selection as an all-conference and all-regional player. Johnson's coach, Johnmy Carter, said that Johnson was impressed with Kansas following his visit to the annual Kansas basketball banquet. CARTER ALSO said that Johnson had expelled the team to Kansas, Texas, Baylor, and Oklahoma. Hurt, another jock standout Kansas has eye on, is from Alleghany Junior College in Chicago. As a sophomore, Hurtt had an 18.0 scoring average and pulled down an average of 10 rebounds a game. Hurt, 6-7, set several school records during his freshman year. Hurtt isn't sure when and with whom he intends to sign. He said he hadn't made up his mind but that the chances of his coming to Kansas were good. BANKS, ONE OF THE high school stance KU would like to sign, is from Peoria, CINCINA. At Central, Banks led his team to the mates class AA championship with a 29-26 record. Banks' scoring average was 14.1 points per game, and he is described as a strong According to pearson in Peoria, Banks has narrowed his choice to Kansas or Bradley. Canadian wins Boston Marathon BOSTON (AP)—Canada's Jerome Drayton, beaten badly during Bill Rodgers' record-smashing victory two years ago, earned the 18th Boston Marathon, easily winning the 18th Boston Marathon. As expected, Drayton and Rodgers hooked up in an early duel in a record field of 2,933 starters, including 126 women. The fourth-highest number miles and pulled out to finish the 28-mile. ★★★ KU runner 34th in race George Mason had never seen the course for the Boston Marathon before yesterday, but that didn't stop the KU senior from going in a field of 2,933 in the 81st annual race. He ran a school record and personal best time of two hours, 26 minutes and seven seconds. Mason, who qualified for the Boston race by winning the Omaha Marathon, earned a third place on the list. The top 100 "I was really pleased," Mason said last night. "I finished a lot higher than I really expected. I was thoroughly impressed with the meet." "I felt bad for the first 10 miles," Mason said. "I was eating some orange they were selling." MASON SAID that the start of the race was fairly fast but that it slowed down after it. AMERICAN LEAGUE Baseball Standings East W. W. L. Pst. GB Milwaukee 6 4 5 2 Cleveland 6 4 5 2 Cincinnati 6 4 5 2 Baltimore 4 3 50 2 Chicago 4 3 373 3 Detroit 3 3 277 14 Nashville 3 3 322 8 Washington...10 Chicago ... 7 Oakland ... 5 Texas ... 7 Rancho City ... 8 Miami ... 5 California ... 5 Los Angeles ... 7 N.Y.C. ... 5 Total ... 29 750 ... 2 370 ... 1 371% ... 1% 356 ... 4 354 ... 4 348 ... 1% 347 ... 1 417 ... 7 417 ... 7 417 ... 7 Yesterday's Results Boston 5, Detroit 3 Nashville 19, New York 14 Baltimore 4, Cleveland 2 Minnesota 8, Kansas City 6 with me. I quit then and started feeling feeling really strong after about 18 miles. **Tennessee's Games** Toronto (Gaviria 2 vs. Patterson 0) Clifton (Wilson 3 vs. Millsap 1) Chicago (Wilson 5 vs. Fannanio 0) Detroit (Bartles 4 vs. Fannanio 0) Milwaukee (Bartles 5 vs. Fannanio 1) Cincinnati (City (Cibson 1), n.) Houston (Jhonson 10 vs. Calfurcia (Tanness 1), n.) Head track coach Bob Timmons, when informed of Mason's performance, said, "I'm just tickled to death. You can't make a mistake, but he must have run a very fine race." Mason, who is scheduled to return to Lawrence Wednesday, will run in the Billy Mills 10,000 meters on Thursday, the first event in the Kansas Relays. He is also sited to run in the 3,000-meter steeplechase Saturday. Miki Mergan, a 42-year-old Japanese- American housewife from San Fernando Valley, Calif., won the women's title for the second time, finishing in 2:48.44. The race, sponsored by the Boston Athletic Association, started at noon with the temperature 74 degrees and a hot sun baking the runners and the pavement. 385-yard run in 2 hours, 14 minutes and 46 seconds. Rodgers, a Boston school teacher who shocked the long-distance running world by winning the 1975 Boston Marathon in June, was the only person who tried to keep up with Deyton Pierce. Gorman was the top female finisher here in 1974 in 2:47:11 before West Germany's Liane Winter set a course record for women by winning in 2:42:24 in 1975. "This was one of the hardest Marathons ever ran," Gorman said. "I wanted to stop so many times, but I kept going. I'm so glad it's over." WANTED: ALL GRADS WITH FLUENT FRENCH FOR NEW PEACE CORPS PROJECTS 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. ivif (allow; $300 term. steml and 3 yr service). OR INTERNS FOR INTELLECTUAL REACTION AND CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT APRIL 27, AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMENT APRIL 25, 26. WOMEN GRADUATES . . . ... are you looking for employment opportunities that can offer you an executive level position with outstanding pay and benefits? Be a successful professional as a Naval Officer. For more information, write Lt. Marcia Kruse, or call collect: NAVY INFORMATION TEAM 2420 Broadway Kansas Cit 64108 Kansas City, Mo. 64108 814-734-9276 NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE "HE DID all right." Royals manager Hilyerot Wichry told him. He was a member of the like Walter. And although Herzog was speaking tongue in cheek about Johnson's performance, Royals owner Ewing Kauffman agreed with him. "Boy that Johnson sure looked good "We thought we could have thought we had something three until he came." The Royals are now 5-4 after winning their first four games. "We just haven't played well the last five ball games." Herzog said. "We hit the ball and we ran the bases all right tonight, but the other team kept scoring runs. "When our two boys - Bird and Already aren't on, in trouble. And it's already done." KANAS CITY, Mo.—It's an old baseball maxim that good stopping stops good hitting. That's what the Twins had last night and they defeated as they defeated the Royals, 8-4. Johnson, 1-0, pick up the win in relief of starter Dave Goltz after working the final four innings facing only 13 batters. Mingori, 0-2 took the loss. Twins' bullpen solves Royals Rv The Kansan Staff Game two of the three-game series will pit Pete Redeem, 0-2, against Jim Colbom, 8-7. With the game tied 6-6 in the bottom of the sixth, Minnesota came up with a near-perfect performance from reliever Tom Johnson. The Royals, however, called upon relievers Doug Bird and Steve Mingori, who allowed a run in the seventh and one in the eighth. Minnesota, 6-5, was at the plate by Rod Carew, who went 4-of-5 to raise his average to .362. George Brett, who hit .485 against Minnesota last year, had his eight-second save. PLEASE MAKE RESERVATIONS BY THURSDAY, APRIL 21 IN THE ACTION-PEACE CORPS/VISTA Room 6, Allen Field House SUA University of Kansas *2.50 Women Student-Athletes *6.00 Parents and Guests Representatives will be at the following placement offices: Sign up to usher in the SUA Office before April 27 Lawrence, Kansas 66045 SEE ZZ TOP FREE ALL ARE WELCOME buffet supper tickets KU Women's Athletics Awards BANQUET Sunday, April 24 6:00 p.m. guest speaker ... OLGA CONNOLLY Olympic Gold Medal Winner in Women's Discus Participant in Five Olympiads Writer, Lecturer, Leader in Women's Sports Wed., April 27 Education Tues., April 26 LA&S Mon., April 25 LA&S APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR SUNFLOWER HOSTS AND HOSTESSES The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is now accepting applications from students interested in assisting with the recruitment of prospective student-athletes for the Football Department. Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled KU student in good standing during the 1977-78 academic year. For further information and applications contact the football office, Allen Field House annex. Application deadline is 5 p.m., Thursday, April 21. SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW TODAY. SENIOR CLASS MEMBERS Come to THE WHEEL on April 21st from 7-10 p.m. FAREWELL TO THE WHEEL PARTY 10c draws 77 8 Tuesday, April 19, 1977 University Daily Kansan Film preservation a task of dedication By CHUCK SACK Reviewer Robert DEFores is a private investigator who has helped track down some of the most famous names of this century and bring them before the public. Lon Chaney, Howard Hughes, Duke Ellington and Maureen O'Sullivan are just a few of those whom he has found. Yet you've probably never heard of DeFlores. A film collector who hunts and restores films that have been thought lost or destroyed, Robert DeFlores is one of those fortunate men who manage to make their hobbies their jobs and the SUA will urge him to create a jizz film that he has been responsible for restoring. DEFLORES began collecting films when he bought his own copy of a Laurel and Hardy two-reeler. Now 41, he realizes that his interest in films goes back much further. "I grew up in Hollywood," DeFord says said his friend and the author of pictures with Johnny Weissmuller, my other aunt was a writer at 20th Century Fox, and my mother and father were in the Geneva. At 18, shortly after buying his first film, DeFlores moved to Kansas City. He attended KU and continued to college in the fall, where he做了 jobs that considered renovating old prints of movies. "IGOT involved with restoration when I made a trip to Odgenburg, N.Y., and saw all the stuff that's just rotting at the Fox vaults." DeFlores said. "I also saw an interview with Thomas Edison. I got the idea that someone needed to be interviewed for a job or for nothing else. How many people have heard Thomas Edison? He died in 1931, yet here's a 12-minute interview with him on the porch talking all about his inventions and facts." Defores said that many films were in danger of being lost because they were made from plastic, and decomposes to powder as it ages. Because many film studios threw out their old footage, many films are being found in the relics of the past by cameramen who kept copies of their work. DEFLORES TOLD a story about one lady who told him that she had some film in her "Her grandfather was a projectionist in 1923 and had brought some old cans of film to the studio. It was $3 millimeter nitrate, all 15 rounds of the Jack Dempsey-Thomas Gibbons World Championship Fight in Shelby, Mont. It was the only complete print of that in the collection." Asked how he finds films, DeFores said, "Like any detective, the first thing that I do is find out which studio made it. Then I call the studio and find out what the status of the film is. Nine times out of 10, the films are missing. You hunt all over the United States collections, or overseas, or in other archives. It's just a long waiting process." DEFLORES SAID that it was unusual to spend 200 hours on the telephone during a period of years tracking down one film. It is now that you can restore and re-record a short subject. George Segal & Jane Fonda NEVERTHELESS, the film was salvaged. With backing from the American Film Institute, the movie is being restored next month at the AFI in Los Angeles. In the meantime, DeFores continues to search for more film. Although his primary interest is in newspapers, short subjects and rare performances, DeFores has also recovered from the loss of a longtime friend in the law "a film that stars Len Chanen Sr. And despite the disappointments and the exhausting research, DeFlores is happy with his work. One of his most prized films, The Faller, directed by Parker, the legendary jazz saxophonist. IN THE CLIP, Parker and Dizzy Gillespie receive their 1951 Dowbeat Awards, and then perform "Hothouse." DeFlores said that when the film was found on a shelf in East, it was covered with dirt and ready to be reactivated. The sound was recorded and the print required the diligence of DeFlores and the friend who discovered the film. "Outside the Law" was in a barn in Crystal, Minn., way back in the back with chicken feathers all over it. We pushed the bay aside, and I thought it was junk," she said, and when I opened the can up, it was learning. I couldn't even unwind it." The Parker film will be shown tonight, along with "Jamming the Blues," a twelve minute short with Lester Young and an all-star group. There will also be a Louis Armstrong some footage from an Armstrong session in Denmark, and a Count Bassi compilation that includes a rare Billie Holiday appearance. The program will be rounded out by a performance of the John Outtune Quartet, which Delores transferred to film from videotape. "I'm working on a Big Band special at Samuel Goldwyn in California," he said with a sigh. "They don't know who appa- UNLKE MANY film collectors who find lost films, re-copyright them and distribute them to make money. DeFlores makes movies that are used for fundraising and to raise funds to continue his work. "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" Every Eve at 7:30 & 9:30 Lat, Sun Mat 1:16 "My livelihood is actually to restore films to share with people," DeFlores said. "If it weren't for collectors hanging onto something and cherishing it like a piece of artwork, we wouldn't be seeing half of this. Somebody has to care." As the high quality of his investigative work indicates, Robert DeFlores cares. Granada 912-764-3500, Granada N.J. 1188 intelligent, Engaging, 1st Class Entertainment ART CARNEY LILY TOMLIN 10 Academy Award Nominations "THE Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" "BLACK SUNDAY" PG "THE LATE SHOW Ever J 2048 9:10 Sat. Sun Hill 6:05 Hillestead "ROCKY" Eve. 7/15 & 9:45 i.sat. 5/11 a.f. 2:30 17 crashed at sea Passengers aboard are missing Starring LVESTRANGE STALLONE Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sall. Sun. 1:45 AIRPORT PG TO '77 Varsity PALACE - Virginia Beach Hillcrest Eve.7:40&9:50 Sal.Sun.1:55 Hillcrest PG 7:20 show time Sunset Bird in Inland Airfield - apart on Highway 69 Get right into the field you were trained for. Teachers are needed in countries of Belgium, Switzerland, or as well as in the U.S. to work as Peace Corps or VISTA Volunteer. Free trai/health,衣裳 allow, $3000 term, pay end 2 yrs. serv. in PC, $600 end 1 yr. service as VISTA. allow, $3000 term, pay end 2 yrs. serv. IN RECruitERS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON APRIL 27. NEW PROJECTS IN PEACE CORPS AND --made for improvements at other branch libraries. VISTA WANT ELEMENTARY ED GRADS Entry Fee: 1.00 Heart of America Frisbee Tournament Saturday, April 23 Registration at SUA office or 9:00 a.m. Saturday at tourney site Competition will begin at 10 a.m. HEART OF AMERICA FRISBEE CLUB Library Sponsored by SUA, Miller Brewing Co., Rec. Services. Trophies awarded in all events. Schools, which accredits universities, Shankel said. Everyone Welcome! IN ITS REPORT, the association said, "We are concerned that the library is a major problem at the University of Kansas and that solutions to problems of library space may be difficult to overcome if we maintain high quality undergraduate and graduate programs." From nage one KU is "at or near the bottom" of the Big Eight schools in the amount of library space, Ranz said, with 252,500 square feet. The University of Iowa, for example, has 480,000 square feet and the University of Colorado has 350,000. But Shankel said a proposal to remodel Watson Library to improve facilities and increase space would probably be at the top of capital improvements in the fiscal 1979. ALSO TO BE REQUESTed, although lower on the list, will be a new building to house a science and technology library, Shankel said. He predicted that the remodeling of Watson should be completed by 1981 or 1982. A new library possibly would be built several years later. A question on the survey on whether a "through-going remodeling of the interior of Watson Library" would make it an adequate facility received 109 'no' responses, 65 'yes' responses and nine "would help" responses. ONE OF THE most common responses in the survey was a criticism of the branch facilities of the library, particularly in Marvin Hall, Johnson said. Problems with branch libraries should be solved with the building of a new library, he said. Johnson said, however, that he thought most respondents to the questionnaire didn't know exactly how the library would be set up or whether it would hold any more books. Meanwhile, Shankel said, the University has made plans for temporary expansion of library space. There will be library space in the Malott Hall addition, on which construction will begin this summer. Shankel he hoped that arrangements could be Other recent improvements, Shankel said, are new library staff positions added this year and last year and the addition of a new accounting system costing $7,000 a year. --and competency of the library staff. Johnson said, ON THE POSITIVE side, the survey indicated a satisfaction with the helpfulness SUA Over two hours of rare jazz films from the collection of Bob de Flores. With host Dick Wright. Featuring Lua Armstrong, Charlie Parker, and Rory Lopez. Lester Young, Joe Jones and others. Tuesday. 19. April 7. 3:30 p.m. $1.25 RARE JAZZ FILMS FILMS HANDS UP! Dir. Clarence Badger with Raymond Griffin, Classical Film Series. Wed., April 20, 7:30 p.m. 75c ECSTACY (1933) Dir. Gustav Machaty, with Hedy Lamarr. Complete, uncut, uncensored. plus Johnson expressed concern about what he said he considered a general apathy toward learning. Dir. Howard Hughes with Jane Russell, Walter Huston, Film Society. THE OUTLAW (1943) THE STORY OF ADELE H. Thurs., April 21, 7:30 p.m., 75c MIDNIGHT COWBOY Popular Films Series. Fri., April 22 & Sat., April 23, 3:30, 7:30 & 9:30 o.m., $1 Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight plus PAGE MISS GLORY Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Art Deco cartoon by Tex Avery. Midnight Movies. Fri, April 22 & Sat, April 23, 12:00 midnight, $1 NAZI HOLOCAUST Edward Alexander, Professor of English at the University of Washington and recent recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship to prepare a book on "Literature of the Holocaust," will speak on "THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE HOLOCAUST." Dr. Alexander will examine the causes and the consequences, historical and immediate, of the Jews' inability to lend credence to the threat and actuality of the "final solution." His talk will touch on some of the older Yiddish writers, on Franz Kafka, on Elie Wiesel, on some of the Warsaw Ghetto diaries, and on Hannah Arendt. 150 STYLES ATHLETIC SHOES Athlete's The Foot. sponsored jointly by the Department of English, the Department of History, and Hillel THURSDAY, APRIL 21st, 8:00 p.m. 919 Mass. • 841-2995 Lawrence FORUM ROOM of the KANSAS UNION VISTA Seniors/Grads needed to work in Community Service program—the United States. Contact ACTION representatives at LA&S placement office, April 25, 26. Sign Up For Interview Today. Place an ad Call 864-4358 "The University of Kansas, to a large extent, is the library, as far as we are a high quality education institution," Johnson wrote. "We work together to improve the facilities." H.Watson's April 18-24 Live: "Millionaire at Midnight" ONLY FROM 25TH DECEMBER All televised KC Royals baseball games can be seen on our 7" TV screen. Laides Night—Disco 8:12:15 On our 7' TV—Frank Sinatra Special Rock & Roll with Roxtar, 9:12-15 Come watch all games on our 7' TV Free 12 noon to 7 p.m. Live: "Millionaire at Midnight" 1. 12:15, 11. 25, 9. 20 Cover Peanut Gallery—NBA Playoffs, 10:30 p.m. Free Disco for everyone 8-12:15 7' TV open 7:00 p.m. Ladies Night—Disco 8-12:15 Specials on beer throughout the night '7 TV open 7:00 p.m. Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Another trip to the Bahamas! Disc 18-2,15. Cover $1.50 Peanut Gallery—Reds vs. Dodgers Peanut Gallery open 1-10 p.m. for your sports enjoyment Specials on beer throughout the night inurance's Newport 18 C Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa THE TUXEDO MAN DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT sponsored by KU BRIDGE CLUB April 24, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of Student Union Admission $1.00 $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS "The original thick crust pizza from New York" This coupon applies 4-30777 MILK JUG Sign up in SUA office For further info. SUA office 864-3477 Everyone Welcome NEW YORKER 1021 MARRACHETT 81 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. This pizza 4.2017 Coors Pitchers 95 $ ^{c} $ With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th ROAST BEEF DINNER Generous serving of chives hot soup includes homemade mush potatoes and homemade gravy and homemade fresh bread, and selections from our relish tray. $1.95 Coupon expires April 30, 1977 Reg $2.50 with this coupon Ford ALQUERETOR R.A. LEASING AGENTAL RENT-A-CAR 2340 Alabama FALS WORLDS LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 19, 1977 9 to a large as we are a on, "Johnson wave to work dies." ii. s baseball our 7' TV hamas! 1.50 eds vs. 12:15 throughout the p.m. 12:15 k Sinatra ughout the Midnight" Playoffs, war, 9-12:15 s on our 7' p.m. 10 p.m. for 18 Club ter Probe indicates minor infraction by Karate Club An investigation conducted by the University of Kansas has indicated that a charge lodged against the KU Karate Club for allegedly allowing non-University personnel to use University facilities was a result of a minor infraction of policy. By HANNES DEAR Staff Reporter According to Vickie Thomas, administrative assistant in the KU general counsel's office, the inquiry came after Mr. Thomas received the University and to the state attorney Use of University facilities is restricted to students, faculty, staff and administrators, Thomas said. Cox had said that others were using them. "They (the infractions) aren't minor, as they I'm concerned, however," Cox said last year. "I had names, dates and events where these clubs allowed individuals from the town to come in, pay money and join," he said. Copies of his letters and the replies by Copierchancellor Daryles Dykes were forwarded to the German Chancellor. general's office by Jim Cox, owner of the Oriental Martial Arts Academy. 83% HE SAID that in February, he learned that some people other than students were not aware of the new program. Cox said that he had been willing to take civil action and would do so unless he was sports clubs. He sent a letter to the chancellor's office the first week in March and, after more investigation, forwarded the names of six nurses violating KU rules. 1 "U1DERSTAND that they have asked the outsiders to leave them. But that决策者可能不是 anything." Wayne Osness, professor of physical education and chairman of the investigating committee, said that an investigation in that there were minor infractions of the rules. given a guarantee that the same situation wouldn't reoccur. "There were only a couple of instances where the clubs were stretching the rules. However, letters will be sent out to an avail sports clubs to resit university policy on the use of facilities and other policies, Ossess said. KANSAN WANT ADS something about one student bringing his little brother," Omensa said. Tom Regen, assistant attorney general, manual, and his office was satisfied with the University's nomination. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their financial status. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAINT HALL "The chancellor and the general counsel's office have been very cooperative," he said. "We feel they have the situation under control." CLASSIFIED RATES .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 one two three four five five times times times times 15 words or fewer $0.00 $2.25 $5.00 $7.50 $10.00 Enhanced additional 01 02 03 04 05 Monday Thursday p 8 p.m. Tuesday Friday p 8 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday p 8 p.m. Thursday Tuesday p 8 p.m. Friday Wednesday p 8 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. The calls can be placed in person or by calling the UBX business office at 844-8358. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT "incredibility of the Holocaust" (Nail mass murder of Jews) Lecture by Professor Edward W. Kissel, Ph.D., Harvard University April 21. 8:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union, Sponsors: English Department, History Department Canoe heat trips, on the Illinois River. Special trips include a 6-hour trip to Canaan, a 4- hour trip to Tahoe, a 36 per person. Other trips available. Write or phone for free of hire on highway 10, Tabuachi, Oklahoma 74468, 965-295- 7500, canaanrivercanoe.com 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 835-979-309 Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets. 843-7567. Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or morning. Over 250 rooms, Extra large dwarf floor, Kitchen and bar facilities Located in New York City Vermont. Call #82-8644 for information. S-13 FOR RENT 1-2 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor. $42-$50/month. Gadgethouse Apartments - Call Becky now. Summer campus rentals available. Contact an office at Gadgethouse apartment 618-824-0951. Frontier Ridge-short term lease available. Enclosed apartment with study. Hidden indoor pool + slam carpet. Frontier Ridge residence. door post + disposal + laundry facilities + furnished and unfurnished from $138. Call 642-795-0018 or visit www.frontierresidences.com CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX Rent the Pro- Room Rental Locations Call客服 607-2892 5-10 Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center. Furnished and unfurnished, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open 4 days a week or call 912-263-9800 or 912-365-2497 either call 912-263-9800 or 912-365-2497 4-21 Make your plant house. Applications are now available from $399-$699 for a 15-gallon planter, by fly by for a tour and complimentary watering. For more information, visit www.horticulture.com. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 843-380-3100 or stop by 1892 H Street, house 843-380-3100 on Monday, Friday, or Saturday. Two bedroom apartment (with all bills paid. cond.) Two bedroom apartment (with all bills paid. cond.) Two bedroom apartment (with all bills paid. cond.) Two bedroom apartment (with all bills paid. cond.) 1 new bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 842-3850. ROSALEA HOTEL, Harper; Keesa 67088 The Rose Rose Hotel, 214-355-1111 or come in or come out ON MAY 14, LARGE LADY DAY Individual rooms for rent immediately, for summer fall, coop accommodation, food program, free laundry amenities included in economic rent ($45 average) 3 bags from campus. Call Lairn K. Carr at (718) 267-0937. Sublease for summer 2-bedroom apartment. A: C $150/month $13 extra furnished. Available B: D $45/month $25 furnished. Available SUBLEASE 5 bedroom newly built apartment, 304 W. 2nd St., Suite A, 11th floor. Paid sound proof on this route. Phone 363-568-2001 or www.sublease.com. Apartment to sublease. Close to campus. June- August. Call 814-3528 after 4:00 p.m. 4:00 a.m. Discount on summer suites one-bedroom Meadowbrook furnished apartment, pool, alco- bonized deck, private hot tub. $249.00/mo. June-Aug. 15 (leave expires). 2 bedroom, new unfitted apartment. A/C $850; Call 641-739-2233. 2-bedroom apartment $140 per plus. elec. after 5 p.m. 842-8231 4-21 Sublease 3-bedroom apartment, furaledal, central 912-780-4151 Call 912-780-4151 4.91 Sublease for summer - 2 bedroom apartment. Call.惠842-8581 - Keep trying. 4-21 Nice 2-bedroom apartment. 10 mile walk to commute. $175 moll. Room #842-3433. 2945. 4-21 Mark I and II apartments for summer and fall rentals. Located on the upper balconies, full carpet (carpet or rug) diagonal, draps and major applications. In building to be heated. Room to walk to Strong, Luxury and conference at Westminster College. Sublease June 1 to August 1, nine 4-5 bedroom house, close to campus. 843-5104 4-19 4-bedroom townhouse, with 2 baths, pool, tennis courts, and reasonable rent. Call 848-627-4225. Sublease for summer. Two bedroom unfurnished apartment on 3rd floor. Hidden Ridge. Hdonion to rent见房 Call: 841-6910 MOBILE HOME RENTALS. We offer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units on off street parking, swimming pool, free golf club, storm shelter, and boat dock. Our master's pickup hotel. Homes 46-242. 842-7290. Summer sublease, two bedroom party furnished close to campan and town, $110; $424-824-504. Excellent condition. aquasion two-bedroom, air- condition, laundry waterer, vanessa - furnished. 173-264-8590. fax 173-264-8591. Summer subacute, 1 bedroom, apartment, furnished, AC, near campus. Call 841-517-9887. Sublime over summer. Traitaille 2 bedroom 6 ft. 10 in. call Job or Mark @ 6 p.m. 841-6571 Sublease 1 bedroom room through July 31. Lease renewal. Available June 1. $118/month. No financing. Sublease for summer-furnished 2-bedroom apartment. annuity, char gift carpet, pool, reasons to rent. Two bedroom apartment, four-four-piece, wooded area, drive, vacation suites. Summer rates. 1602 sq. ft. 1. 2. 3 rooms needed for Trailside town- house: 842-2590 4-21 Bulletin-Branded-Primarily studded apartment Mid May 8, 2014 A. Meadowbrook road to pool, terrace on West side. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense in case 13. To learn more, come to sense in case 14. As a study guide, **2**. For orientation, **3**. For Exam preparation, **New Analysis of Western Civilization** available now at *ATP Store*. Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties: BEL AUF ELECTRIC, 843-900-5000 W Belt AC ELECTRIC, 843-900-5000 W Belt AC We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kanaa, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, monitors at Audio Systems, 10th Floor, Rhode Island. HP 35 calculator like new, only $80. Please call: Mike, 524-2584. 4-19 Crustacea Castanea Tapes recorded final cut to $35 from the Wetlands Film Company. $120 from Stoneshaw's 1992 Mass. Open Thurs., 11am. $35 from Shorewood's 1986 Mass. Open Thurs., 11am. Six of all four 130mm lath 13 inch bearded radially only two-inch wide. Tube diameters 76mm, 92mm, Mountainback's 92mm. Open Thruh 8mm. $4.25 and $4.25. Final cut on C.C. Radio's and Antenna's. Some things are "Antenna's" on the album. Stuff, Stuff, Stuff. H 8-30. RADIAL THE CLEARANCE. 145 x 13, 135 x 13. 135 x 12. FITTING. 135 x 12. FITTING. 135 x 12. FITTING. 135 x 12. FITTING. 135 x 12. FITS. 135 x 12. FITS. 135 x 12. Color TV 20 inches, good condition only $13.95, cassette recorder $22; call Lennar at 0800-274-7222. RAY AUDIO. The Little Stores store, now has a new RAY AUDIO system. It will impress your expectations. At 12 ¥39.00. 1973 Mazda RX-2. Only 22,000 miles. AM-FM eight truck stock, new tires, ex condition. $40,000 in fuel. www.mazda.com Akwa AD 6200 cassette-recorder. Only one month already sold. Sine immeditely. Call 814-8426 ask for more information. Theorems TD 160 C turntable $135, with Stanton @GIBEES 175 Call Day at DvA-4236 for more information. JVC stores cassette deck $200; complete with cassette. New for sale: Old Retail. $59 for will for $75. To purchase, call (312) 660-8840. You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s $103 less than the youth fare you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is to be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. AiRFRAME WATERbeds THE FIELDS STORE 712 MASS ST quality travel since 1951 Spring clean service. B, and O. turbillate model wheel brakes. C, and D. power amplifier 125A power amp and amp DYNAT PAS-3 premium belt 700 Case Duck, Stack 611 and 717 receiver 700 Case Duck, Stack 611 and 717 receiver D, and D. The Little Stereo Store With DDI, Different Technica RA-5500 Am-Pm receiver 2 watt ptts with 3.5 mm coaxial cable 4-809 644-892 use 4-200 4-809 644-892 use 4-200 Icelandic Ludwig Pro-Breast床 w set cases, excellent condition, call 843-7169 night. 4-20 CLASSICAL GUITAR CLEARANCE SALE, on Alvarier Varez classical models while supply ends up. We also give you now and get a free $70 case also. Lawnmer Music Center 901 and Ribbon Island Located in the city of Los Angeles. Sell or trade (buy)鞭壳芋 home to 40 food arabic for trade good for fishling Call 862-3591-3591 after 5 hours Old books 1907-1933 mostly architectural design, building, construction-furniture design, decorative-Funk and Wagnall Dictionary 1895 (15 Ibs.), old Warrington price $3 for 1.40; Calling cards 4892, 4892 Calling cards 4892, 4892 SUA Maupintour travel service 62 Ramber, 3 sp. 6 cyl, good shape! $275. 841- 421. after 6 p.m. on 6/19 DRUM SET, FOR SALE. Ludwig drum and drums set, 28" x 46". Music Academy Music Center, 96th St., New York, NY 10017. 1976 Firebuild Fireball, every available option, immediate condition, light blue with honeycomb pattern. 1750 Honda SL-350. Good condition. $475. 841. 1859. 841-421 Pocket walletch (Cruen 1034)—5100, Tom. 841- 5270 or leave message) 841-4604. 4-21 1977 W S. 65ci. Service, only 5000 miles, air, leather Michelin tires. Reasonable price. 841 K-23. Service, only 5000 miles, air, leather Michelin tires. Reasonable price. 841 1976 Monte Carlo, maroon with white and lanceau vinyl roof. Maroon interior with svelte bucket shelves. Black leather suede, super slur. 30 day guarantee. Price negotiable. please call 842-7520 between 7 - 10 p.m. (Saturday). 1. 720 Chevrolet Impala 4D, PS, PB, AC. Very clean. Must sell. Call 864-1698-14. 4-21 72 Pine - Good condition, low mileage $1,100 best offer. 841-3796 4-21 BALLJOAN RIDES--Make a date to fly the skies on your boat or ship. Commercial balloon pilots B-G-BALLOONS and commercial balloon pilots O-Z-BALLOONS. Volunteer Cleaning House is selling T-Shirts for $2.50 each. Available in adults and children dresses. 100% white cotton shirts—red letters saying “Volunteer Cleaning House.” Order at 18 K. B. Jackson, 844-369-8000, order_airat_18 K. B. Jackson, 844-369-8000. Mobile home, 1921 Baird House 126/88 2 bedroom farmhouse, furnished, adapted, diluted, down, muni. 841-750-2222. 27" Penguin for sale. Excellent condition. $85 firm-furnished $10. Call 362-749-108-2 4-82 70 Kavann Ghib Convertible - 4-speed, 28 mpg 70 Kavann Ghib Convertible - 3-speed, 28 mpg deep dish duel 643-837-2598 or 842- 837-2598 Acoustic guitar with pickup. Great shape, only 60 Call Mike or Toni: 841-2266. 4-20 1975 Bulloch Frontera "360" Beter Forks w/NEW seats, new piton, real flat. 130 Tremen. 1974 seats. Flat. 72, 128 green, good condition, tape, 841-3614 after 5 p.m. 4-20 Panaonic AM-FM w/turntable, speakers, 100+ or offer, BWI-5839 Lawrence teacher must sell 1744 mobile home, seating up to 60 people in a designated seating area, includes central air, appliances and washer and dryer. Anchored and on-site for 8-4pm. Pardon, 2323 Iowa, i525, 1525 4-28 Must sell 72 pickup. Good condition. Best offer Must sell 84, 913, 913, provine. 4-22 Honda 360CLB 5.3-10.75, windshield and back-rear: 811, m41, 381-225 4-22 Kansas Union 843-1211 10-speed Motobike (Super-Mirage). In excellent shape. Used only a month and a half. Capacity 35kg. Available from £249.99. Unicycle, the best. Never used. Over $60. Will sell for $12. 841-8222. 4-20 over $50. Will sell for $12. 841-8222. 4-20 Camera, Petri PT, 35 mm, SLR, F=58mm 1.1.8 lens exposure meter, haze filter, shade unfiltered Craig Powerplay cassette tapepher. 2 Jenken bussard, 2 cocktail speakers with hardware - 8GB - Pender Mustang Electric guitar and varet, very 4-20 must sell, call 642-6760. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841.7946.M.S 0.5:30(Thurs.a.m) HELP WANTED Avon open territory in Lawyers. If it you want to learn, they will probably profit by selling world famous Avon products. SUMMER JUNES : Forced services. How where, Mountain City P.O. Box 727, Polona Hill, Mount. Marion County, FO. P.O. Box 5800. Full and part time fontain and caddier work. Needs a Masters in Art, apply in person at the Nassau College, 210 W. 7th St., New York, NY 10019. LIFEGUARDS-Johnson County firm has several full-time summer summer positions for persons employed in the WSU preferred. Send application to A.S.L. 8435 Valquita Lemes Ks 60215 or call 1-888-4280-298 30 hr week Thurs through Sat. Secretary and Assistant to Director of new fine art gallery appraisal in working with the public as recepient interested in working with the public as recepient, but most important the desire to learn more about the formations at 842-9811 after 4 p.m. Send 3 reference and resume to P. O. Box 323, Lawrence, NY 10536. Summer employment (part time during school if desired). Crew erases for培莱尔, Lawrence training to from Work. Resume giving work x-150. Trainer providing training. Showner and Company, RD 100. BOT. Hostes, hot area restaurant and club, prefer over part time, evening, aupalier number. Call 811-253-9460. 1st class F.C.C. ticket holder for part-time. Send resume to Lee Yazell Box 1208, Topkappa 604a, China. TEACHING ASSISTANT. Chinese and Japanese (1 each) for summer session (June 13 to August 5). These interest should apply to R. L. Speak for summer Session, 2181 Wheaton Ave., May 1, 1977 LOST AND FOUND Lost somewhere on campus, small multicolored desk with a computer and driver's license. Please call 843-8224 if you need it. change purse containing student ID and driver information. Check ID. Go to Gold initial initial found on Mass St. Initial Initial found on Mass St. Initial found on Mass St. Found 1 pair of gold glasses in black case. Call 841-2634 Found a watch at Cordray Grade School. Saturday, the basketball courts. Call 824-350- and identify Lost-Prescription glasses in brown case. Lord Lord-Prestige, 36, St John's Church, Gloucester, ton 912-870-3411 or phone. Glass cover, Tom. 912- 870-3411 or phone. Glass case, Tom. 912- 870-3411 or phone. Lost over month age, red notebook in Wearoe, Very important. Call, Mahlum Mahlum, 12371 4,431 Found—Sct of 3 keys on a ring, sidewalk beside Robyn Gym. Gym 884-3170 and claim them. Mocaina thief — please return my shoes. $7.00 re- ward: 842-7693 Lost-Blue bound xerox entry of disertation by Dauphine, Syracuse University, 1974. Reward, 81-11. NOTICE Swap Shop . . . M&s. Mass. used furniture, dishes, tablecloths, clocks, televisions.开放日 12:30 PM。 Chantry Dance - American Heart Association Chantry Dance - American Heart Association 19-Day Course - 19-Day Course $19.00-Phrases $17.00-admission $24.00-$28.00-per-hour KARATE Learn the ancient secrets of this martial art. Master the physical conditioning and learn self defense. Spice up your training with Karate techniques. ANTIQUE AND COLLECTORS SHOP AND ADMINISTRATION SERVICE Hours 10:00 to 8:00. Rental Admission $25. Graduates: plan now for cap and gown photos Graduate's degree: Two x7 and bachelor's degree: B400 - 842-7298 B500 - 842-7299 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 843.9891 6:30.9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 0.00 secs 8-8 Sun Harley-Davidson and Honda Cycles 1811 W. 64k 843-3333 Apply for special events committee 1977-78. Sign- up in SUA office, deadline April 27. 4-22 MISCELLANEOUS K-1U Baily. Business Capital for Squirez Amy Bryant. Gay Services meetings, April 19 and April 21, first Room of Union Meeting, Kansas City; with the gay movement in Kansas City, discuss the current, current backlash across the country. 4-19 PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available at Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, 2 p.m. on Mass. PERSONAL Permanentized office, ceremonies, University Inquiries. Inquiries 806, 306, Lawyer Kannia, 60044, www.kannia.edu Gay Counseling Services. Call 842-7505, 6:15 p.m. for referral. For socializing services. Alceolimum is the most prevalent form of deactivated drug addiction. For help or info, #810-810. RELAY PARTICIPANTS BEWARE: BEN WILL BE THERE. 4-19 ANYONE can become a Universal Life Chun- Minister—even athletics! Legally perform mar- kinesic exercises and swim competitions on more taxes! (Now over 25,000 tax-exempt ULC nationally万名公民!) Don't delay—become accredited of Ministry, and $1, and a self- addressed, stamped envelope to Rev. Tred R. and receive the $250 gift card. biblybium, charred. Sedimentally based tech model for study of the emotional control and physical making-emotional control and physical plantation of your 1977 biblybium, and send you a model from 1784 to 1784 Rd #323. Lawrences cope to 1784 EaR Rd #323. You can record a broken heart at Stuart'san- Charter Dance Foundation $190 for American Heart Awareness. Heart Pump Night-Shrinkman's highest percent- ment in 10 years wins 2 kgs of beer down $100-$150 per person. ENJOY LIFE. Experience Spoon River Anthology April 21, 2023 4: 8 p.m. Hudson River Halloween Party at The Enjoy Life Center Dear Survey Sender—Do you call that work exerted for a reply 'raising my hand on the book' or 'showing up with an audience'? I have reason to believe that you are a lawyer or someone with an imaginary intention. I would appreciate any hints for the third year. I have received a promotion in the past, but I'm not asking for it. I'm taking you to the Triple B Hotel (Boston). SERVICES OFFERED Math learning - competence, experienced tutors help you through courses 606, 602, 102, 101 can help you through courses 115, 114, 171, 122, 122, 123, 142, 508, 552, 687, Remainder calls. Call 824-7241. Test preparation Remainder calls. Call 824-7241. STEREO BROKEN? BIKEEN? amplifiers, amplifiers, turntable, tape decks. Preventive Maintenance (turn tab clean with tube and tube sec.) Custom Amplifier Warranty Jinger Electronics, 724 Mass. 841-5355 warranty. Janger Electronics, 724 Mass. 841-5355 TVVs, strenues, and radios repaired. Most makes. Pick-up and cars or carry in. Pine's Radio and Cable. Connecticut. 845-632-9751. A question professionally, confidentially. Call Katie 845-722-9751. 4-20 Drive-In Clinic for most imported cars TONY'S IMPORTS DATSU 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 15 WEST 81st, 841-2656 10 AM - 5 PM www.yarnpatterns.com HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CARG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. **TYPING:** Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6558. 75c file. If 9th and Iowa Typist editor, IBM Pica/clite. Quality work. Reasonable rates. Talks, dissertations welcome. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. Will type your paper with TCL. TLC papers and specific calligraphy Karen at 864-313-5101, 841-718-7000. "A different kind of bar THEISM BINDING COPYing The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawyer. Let us know if you are at 835 Manhattanss or phone 412-360-7561. Thank you. - Foosball TYPING Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mRNA. Experienced proofreader—spelling, spelling corrections, 843-905-6344. Wright. Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for great typing: 844-3114 days, 822-8988 evening. Wide experience law paper, thesis, dissertations. Special skills: Knowledge, Reasonable, Plan efficient. Mrs. Widley: 842-923-6741 A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." No hands—just kind trying at lower than averages. We must meet the severity of deadlines. Harvey is very worried about it. - Pinball Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, etc. or ette type. Callarm, 842-7263. 4-21 C-2243 WANTED House wanted to rent for summer. Call Brian. 842-7070 The Lounge Female female needed for summer. Own rent- West Hills, W9. Must be straight, 21- 4-1288 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Female roommate needed to share apartment for located Located near KU Med. Center Phone 677-5431 Male roommate for professor, roommate on home until July 1. July 875 plus 4 utilities. 823-9233. 4-21 Must not break hearts, charity shines. Shenan- ian's $170 proceeds go to American Heart Association. $170 proceeds go to American Heart Association. Pier1 imports associate store Roommate needed three summer, 2 bedroom, Commercial Kitchen, Bath, PSC plus utilities. 285-920 Female roommate wanted to share apartment next year. Prefer upper class, non-smoker. - Bud on Tap Female roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment to campus. Call 841-7264 or 842-7087. Female to separate apartment for fall and spring暑季; students non-smoker preferred. Call 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 Female to share comfortable two-bedroom house, vard, AC 1200; unit 841-7179, 843-6535, L19. AIR CONDITIONING. 710 Mass. • 843-2182 DEADBOLTS INSTALLED MORRIS Lock & Key - Pool NAISMITH HALL Pool HILLCREST I Home of The Chalk Hawk BILLIARDS - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong Pin-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Air hockey Fees-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEEK 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week No One Under Is Admitted 10 University Daily Kansan FALLEY'S OPEN 7 AM-MIDNIGHT @ 2525 IOWA—NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S Prices Effective Tuesday thru Sunday April 19-24 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Falley's Fluff Pak GROUND BEEF 3-5 lb.Avg. $ 6 3^{\circ} $ Ohse Boneless Big-T Hams $1 39 Whole Only lb. Armour Grill Dogs ... lb. 79c MORTON—IN A BASKET Fried Chicken ... 2 lb. pkg. $189 Swift Sizzlean ... 12 oz. pkg. $129 Mrs. Paul's Fish Fillets ... 14 oz. pkg. $129 Schlitz Beer 6 pack 12 oz. Cans $ 1 29 SWIFT Brown & Serve Sausage ... 8 oz. pkg. $79c OHSE Economy Luncheon Meat ... lb. $79c Center Cut Ham Slices ... lb. $169 Farmland Sliced Bacon ... 12 oz. pkg. $99c Schlitz Beer 6 pack 12 oz. Cans $1 29 Johnston Frozen Cherry Pie 26 oz. 89 c each 6 pack $129 12 oz. Cans Johnston Frozen Cherry Pie 26 oz. 89c each Schlitz Beer 6 pack 12 oz. Cans $1 29 Johnston Frozen Cherry Pie 26 oz. 89c each Stokely Fruit Cocktail 3 16 oz. Cans $1 Coca Cola Sprite or Tab 16 oz. 8 pack 99c Plus Deposit 26 oz. 89c each Del Monte Catsup...32 oz. **83°** Zestee Salad Dressing...32 oz. **69°** EARLY CALIFORNIA Extra Large Ripe Olives...7 oz. **49°** Nabisco Snack Crackers...SEVEN VARIETIES **59°** Dannon Natural Yogurt...8 oz. **3** $1 Stokoly Fruit Cocktail 3 16 oz. $1 Cans Stokely Fruit Cocktail 3 16 oz. $1 Cans Coca Cola Sprite or Tab 16 oz. 8 pack 99c Plus Deposit 16 oz. 8 pack 99c Plus Deposit Falley's Cottage Cheese 24 oz. 79c Hi-Dry Towels Jumbo Roll 39c Cigarettes... all brands and sizes $3^{99} C & H Powdered or Brown Sugar ... 16 oz. 3 for $1 C & H Pure Cane Sugar ... 5 pound bag $9^{c} Gold Medal Flour... 5 pound bag $6^{c} Family Size Cheer Detergent ... 10 lb. 11 oz. $4^{19} 24 oz. 79c Food King Cut Green Beans...15½ oz. 5 for $1 Food King Golden Corn...16 oz. 4 for $1 Food King Sweet Peas...17 oz. 4 for $1 Bruce's Yams...16 oz. 3 for $1 THREE DIAMOND Mandarin Oranges...11 oz. 3 for $1 Del Monte Pineapple...15½ oz. 39¢ Sun Maid Raisins...8 oz. 59¢ KRAFT Miniature Marshmallows...10 oz. 3 for $1 Charmin Bathroom Tissue 4 roll Pkg. 79c 4 roll 79c Pkg. Crisp-Solid-Head Lettuce or California Pascal Celery 3 for $1 Musselman's Applesauce 3 16½ oz. $1 Cans Bagged Ice Cubes...10 lb. Bag 49°c Bright Red Radishes...160z.bag 3 for $1 Tender Snappy Carrots...2 pound bag 49°c Large Bulb Green Onions...4 bunches $1 WASHINGTON Red or Golden Delicious Apples...10 for 99°c European Cucumbers...each 49°c Washington D'Anjou Pears...10 for 99°c Assorted Tropical Plants...reg $6.99 . each $499 Musselman's Applesauce 3 16½ oz. $1 Cans Van Camp Pork & Beans 4 16 oz. $1 Star Kist Chunk Light Tuna 6½ oz. 59c Food King Sliced Yellow Cling Peaches 29 oz. 39c Van Camp Pork & Beans 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Star Kist Chunk Light Tuna 59c 6½ oz. 6 1/2 oz. 59c 29 oz. 39c FALLEY'S SAVE Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S HUNT'S MANWICH 2 15½ oz. Cans $99c Regular Limit 2 with coupon Good thru April 24 COUPON FALLEY'S HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE 5 8 oz. Cans $1 Limit 5 with coupon Good thru April 24 Reg. 5 for $1.13 COUPON FALLEY'S MORTON HOUSE BAKED BEANS 3 16 oz. Cans $1 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru April 24 Reg. 3 for $1.23 COUPON FALLEY'S SOFT IMPERIAL. MARGARINE 16 oz. $59c Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 75c COUPON FALLEY'S POST TOASTIES 18 oz. $69c Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 83c COUPON FALLEY'S POST HONEYCOMB CEREAL 12 oz. $79c Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 98c COUPON FALLEY'S O'CEDAR SPONGE MOPS $279 Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 $3.79 COUPON FALLEY'S HEFTY TRASH BAGS 30 Gal. 10 ct. $99c Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 $1.29 COUPON FALLEY'S SUNSHINE COOKIES CHIPPAROOS 14½ oz. $69c Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 93c COUPON FALLEY'S GULF-LITE CHARCOAL STARTER 32 oz. $49c Reg. Limit 1 with coupon Good thru April 24 69c COUPON FALLEY'S HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE 5 8 oz. $1 Cans Hunt's tomato sauce FALLEY'S MORTON HOUSE BAKED BEANS 3 16 oz. $1 Cans Reg. 3 for $1.23 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru April 24 COUPON THE UNIVERSITY DAILY RAIN KANSAN Vol. 87, No.129 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Hassles delay KU money bills Wednesday, April 20, 1977 See story page five KU energy-regulating plan awaits Legislature's OK By LEON UNRUH Staff Renorter The University of Kansas is awaiting word from the Kansas Legislature on possible appropriations for the University to enhance its institutional system designed to cut excessive energy use. Max Lucas, director of facilities planning, said last night that he had talked with the House and Senate Ways and Means Conference Committee about an energy policy ITWOULD TURN fans off and on The system, which would use a computer programed to regulate cooling and heating circulation fan motors, would cost $350,000 per hour. The school buildings on the Lawrence campus, he said. Mail-order ordination legitimate for church By DONNA KIRK Staff Renorter For a $20 honorary doctorate, a church kit and a mail-order ordination as a minister of the Universal Life Church, Inc., Marvin Umholt, Lawrence, can now do something he has wanted to do for a long time—marry people. “It’s an ego trip for me, something that I’ve always wanted to do,” he said recently. His desire to marry people and an advertisement he saw in whole Earth Catalog recently prompted him to join the Universal Life Church, a California-based religious organization that ordains its ministers by mail and sends them suggestions for performing services. Being a minister is a service to people according to Kirby Hensley, president and founder of Universal Life Church, who said yesterday that his church ordains anyone. He serves the office and church are in Modesto, Calif., where Hensley conducts services each Sunday. "WE BELIEVE that according to the Bible, John 16:15, that anyone who's called by God to be a minister can be a minister." Hensley said. "There's no charge for being a minister, but we send you a card on request that says you are a minister, because most states' laws say you need certification." Hensley said that the fee, according to his church, was legal. The fee is the salary of a local minister, T. Miller. Miller could not be reached for comment. The church tried to solicit new members through classified advertisements in the University Daily Kansan last week, listing a $30 box number to which the $3 fee could be paid. HENSLEY, 77, said he believed that God was life and that the devil was death, but that his church's doctrine was that what's right for a person is right. "All anybody really wants is freedom, good food, good sex and more of all that," she said. Originally a Southern Baptist minister, Hensley began the Universal Life Church in 1982, because he said he wasn't satisfied with the doctrines of Baptist, pentecostal, and other religious factions under which he preached for more than 30 years. Umholtz, who has been a minister less than a year, said the church's non-demonstrational doctrine appealed to him, but he hadn't performed any marriage service, which he has advertised in the Kansan. "Ive filed my credentials with the county he said, "and so I can marry people legally." depending on how a building was being used on a given day. The fans would run longer, for example, on a class day than on a weekday or holiday when few people were using it. "THE CONSTITUTIONAL protection of religious freedom is strong in this country, and the Universal Life Church is a celebration of that," he said. Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, said that Kansas law provided that any certified minister who registered with the Berk's office could perform marriages. Suggestions for conducting marriage and funeral ceremonies are included in a new minister's church kit and in periodic newsletters sent by the organization's central office, Umholtz said, but the suggestions aren't binding. Each minister can make up his own ceremony, depending upon the interests and wishes of the participants, Urmoltz said, "You don't want to charge for performing ceremonies." Ministers who want to start a part of the Universal Life Church in their areas can get a number for tax purposes provided by the Ministry. Its name for its central office, Uholzt said. HENSLEY SAID the office issued a charter to new churches and charged them a $2 monthly fee to maintain their tax records. The Universal Life Church has more than 8 million ordained ministers, he said, and about 2,500 churches across the country. As a certified religious organization, the church's tax-exempt status is legal, according to a 1979 U.S. District Court ruling, which also said that Universal Life mailchips were no less valid than credentiales obtained in other ways from religious organizations. The 1975 ruling overturned a 1974 Kansas attorney general's opinion that said mail-order ordinations weren't valid under Kansas Law. Mike Elwell, Douglas County Court judge, had relied on the 1974 decision when he refused in 1975 to recognize Universal Life Insurance Company's decision brought a $7 million A fire and security system could be added to the 29-building arrangement at an additional $200,000 cost, Lucas said. A printout at the computer, which probably would be stored in a plant building, also would give immediate alerts when fire or security alarm sounds. See UNIVERSAL page seven KU's energy management system request total $550.000. But the system could pay for itself in less than two years, Laus said, by reducing energy consumption. Savings of up to 30 per cent were realized with the computer system, he said. THE CONFERENCE committee is considering a Kansas Board of Regents request for a $2.5 million allocation from the department to pay projects at all Regents institutions. KU asked for just under $2 million of the $2.5 million for its own energy-related projects, but Lucas said KU officials didn't realistically expect to get that much. Besides the $550,000 computer system request, KU asked for $400,000 to improve air conditioning at the KU Medical Center; chased by KU to power on campus and not lost in transmission; $20,000 to upgrade controls on the main boiler at the Lawrence campus; and funds for adding insulation to the boilers. In some buildings at the Lawrence campus. THE UNIVERSITY asked an additional $80,000 to connect a power management system already installed at the new Med Center clinical facility to the existing campus. The Center computer was installed as part of the original construction plan, Lucas said. The conference committee also is considering power management systems for the other Regents schools, State Rep. Mike Koch, who has served on the committee member, said last night. KU's chances of receiving funding for the system have improved for two reasons since the Regents proposal first was offered. Glover said. See LEGISLATURE page two STEPHEN HUGHES 图16-29 腰骨 Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER KU music composer Vicki Burkhard, Manhattan senior, and Nancy Engelken, Goff senor, waited for the start of Burkhard's recital rehearsal yesterday in Swarthout recital hall. Burkhard will hold a recital of music she has composed tonight in Swarthout. See story page seven. KU composer Wine sellers likely to flee over tax fee By DEENA KERBOW Staff Reporter A liquor tax bill passed by Kansas legislators in a last-minute move before first adjournment may force wine distributors out of the state. The bill would require manufacturers or distributors of each brand label of alcoholic liquor sold in Kansas to be registered with the state for $500 a label. J. L. McClure, manager of Schneider's Retail Liquor Store, said his distributors had told him that the majority of wine producers wouldn't be able to afford that price because wines are bottle under so many different labels, even within a single Area liquor retailers and wholesalers and a Kansas省man met in Tepeeka yesterday to consider methods for reducing the $500 per gallon of beer owned by owner of Underdwell's Real Liquors. UNDERWOOD REFUSED to reveal the senator's name and said nothing happened "It was generally agreed that we would not get into specifics outside the meeting," But, he said, the $200 charge would be a regressive taxation, and "we're—all in the business." He said the group was trying to decide "what can be done to make this thing palatable and still make money for the state." Legislators have estimated that the bill would generate $800,000 annually for the state to be used for community alcoholism and intoxication programs. Retailers do not agree. ONE ANONYMOUS Lawrence retailer said, "It is no doubt that they are not going to get it." MMcure said, "I presume that $800,000 figure was arrived at by someone going down the books and looking at the brands on the shelves," he added, we expect they, won't make that figure." McClure explained why wine companies wouldn't distribute in Kansas under that law. One typical example, he said, would be the RBG Co., which grossed $150,000 last year. Considering its profit margin to be the 25 per cent of the revenue, McClure awarded 22% of $72,000. The company produces its lub See NEW KANSAS page slx Prison serves as KU classroom By MARY RINTOUI This is the first of two articles on classes taught by University of Kansas professors Eugene T. Meyer and John D. Ward. By MARY RINTOU STaff Reporter Every Wednesday night, two University of Kansas instructors must pass through an elaborate security system before they are allowed to face their classes. The instructors, Don Hatcher, assistant instructor of philosophy, and Mike Gaines, associate professor of systems and ecology, teach courses at the University courses at the Leaweworth University courses at the Leaweworth Federal Pentientian—what Gaines recalled called the "palace of federal KU has conducted classes at the prison for 24 years, but only in the last few years have inmates been able to earn a bachelor of general studies degree. On June 10, three students at Leavenworth will become the first KU graduates to graduate. Any inmate, except those in solitary confinement, may enroll in classes at the prison. However, unlike most federal prisons, the inmates pay their own tuition. Charity Dance at Shenonigan's Tonight! 7:30 Reduced Pitchers $1.70 Donations $100 BRITT HA Charitable ride Carolyn Costley, Stillwater, Okla., junior, got a free ride down town Boulevard in an old bathhouse to attract attendance for a beni dance held last night. Susie Nanson, Kanea State University, came to attend her class on Thursday. Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Hudleston, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Patricia Manson, Overland Park sophomore, worked from the opposite end. Alpha Phi Omega, Alpha Phi Alma and Delta Phi TUITION FOR five classes is $290, not including books. To pay for their tuition, almost all the inmates work in one of several prison factories, where the maximum hourly wage is 75 cents. Some of the inmates are disturbed about having to pay for their own tuition. According to some of the inmates, in almost all other federal prisons, the federal government allocates funding for the inmates' tuition. Enrollment at the prison has dropped from about 200 last year to 80 this semester, according to Gaines. Inmates said recently that most of them dropped classes because they didn't work at any of the factories, and simply couldn't afford the tuition. OTHER INSTRUCTORS who teach at the prison and the classes they teach are; Sam Jones, assistant instructor of political science—American Political Parties; Al Johnson, assistant instructor of sociology—Sociology; Larry Gwin, assistant instructor of sociology—Sociology; Larry Gwin, assistant instructor of economy—Economics. Gaines, who began teaching the fall semester of 1976, said he thought the job 1. and planned to teach only one man; but it gets in your blood, "he said perhaps." Gaines isn't paid for teaching at the prison. However, in proportion to the number of students taught, he receives $500, which can be used toward his professorship. As an assistant instructor, Hatcher, a graduate student, has to teach two University courses each semester, and the prison course counts as one of them. During the drive to the prison last week, Hatcher and Gaines spoke freely about their experiences, their feelings and inmate's feelings. GAINES, 34, a tall man who has distinguished roles as the black gangster on his plight. Hatcher, 29, his redish-blond hair neatly combed, wore dress shirt and dress pants. Hid faded jean jacket had tattered sewers, and there were holes in the left knee. They were holes in the left knee. Hatcher was more reserved about discussing Leavenworth, while Gaines, speaking with a marked New York accent, talked confidently and seemed to enjoy "I was terrified the first time I went to Leavenworth," Gaines said. "I had stereotyped what about what can happen in a classroom and robbed someone." Once in the classroom, though, all my fears were gone. The inmates made me feel at ease." GAINES SOON found that he taught the inmates as he did KU students. However, he noticed one big difference between KU students and Leavenworth students. "Students at KU are subconsciously grateful for what I teach them," he said, "but the guys at Leavenworth are demonstratively grateful." The last semester when he finished giving the final exam, Guinea said, students shoot his handgun. Hatcher, who has taught two years at Leavenworth, said that before any instructor began teaching at the prison, he was briefed by prison officials. "The BRIEFING scared me more than the actual classroom did," he said. Hatcher and Gaines said they often strapped from the subject in class and talked to the inmates about their feelings and anything else they had on their minds. "Pirson takes their identities away—and their self-respect," Gaines aid. "It's dehumanizing. These classes give them back their self-esteem." Hatcher said, "The inmates love the classes because someone from the real world—not a guard, not a fellow inmate—has been in charge." Be an inmate is a degrading position. GAINES SAID once he was settled into teaching at Leavenworth he could talk to the inmates about almost anything and they would tell him almost anything. "Most of my students are bank robbers," he said. "I couldn't really talk to them about the reason they were in prison until they began to trust me, though. Teaching is a mutualistic thing. They've taught me as much as I've taught them." Tomorrow: Inside the prison Forms for staff now available Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansan are available in 105 Flint Hall, the Student Senate office. Applications to the offices of the deces of men and women. Positions are open on both the news and business staffs. Applications must be turned in by 10:30am. Summer and fall editors and business managers will interview candidates next Monday and Tuesday. Interview sign-up be posted outside 111 and 141 Flint Hall. 2 Wednesday, April 20, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Texas fire kills at least 8 GALVESTON, Tex. — Firemen duight eight charred bodies out of the smoldering debris of a 60-year hotel yesterday after it was destroyed by a fire, which police said may have been arson. More than 20 guests of Central Hotel were still unaccounted for. The bodies of five children, including three babies, were among the first pulled out of the pile or rubble. In addition to the dead and missing, 13 were injured. A spokesman for John Seale Hospital said four were admitted, with their conditions ranging from good to fair. In addition to the dead and missing, 17 were injured as sparklers burned their facility. Hospital said four were admitted, with their conditions ranged from severe injuries to mild wounds in three locations, police said. The fire broke out in one room, in similar proximity to the police station, rapidly, sailed off the narrow entrance and burned the five-story brick building to the ground. Postal Service in the black WASHINGTON - Postmaster General Benjamin Bailar said yesterday the Postal Service had achieved or first the time a surplus for a full year and wouldn't need more. The Postal Service has a surplus of about $5 million for the 12 months ending March 25, Bailar said. He said the surplus was $4.5 million for the first six months. That compares with a $500 million deficit for the first six months of the previous fiscal year. Ruler, said "For the first time since postal reorganization (in 1971), we have a firm hold on our costs," Ballar, said. Winter auto deaths drop CHICAGO- The bitter winter of 1977 may have been partly responsible for a seven per cent drop in sales for the first two months of the year, the Chicago-based company said yesterday. "Traffic fatalities dropped dramatically," the council said. It noted "the devastating blast of cold from the North, which plunged temperatures to record-breaking lows and buried portions of the country under the heaviest blankets of snow." during January and February. "We can't be sure that was because of the weather alone," said spokesman Vincent Tofany. "These figures are preliminary, and further study will be needed to show which types of accidents were involved, at what rates of speed, under what road conditions and other circumstances." Legislature . . . From page one First, the committee initially thought that Emporia State University was the school fostering the system proposal, but later found that KU had come up with the idea. Neither Glover nor Lucas was openly optimistic that KU would receive the SECOND, HE SAID, the Senate wasn't supported by the House in proposals to raise KU faculty salaries and other operating expenses, so when the Senate compromised with the lower houses' suggestions, more was available for the energy proposals. reason that KU first thought of it, and we can get it amortized in such a short time." LUCAS SAID, "We feel that our research is sound and that the system has been proven at other institutions. I think that it actually be a sound investment on the part of the state." Earlier this year, KU asked for an energy budget supplement for the current fiscal year, after high fuel oil prices depleted KU's funds. KU had to use fuel oil exclusively for several weeks in December 1976 and January and February 1977, when cheaper natural gas supplies were curtailed. KU was on an interruptible-service contract, which allowed the gas company to cut service when the supplies available to the medical institutions were endangered. NAZI HOLOCAUST Edward Alexander, Professor of English at the University of Washington and recent recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship to prepare a book on "Literature of the Holocaust." will speak on "THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE HOLOCAUST." Dr. Alexander will examine the causes and the consequences, historical and immediate, of the Jews' inability to lend credence to the threat and actuality of the "final solution." His talk will touch on some of the older Yiddish writers, on Franz Kafka, on Elie Wiesel, on some of the Warsaw Ghetto diaries, and on Hannah Arendt. THURSDAY, APRIL 21st, 8:00 p.m. FORUM ROOM of the KANSAS UNION sponsored jointly by the Department of English, the Department of History, and Hillel CLIP OUT THIS COUPON 2 $2 2 Fish & Chips for $200 With Coupon $200 With Coupon 00 With Coupo Offer Good Thru April 24,1977 Pirate's PEPSI Cove 6th & Maine TOPEKA (AP)—The three state colleges in Kansas were elevated to university status yesterday under a bill signed into law by Gov. Robert Bennett. Offer Good Only With Coupon "All have graduate programs. Traditionally in America, 'college' has referred to a four-year liberal arts institution. Many colleges carried a more comprehensive connotation. Name change bill elevates 3 colleges to university status Heralded as a move to aid student recruitment and lend greater prestige to the degrees conferred by those colleges, the institutions will now be known as Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University and Pittsburgh State University. "These institutions are universities, offering a variety of programs in several Official names of the three state schools were Emporia Kansas State College, Fort Hays Kansas State College and Kansas State College of Pittsburg. Bennett said, "These name changes were made to more accurately reflect the nature of the changes." WASHINGTON (AP)—President Jimmy Carter will ask Congress to approve substantial price increases for gasoline and other fuels, lawmakers briefed by the White House on the President's energy plan confirmed yesterday. Carter to ask for fuel price increase If the President's program is approved, it could add about seven cents to the cost of a gallon of gasoline shipped by 1981, said Rep. Thomas Ashley, D-Ohio, adding that this would be in addition to a possible standby gasoline supply. The president's population continues to increase. ASHLEY, who will head a select House committee that will deal with Carter's energy program, was one of a number of people who joined the House energy adviser James Schlesinger. Carter will spell out his proposals in an address to a joint House-Senate session tonight. On Monday night, he said in a nationally televised address that the United States faced a national catastrophe with conservation measures we adopted. Carter addressed a group of congressional leaders at a meeting with the White House to participate. Concerts for Young People, Inc. in cooperation with SUA in a one hour performance SUNDAY, MAY 1, 3 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE HARTFORD BALLET K. U. Student tickets in advance presents the K.U. Student tickets in advance at SUA Box Office $2.00 Children 1.00 Adults 2.50 at the door Carter will call for a standby gasoline tax of five cents a gallon per year, to be imposed beginning in 1979, to a maximum of ten dollars, according to legislators who attended the briefing. AORTE-A GREEK CELEBRATION APRIL 21-MAY 1 Congress have publicly confirmed its key elements. ALTHOUGH DRAFTS of Carter's plan have been widely circulated during the past few years, Mr. Miller has no plans to alter it. Tickets for the Greek Night at Royals Stadium are on sale at the Interfraternity Council Office at the Union. The Royals Game is scheduled for Tuesday, April 26 when the Royals will be playing the Texas Rangers. Houses are advised to bring one check in advance of the game to confirm security by Wednesday night. For more information, call David Jervis at 843-6046. he said that he knew his plan was politically unpopular but warned that "the basic fabric of our society would be destroyed" if it wasn't approved. THE LADY TWEETS DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT sponsored by KU BRIDGE CLUB April 24, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of Student Union Admission $1.00 Sign up in SUA office For further info. SUA office 864-3477 Everyone Welcome- NEW YORKER 1021 MAASSACHUSETTS 51 $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS The original great price from New York This image captures a pizza with toppings. NEW YORKER 1021 MARSHALETT ST Beverage NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Coors Pitchers 95¢ With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 MISS STREET DELI Special CHEF BALAD 4 kinds of cheese. 3 kinds of meat, your favorite salad dressing and crackers Reg $1.85 £1.50 Get There with famolare Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street KIDS SHOES VINCENT Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop FAIRCLAYE FAIRCLAYE No at Chan requirer and Sce in cours College meeting afterne Although propose and Pro propose next me UNDI De The definitive Chairm physics Rowlan quarter The K Robin F win a Monday Rowl nationa tournan semifir Univers tournan The d whethe University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 20, 1977 3 New junior requisites proposed at College Assembly meeting Changes in junior classification requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the method of enrolling in courses numbered 300 or higher in the course discussed at the monthly meeting of the College Assembly yesterday afternoon. Although no action was taken on either proposed change, the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (EPPC) had identified at the next meeting of the Assembly. The changes were presented as definitions for the College by EPPC Chairman Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy. UNDER THE PROPOSAL the admission to junior standing would be defined as "A student who has completed 60 hours of college level work and has passed two freshman courses in each of the three distribution areas." The distribution areas required by the College are social sciences, natural science, and health. Under the present system, a student becomes a junior after completing 60 hours, whether or not he has filled the distribution requirements. According to Friauf, the change was needed to ensure a student had the proper "broad background" to continue his degree in the liberal arts or the sciences. Under the new system, it would be THE SECOND DEFINITION, concerning enrollment, stated, "No student may enroll in a course numbered 300 or above unless he (1) has been admitted to junior standing, (2) has received permission from the department that has received permission from the course instructor." possible for a student to have 90 hours and still not be classified as a junior. Friar said that the main enforcement of the enrollment procedures would come from Debaters fail to keep title Rowland and Cross, the defending national champions, placed third in the tournament, after being defeated in the semifinal round by a Georgetown University team that eventually won the tournament. The KU debate team of Frank Cross and Robin Rowland, Lawrence seniors, failed to win a consecutive national debate title Monday in Springfield, Mo. The loss came on a $3-2 decision right after Rowland and Cross defeated Kentucky in a closely contested game. A proposed option asked that the new system not be accepted for the entire College, but that individual departments in it should decide to their own enrollment policies. The debates all considered the question of whether the federal government should significantly strengthen the guarantee of consumer product safety required of According to Cross, the two entered the tournament thinking that they could win but realized the difficulty of repeating their performance of last year. Rowland finished eight in the individual point category. KU's other entry in the national tournment, Margaret Michels, Urbandale, Iowa, sophomore, and Charles Fairchild, make it to the final elimination rounds. Because the proposals had been made for discussion only, no action was taken. Another item on the agenda was a report from the Undergraduate Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (UEPPC), which included suggested item changes, ranging from changing course numbers to deleting classes. JAMES CAROTHERS, assistant professor of English, said the original proposal should not be accepted because he was no real harm in the current system. The measure was passed by a voice vote with the stipulation that any questions raised after further investigation of the matter could be brought up at the May meeting. Paul Gray's Jazz Festival only at Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. Wed., April 20 Acme Tunes featuring Jim Stringer on Guitar. Admission $1.00 Pitchers $1.50 Thurs., April 21 Jam Session with River City Jazz Band No cover No minimum Fri., April 22 Jay McShann Band Just returned from highly successful European tour. Admission $5.00 Sat., April 23 All Star Jazz Band featuring: Claude Williams, violin; Ray Ehrkart, piano; Levine, Claire Williams, boob; Ray詹坤, piano; Clyde Bysom, saxophone; Paul Gray, trumpet; Mike White, clarinet; Horow Keen, trombone; Pete Wyman, bass; Paul Gunther, drums. Admission $5.00 Free Beer! THE DEAN OF BEER'S QUICKIE QUIZ. Q: The best water for beer comes from: a) Big Duck Mountain. b) Underground from Tijuana. c) A small store in Macon, Ga. d) None of the above. ( d ) The way some beer drinkers talk about water, you'd think Alice found it in Wonderland. Not that water isn't important to a beer's taste. It is. Very important. But the fact is, virtually all brewers filter and further purify their brewing water. And Schlitz doesn't stop there. They put their water through what they believe is the most sophisticated purifying process of any brewer in the world. So when they're through, it's purer than the purest springwater. HERE'S JUST ONE WORD FOR BEER. AND YOU KNOW IT. Tom Soo Schlitz Campus Rep. 843-3058 THERE'S JUST ONE WORD FOR BEER. AND YOU KNOW IT. Siglinda Steinfüller Dean of Beer THE DEAN OF BEER Chevennes concern action anthropologist Changing Indian cultures that have encountered problems can be helped by action anthropology, Karl Schlesier, professor of Indian Studies at Wichita State University, said yesterday. 30 persons in the Kansas Union. "He appears as a knowledgeable person who can communicate effectively." "the action anthropologist makes himself and his knowledge available." Schuster The applied anthropologist works with both government programs and native populations to investigate current issues, but never said, but doesn't act as a problem solver. Schlesier said he had worked in Oklahoma as an action anthropologist since 1960 with a tribe of Cheyenne Indians who were adversely affected by changes in its culture. "I offer ideas, things they haven't heard before," Schleier said, but said the final word was "not." ACTION—PEACE CORPS/VISTA Representatives will be at the following placement offices. Mon., April 25 LA&S Tues., April 26 LA&S Wed., April 27 Education Make Your Summer Profitable Continue Your Studies at WASHBURN UNIVERSITY OF TOPEKA Day and Evening Classes Quality Instruction Excellent Study Environment Air Conditioned Classrooms Graduate Education Course Short-term Workshops Eight-Week Session Foreign Language Workshops urses Workshops REGISTRATION FOR DAY AND EVENING CLASSES · MAY 31, 1977 For further information and application, contact: SUMMER SESSION OFFICE Morgan Building Room 107 913-295-6619 sale SPRING SUIT SALE Mister Guy announces its Spring Vested Suit Sale! Suits from '120 to '130, NOW 9950 Suits from '140 to '150, NOW 115 $ ^{00}$ This Sale includes solids, plaids, pin cards, chalk stripes and more. Shop early for the one just right for you while selection is. All Stock Not Included Open Thursday Nights 'tll 8:30 MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHING 922 Massachusetts 4 Wednesday, April 20, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily affect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism Debate promotes KU You may not know this, but earlier this week we heard from the University of Kansas third from them. Last year, the same team won the national championship. You may not have known The team that was so successful is otherwise known as Frank Cross and Robin Rowland, members of the KU debate squail. During the past few years, those two students, along with several other members of the squad, have made quite a name for the team. THE REASON you not have heard about them is that debate frequently is passed over by the public and by the news media (the Kansan included). So people would be saddened by the spectacular spectator activity; most people would rather watch, and the press would rather cover a football game. Fortunately, debate isn't dependent upon box office revenue for its survival. Obviously, the KU debates have gotten along quite nicely without us. This season, in addition to the third place finish at nationalists, Cross and Rowland won tournaments sponsored by the universities of Utah, North Carolina, Wake Forest, Georgetown and the national speech fraternity. They also placed in the top five at several other tournaments, including University of Alabama and Owens Heart of America tournament. The tournaments and the competition were the best in the nation. AS IN FEW other areas of competition, KU has a reputation as a superpower in debate circles, thanks to Cross, Rowland, and Terry. But he should not be a squad. They should be justly proud. Don't read this column. Book banning defined as vulgar There are times when editorial writers can't decide whether to write about a subject because writing about it might lead to a situation the writers don't think should be popular. So, if you read on, promise me you won't talk to anyone else about the subject unless they mention it first. The public's "right to know," if such a right does exist, sometimes might be better described as the right not to know. THE SUBJECT about which I hesitate to write is the Eldon, Mo., school board's refusal to allow its junior high school to be with 30 copies of the American Health Journal of the English Language. Eldon is a farming and resort community of 3,520 residents near the lake of the Ozarks. Its Board of Education decided recently to refuse to allow use of the dictionary in question because, apparently, of the book's reference to words and phrases considered vulgar and scatalogical. they can ban the use of the words it contains. The reason that I hesitate to The Eldon case is an example of what seems to be a renewe interest in book banning Brent Anderson Editorial Writer write about the "banning" (an admittedly descriptive description) of the American Heritage Dictionary is that it might cause similar action among others who want to shield their children from certain words and definitions. especially in junior highs and high schools. Instances of the outlawing of certain books in several communities occurred in several communities. THEY MIGHT be able to ban the dictionary, but I doubt that Dictionaryes had rarely been the cause of such action, however, until someone found out that the American Heritage's newest dictionary, published in 1969, contained several words frequently used in this country, but rarely defined. According to Lyle Hensley, superintendent of the Eldon school district, an Eldon resident apparently read about the banning of the American Heritage Dictionary in a community in Indiana, then found out that the Eldon school district was not authorized to dictionary. The resident, when Hensley identified as a Missouri highway patrolman, started a drive to ban the dictionary. THE PATROLMAN read about the banning in Indiana in the Jefferson City Times, making the press at least an accessory in the Eldon case. A committee that reviews comments recommended that the board allow the use of the dictionary despite the complaint. The board didn't follow that recommendation, however, and voted unanimously to ban the There are three main reasons the dictionary shouldn't be banned. First, the words apparently in question are frequently used and, therefore, should be defined; second, the dictionary is hoped to be hoped, its readers will use instead of vulgar words; and, third, it's an excellent dictionary. BESIDES, it's doubtful that anyone doesn't already know what the words in question mean. As far as the role of the press in this matter is concerned, I hope its publicity doesn't facilitate the apparent book banning trend. And that trend is, I think vulgar. WESTPHAL ...LISTEN TO ME, YOU PEANUT BRAIN. DON'T YOU REALIZE WHAT THAT STUPID, SHORTSIGHTED TAX ON GAS GUZZLERS COULD DO TO US OIL NEE? ONE MORE THING... Private schools face suit ... MAMA SENDS HER LOVE. STP MEMPHIS-For rouguy, 35,000 pupils—most of them white, but with a fair sprinkling of blacks—the school year in Memphis will end on a note of apprehension. The students and teachers work together unwind- ing how much longer their schools will stay alive. In view of the law's delays and the probability of political action, it's likely that the state will some time to come. Nevertheless, their perilous situation is real—for these are private schools in a desegregated city. It's also likely to crush the life out of them. A suit is slowly maturing in Washington, D.C., brought by a number of black parents in the form of a class action. Inez Crawford, a former public dividually and in behalf of her four children, leads the list of plaintiffs. Their purpose is to nullify the federal tax exemption granted to private schools in cities that have desegregated their public school systems. The Supreme Court or government regulation. THE SUIT GOES farther than any previous class action. The plaintiffs estimate that the suit will cost 750,000 children, now maintain vit tually iily-white enrolment in about 3,000 affected school districts. The plaintiffs come from communities as far apart as Natchitoches Parish, La, and Boston, Mass. The suit James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. attacks private academies in Montgomery, Ala.; Cairo, III; Prince Edward County, Va.; Yosemite, Cal.; tension the sought-after relief would affect private schools in Los Angeles, Detroit, San Antonio and hundreds of other school districts outside the South. be canceled; if this effectively kills the schools, the plaintiffs couldn't care less. THE LOSS of tax exemption in Memphis would gravely affect three large private schools. These include Harding Academy, with an enrollment of 2,900; the Briarcrest Baptist Schools, with a combined enrolment of 3,500; and the Memphis School of International Whitehaven, with 1,200 students. Ten smaller institutions might also be compelled to close. The suit involves delicate questions of church and state. Harding Academy, for example, is a subsidiary of Harding College in Searcy, Kentucky, under the wing of the Churches of Christ. In Orangeburg, S.C., the Bowman Academy is loosely affiliated with the Southern Methodist Church. In Montgomery, the St. James Parish School continues to conflate the terms of the St. James Methodist Church. THE SUIT ALSO raises grave questions of public policy. No one questions that, in the language of the Tax Code, the schools exist exclusively for "religious, literary" or educational purposes." Is it wise for the federal government to decree one kind of education only—heavily integrated education—as the sole approved kind of education? Memphis school administrators insist they have done everything the law requires, they proclaim a non-discriminatory policy, but they get few black applicants. One reason may lie in the tuition fees, which range at Harding Academy from $430 to $590 and in senior high school. The Briarcrest Baptist fee schedule is even higher. Black children may also shun the private schools, wholly personal reasons. They won't want to be鱼 out of water. PRIVATE SCHOOL spokesmen make this point also. If local private schools were forced out of existence, 35,000 pupils would be dumped on the Memphis public school system at an additional annual operating expense of $49 million. Construct costs of that program are of that. If that contingency were widely understood in desegregated cities, apprehension might be shared by all taxpayers, black and white alike. Bryant sings, but not gayly; umpires call, unfairly Gays don't recruit To the editor: Bryant's efforts to repeal Dade county's gay rights ordinance have received little attention. Although her actions have had a binding effect upon the gay community like nothing ever before, they have now become a major concern in homophobia across the nation. Witness the Arkansas A high school teacher recently wrote that "every time I get a bit optimistic about the American people, I get several rude jokes." This well expresses the feelings of many within the gay movement as we witness the pride against the rude joke against the gay community. legislature's unanimous resolution endorsing Bryant's campaign against gay civil rights. For the first time in the history of the gay movement, gays must contain with an organized, well-financed, and hysterique lobby fixed upon the success of progress gays have made politically and socially. This is the time for the gay community to band together, assert itself and support the efforts of gay organizations through permanent money—especially money. The verbage that Bryant espouses about homosexuality is manical nonsense, abhorrent. The word homosexuals do not 'recruit new members." We are "reproduced" by heterosexuals such as you and your husband. We come from families identical to yours, I know, because I were not born in the molestation and rape are exclusively heterosexual problems. These, rather than don't mean to sound thou-ther than, but I feel his remarks smack of fasciat supremacy. A free and open country should leave its doors open to all races without prejudice or respect. In the words of philosopher Wayne Meisenheimer, "That's what Win Wilhelmsen feel your letter does indeeed sound like "sour grapes." Prescott, Ariz., senior Let the junk rust To the editor: My only consolation for having to look daily at that ugly Readers Respond A Pacemaker award winner the actions of two people of the same gender loving each other, are the real "abominations" to the Deity. And these represent a far greater threat to the American ideals of monarchy than the violent efforts of gay people to secure their basic human rights. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom -864-4810 Business Office -864-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily August 27, 2013 July 5 and June July eaxpired Saturday, Sunday and Helen- day Sunday. Subscription rates are $14 for 600 subscriptions. Subscriptions by mail are a $3 per month or $18 per year a outside county. Student subscriptions are a $19 per month. Editor Tim Rates Editorial Editor Stewart Brann Jun Editor Campus Editors Jun Editor Bernall Howeer Copy Chiefs Sports Editor Associate Sports Editors Photo Editor Makeup Editors Mary Myers Wire Editors Entertainment Editors Contributing Writers Editorial Writers Lynda Smith Bernal Howeer Barbara Boozer Jim Cobbs Bernall Jaubeck Jr. Gary Vee Dowerman Rowman, Courtney George Miller McGraw Jay Kozelier, Martin Maurice Soap Appliance, Jim Cob, Anson Ashby Larry Bonner, Billy Sheil Bailey Elizabeth Leech, Bill Sniffen, Barbara Rosewood Jerry Baynis, Paul Jefferson Jerry Baynis, Paul Jefferson Ken Wetphal Campus Editor Alison Gwinn Managing Editor Greg Hack Business Manager Janice Clements Todd VanLaningham Gay Services of Kansa Advertising Manager Tim O'Meara Associate Marketing Manager Jack Baird Classified Manager Randy Hubeer Assisted Classified Manager Paul Thornton Promotion Manager Daniel Foster National Advertising Manager Robin Guideren Advertising Manager Michael News Adviser Publisher Business Adviser Bob Giles David-Darry Mel Adeana Cadden scolded I was deeply revolted and greatly humiliated after reading Tom Cadden's letter of April 8 about "Americanizing His contention that foreigners should have no place in American track programs is against all the fundamental ideals upon which democracy and this nation are based. 1 To the editor: makes this country a great melting pot." Letters Policy Some of Cadden's other arguments are equally outrageous. He implies that foreign athletes owe their success in this country to the fact that they are generally older than American collegians. He also suggests that Nadia Componet is only 14 years old, and yet she is an Olympic champion. Another statement he makes is that we should give scholarships to marginal athletes. This is contrary to the spirit of competition. If we want to improve the quality of American track, we should concern ourselves with obtaining the best possible athletic athletes happen to be foreign, then this is the recruiting route we should follow. Besides looking at these athletes as mere pawns in the recruiting game, we should also look at the other attributes they have to offer. Bringing them to this country means cultural understanding and appreciation of others' beliefs, values and lifetimes. No place better represents this harmonious exchange and camaraderie than the classrooms at Learned Prep, where Samboo on Thursday night after the Hatter closes.) letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-space and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be provided their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address. I must also shoot down another of his implications. He contends that American collegians can win against it. We criticize him, pointed out that KU won the recent Dallas Invitational, a meet in which KU competed head-to-head with UTEP, a school whose powerful squad is dominated by foreign athletes. piece of rusted junk displayed prominently just south of the Union is that it might eventually rust away. De Boeck Lawrence senior In conclusion, Mr. Cadden, I Conserve that water De Boeck Foul umpiring called To the editor: To the editor: Both of our teams are in the "A" Independent division of intramural softball and were in the race for first place during the tournament. Tahitan Founders first game, some poor "judgment" calls were made, and members of the team were upset, and rightly so. We are aware that the umpires try, and usually do their best, but they can fail. We involve knowing the game of softball and the rules. as there a defendable reason for the streets of the University to be washed down (Oread Avenue and road behind Strong Avenue). If conservation does not begin at home, where does it begin? Intramural office, here is our proposal: Teach your umpires the rules. Give them rule books and make certain they know not only the rules but also the game. And please have them bring the rules to the games. By all means, give them diagrams for positioning. Andrea Welborn Pat Mimeau KU staff members All we want to do is play ball. But to lose or win because of an umpire's lack of knowledge, well, it is hard. A comment from the Vikings on our game, "It's only intramural softball." Well, not all of us are really good enough to play for the KU baseball team or foot-ball team (the case may be). (The other team comprises KU football players.) Every year intramural officials become the target of criticism. Why? Is it because they don't know the rules and the game, or are they improperly instructed? Spectators violent To the editor: Michael Goldstein St. Louis senior The Tahitan Pounders The Coral Reefers It's a shame to see that sports fans can't be expected to attend athletic events any more without turning into a pack of vicious animals. The recent attacks against athletes at athletic events is something that should be of concern to everyone. I'm sure everyone can remember the outrageous cup fights in Memorial Stadium this year. A sorority housemother received a "rhapsody in the kisser" from an empty whiskey bottle thrown from the upper rows of the stadium. The most vivid example of fan misbehavior in the recent past has to be the Kansas City Royals home opener. Fights with the opposing team all directions from where I was sitting. One man who was quite drunk walked up to a friend of mine and yelled, "I lost my buck-a-roo!" He then hauled off struck my friend in the face. I am afraid to go to some athletic events. Some people may laugh and say that only babies are afraid, but I just can't bear the thought of paying for such an event. I have the possibility of some big ape walking up to me and knocking my head off. of figurative "water letter outer" I'm not saying that fans should turn themselves from Great Danes into Pekineses. I do feel that people should try to use some restraint and not regard the sports so seriously. I don't think much has the same effect as water filling up in a boat—it makes the whole boat sink. The only solution is to find some sort Jerry Howard Wichita sophomore Football bunnies? To the editor: Had last Wednesday been April 1 and not April 13, I might have been able to dismiss the ad for Sunflower hostesses on the back page of the Kansan as a tasteless April Fool's joke. Unfortunately we were apologetic to talk seriously an ad soliciting the services of our female students ("hostesses" was the word used) to assist in recruiting football players. One wonders what a full job description for these positions might include. Are there special requirements standing be accepted? Who will make the selection? How? The whole concept, with its exisit connotations, is an insult to the students at whom the ad was directed and to the prospective football players who, we hope, will choose KU for the excelent athletic programs and won't need the enticement of KUAC "bunnies." K Democr state tree office of control the most other 64 years, one house A politi of power less work this year example. Eizabeth Banks assistant professor of classics An unfit democrat cohesive nobody s because e going to majority Democrat to 60 Rep maximum © 1977 NYT Special Features THE disagreee Some leg agree wi the other Both he with Rep the gov probable race, Cun general. > The so leads to flourishin THE 1 Board of about $4 employee and other decided This ce was the journed importa directly The legis two-or t "IT WAS A PRECULAR CIVILIZATION. DEFLEETING ALL ITS FUEL RESOURCES WORKSHOPING THIS STRANGE MACHINE..." Wednesday, April 20,1977 5 itent ioned reded saw onons- ick ack g430 g430 theule renen renal be IO LINE bposed boped boolaul boolaul $49 $49 lately deck KU bills stalled by party politics A News Analysis By ROSS McILVAIN Staff Renorter The Kansas Legislature accomplished less than usual during the main part of the session this year, chiefly because of an enormous division of power in state government. Democrats control the House, the office of state treasurer and the now highly visible office of attorney general. Republicans elect the Senate the governorship and most other offices a first time in 64 years, the Democrats hold a majority in one house of the Legislature. A political axiom says that such a division of power usually causes more conflict and work—more smoke and less fire—and the legislative session offers a prime example. Both houses are held by narrow party majorities—21 Republicans to 19 Democrats, the state, and 65 Democrats in both houses in creating a maximum of internal conflict. An unfortunate property of an elective democracy is that, although rule by a cohesive elite is discouraged, sometimes nobody seems to be running the show because everybody is bickering about who's going to do it. THE DEMOCRATIC House often disagreed with the Republican Senate. Some legislators in one house couldn't even elect a senator, members of their own party in the other house. Both houses disagreed often and heartily with Republican Gov. Robert Bennett, and the governor traded insults with his probable rival in the 1978 gubernatorial race, Curt Schneider, Democratic attorney general. The clean-up session traditionally has been held chiefly to consider the governor's vetoes, having evolved as a simple mechanism to balance the governor's power over bills passed late in the session. The governor has 10 days to sign or veto a bill before he becomes first adjournment and the clean-up session usually is about two weeks. This conflict, an the resulting indecision, was the main reason the legislature adjourned April 7 without deciding several important bills—including some which Kansas. The legislature will reconvene April 17 for a two- or three-day clean-up session. This means that the governor usually will have acted by the final session, and the legislature will get to consider his decisions. The governor will act by the legislative, especially appropriations bills, usually has been passed during the main session so the legislature will have a chance to muster the two-thirds majority necessary such house to override the governor's veto. The sort of political environment that leads to constructive cooperation wasn't invented until the 1950s. A SUPPLEMENTAL appropriations bill to give KU $34,400 to cover utility cost increases for this fiscal year is in the same state as the main appropriations bill. On both the main and the supplemental appropriations bills, the legislature couldn't decide whether to agree with the governor's recommendations—or with each other. The two houses put off the decision until they could reconvene. THE MAIN appropriations bill for the Board of Regents schools, which included about $4.54 million for KU faculty and employee salaries, utilities, maintenance and other operating expenses, waits to be decided when the legislature reconvenes. Both bills passed each house in different forms and are now in the same conference committee. The committee, comprising three members of each house, will try to work out an agreement between the two houses. The legislature probably will follow the committee's recommendations with, few exceptions. finished business and the short time will stiff lengthy consideration by either house. A capital improvements bill that would allot KU $1.7 million for additions to Malott Hall and Robinson Gymnasium has passed the Senate but is still in the House Ways and Means Committee. According to members of the committee, Mr. Malott disagreement on the bill, but other bills they were considering kept them from getting capital improvements. MOST LEGISLATORS, of course, deny this, because they would be admitting that major decisions are being made by only a few men and that the rest of the legislature will rubber-stamp these decisions. It's not in their best interests to admit it. University Theatre to hold summer season auditions The University Theatre will have auditions for their summer theater season from 10 a.m. to noon and 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. The performances are on Sunday, April 24, in the Intec Theatre. Approximately 35 to 40 actors and technicians will form a summer repertory of the show. "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" is a comedy set in ancient Rome, "Inherit the Wind" is a Pulitzer prize-winning re-recreation of the Scopes trial, and "The Moon" is the story of a young warlock who falls in love with a mortal. The productions are: "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum," directed by Tom Rea, associate professor of speech and drama; "Inhert the Wind," directed by Bobby Patton, chairman of the speech and drama department; and "Dark of the Moon," directed by Spencer Golub assistant instructor of speech and drama. Singers, dancers and actors will be auditioned this weekend. Community auditions for "Inherit the Wind" will be from 2:15 p.m. Sunday. The summer theater season will be June 11 through Aug. 6. The first four weeks will be spent in rehearsal, and performances will begin on the day of the schedule during the remainder of the season. You don't ask for a date because you can't stand rejection? It's time you explored... YOUR ERRONEOUS ZONES Give us a quote, suggestion, or be the lucky winner of your weekend on-line. Never have I read a book that has such power to inspire me in so many ways. Robert L. Cummings (author) QUILT MONSTER WARD HAND PAINTED DENIM WORLD SINOON DR. MAYNE W. OYER Dr Dyer has blended humor, powerful insight into human experience and alarmingly straight forward approach to personal mission. -D.B. St. Paul Minn $695 teapot FUNK & WAGNALLS Coffee and Tea Sale Buy one pound of our specialty coffee at the regular price and get a pound of any other variety for 50c. Buy 1/4 pound of our bulk tea for the regular price and get 1 ounce of any other variety of bulk tea for free! Twinings. Herbal Trees (Tisanes). Tea Infusers and Irish Coffee Cups—10% off 809 1/2 W. 23rd St. Next to McDonald's THE STINKY CHEESE SHOPPE tel. 842-7434 SOPHOMORES! (Class of '79) Here's your chance! Sign up now for Publicity Social Special Events Committee positions are open to all. Submit names to BOCO office, 1138 Union between 10:30-3:30 DEADLINE-FRIDAY, APRIL 29 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS present Cosi Fan Tutte A Comic Opera in Two Acts 77 W. A. Mozart April 22,23,29,30 8:00 p.m. University Theatre—Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 K. U. Students admitted without charge with current Certificate of Registration SENIOR CLASS MEMBERS This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. Come to THE WHEEL on April 21st from 7-10 p.m. FAREWELL TO THE WHEEL PARTY 10c draws KU Women's Athletics Awards BANQUET Sunday, April 24 6:00 p.m guest speaker... OLGA CONNOLLY Olympic Gold Medal Winner In Women's Discus Participant In Five Olymplads Writer, Lecturer, Leader in Women's Sports ALL ARE WELCOME buffet supper tickets '2.50 Women Student-Athletes '6.00 Parents and Guests PLEASE MAKE RESERVATIONS BY THURSDAY, APRIL 21 IN THE Room 6, Allen Field House University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 6 Wednesday, April 20, 1977 University Daily Kansan New Kansas liquor tax From page one which multiplied by the $500 would equal about $15,000 or one-half of their profit. "Why should a company lose that much money in Kansas," he said, "when they can't get it from them." MCCLURESAID that about 60 per cent of all posted wine companies would cut off everything from Kansas, and that others would limit their distribution in the state. He said nearly 90 per cent of the foreign wines would quit distribution in Kansas. "Matesus and Huntite are the only foreign wines available in the state," he added. "Foreign wines will not afford it—no way." McClure explained that wines like Beaujolais are individually brought into the state by importers who couldn't afford to pay $500 for each label they bring in. "We're not cutting out any problem," he said. "We're cutting out the person who likes a good wine with dinner. These are people that are really into the wine, couldn't even afford them just to get drunk." “IT'S LIKE this. If you go to the store to get caviar, if they don't have it, you don't buy asparagus to replace it. There is no replacement.” "Like a Dorm Pernigon which is about a $23 per bottle," he said. "We have a club that He said he would lose about one-third of his business if the bill became law because the kinds of wines that would be lost weren't replaceable. On Campus LAKE MARY'S PARK Events TODAY: THE ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT will sponsor the film, "Teaching Sign Language to the Chimpanzee Washoe," at 4 p.m. in 627 Fraser Hall. Karl Rosen, associate professor of classics and linguistics, will lecture on "STUDIES ON POLITIAN" at 4 p.m. in 4066 Wescow Hall. TONIGHT: BACKPACKING is the subject of an Outdoor Recreation Seminar at 7 in 205 Robinson Hall. An Adult Life Resource Center's seminar on CREATIVE DIVORCE will be held at 7 in Annex A, 13th and Oread. Students International Meditation Society presents an event for SCENDEN and the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union. A recital of compositions by VICKI BURKHARD, Manhattan senior, will be presented at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW: A conference on "INNOVATIONS IN EDUCATION" will be held all day in the Union. The KANSAS RELAYS begin at 1 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. Alan Buecher, associate professor of music at Queen's College, City University of New York, will lecture on "WILLIAM HAWKINS: A Celebration of Restoration Becthall Hall, William May, chairman of religious studies at Indiana University, will speak on "THE FUTURE OF RELIGION" at 6 p.m. in the Union, Don Abhasseph, professor at Haskell Indian Junior College, will speak on the "SPIRIT OF ECOLOGY AND THE NORTH AMERICAN PLAINS INDIANS" at a meeting of the Jayhawk St. STUDENTS of THE YOUTH GOODWILL MISSION of the Republic of China will present music, art, fashions and the martial arts at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom, the SSYMPHONIC BAND will perform at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre. THE BAILES MESTIZOS DANCE CONCERT will be held at 8 p.m. in Hech Audience. Alexander, professor of English at the University of Washington, will speak on THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE HOLOAXIAT" at 8 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. Announcement Applications are being accepted by the Office of Study Abroad, 108 Strong Hall, for the "Encounter Ireland" student scholarship program. Students would spend July 14 to Aug. 12 in Ireland the cost of the program is $700, and scholarships are available for qualified students. STAKE A CLAIM ON ONE OF OUR STEAK SPECIALS STEAK-A-BOB Served with rice, tossed green salad, rolls & butter. $4.50 Hearty 12 oz. TOPSIRLOIN STEAK Served with choice of $5.50 potato, cottage cheese or vegetable; tossed salad, rolls & butter. Holiday Inn of Lawrence 23rd & Iowa Streets Phone 843-9100 Holiday Dnn° HOTEL WESTERN EXPRESS There's Always Something Developing at Our Place! With our fully-equipped darkroom here at Naismith,it's only natural! Relax Next Fall—Move to Naismith Hall "Obviously they're not buying it at $32 per bottle just to get drunk." Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features uses two bottles a week and customers who buy it for special occasions. 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 --n it goes through, without modifications and does not have an injunction filed against it," he said. "we will see a great improvement." He would be pretty intimate to the consumer. McClure said one good thing about the milk was that it would get rid of many minor labels like Old Fence Tee and Kentucky Hubcap. "the ones you don't ever sell, but..." "IN GETTING RID of these," he said, they are also going to be knocked out a much harder time. "I imagine Gallo will stay, and Almaden may not keep their full lines, but will probably be a big portion of them. But a bit majority of wines just cannot afford this." "It's cutting the premium wines totally out of the picture." McClure said premium wines like Ridge California Zinfandel (Late Harvest) came from small vineyards that specialized in a particular grape or method that made them better than average. But, he said, these small companies couldn't afford the $200 Underwood said that the governor didn't have to take action on the bill until April 28, and that he hoped a new, more feasible plan could be developed before then. HE SAID SOME popular wines that probably wouldn't be available in Kansas if the bill passed into law included Beringer, Sonoma, Clos Duval and Mirasson. Another anonymous retailer said, "If they don't change the bill, and it passes as is, there would probably be so many law suits that we would have had tied in court for a long, long time." He said that would mean it would be a long while before Kansas would see any big change in lieu distribution. "He would be faced with the wine selection of about 10 years ago." Pier1 imports assist site more Pier1 imports associate store 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 19th & Mass. 843.9891 6:30-9:30 p.M. Mon. Sat. 8.8 Sun. Horley-Davidson and Honda Cycles orizon 1811 W. 6th 843-3333 After the Relays Come as you are... HUNGRY! Sandwich lovers start here Sesame bun Melted cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beef! to Sandy's 2120 W. 9th GET INVOLVED IN UNIVERSITY GOVERNMENT While the board itself meets approximately five times a year, involvement in Union governance is only limited by the board member's initiative. Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union. 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789 5 Student Positions Available for Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board: Applications must be returned to the Student Senate Office by Thursday, April 21, 1977 The Memorial Corporation Board of Directors is a 36 member board composed of students, University and Union admini- dictators, alumni, and faculty. Its purpose is to determine financial and operational policy for all facces of the Kansas Union. SEE ZZ TOP FREE Sign up to usher in the SUA Office before April 27 SUA 1/3 carat $565 12 1/3 carat $550 1/3 carat $388 1/3 carat $388 --- 1/2 carat $795 1/2 carat $800 1/2 carat $1,650 5/8 carat $775 --- ❤️ 5/8 carat $495 14K White Gold Diamond Ring 5/8 carat $1,595 3/4 carat $2,400 3/4 carat $2,580 Diamond Ring Fc 100% Proppé Newweelw pencils an Viclk Bur posmes "When read my more," mile. En Burkha composed recital hu "Engin will be the Council's and Satu 3/4 carat $775 Yc Yca A n . . . . . . . . . . . . Nine st will be o Friday, a Learned Student tertiary o by the Se model sit built bityt by Advance display o American The Art and Astro y B istics quali P some beca C Ther sparl each And what B ring you! Wednesday, April 20.1977 Feelings rule music, writer says By PAM EKEY Staff Reporter Propped up in bed 'sunday mornings, Newsweek magazine on her left, papers, pencils and erasers scattered on her right, diamond, Manhattan senior, composes music. "When I get tired, I either fall asleep or read my Newsweek. Then I write some response." Burkhard will hold a recital of composes worked at 8 tonight in Swarouth where Although she is majoring in music composition, Burhard said composition was her favorite. Engineers' show to open "IT'S VERY painful knowing that everything I write is not good, but there is real joy in hearing an instrument produce a sound as you intend it to sound. There's something that can compare with a composition piece being done, and been done well." "I have to work very hard at it," she said. Because I know I'm not a Beevor or a hamster. "Engineers: Exploring New Frontiers" will be the theme of the Engineering School Council's 57th exposition this Friday and Saturday. Nine student and 21 industrial exhibits will be on display from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, and 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, in Learned Hall Student displays will include an exhibit on tertiary oil recovery from off-shore fields of the Gulf coast. The model city of energy conservation methods built by the University Association for the Advancement of Women Engineers and a display on the use of insulation by the students of the University Association. The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics will have a display explaining its work with the University and NASA on the Venus space probe. Labs will be open for such demonstrations as concrete strength testing. The Engineering School Council will give first, second and third place awards for the three best student displays based on theme, originality and technical merit. Sigma Tau, an engineering honorary fraternity, will award a trophy to the engineering department that has the best over-all display. Guided tours may be arranged by contacting Steve Catley, Lawrence graduate student, at 864-3747 at least two days in advance. Engineering students will be available to talk to prospective engineering students. Ideas for a musical score are difficult to formulate. Burkhard said. She said she rarely 'ad an inspiration, but had to keep a time to sit down and consciously write. "That's what my Sunday mornings are for." She usually jets down an idea and then works with it, modifying and changing it until it fits the mood of the piece she is writing. Burkhard said. SHE SAID SHE BELIEVED in the romantic ideal that with music, words weren't necessary to express a feeling, and her music reflects her moods. "I think I get my emotions rule the music too much, but that is not unhealthy, because I am a great listener," she said. idealistic, because I still believe you can make money by selling music that has Modern composers are sacrificing their emotions to write pieces that aren't upsettting to anybody, she said, by finding a way to repeat it and then repeating it in every piece they write. BECAUSE OF ITS emotion, Burkhard said, her music sometimes upsets people, but to write without emotion would be to compromise herself. Pieces written without emotion are a formula all sound the same, she said, so we work to make each composition unique. Plant Lovers, You Just Don't Know What You're Missing!! "YOU ETHER have to be able to play the instrument or have a good friend who can," Burkhard said, because a composer has to hear the piece. To write music, a composer must be familiar with the instrument she is writing for and know the inherent problems in the instrument. Burkhard said. Burkhard said she was uncertain about her future. She has applied to some graduate schools, where she wants to study piano accompaniment. ANYTHING GROWS "I don't think they're feeling anything from the music," she said. "I'm too As an alternative, she said, "I've visions of going to New York and living a puper's life." A new plant store, offering so much more! - Plant Rental * Plant Maintenance * Decorating Services * Friendly Free Advice Just ask for Judy Green or Anna Hines STORE HOURS: 12 to 5:30 on Monday 9:30 to 5:30 on Tuesday through Thursday Ocnen until 8:30 p.m. on Thursday - Open until 8:30 p.m. on Thursdays 6 East 9th • 843-1166 Half block east of Mass. St. APRIL'S FOOLE GEORGE CARLIN at Kansas University Noch Auditorium SUN. APRIL 24 It's this Sunday night! Buy your tickets now! A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. University Daily Kansan Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas TICKETS— Reserved Seats Only $7.55, limit 10 at: SA Box Office, HK's Influence At any price you can afford to be choosy. Because the value of every diamond is determined by four characteristics (cut, color, clarity and carat weight), you can always use these qualities to your best advantage. Perhaps you're attracted by the grandeur of a large diamond. Well, sometimes a large stone can cost the same as a smaller one. Simply because it has a little more color. Or a delicate birthmark hidden inside. In any case, you'll be able to find one to suit your personality. Because each one is an individual, with its own combination of characteristics And you can use these qualities any way you wish, to help you decide what's precisely right for you. On the other hand, you may feel size isn't the most important quality. Then you could choose a diamond that's small, but perfectly cut to sparkle with an icy-white elegance. But the important thing to remember is to buy a diamond engagement ring you'll be happiest with. You'll be sharing it for a lifetime with someone you love. And for that reason alone, you should be choosy. Adiamond is forever. Prices shown represent retail quotations for these specific rings (included for detail). Your jeweler has many diamonds to choose from and can give you the best guidance. De Beers Consolidated Mines, Ltd. Universal . . . From page one lawsuit filed by Timothy Albertson, a former University of Kansas student, then head of the church in Kansas, who said that Elwell had violated his right to perform marriages. Elwell refused yesterday to comment. AN INTERNAL REVENUE Service spokesman said that ministers as self-employed individuals could be exempt under certain conditions from self-employment taxes, and that personal property that was proved to be used for governmental purposes was not. However, ministers do pay taxes, she said. Bill Lacey, state department of revenue spokesman, said the church wouldn't be exempt from paying sales and excise taxes, but state tax exemptions would be similar to allowable federal exemptions. Any religious organization would have to show proof that personal property was being used for religious purposes, according to Tuck Duncan, attorney for the state court. In some cases, before the state can declare the personal property exempt from ad valorem taxes. The Topeka office of the Better Business Bureau said that the church was a certified religious organization, but a spokesman said the office couldn't comment any further. Enjoy the pleasure and excitement of delicious Mexican and American food skillfully prepared and a delightful Mexican atmosphere. Special Luncheon Menus and To Go Orders, Too! all at the XI. 1982 SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Aztec Inn 807 Vermont 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tues.-Sat 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday Closed Monday 842-9455 "THE OMST THE MOST POPULAR ARRAY INFINITE FILMS OF RECREATY TEAM." *$^2$* "If you can imagine the passion of a restrained Costa-Gavras combined with the luminous cinematography of BARRY LYNDON on a subject like THE GRAPES OF WRATH it would provide some idea of the sweep and power of REBELLION IN PATAGONIA." Jude Singer, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE REBELLION IN PATAGONIA "A PROVOCATIVE ... ACCOUNT OF HOW THE ARMY PUT DOWN STRIKING WOMEN'S" "BREVE ALL THE FILM IS A PARADE, WONDERFULLY CHARACTERIZED STATEMENT BUT JUSTICE." WEDNESDAY APRIL20 - 7:30 P.M. FORUM ROOM-K.UNION SUPPORTED BY THE VENEZUELAN CLUB AND THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB after the movie Patricia Erb, 19-Year-Old Daughter of Kansas Mennonite Missionaries was Kidnapped September 13, 1976 In Buenos Aires, Argentina and Tortured by the Argentine Military Government. PATRICIA ERB will speak at K.U. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20,1977 at 7:30 p.m. In the FORUM ROOM of the KANSAS UNION. Sponsored by the Venezuelan Club and the International Club. 8 Wednesday, April 20, 1977 University Daily Kansan Graffiti spreads the word Bv MISSY PETERSON and Staff Reporters The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls and tenement halls, according to a Simon and Garfunkel song, but KU prophets have found a more appropriate canvas—on campus in the Mr-vin Hall bathrooms and the dark recenses of Wakson An unknown prophet scribbled this on a desk deep in the stacks of Watson: "Our fervor to embrace the science—it is our only salvation, and it as also is our major mission." Grafitti is the world's oldest art form, and one that probably hasn't progressed much since it began several centuries ago. It may revert to drawing graphic illustrations of the human annoty once of prehistoric horses, but self-expression has grown more important on the writing on today's walls. ALTHOUGH NO one really knows what motivates a person to scribble his thoughts on walls and desks, some "artists" try to explain it with graffiti of their own. *Why do people write on bathroom walls?* asks a gifted artist in women's clothing. She was answered with, "Self expression and relief from mental frustration." If frustration is indeed manifested in graffiti, the night owls who inhabit Marvin's apartment have been on the run. "THERE ARE children starring in Biafra," lamented a latrine artist in Marvin, "but at least they get enough sleep." "Have you ever tried sleeping when you're starving?" another asked. Another sentiment, frequently voiced by women all over campus, found its way to the University of Oklahoma. At 3 a.m. it strikes me—why don't you just get married, have kids and say to hell with this." The response that followed was less than hopeful. "Because you would still be up at 3 a.m. but it would be worse." The plight of many architecture students is expressed in various ways on Marvin's website: "To create or not to create what is original." A plea at a sleepless student perhaps expresses a sentiment that runs through the room. "If only we could all expire the day after graduation and end our lives with one friend." "TO LIVE, really live, is the consummation of existence; to half-life is to fail utterly, it is to die standing—or die drafting." Oedipus, Please come home. all is forgiven. MODEL: Or this one probably by a psychology major: "Does the name Pavlov ring a bell?" There are many dominating themes in graffiti depending on who is doing the scribbling. Someone with a liberal arts background probably inscribed this note in Murphy Hall. PHILOSOPHICAL debates are always popular on walls and desktops. One writer proclaimed, "The otherness of the Universe is the joy of the derived self." A comment nearby read, "Nietzsche, turn over in your grave." Others expound on reality and drugs, and how one reacts with the other. "Reality is a crutile for those who can't with drugs, or 'Marijuana consumes your brain.'" Some try to bring religion into their writings. Someone in Watson asked, "What is this? What is that?" Foreign student rise expected to continue Stinson said Monday that the increase was due to the fact that people throughout the world were trying to upgrade their education. Enrollment of foreign students at the University of Kansas will continue to increase in the coming years, according to Jim Stinson, foreign students admissions There are 1,207 foreign students enrolled in the University this semester and 59 others. The trend of increased enrollment of foreign students began in fall 1974, he said. The number of foreign graduate students at KU has remained consistent, but the number of undergraduates enrolling has increased markedly. IN 1976, Stinson received 2,299 accept- ed, of which 1,264 were accepted. STINSON SAID that in fall 1974, 317 undergraduate foreign students enrolled and graduated. Foreign undergraduates now outnumber foreign graduate students, Simson said, and since 1971 there has been a 201 per cent increase in foreign undergraduate foreign undergraduates enrolling at KU. Foreign students usually send letters of inquiry to the University, Stinson said, and his office responds by sending an application and a packet of material about KU Foreign students must meet several requirements before they can be accepted "Our admissions criteria are a little higher than most of the institutions around here," Stinson said, and the foreign students accepted here are among the best students in their native countries, most of whom are in a high equivalent of a high B average in college. "We must be satisfied they can demonstrate proficiency in the English Language." Sinnison said. If a student can't meet the standards required, he must attend the Applied English Center, which teaches foreign students to improve their English training program to foreign students. Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN A FOREIGN student must be academically qualified to enter KU, he said, but the study programs are any, are looked at. No standardized tests are required for foreign students, but most countries give students a standardized test equivalent to American standardized tests. $4.50 "MOST OF THE applicants are from oirlrich countries," Stinson said, most coming from the Middle East, North Africa, Nigeria and Venezuela. A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Daily Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT "There are 88 different countries represented at the University at the present time," Stinson said, the largest group, 273 students, is from Iran. "We look at the national exam scores," Stirson said. "It gives us an indication of how the student compares with the whole country." A foreign student also must demonstrate the financial ability to support himself for each 12 month period he is in the United States, including paying nonresident KU tuition. Agencies in foreign countries have lists of preferred American universities they recommend to students who want to study in the United States, he said, and KU is highly recommended, along with such schools as Harvard, MIT and other institutions. Fundations based on the academic programs and reputations of the schools. "A lot of the foreign students are on government scholarships, especially from the oil countries," Stinson said. "Most students from Iran, however, are not on scholarship," financing their educations with private resources. Another agreed with those who wrote, "was sus, but decided not to let it end there." "Jesus saves . . . But Mankowitz gets the rebound, and scores!" someone added. "Man created alcohol. God created marijuana. Whom do you trust?" Another prevalent theme on walls around campus is sex, or the lack of it. A frustured male in Watson wrote, "Would some people have been ashamed of the shoulder and kiss me passionately?" An equally frustrated female sitting nearby seemed to have the same problem. "Sexual satisfaction is hard to find," she wrote. "I wish my libido would fly away and set me free. Then, perhaps I could do my chemical." SUA Another lonely scribbler sitting in the secluded stacks of Watson, who may have been reading too many letters to the editor and wrote, "Why don't we do it in the cubicle." The infamous Nugent has become an entity of graffiti all his own, while biting many a desktop and bathroom wall for several years. One student, apparently tired of the familiar character, scribbled a new sentence, the familiar character: "Nugent weart dens." FILMS Dir. Clarence Badger with Raymond Griffin, Classical Film Series. Wed., April 2: 7:30 p.m., 75c Cubicles, desktops and bathrooms will continue to be the target of writers seeking a medium in which to express themselves. If confused about this scribbling, look to examples of graffitic advice: "Never clarify today what you can observe tomorrow." AN OCCASIONAL desk scribbler will even manage to the God of drugs. HANDS UP! GRADUATION photographs add to the tab. "This once in a lifetime memory" in color costs $10.50 for 5 large photos or 11 smaller ones. One extra is graduation announcements for family and friends. Announcements are being sold at the Kansas University for 40 cents each and can be ordered from a local printer for $3.90 for 25 cards. Specially ordered announcements from printers are more expensive—25 cards for from $15 to $24. Diplomats are free and graduates aren't required to participate in commencement, be a graduate or a bachelor's degrees, rental on a cap and gown is $7. The graduate keeps the tassel, which is included in the fee. Masters' and doctoral degree caps and gowns cost about $500. The Senior-Parent Supper, the last official social activity of the graduating class, costs $2.52 a person, or $15.75 for a graduate and his parents. The bare minimum for caps and gowns can easily add up to hundreds of dollars if you choose the right style. Dir. Gustav Machaty, with Hedy Lamarr. Complete, uncut, uncensored. plus Graduates also are invited to join the KU Alumni Association. Membership costs range from $10 to $200. For $10, the graduate gets a single annual membership. On the 10-year plan, the graduate pays $25 each year for ten years and gets a life membership. For $200, a graduate gets a full life membership. ECSTACY (1933) Dir. Howard Hughes with Jane Russell, Walter Huston, Film Society, Thurs., April 21, 7:30 p.m. 75c Popular Films Series. Fri., April 22 & Sat., April 23, 3:30, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., $1 The biggest expense probably is the If the memories are fond and the pocketbook willing, University of Kansas graduates can exit with a free diploma and hundreds of dollars in memorabilia. An Art Deco cartoon by Tex Avery. Midnight Movies. Fri, April 24 & Sat., April 23, 12:00 midnight, $1 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. Freezes U.S. health benefits on campus AND FOR INTERVIEWS. RECRUTERS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON APRIL 27. THE OUTLAW (1943) Glenda Jackson, Sandy Dennis, Geraldine Page THE STORY OF ADELE H. PAGE MISS GLORY "NASTY HABITS" "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" Diploma free but extras add up MIDNIGHT COWBOY TESL TEACHERS WANTED FOR NEW PROJECTS IN THE PEACE CORPS George Segal & Jane Fonda Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight. plus Eve 7:18 6:45 Sat. Sun. Milk 2:00 Hilcrest Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Granada 941274 ...Viejaplaza F-3880 10 Academy Award Nominations Starring SYLVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7:35 & 9:45 Saf. Sun. 1:45 Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" "ROCKY" "BLACK SUNDAY"Pg Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. at 2:30 747 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped, underwater. Varsity 784-7471 - Longmont 912-3661 AIRPORT PC '77 "BREAKER BREAKER" Hillcrest —Plus— PG "SPECIAL DELIVERY" Eve. 7:40 & 9:50 ENDSTHURSDAY Sunset Dear Sir/Madam/Prof, we are happy to hear that senior ring, sold in the Kansas Union Bookstore and local jewelry stores. Those sold in the Union come in 10 styles and five metals. Sterling rings cost about $50, and 10-karat yellow and white gold rings cost between $70 and $40. Fourteen-karat rings, available in two styles, cost from $100 to $120. STONES IN THE rings are synthetic birtishens, which local jewelers will replace with genuine stone persons. A personalized 14-karat ring with a diamond for about $200. For information on graduation activities and filing deadlines for diploma applications, students may contact their individual schools. The Union bookstore can arrange for a facsimile signature on the inside of a ring Other KU nostalgia items include mugs and jewelry. Their costs range from a $1.50 mug with a KU emblem to a $120 ring. Local jewellers will engrave their name on the date of delivery at an extra charge. For $75.70, Marks Jewelers, 817 Delivery of orders for announcements and enclosure cards takes from 10 days to GRADUATES ARE treated to a free few events. The Chancellor's Reception is open to all graduates and their relatives. Some of the schools, departments and campus organizations have special activities for their graduates. Massachusetts St., has a three-dimensional, 14-karat gold Jayhawk charm that can be put on a chain for a necklace. Appointments for photos, which are to be taken May 9 to May 20, should be made as a Information on photographs, cup and gown rentals and the Senior-Patient Supper room. KU Physical Therapy Club Meeting Thursday, April 21st Watkins Hospital Cafeteria 7:30 P.M. Mr. Robert Scott, director of physical therapy education at K.U. Med Center will speak. Elections of officers for Fall 1977 AOTRE—A GREEK CELEBRATION APRIL 24—MAY1 Calendar of Events April 26, Tuesday Greek Art1Show April 24, Sunday 4:00-5:30 Potters Lake April 27, Wednesday April 29. Friday 8th & New Hampshire 9:00-9:00 Market Place Area Royal Stadium Greek Art Show K.U., Greek Night at Rovals' Game Greek Art Show Philanthropy, Bowling Alumi Appreciation Banquet Greek Night at Drive In April 30. Saturday Greek Art Show Philanthropy-Sports Events Greek Sing Greek Art Show Street Dance—TGIF, Band May 1, Sunday 9:00:00 Market Place Area 14:30:50 Jaybowl (Union) 8:00 Union Ballroom 6:00 Sunset Theatre Greek Art Show Philanthropy Sports Events celebrity obstacle course Greek Games 9:00:00 Market Place Area 4:00:00 Veteran Park Lawn School 9:00:00 Market Place Area 3:00:00 Stewart Avenue Closing ceremonies awards, speakers 9:00:00 Market Place Area 11:00:00 Holcom Park 1:00:40 Holcom Park 1:00:20 Potter's Lake PLAIN TALK FROM ARMCO ON FINDING A JOB: It all may depend on how well we work together In recent weeks this publication has carried a series of messages from Armoe. This series of Armoe messages has talked about your job—how low profits, scarcity energy, overregulation, and other less affirmative action for equal rights may hurt your chance of finding the job you want. Each of these issues will have an impact on America's ability to create the 18,000,000 more jobs we'll need over the next ten years. We believe it's important for everybody to think about these issues from several points of view. The economics and technology involved, as well as the politics. Too often, most of us think about each of America's many goals in a vacuum. We isolate one at a time and propose solutions. Carrying out those "solutions" often creates new problems for us. It's also the where all the other needs suffer. Who would have thought that making energy cheap would lead to an energy crisis . . . or that efforts to save it from a one form would create it in another? We Americans also tend to isolate ourselves in little groups, when it comes to many issues. We put on one hat at a time, becoming partisans who consider those who disagree as enemies. We'd like to make a suggestion. Could we all try a little harder to work together? FREE--Armco's plain talk on how to get a job We've got a free booklet to help you get a job. Use it to set yourself apart, above the crowd. We answer 50 key questions you'll need to know. Like why you should bone up on companies you like. What to do after the first interview. Hints to make you a more aggressive, attractive job candidate. All prepared for Armco by a consulting firm specializing in business recruiting, with help from the placement staff of a leading university. Send for your free copy of How to Get a Job. Wear Armoe Steel Company. Educational Relations Dept., General Offices, U-6, Middletown, Ohio 45043. Our supply is limited, so write now. ARMCO Plain talk about COOPERATION At Armoe, we're working with many people to try to get things done. We're asking government officials—local, state and national—what they want us to do to help them in their work. We're showing them what we need to keep our plants running and people on the ground. "We can't." We hope other people will stop saying: "You must! We ought to both start saving; 'Let's work together'." When Memoria Kansas special g Rearend of the m AT KA to perfor right aw He'll h The v compete and trip publicize country Kansas Missouri What done, w done, an We don't have all the answers. But we're trying to look at each issue thoughtfully, so we can at least discover the pertinent questions. Next time you hear somebody demand that anybody else do something, maybe you should ask: "Has this idea ever been discussed with whoever will have to carry it out?" Getting those 18,000,000 more jobs we need may depend on how well we all work together. 'It' s n when yo Reardon some of would be "In hi to take t take all Pencil ARMCO wants your plain talk about cooperation and jobs Reard make th where college Does our message make sense? We'd like to know what you think. Your personal experiences. Facts you've found to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We'll send you a more detailed report on the relationship with our clients. Our offer of How to Get a Job, above, tells you how to write us. Let us hear from us. We've all got a stake in more American jobs. Reearc the 14 a Indoor O To do t "That come b in a slum of it. without Right long jum jump the corr REAR either th had set outdoor A speci Kansas R trend accr faculty this year Fa Last ye medley re competing time com teams but FRED mathematica faculty a stimulatec in two Kai and Haile C year team we seek Vanvlec competitive KU Facul the Facul nation-wic competitive times to a of their st "IT'S I casionally don't com you can backgroun Grover and muller reason for a competition weren't woken weren't wget events were runners fi Vanlee teams The teams fro University; University HE SAI James H botany, research Survey,' of the art 36, one n The "A this year UN-O tea 10:40. "It show could ha been cha Vanvle younger than the who ran "A" tear college a WHILE win, the third pair Kansas and a 44 KU's team,"h Mason, Waldron, Geologic Brady. University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 20, 1977 9 Reardon aims higher, farther By ROB RAINS Sports Writer When Jay Reardon walks into Memorial Stadium this weekend for the Kansas Relays, he's going to have a special goal in mind. He'll have three chances to do it. Reardon, a freshman, wants to win one of the meet's individual championships. He'll have three chances to do it. What he was expected to do, and has done, was score points. What he hasn't done, and what he wants to do, is win. AT KANSAS, Reardon wasn't expected to perform those kind of miracles. Not right away at least. The versatile Reardon, who will be competing in the high jump, long jump and triple jump, was one of the most publicized high school athletes in the country. He attended the Kansas City (Mo.) Rock堡县 and Missouri high school record books “It’s not really that depressing to lose when you know you’ve done your best.” Reardon said, “or when you get beat by people in the world. But it would be nice to wish you.” Reardon said it wasn't that difficult to make the adjustment from high school—where he was expected to win—to college. "In high school," I'd maybe just have to take two jumps to win. Here, I have to take all six." Reardon was the only freshman among the 14 athletes to qualify for the NCAA Indoor Championships in the high jump. To do that he cleared 7-1, his best. REARDON FAILED to quality in either the long or triple jump and said he had set that as one of his goals for the outdoor season. "If you're just in one event and you get in a slump," he said, "it's hard to get out of it. With three you can get out of it without much trouble." Right now, Reardon said, he thinks the long jump is his best event, but the high jump and triple jump are "right around the corner." "That's this week," he said. "You can come back next week and it might be NEAL BACK & FIELD Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Multi-talented Jay Reardon sails into long jump pit something totally different. It switches back and forth." Reardon's best effort in the long jump, 24-10½, is only ½ inches short of the NCAA Outdoor qualifying mark. In the triple jump, he has gone 49-2½, more IN THE high jump, Reardon's outdoor best is 6-10, but he knows he can go higher than that. The qualifying mark for the NCAA is 7-1. than two feet short of the 52-0 needed to qualify for the NCAA meet. "Obviously, I would have lked to have gone farther and higher," Reardon said. "I want to improve each mark, but I am going with the way things have been going." Part of the success Reardon has had this season, he said, is due to the competition between the Kansas squad members. "The competition within our team is strong," Reardon said, "not in the sense that we want to beat the other guys on our team more than anything else, but in the sense that we want to help each other do the best we can." REARDON, WHO didn't start high jump until his junior year at Rockhill, said one of the hardest adversities he faced was training for track the whole year. "in high school," he said, "I played basketball in the winter, so track was just from the start of March to the middle of May. Here, it is all an-low thing "I was getting to the point a while back where I was really tired. Now I'm thinking this is the start of the season again." The hardest part of his training, he said, is that he has to split his time between the three events instead of concentrating on one. In a meet, he said, competing in that many events helps to keep him loose. "IVE WORKED real on the triple jump the last couple of weeks," Reardon said. "I had a little injury where I got hurt jump for a whirl and I belong in it." Reardon, a business major who hopes to go into the insurance business as did his father and brother, said he never doubted that he would be in mind that he'd be coming to KU. "I visited Arizona State, Colorado and Notre Dame," Reardon said, "but I knew all along that I was coming here." Faculty members to compete in medley relay ATTENTION PREDENTAL STUDENTS Tour Of UMKC SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY Friday, April 29 He said he hoped the faculty medley relay caught on in other areas of the country because he thought it would encourage students at universities to get "athetically involved." this was especially important to him since KU didn't have a faculty club. Pre-dental group will leave Lawrence at 12:00 noon, the tour itself beginning at 1:30 at north entrance of dental school. The pre-dental group will assemble outside the lower end of the Union tunnel in X-zone parking lot directly adjacent to the KU Union and south of Memorial Stadium. Transportation will be provided and we should arrive back in Lawrence around 4:30. Interested students can sign registration sheet posted outside Student Senate Office in Union until 4:30 Thursday, April 28. Funded partially from Student Activity Fee. TRIP INCLUDES: Tour of clinics, classrooms, labs and dental facilities. Dental students and administrators will be on hand for questions also. Fun Is . . . Gas Patio Grills Congenial Neighbors Tennis Court Cool Blue Pool Living at Traibridge Traibridge Apartments 2500 W. Sixth 843-7333 Staff Writer usually runs 3 to 5 times a week during the lunch hour. By JEANNE HIERL A special event was introduced at the Kansas Kales last year that could set a trend across the country. The event was the first time it would run again this year. Thursday, at 3:58 p.m. The faculty medley relay is a 2.5 mile event run by teams of university faculty members, a group that isn't generally considered to be athletically inclined. "In the fall most of us do 4 to 6 miles a day, and in the spring we do interval training." Vanvelck said the track club's 60 members ran for various reasons with physical fitness heading the list. He said running was one of the main reasons, a number of people from different areas, and Last year, the University of Kansas medley relay "A" team defeated seven competing teams with a time of 11:30, a school team with a time of 11:26, and a school team but not with university teams. VANLEEK SAID KU's teams didn't train together as a team because of scheduling conflicts, but most of the members of the Faculty Track Club, which members of the Faculty Track Club, which Geological Survey, $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile; Robin Davis, 3, professor of physics and astronomy, $ \frac{3}{4} $ mile; and Harold Yarger, 36, research associate with the Geological survey, one Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. FRED VANLECK, professor of mathematics and coordinator of this year's faculty event, said last year's race was reported in two Kansas City papers. ★★★★★★★★★ Kansas State will field the oldest team, Vanessa said, with a 65-year-old *¼* miller and a 30-year-old *¾* miller. He said word of the event spread through Faculty Clearinghouse channels and this year teams in other areas of the country were seeking major meets to comete in. HE SAID the "A"队 was composed of James Hamrick, 35, associate professor of botany, $^4$ mile; Neal Livingston, 28, research associate with the Geological department; Michael Otte, 30, chairman of the art department, $^4$ mile; and Everett, 36, one mile. KU's 'B' team also is a "fairly old team," he said, with an average age of 37. Members of the KU 'B' team are: Garry Waldron, 28, research associate with the Geological Survey / ¼ mile; Lawrence Brady, 40, research associate with the Vanleeck said the idea of a faculty competition in the Relays grew out of the team that organized the Faculty Clearinghouse competition, a nation-wide organization that allows faculty competition by mail (teams send their times to a clearing house and are informed about the results). WHILE THE two teams are not ready to go, the other teams will be scrambling for them. "IT'S INTERESTING to compete occasionally," he said, "because most of us don't compete regularly. It's fun to see how people respond against people of similar background." The "A" team has a good chance to win this year, Vanleck said, even though the UN-O team said it had run the event in 10:40. "It should be a good race," he said. "We could have raven last year if we had basketball." Vanicke said the UN-O team was younger and had more track experience than the KU team. They also have a man who ran a 4:01 mile in college, he said. KU's 'a team miler, Everett, ran a 4:12 mile in college and last year his ran mile in 4:26. Grover Everett, professor of chemistry and miler for the KU faculty team, said one reason for initiating the event was to create a competitive opportunity for runners who weren't old enough to compete in the Relays masters events (for those 40 or older) but were not as strong. The open events which draw outstanding young runners from across the country. Vanveckle knew KU would field two faculty teams Thursday. They will compete with teams from Kansas State University, the University of Nebraska and the University of Nebraska at Omaha. --- Heart of America Frisbee Tournament Saturday, April 23 O-Zone Field Entry Fee: 1.00 Registration at SUA office or 9:00 a.m. Saturday at tourney site Trophies awarded in all events. Competition will begin at 10 a.m. Everyone Welcome! HEART OF AMERICA FRISBEE CLUB Sponsored by SUR, Miller Brewing Co., Rec. Services. ALL THE BEER,& POLKA & POPCORN YOU CAN TAKE!! POLKA!! MUSIC PROVIDED BY JOE SCHIEFELBEIN AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN DATE: April 22nd TIME: 8 p.m. - 12 p.m. PLACE: Knights of Columbus Hall 2206 E.23rd, Next to Don's PRICE: $3.00 Steak House 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. THE DOOBIE BROTHERS SATURDAY,APRIL 30,1977 8:00 pm "BRINGIN' IT TO K-STATE!" AHEARN FIELD HOUSE Kansas State University TICKETS GO ON SALE: K-State Union Ticket Office Only 9:30 am Sunday, April 3 TICKET PRICES: $7*-$6*-$6* (All Reserved Seating) Tickets Available April 6 thru April 27 at: TEAM ELECTRONICS 2319 Louisiana Another K-State Union LPC Concerts Presentation- 10 Wednesday, April 20,1977 University Daily Kansan KU loses two at Emporia State Bv GARY BEDORE By GARY BEDOR Sports Writer Emperia State University lived up to its billing as a small college baseball powerhouse when it beat KU in both games. Mildshader in Emperia yesterday, 14 and 2-1. The Hornets, 28-5, came into the doubleheader hitting .358 as a team, but yesterday they had to use tough pitching to beat the Jayhawks. "The ball just wasn't alive today," Emporia coach Dave Bingham said yesterday. "Kansas had a lot of base hits today and they could have broken the game open at any time. I felt we were fortunate to win." IN THE first game, Rick Bogdan started for KU and lasted until the fifth innning when he was replaced by Terry Sutcliffe. KU led, 3-2, at the time. The game was forced into extra innings by an Emporia run in the sixth. In the eight innings, Sutcliffe walked the first two Hornet batters then Fred Hernandez singled to knock in the winning run. Sutcliffe, the losing pitcher, is now 4-2. Kansas had 12 hits in the first game. Carl Heinrich was 4-for-4 and Jeff Watson, 3-for-4. 3. Brian Moyer continued his long ball to the first game by hitting a home run to load the bases. in garmear kw, KU's Stat Mus Tester and Em府军 tkw, KU's Stat Mus Messier and in a faucet NEITHER TEAM scored for three innings, but in the fourth, KU's Andy Gilmore, who was 4-0 for 7 on the day, hit a double. Heirchin then singled, and as Gilmore rounded third base, attempting to score, he slipped on the wet infield and was thrown out while diving back to third base. Heirchin took second base on the play. Heinrich also was injured on the play and was taken to a Lawrence hospital for care. tried to score he crushed in Emporia State catcher. Mike Gehrer, and was called out. Monte Hobbs singled, and as Heinrich During the play at the plate, Hobbs took second. Scott Wright reached first on an error and Winston Mondolow walked to fill the gap off his foot so force in the 'Hawks only run of the game. Kansas is now 17-14-1 and plays Nebraska in two doubleheaders, Friday and Saturday. Emprioria scored a run in the fifth and sixth innings to beat KU 2-1. As of last night, there was no report on the extent of Heinrich's injury. Ali after ABC for money NEW YORK (UPI) - Muhammad Ali wants the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) to pay the $181,000 in legal fees it cost to successfully defend himself last year against a $20 million slander suit brought by fight referee Tony Perez. All his request was revealed yesterday in Monarch and Sports filed a lawsuit in Manhattan and New York. contention that he was entitled to the payment in 'performer covered by the code' ABC content Ali was not employed by the network and was not a "covered performer" when he made unkind remarks about Perez in an ABC interview with Kyle. The interview was after Perez's 187杯 with Chuck Wepner, which Perez referenced. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Ken Meyer, former 49ers assistant and for the past four seasons offensive coordinator of the Los Angeles Clippers, assisted San Francisco's head coach yesterday. 49ers appoint Meyer to head coaching post Announcement of Meyer's appointment was made at a news conference by Edward DeBartolo Jr., the club's new owner. Monetary terms of Meyer's contract were Golfers win Meyer assumed his new duties immediately and said he was hopeful of retaining the entire staff of assistant managers at the company. Mr. Meyer had last week in a dispute over responsibilities. Craig Palmer shot a 76 yesterday, leading KU to a win over Nebraska and Kansas State in a triangular meet at Alarmar Hills golf course. KU golfers had a total of 318, followed by Nebraska with 321 and K-State with 329. not revealed, but he agreed to a three-year deal. Palmer was the medalist for the meet, followed by KU's John Michaelis with a 77. Doyle Gerdall, 81. Jim Pearson, 84, and Jim Brenner, 85, finished the scoring for the 'Hawks. Coach John Hanna, pleased with his team's play, said, "I thought we played very fine golf and I was especially impressed with Palmer's 76 today." DeBartolo purchased the 49ers a month ago and named Joe Thomas general manager. Under the old ownership, Clark, who had three years left on his contract, served both as general manager and head coach. NAISMITH HALL Patronize Kansan Advertisers The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Pinball - Bud on Tap - Pool - Foosball Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa 843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday KU BAND MEMBERS 1976-77 Annual Spring Formal Banquet Sunday, May 1, 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom PROGRAM: Chancellor Archie Dykes—Speaker Band awards Showing of Missouri Game Film Other Entertainment Prepaid to those paying fall band fee. $5.00 all others, including guests, family and friends. Sign up for all reservations in Band Office, Room 214, Murphy no later than Friday, April 22. AIRWING CHALLENGE SKY DIVING Come Fly with Us Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Student Training Classes begin Sat.-Sun at 10:00 a.m. Monday-Fri. by appt. First Jumps Course $41.00 Groups of 5 or more! Only $31.00 per Person Price Includes: Logbook, All Training, All Equipment, First Jump and Dummy Pipcord Students Required to Show ID Located at A Miles West of Wellsville For the Card for your phone: *282-832-3625; or *6:00 a.m.* Call 883-2535 after 6:00 p.m. 3m 7m 1.35m COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES! CLEAN AND FAITHFUL. The network speaker system ADS L700 and ADS L400 were developed right along with more vigorous ASD audio speakers for the best possible reason. ADS warmed a unique design that was designed to be easily adaptable to every model regardless of size would have been the ideal choice for the high quality and timeless nature of our collection. ADS L700 were used to meet these criteria they called the highest performance audio sound since introduction only two years ago for many professionals and the public. The lowest price possible the ADS L700 cost less than all other ASD systems with all other ASD systems with the technical refinement that make this faithfully maintained high quality pair for distance. ADS L700 *ADS L500 You owe it to yourself to hear these speakers! RMS ELECTRONICS audio 742 Mass. Open late Thurs. & Fri. 841-2672 STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00! and 100 were developed right along with more expensive Audio Studio equipment for the even more elaborate studio environments where a different line of audio processors were employed. Every model designed would have an optimum clarity and a high abstraction of emotion or action. These were able to meet these criteria they used the latest audio processing techniques, such as the Voice Sound Since I arrived in New York, since it has become our standard and our experience for the ADS L700 and the dedicated subsystems. The lowest pound speaker (650Hz) than the S800, but still below 3000 Hz, with all other ASD systems, including the electro-acoustics instruments that make this technology possible for remote mastery in sophisticated audio design. All of our speakers offer single channel digital sound recording and playback for maximum quality of course you want a speaker for its sound. When you use an ASD for your sound output, you can expect a higher quality of course you want a speaker for its sound. When you use an ASD for your sound output, you can expect a higher quality of course you want a speaker for its sound. As a total value we believe the ADS L700 without competition in their respective five catheters can really be our sound studio experience. Involve Sound Well then we encourage you to accept anything less. ADS L700 You owe it to yourself to hear ADS L500 ADS L400 RMS ELECTRONICS SATTER DAYS a record date audio 742 Mass. Open late Thurs. & Fri. 841-2672 You're graduating. What happens then? What happens to all the people you knew in school? What happens to all the groups and activities you were involved in? Where do all the graduates from the Class of '77 go? There's a way to stay in touch, not just with the past, but with the present and future as well. Find out now* with the and future as The University of Kansas Alumni Association invites all recent graduates and seniors to Open House Wednesday and Thursday April 20 and 21 2-5 p.m. Stop by, have some refreshments and pick up your free KU memorabilia. Meet the people, find out how they help you stay in touch, find out about the activities and programs they coordinate, learn about the services they offer. Your Alumni Association Friend raisers --- Accommodation advertisement are offered to sex, color, or BRING ALL ( 15 words or fewer ... Each additic word ... AD DEADLI to run: Monday Wednesday Thursday Friday ERRORS The UDK than two ances will materially FOUND AE Found it charge days. The simply be at 864-432 UDK BUSII III Flint H A Canoe boat student rates mile, 4-6 hour Sparrow Haven Sparrow Haven on highway 1456-8371. "I incredibility dor of Jew Alexander, I April 21, 8 Ement, Hillel 3-piece Pla- tie $49, buy Mass. in the --- Reserve the or meeting. too large or Kitchen and the newly Vernont Ci Gatehouse a Fall, Spring contracts o 6446 for me 1 and 2 rc Union, unif Apartments Union, unif Frontier B B Studios 1 da draperies = da door pool = door furnished = furnished CARPET C Six Lawrens 267-2980. 1-3 bedroom illeges, poss. 842-4065 Apartments Furnished swimming call either Make you available f going fast. Naise. Naise Two bedroom campus, fr. W. 15th to W. 15th New 1 bed campus gr aga OF ROSALEA*' Oasis of fr. OPEN M OPEN M 841-794 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 20. 1977 11 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered to all students without regard to their academic status. BING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Site Two three short five time times time times 15 words or less $1.00 $2.25 $5.00 $7.50 $3.00 Either additional $0.11 01 02 03 10 am Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. EARRORS 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. *eound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months.* They can be placed in person or telephone. Calling the UK business office at 841-8358. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ANNOUNCEMENTS 864-4358 Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special trips, 4-hour or 6-hour boat trips $3.60 per person. Other trips, 1 hour or 2-hour boat trips $1.50 per person. Sparrow Hawk Camp, Loop Route (2 miles north on highway 10). Tableauville, Oklahoma 74461, 96188. "Incredibility of the Holocaust" (Nan mass mur- sure) in "The Holocaust," by Amelia S. Jacques, University of Washington, Thursday, April 21, 8:00 p.m. Forum Room; Kauai Union. English Department; History Department; 4-21 3-piece Riat plant stand, with planters, normal- mature size. They last they stand in the B4-26 Mask in the Cashbox. ENTERTAINMENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 650 jobs available. No group larger than 100 people. Kitchen and facility facilities located in the new building at 2415 E. 78th Street. Call 882-9664 for information. 5-13 FOR RENT 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to union, utilities paid, parking. 843-579-70 Frontier Rider-short term learner available with study. Frontier Rider-portioned learner with study. Indoor trainer post - 5 singles training. door pool, disposal & laundry receptacle, furnished & unfurnished $135. Call 822-496-1700 furnished and unfurnished from $135. Call 822-496-1700 Apartments and rooms furnished, uilties paid, no pets, 843-5767. ff Gatehouse Apartments - Call Becky now, summer. Contracts on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 815-269-7020. Contracts on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 815-269-7020. CARPET CLEANING STAEMK. Rent the Pro- 902-899-2000 Rental location. Call客服 5-10 5-10 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor. 482-507-601 Make your plant live. Appliances are now available to grow plants fast by for a better and complete life. Make it fast by for a better and complete life. Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center. Furnished and unharmed, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open 7 days a week. Other amenities include free Wi-Fi call either 913-262-9020 or 913-262-7407. 4-21 1 new bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus great location by the stadium. Call 842-2563. ROSAKA L A HOTEL, Harper, Kansas G554 The Hotel has a 20-minute walk to the MAY OAY LAWYER DAY 6-10 SUN 8-10 Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 813-492-39 or stop by 1635 Hwy. House 8-230 to Monday, January 21st, at Saturday, Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid on, two bathrooms, fireplace, two cars. $179.50 per month. 843-693-000 or come in 1000. (For more details see www.glenview.com) Sublease for summer 2-bedroom apartment. $800/month, BIB extra furnished. Available: 842-586-3950. **STABLELEASE** 2 bedroom newly built apartment. Custody and rent paid on this route. Phone #435-3408. Sound proofed on this route. Phone #435-3408. Apartment to sublease. Close to campus. June- August. Call 841-3622 after 4 p.m. 5:00. individual rooms for rent immediately, for summer fall, coop situation, food program, free laundry utilities included in economical rent, 3 blocks from campus. Call Laird, 824-9212. Discount on summer nubilee of one-bedroom Meadowhouse furnished apartment, pool, air-conditioner, laundry room. June-Aug 15 (lease expires). 2 bedroom, new- manned apartment A/C/B/Rm. Calc. $4900. Call (312) 786-8340. Nice 2-bedroom apartment 10 walk to amenities. Nice $750 comm. $750 call 812-943-3432 or 4-215 Su Casa IN THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522 IN THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire nest in Selection of Mexican A & Crafts 841-3522 Show me the available products. Ofivx. wood and hone chest sets available ... ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE INN STREET MARKETPLACE 841-7946 M-S 10:5:30 (Thurs, 8:00) 2-bedroom apartment $140 plus plus eldest after 5 p.m. 842-8231 4-21 Sublease 3-bedroom bedroom, furnished, termite $165 mo. plus utilities. Call 841-6354 4-21 Sublease for summer - 2 bedroom apartment. Chell Call 854-5810. Keep trying. 4-21 Balconies and H apartments for summer and winter. Balconies full carpeting (hair or regular), disaccented balconies, laundry facilities, managers, laundry and storage facilities 7 minute walk to Strong, luxury apartment 843-5297 43-329 **CHICKEN FORM** Cheap Call 842-5810 Keep tryting 4-21 Mark I and II installs for summer and fall 4-bedroom townhouse, with 2 baths, pool, tennis courts, and reasonable rent. Call 844-4427 and ask for Michael. Sublease for summer. Two bedroom unfurnished home in the heart of Fort Worth. Rooms Buffalo. Option to rent test fail. Call 411-8210 MOHLE HOME RENTALS. We offer 1, 2, and 3 bedroom units with off street parking, swimming pool, free pool pickup, storm shelter, and fire station. The MoHle Home's Miles 68. 843-7700. 4-22 Summer sublease, two bedroom partly furnished close to campus and town. $110. Call 842-264-984 Summer aluminae, 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, AC, near campus. Call 841-5738. Excellent condition, queen-sized two-heddon air- condition, daftather, veranda, decking, furniture. 841-7452. 841-7453. Sublease over summer. Trail Ridge 2 bedroom apartment, call John or Marie at 6 p.m. 841-688-3701 Sublease 1 bedroom apartment through July 31 Lease renewal Available. Availability $1900 per month. Sublease for summer-furnished 2-bedroom apartment, central air,赔 carpet, pool, reason to buy. Two bedroom apartment, four-floor, wounded Ward 13, West Terrace, 811-429-4 4-25 West Terrace, 811-429-4 1. 2. 3 roamers needed for Trailrider town-house, 842-2590. 4-21 Suburban Townhouse, three large bedrooms, two bathrooms, pools, tennis, bus services, bus number 841-384. COMFORTABLE stubet apartment available. Reduced summer rates: 2-bedroom, A. C. 5 m to Union, modern kitchen, sunny hallway, laundry, laundry, quiet, neighborhoods. 4-6 3-bedroom, 1/2 bath townhouse for salele. Will dislodge bean $500, call M841-5697. - 4697 Reduced meals. Walk to campground. Refrigerator, raid and, food. Diet dish. Dishwasher. Cook at home. For summer or year-Leave houses, 1-3 bedroom apartments or single room with kitchen. 841-567-2900. APARTMENT. Neely furnished, one-bedroom apartment for rent in New York City with excellent room and excellent landlord. HOUSE. Wanted graduate student to share great house with female student $100 a month plus 15% of rental fee. Please call 212-490-8678 or visit www.fresno.edu for $250 plus 2/3 baths. Prefer female, no smokers. Come by 1255 Indiana, No. 4, B-20 Subleasing one-bedroom, Mark II apartment for summer. One block north of巩昌 Call 876-452-3000 Sublease for summer session only. Small furnished house, good location 841-7176 evening, late Sunday through Saturday. FOR SALE Western Civilization Note—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization materials. For Class preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, 3. For New Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Towson University. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialities: BELLE MUIR ELECTRIC, 605-4009, 3000 W, 6 hh. ELECTRIC, 605-4009, 3000 W, 6 hh. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crowd dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, lights, and audio Atlas System, 9th, or Rhode Island. Clare Court Tape recorders final cut to $29 from $49. Cash stores are $59; Rock Store Tapes are $99; Mall store, Open till 11pm, Set of four new 125w 13x steel belfed radials only of size, color and finish as shown in each pce. Buffalo's $990, $999, Open. Offer on new belfs. Final cut on C.B. Radio's and Antenna's. Some from the 1960s, including "The Blue Sea" and "Buckeye Song," 292 Mass. Openings, 118:35. (Beloved) RADIATEL THE CLEARANCE 148 x 15 x 158 cm FPT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. PFT. ADW A 6300 cassette-reorderer. Only one month old immediately. Call T1-812-6428 or Michael RAY AUDIO. The Little Sister Stove, now have their own microphone and recorders. We will all agree with your expectations. At 8: 20:30 Color TV 20 inches, good condition only $13, purchase cassette recorder $29, call Store 4-201-875-6500 1973 Mazda RX-2 LX. Only 22,000 miles. AM-FM carry-on luggage. For Sale for $299. 841-502-6020. JVC sienna casetie desk 600; complete with desk stand; bedside table 540; old desk with shelf; will sell for $71.49 4-20 $39.99 DRUM SET FOR SALE, Ludwig grunts and glitz up the music at Lawrence Music Center, 6th and 10th Avenue. Call 528-953-7470 or Sell or trade, skylight mobile bounce, 40-foot air- conditioner for trade, trade for good bounce. Call 825-4933 at 825-4933. Surprise bureaume Sale. B, and O. turtleable model 320VA power amp and 60VAC DAFY-P 5KW pamp kit. 180VA power amp and DAFY-P 5KW pamp kit. 760 Cass. Daack. Sanilai 61 and 77 receive 400VA power amp and DAFY-P 5KW pamp kit. 815 Cass. Little Stereo Store With. A BIG size 815. The Little Stereo Store With. A BIG size 815. CLASSICAL GUITAR CLEARANCE SALE, on Alvair Valveri classical models while supply ends. Save $300 and now get a free $60 case also. Music Muse Centre 9th and Hobe Island. Located in the heart of New York City. Thornton TD 160 C turntable $135 with Stanton KRIS 175. TX call at D41-8943 for 4-20 4-20 1941 Clever, 8 cyl. 3 speed. Excellent mechanical condition, $200 or best offer. 812-5472. 4-20 Technics SA-3259 Am-Pn receive 20 watts power. HPM-MS provides all in excellent condition, with no cracks or scratches. Giftweder Optical Ludwig Pro-Heat room, set w/caws, excellent condition, call 841-7169 4-20 62 Bumber, 3 sq. p., 6 cyl., good shape! $275. 841- 7284 after 6 p.m. * 1977 W V Interior, only 5000 miles, air leaker interior. Michelin tires. Reasonable price. 4-21 1970 Honda SL-300, Good condition $475, 841- 4-21 0556 Firebird formula, every available condition, light him with蜂蜜 0557 Firebird formula, every available condition, light him with蜂蜜 Pocket walletch (Cirau 1094—4100) Tom. 841- 5570 or leave message) 811-4604) 4-21 1. 728 Chevrolet Impala 4D, PS, PB, AC. Very clean. Must sell. Call 646-891-6645 4-21 Volunteer Cleaning Home is selling T-Shirts for $2.50 each. Clearing available in adults and children sizes. Available in 100% white cotton shirts - red letters asking: "Volunteer Cleaning Home." Order at 14 B, Kansas University, 864-380-3900. Order at 14 B, Kansas University, 864-380-3900. 72 Pitto - Good condition, low mileage $1,100, buyer order, 841-3796. 4-21 BALLOON RIBES.-Make a date to fly the skier with the commercial pilot. -OZ-BALLOONS- for commercial pilot. -OZ-BALLOONS- Mobile home, 1952 Blade House 12408 3 bedroom Farmhouse, 1956 Blade House 12408 3 bedroom; farmhouse, fitted bed, down floor, 841-266 bedroom, fitted bed, down floor, 841-266 70 Karpan Gln Convertible. 4-assembled. 28 image compartment. 43-assembled. 28 image compartment. Supply # 614-2327, evenings or weekdays. Acoustic guitar with pickup. Great shape, only 60. Call Mike or Tone, 841-2286. 4-20 1975 Bullero Frontera "606" *Hotto Forks* w/Nike new piston, new rebellion. 1381 Tennessee, 4425 Nashville, 4026. 27" Penguin for sale. Excellent condition. $85 29" New car; $91 Baldi 82-109. 4-22 Panasonic AM-FM w turntable, speakers, $100 or offer, bk利5839 4-22 Flat 72. 128, green, good condition, tape, 841-3614 after 5 p.m. 4-20 Must sell 72 pickup. Good condition. Best offer 841-8613 anytime. 4-22 Camera. Petri FT 35 mm, SLR: F=Mmmin 1:1.8 lens, exposure meter, haze filter, um shade 200, dust filter, polarizer. Honda 360CB, New 5-10-75, windshield and backrest. 841-841-3655 4-22 Unicylec. Schwinn's best. Never used. Lined over $60. Will sell for $45 for fcm. 81-322-5392 4-29 Lawrence teacher must sell 1924 mobile home, fitted with full carpaided, fenced yard, draped outside wall, garden shed, ances and washer and dryer. Archived and moved to Kirkland, WA - 6-4 pm. Furniture. Friday, 3233 lawn, 2153 10-speed Mutebike (Super-Minge). In excel- tion, use only a mounted and a half bike. 641-6605 Creata Powerplay cassette transpher 2 Jemison 40mm coastal speakers with hardware 8x4" stereo display 97 Olds, Delmontio 88, air-power, good condition and very reliable, $40 or best offer. Call 845-231-5050. Fender Mustang Electric guitar and case, very good condition, must sell. Call 842-6750. 72 VV 411 wagon, automatic radio, new VW- destin radio, very good condition. 8-36 4-26 Sunn 1901, speaker amp, 50 watts, 3-12" speakers. Excellent condition. 841-4841 all-in-one. Wedding and graduation gift ideas. Unique selection of jewelry and basket items at Lily's, 4-26 Records (over 200) in good excellent condition. Record sleeves. Books on music. Lightly way down. Soundtracks, Santana, CSN Zywy, music more, music more, music more, charts, tales, bricks boards. Must move up and well with clean lining. 4-20 1972 Fiat 124 afore depict. 65,000 good third-air conditioning, rims and tires. Number and number. 4-26 name and number. Yamaha guitar - with case. Good condition, nice sound, will bargain. Call 842-723-4-22 1966 Pill Valent 3-speed manual, 6-cylinder transmission. HI-27228. Fiat 5. 4 am/pm. www.fiat.com Overview, 115 vol. air conditioner; $70, Yamaha FG-110 guitar and case, $75, 842-862-802 DISTINCTIVE EYEWAR BILM WORLD FESTIVAL 2 Electric-Voice speaker, $25 each. Sanzo GXT-4500 stereo, cassette player and turntable. Rubilain Grand Prize 1978拨号 Call 8453 4-26 Excellent 1973 Honda 2050 Motorsport, more-4-26 Excellent 1973 Honda 2050 Motorsport, more-4-26 Item #822 John A83-2977 4-26 White and black white Canada wood TV-RCA 25' black and white Culcino, real wood cabinets, piece of furniture, works great. Also, the Pioneer LS-1040i, Pioneer LP-12D-11, Belt drive turntable, 10" Pioneer LP-12D-11, Belt drive turntable, 10" Pioneer LP-12D-11, Excellent condition, 841-2861, 4-25 included, Excellent condition, 841-2861, 4-25 included HELP WANTED Full and part time fountain and enable work. Needs and experience. Apply in person at the department or contact the Office of Administration. **SUMMER JUNE 2013** Forced service, How, where, Mountain CO. P.O. Box 727, Fulton, MO. 69806. Avon open territory in Lawrence. Keep if you don't, because it could prove so profitable; probably sell world famous Avon products to pay for it. JOBS!!! Spare time/Full time 4-7 p.m. weekdays Call 913-272-2786 xxxxxxxxxx TEACHING ASSISTANT: Chinese and Japanese 18 each for summer session (June 13 to August 15). These interested should apply to R. L. Sper- son, Summer Session, 2118 Wheeler Street, Maryland, M. 197, May 1, 1978. *Legal Late Delivery* - must know area well, be willing to negotiate and speak with sales call. Call 911 or 340-6800. KANSAN needs two people to prepare subscriptions for mailing next fall. VERY heavy work, approve. 2-8 hours per day. Man through Fridays. Reqs. Mail resume to Contact.雇员: 644-838 or in 111 Flunt. **4-26** - Amateur 10 telephony requirements for new applicants. - Amateur 20 telephony requirements for new applicants.可选: 9-12 and 2-4 pm.电话热线: 850-667-3232. SUMMER WORK PROGRAM Make '2,772.00/Summer Work outside Midwest Career oriented LOST AND FOUND DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS AND ASSISTANT TO KANSAS Administration of admissions, financial and related matters. Probable responsibility includes full-time, year-round appointment. Required mathematical ability, skill in dealing with problems, open interest in mathematics, open interest on experience and ability expected to be $18,000 or $17,000. Position requires a Bachelor's degree in Mathematics May 10 - submit resume to Dean Martin B. Dickey Lawrence, Kansas 60445. AnEqual Opportunity Department of all women are encouraged to apply 4-26 "Student." 15 telephone recipients for new Lawrence Portrait Club!" No experience required. Lost over month age, red notebook in Worcestershire Very important. Call Melona 841-7371 4-21 Lost-Precision glasses in brown case. Lost-Precision glasses in brown case. Lost-Precision glasses in brown case. Torn glass can 'warn' you about the danger. Toenail from a broken bottle. cost—somewhere on campus, small multitcolored change purse contain student ID and driver's id. Hostess, this area restaurant and club, prefers 24-part, part evening, available summer. Call **Jay** at (800) 659-1030. Lock—Hain bond copy essay of dissertation by Duplex, Syracuse University 1974. Reward 81-6. Moceani thief - please return my shoes. $7.99 re- ward. #823-7887. 4-20 Vista Found-Set of 3 key sets on a ring, sidewalk bench Robbyn Gymn. Call 864-3170 and claim them Found textbook in 4056 Wescoe. Call Tim at 8:32- 9:29 and discuss. Lobster wallet and key ring with 4 keys, east of Robinson. Reward, 843-765. 4-25 Only Interviews—Wed., April 20 12:00 or 3:00 Parlor C, Union 6:00 206 Fraser Please be prompt Found a watch on the hill behind JRP. Call 864-1211 and identify. Keep trying. SUMMER JOB MAKE $265.00 THIS TIME, SUMMER JOB JOKE $135.00 THIS TIME, MORE MULTILOCK CALL 81-4272 FOR INTER- NET MESSAGE. Less-small black and red tom cat wearing white flea collars. K82-85238 after 5 p.m. 4:26 Restaurants Unique selection of rings and bracelets at Bengala, 803 Mass at the Cashah 4-26 Lost pair of glasses in orange case. If found call 864-5577 4-22 Please be prompt. NOTICE Swan Shn, 628 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, tables, television, electronics. Open daily 12- 30pm-3/377 KAMATE. Learn the ancient words of this twentieth-century language, including physical and emotional conditioning, forming a "bond" with your partner. **8244** 10-16. **8245** 10-19. ANTIQUE AND COLLECTORS SHOW AND BANKING ADMINISTRATION $10,000 to $10,000. Sun- day Admission $10,000 to $10,000. Sunday. Admission $10,000 to $10,000. 20 hr. week. Tues. through Sat. Secretary and assistant in new fine art gallery opening in Lawrence, Ohio. Participated in inter- ested in working with the public as骤 surely in educating them about the dee received, but most important the desire to lear nge more about the art form. Formation at 842-9801 after 4 p.m. Read re- flections and return to P O 'Brien 3228, Lawrenc "Suturna Employment" afternoon and evening. "Employment" Saturday morning. necessary. "The Talent" plausible, working surface- ing equipment required. Apply for special events committee 2777-78 in SUA office, deadline April 27 4-12 Graduates: plan run out for cup and growth photos Master's: plan run out for cup and growth photos. Two '84, 85, $400; 812, 829-729 3-50 1st class F.C.C ticket holder for part-time. Send resume to Leu Yazell Box 1809 Japan 760436 "How to buy a used car?" Workshops sponsored by Consumer Affairs Association, Kansas Union Council Room, April 20, 23 p.m. ballard Center, Kansas City, KS. $175-$350. 3:00 p.m. Free film and discussion. 4-22 3:00 p.m. Free film and discussion. Waitress. Well established restaurant and club and summer fun and grand festivities 4-26 841-306-386 Fri. & Sat. fil 2 a.m. 1527 W.6th K. U. Belle Dame Club, club singing performances 8:30 a.m., and concert tickets $15.00 Availability 4:00 p.m. Drive-in Clinic for most imported car TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUIN BE AWARE: APRIL 30 KANSAS UNION 4-26 Low cost flights to Europe from £39.10 Israel from Ireland from €65.20 European from €75.40 Europe airline Lid. Ltd. 880-222-7676 4-21 Air condition your feet! Flaps, $1.75, Bengals, 803 Mass in the Caithin. 4-26 MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 b.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mas. PERSONAL Gay Counseling Service: Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. For socializing services, call 842-7505. Personalized wedding, ceremonies, Universial Weddings, Inquiries, Box 806, Lawrence Kennison, Kansas 60415 Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of destructive drug addiction. For help or info, 842-610-0101. Biochromes charted. Scientifically based tech- mology and labelling techniques enable mas- king, emotional control and physical planning of 1924 *77* biochromes and year of discovery. 1925 *77* biochromes and year of discovery to 1783 Emul Engl b#223, Lawrence K envelop ENJOY LIFE 12, Experience Spoon River Antibiotic Laboratories 24, 28, 4 pm Haldisberger Hall 750 W. 3rd St. Dear Survey Sender, Do you call that work e-mail and ask me if I can help with your next one? Do I know what you're looking for. If you're the REAL Survey Sender, have you received a mock OR are you a fragment of my imagination? Use your in-your-life identity. And for the third year I haven't received my promotional email. I'm taking you to the Triple B Better Business Bureau survey. ANYONE can become a Universal Life Church Minister—even after death! Legally perform many tasks, orginate donations, lead meetings (Now over 25,000 tax-exempt ULC members nationalize!) Don't delay—become credentials of Ministry, send $ and a self-admitted draped envelope. See http://www.universallifechurch.org/sx_6x404-4-22 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 SOCIAL ACTION WITH CHRISTIAN BLAS PLUS LIVING COURTS: SEE us at the University April 25 7-10am at Wesleyan Center. VISIONS has the eyeglasses you want! 806 Massachusetts phone 841-7421 Delicatessen Hole-In-The-Wall HAPPY BIRTHDAY, JOINN (You old man) My wish for you is happiness! Happiness in simple things like roasted peas and Ether Satter-tering milk. You are No. 1. Rainbow to sunshine to you! The Rev T. Miller referred to in previous Uni- lise Life Church address to the Rev Todd K. Miller Why would 90 footholes bounce on a trampoline for 72 continuous hours in front of Allen Field? It must have been tough to touch skins jeans! NO' the men at TAU KAPA EMNCHS for enrollment — the third annual Allen Field House to benefit the Lawrence Boys Allen Field House. This is your big chance to win $10 easy dollars this Friday and $100 April 21. Enter the Mellow Yellow Paper Cornbury today at Booth 3, Kansas University. Babe- You are definitely the one, Kentucky isn't! Babe- How do you find that stuff. Tubbwholehouse, the house Chubs could tell us. Tubbwholehouse, the house Chubs could tell us. How's the chemistry? There are some could tell you everything. I am so into you. Babe- You are definitely the one, Kentucky isn't! REWARD-$5 for info leading to rental of furnished efficiency or one bedroom apartment for roommate & Sandwich Shop Doris P. Forks~Were to 146 and I had my heart to dare me to be the best. Like Ice Cream Much better in my dream. Like Ice Cream Much REWARD* $100 for info leading to acquisition of nine, quiet 2-room apartment, $165 or unde- sired. Chipse, Harry 22nd. Even though it seems like a movie, I'm still hard to hope and toope for Chipse. SERVICES OFFERED Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 158, 161, 117, 114, 121, 122, 123, 142, 500, 588, 124, 119, 117, 114, 121, 122, 142, 500, 588, 124, 119, 117, 114, 121, 122, 142, 500, 588, 124, 119, 117, 114, 121, 122, 142, 500, 588, Reasonable rates. Call 842-7631. STEREO BROKEN! deckers, amplifiers, turntable, tape deckers. Preventive Maintenance (turn table clean and tape, etc.) Custom Receiver. Reasonable warranty. Jaeger Electronics. 724 Mass. 841-5333. TV's, stereos and radio repairs. Most makes Pioneer, Tascar and Avery or carry in Pioneer, Tascar or Avery. I do damned good typing, Peggy, 842-4476. TYPING Need a resume professionally, confidentially! Call Kathy 842-8913 4-20 846 *Wilmais* 843-7685 BILLIARDS ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey ● Foos-Ball Experienced typist -term paper, thesis, etc. Plex type with ETL Meridia 3486, Macro 1502, and other types of manual programmable script Grammar, spelling expert Access to examples, readability testing, reasonable rating types, Beryk 464-173, McKinley 464-173 THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for theminding and copying in Lawnery. Let in the copies to 85 Massachusetts or phone 482-387-Thank you. File description with Trappe, Poly, 839-546-1466 Biography of Paul H. Trappe Born Columbia, SC. Discusses w孝孝 w孝孝 Biography of Paul H. Trappe, Poly, 839-546-1466 HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CARC Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Wbd. experience law papers, thesis, dissertations Wbd. experience legal research for Mrs. Wbd. Weds. 842-0724 5-10 Your paper deserves the best Call. Peggy for grittyping 864-1351 days, 842-8998 overings **NOT FOR SALE** Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mike, milc. IBM HSM Machine, Proedreading, spelling cor- nexion No helmets; just good typing at lower than average. They are the shortest of deadlines. Harvey was the shortest of deadlines. Peninsula's dammed good typing now offers copies, and binding. Convenient one stop service 802.11g. TVPGP (Lyme 426-8346 m-434-6056) 72 mm image TVPGP (Lyme 426-8346 m-434-6056) 72 mm image specialist. Call Karen al ajam at 434-6191 855 specialist. Call Karen al ajam at 434-6191 855 WANTED Female roommate to share nice 3 bedroom apa- niment close to campus. B1417-6478 or B2427-6868 House wanted to rent for summer. Call Brian, 718-435-6200. Female roommate needed to share apartment for summer. Phone 671-6250. Located near KU Med Center. Phone 671-6250. Mind our broken hearts, charismatic舞帝, Sanjana's Tuesay April 19, Donation $10. Pitchers, Advance tickets buy 2 Union. Room West, West Walls, West Bedrooms, West Walls, $90. Must be straight. Call male roommate for room, professor's home until July 1. $7 plus 4 itilies, 842-2923. 4-21 Female roommate wanted to share apartment with roommate after 5:00. 842-0066 after 5:00. 4-22 Female roommate wanted to share apartment for fall and winter studios, non-smoker preferred. Call Melissa 841-1802. 4-23 Female roommate wanted two-bedroom house, yard, AC 841-1478. 841-4475, 841-Lyson. 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week - No One Under 18 Admitted SELECTION OF BEER Female roommate for next fall, spring at Jayne Tower Towers Carolina, Cana. Dan A. - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong some of HALF AS MUCH Home of The Chalk Hawk Selected Secondhand - Furniture · Antiques - Imported Clothing Icelandic 7308 Mass. 841-7070 Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s $103 less than the youth fare you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. SUA Maupintour travel service Kansas Volunteer 844-1231 12 Wednesday, April 20, 1977 University Daily Kansan Walk-on leads wide receiver corps in spring drills BY DAN BOWERMAN Associate Sports Editor A walk-on to a football program usually isn't a big addition to the team and that's especially true when the program becomes as large and competitive as KU's. However, that isn't the case at the wide Softball team plays today The KU softball team (14-4) will take on Central Missouri State (12-9) in a doubleheader at Holcum Sports Complex at 2 this afternoon. The Jayhawks beat Central Missouri, 6-0, in the Springfield Invite two weeks after "That was the only decent game we played in the tournament," coach Bob Stancill said. "That's a weekend we'd cater forlet." The Jayhawks managed one win in four games at Sorringfield. Stancliff said that he was sure the Jayhawks could win both games today, but the team had to guard against a letter from the Big Eight tournament last week. KU's starting lineup for today's games will be different. Stancliff had planned to use several people who hadn't played much this year, so they could get some experience before the state tournament gets under way Friday in Hays. Baseball Standings Race Rows W L Pct. GB Milwaukee 7 5 173 1/8 Toronto 7 5 169 1/8 Cleveland 4 5 444 1/8 Houston 4 5 444 1/8 Detroit 4 5 200 3/4 Dallas 4 5 200 3/4 Toronto 8, New York Milwaukee 0, Oakland 4 Baltimore 1, Detroit 10 innings Houston 12, Detroit 11 Minnesota 3 Chicago at California, n Chicago at California, n Today's Games Toronto Hargan 1, Oakland 6, Gilbert 0.2 Milwaukee Augusteine 0 at Toronto 20 after Torre 0.2 Cleveland Gardnard 0 at Bollinger Martin 0.6, Minnesota Thermodog 1 at Kansas City Splitter 0.2 AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago 5 2 750 Oakland 7 4 380 1% Kansas City 6 4 698 1% Minnesota 6 6 500 2% Seattle 6 6 600 2% Tampa Bay 6 7 452 3% at Seattle Abbott NATIONAL LEAG Chicago Knapp 1-0 at California Ryan 2-1, n. Texas Brttes 0-0 at Seattle Abbott 0-2, n. "NATIONAL LEAGUE" W 6 I Pet. GB Monteil, 1 6 600 St. Louis, 4 4 838 Chicago, 4 5 345 Chicago, 4 4 480 Pittsburgh, 4 6 340 Philadelphia, 4 6 133 HALL HOME Los Angeles 6 2 800 Atlanta 6 5 340 2½ Houston 6 3 300 San Diego 3 7 417 San Francisco 3 7 400 Cincinnati 3 6 400 receiver position for the Jayhawks, Rodney Olson, a senior walk-on, is now the No. 1 wide receiver on the KU team—ahead of two scholarship athletes. Montreal 6, Pittsburgh 0 Atlanta 5, Chicago 1 Atlanta 4, San Diego 1 Texas A&M 2, Houston 4 New York 5, St. Louis 1 Denver 6, Geneva 1 Los Angeles Sultan 8, 1 at Cincinnati Fremont 1, 1 Chicago 3, New Orleans 1, 1 Pittsburgh Harlem 1, 1 at Montreal Hamble 1, 1 San Diego Jones 1, 1 at Minnesota Messner 1, 1 San Diego Jones 1, 1 at Minnesota Messner 1, 1 The wide receivers have been getting a lot of attention from the KU coaching staff during spring drills this year. Head football coach Bud Moore had earlier classified the other as one of KU's four problem areas. The others were inexperience at quarterback, linebacker and defensive secondary. NEXPERIENCE. WAS labeled as a problem because the 'Hawks' No.1 receiver last year, Waddell Smith, has used up his eligibility. Smith was KU's leading receiver for the last two years, and finding a replacement for Smith has been difficult. Last year's No. 2 and No. 3 receivers, Walt Little and Delvin Miller, were transferred at the start of spring钻的 to the drillers' arbitrary to relieve some depth problems there. way, a junior college transfer, Rob Fulton was expected to step into the top spot. With Smith, Little and Miller out of the But the coaching staff wasn't going to save him there alone, so they switched to the backroom. quarterback for KU last season, to wide receivers. The coaches also had Olson there. Sports THE PERSONNEL at wide receiver has changed since the start of spring practice. After a short experiment in the defensive secondary, Little was moved back to wide receiver, and Lissak, after his experiment in the defensive secondary, was moved to the defensive secondary. According to receiver coach Don Black LITTLE, A 6+j and 170 pound junior from Winston-Salem, N.C., was the No. 2 receiver for the Jayhawks now. Now, he is with Fulton on the second team and, according to Blackwelder, needs to improve his blocking. "Olson has done a real good job catching the ball," Blackwieder said. "He's also a good leader." BLACKWELDER said that KU would try to have three receivers ready to play in each game and that with certain offensive strategies, the receiver would have two receivers in at the same time. The blocking ability of each of the candidates is being watched closely, he said, because it's important to have a blocking receiver in a wishbone offense. "We need blocking receivers," Black-welder said. "In some offenses the receiver only is to catch the ball, but in others a receiver might have to block eight out of 10 players." welder, Olson now on the first team and Fulton and Little are on the second team. In that way, Olson, 5-11 and 175 pounds, was a pleasant surprise for the KU coaches. Two outs later, Tom and Pompey and Fred Patek before the White laced a two-run field at 11:50. Jim Hughes, Minnesota's a third pitcher in the inning, carne in an end on the onslaught by the Rangers. "He's a good athlete," Blackwelder said, "He's got toughness and real good speed." KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP)—Frank White drove in three runs with a homer and a double in the fifth innning as the Kansas City team outpaced the Minnesota Twins 11-3 last night. surrendered a single to John Mayberry and a 42-foot horse to Amos Oils. Royals pound Twins Kansas City's eight in the fifth inning were one short of a club record. George Brett followed with a single and scored on a triple by Hal McGaear. Carriers Royals right-hander Jim Colburn won his second game of the year against one loss. "We had Little in the defensive secondary, but we have since moved him back to wide receiver," Blackwelder said. "We wanted to look at him in the secondary, but we feel he'll be more of an asset to the team at wide receiver." White's leadoff homer snapped a 33 tie and ignited a seven-run explosion by the Royals off Twins starter Pete Redfern and reliever Don Carrithers. Last season he had 58 receptions for 940 yards and eight touchdowns. During his freshman season at Coffeyville he caught 22 passes for 380 yards. In his senior year at Shawnee Mission East High School, he had 26 receptions for just under 500 yards and was chosen by the Kansas City Star for the all-meroro and all-state teams. But Fulton had had some trouble adjusting to football at KU. Blackwelder said, "When you spend years in a junior college program, you just learn the basics." BACKGAMMON "Spring ball isn't over yet," he said. "I'm there (No.1), now but I have to be there after spring ball is over it." It an honor, I am lucky that the coach met me is if I get a scholarship or not." OLSON SAID he thought being a walkon had probably strengthened his deter- ment. Coffeyville Community Junior College, probably came into the spring drills as the freshman. Olsen, who played for three years at William Penn College in Okealaosa, Iowa, before transferring to KU two years ago, said he has "a lot of experience than the other two players. "Everybody else is doing good, too," both sons said. "And the girls were going to 64 and 195 weight transfer from her." Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union Fulton, a 6-3 and 195 pound transfer from KJHK FM191 STAFF APPLICATIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE ON THE BULLETIN BOARD BY 217 FLINT HALL DUE IN THE JUKH MALBLOX - 217 FLINT BY FRIDAY, APRIL 29 PARTUALLY FUNDED THROUGH KJ STUDENT SENATE J. Watson's April 18-24 All televised KC Royals baseball games can be seen on our 7' TV screen. Another trip to the Bahamas! M Disc 8-12/11, Cover $1.50 N Peanut Gallery—Reds vs. O Dodgers Ladies Night—Disco 8-12:15 Specials on beer throughout the night? TV open 7:00 p.m. W Free Disco for everyone 8-12:15 E 7' TV open 7:00 p.m. Laides Night—Disco 8-12:15 T On our 7' TV—Frank Sinatra H Special H Laides Night—Disco 8-12:15 U Specials on beer throughout the R night Live: "Millionaire at Midnight" 9:12:15, 10:20. Cover Pearl Gallery—NBA Playoffs, 10:30 p.m. Peanut Gallery—NBA Playoffs, 10:30 p.m. Rock & Roll with Roxtar, 9:12-15 Come watch all games on our 7' TV Free 12 noon to 7 p.m. Peanut Gallery open 1-10 p.m. for your sports enjoyment Lawrence's Newest 18 Club Millcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa A Program of Chinese Culture featuring the martial art of Kung Fu. the arts of calligraphy painting, music and a Chinese fashion show, dating from 1112 B.C. A gift of international friendship Thursday, April 21 7:30 p.m. YOUTH GOODWILL MISSION OF THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA 國防好衛友年青國民集中 SO YOU THINK YOU'RE SPECIAL?? POSITIONS OPEN: 来样缝纫 专业加工 可修补 Well, we're looking for special people to work 1977-1978 Special Events Committee No Charge Ballroom Kansas Union SUA Security Secretary Publicity Hospitality Ushers Sign up for interviews in SUA office Bicycle SPORT Priority given to any registered vehicle that is registered in the April 23 SUA lime trials, for quick race-ready service on their bicycles. $9.00 plus GRAY SPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Advance 842-2292 GRAN SPORT Announces . . . LAST MINUTE BICYCLE TUNE-UPS for the time trials If you can't fly Continental... C You'll miss 24% savings and all the extras,too. Continental's got a good deal going for you next time you fly to one of our many domestic destinations—our Economy Excursion Fares* give you 24% savings all summer; our Economy Shuttle gives you 10% on our Economy Fares, based any time of the year. To put you in the mood for your vacation, we've got the only Coach Pub in the Sky on board our wide-bodied DC-10's, plus filmed concerts, comedy and sports. And our spacious 225%优惠 free stereo, overhead storage and a middle seat that folds down when unoccupied to give you lots of room to relax or spread out the books. Don't forget to ask about our special travel programs, such as our California Campus Tours, California Flyers and so on. For more information, call your Travel Agent or Continental Airlines. And remember, if you can't fly Continental, try to have a nice trip anyway. - *Coralmen will provide information regarding hatch and number of starts available. Purchase tickets within 10 days after watering are competitive. 24-hour application from 6:17 1979 (157). All other times 24-hour. 28-day application from 6:17 1979 (157). All other times 24-hour.* The Coral Club is a non-profit organization. The Coral Club's DC10 includes Hawaii We really move our tail for you. C e WASH Carter America diet inc gallon gas-guz In a so a joint America because wasteful He ca that the overwhe CONTINENTAL AIRLINES The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail CART of his presenta energy yesterda —Gas price of necesse —Hef starting by reba pri Repri The li Robinso the int streets student The 1 fields we Leben : $11,000. Two p $60,000 week f facilitie P student Leber courts, would r Leber about it lighting and the proft Leben s ministries costs. The emendate Board. I both ap Office of specific bids. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Relays begin this afternoon Thursday, April 21, 1977 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87, No.130 See story page six Carter reveals energy tax plans WASHINGTON (UP1) - President Jimmy Carter urged Congress yesterday to put Americans on a painful, mandatory energy diet including taxes that could bring $1-a-gallon gas and add $2,480 to the price of gas-guzzling cars. He called it "a thankless job" but said that the alternative was a crisis that could have been avoided. In a sober, nationally televised address to a joint session of Congress, Carter said Americans must be forced to save energy and take action to give up wasteful habitats voluntarily. CARTER'S 30-MINUTE speech—the first of his presidency before Congress—presented the grand design for a national park. He called on earlier yesterday. Its central points are: Gas pump taxes to add five cents to the price of a gallon every year for 10 years, if neces - Hefty taxes on the 'gas-guzzling' cars, with the 1978 models, but tempered by rising fuel prices. Two priorities have been set for the use of $60,000 the Student Senate allocated last week for improvements in recreational facilities. Recreation fund priorities set The lighting of eight tennis courts south of Robinson Gymnasium and improvements in the intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa State University are being completed, student body, president, said vexander. Leben said the extra light of the tennis courts, which would cost $16,000, would be available for $35. The improvements in the intramural fields would include a new watering system, Leben said. The system will cost about $11,000. Other possible improvements would be to plant more with sharp slopes and fertilization and seeded. He said the leveling would cost $10,000 or more, the seeding about $3,500 and the irrigation about $8,000. Leben said many questions remained about the improvements. The tennis court, the player's stand and the improved fields would transform and the improved fields would be used for protection, but it was still undecided. Leben said, whether the Senate or the administration would pay these additional fees. A committee will be formed by the end of the week and will meet next week to develop final recommendations on the improvements. The committee will send its recommendations to the Recreational Advisory Board. If the board and the administration both approve the recommendations, the Office of Facilities Planning will make finalifications and handle any construction bids. -Taxes on domestic oil designed to drive the prices gradually up to those on the world market, and to boost consumer prices further. - Tax credits for insulating homes and businesses and for converting to solar heat. -STANDBY GASOLINE rationing authority for emergency use. The President got standing ovations from his bipartisan audience before and after his address, but members of Congress predicted his program would face a tough battle from many lawmakers, lobbists and others. The president pump tax seemed particularly vulnerable. Said House Speaker Thomas O'Neill: "The tax bill, the dams, the economic package, they were all skirmishes. This is the battle." The proposals got kindly reviews from many Carter partisans, in industry, labor and consumer groups expressed displeasure with various points. "ASKING AMERICA, the richest nation on earth, to start acting like a poor nation is absolutely contrary to the American way," Rep. Robert Baumman, R-Md., said His head and shoulders framed by a huge American flag in the house of Representatives, Carter told Congress—and millions in his television audience—that he wanted to refund the billions of dollars of revenues he earned from sales, primarily through income tax credits. But the tax credit proposals were vague, in sharp contrast to the specific proposals to collect new levies and make energy consumption more expensive. Carter made plain at the outset of his speech that his proposals would not be politically popular one, amending his plan to say, "I don't expect much applause." BUT HE WAS interrupted by applause seven times when he referred to stepping up domestic oil production, preventing wind turbines from being installed on synthetic fuels, shelving the plutonium breeder reactor, speeding up construction of conventional atomic plants, correcting a lack of oil industry competition and reducing companies from collecting unearned profits. The President sought tax rebates ranging up to $410 a household for homeowners who install storm windows, weather stripping and other insulation between April 29, 1977, and Dec. 31, 1984. Natural gas prices would go up to a maximum $1.75 a thousand cubic feet at the beginning of 1978, and federal jurisdiction would be extended to intrastate production He said his goals for 1985 included cutting U.S. energy growth to the point where it would double every 40 years instead of every 18, reducing gasoline consumption 10 percent and reducing a cent of America's homes and putting solar energy devices on 2.5 million homes. "I HOPE THE Congress will adopt these See ENERGY page 10 YELLOW Experienced driver I've got a new Cougar in the carport that I hardly ever drive," says Delores Burton, for three years a driver with Union Cab Cabbv likes her job, passengers By RICK THAEMERT Staff Reporter Staff Reporter In all her days of driving cabs, Delores Burton has never had anyone jump in and shout, "Follow that car." Burton, 40, looks small in comparison with the large, yellow cab she drives daily for about 11 hours. Her sad eyes and smile reflect an aura of meekness. In fact, after driving about three years for the Union Cab Company, Burton says her job isn't filled with late-night rendezvous with unsavory characters, but she doesn't hours, tedious waiting, interesting people and a tired rum. But she likes it. "I've always loved driving," she says "smiling shyly." "Me and my husband used it to get you up and across the road." Now, she drives about 130 miles daily and has been on every street in town. She lives in a beautiful neighborhood. "I DRIVE MORE miles than most people so I have to be a little more alert," she says as she answers a call from the cab office. She throws several rapid glances in the mirrors, then struggles with the big steering wheel as she pulls away from the taxi stand. The work looks tiring. "You're usually not too tired when you get off, maybe a little mentally tired. You mostly get tired of sitting," she says, stopping impatiently at a red light. She cruises quickly down obscure streets. Bumping along between two homes where a dirt road has been worn, she says, "You kind of get used to where some of the short cuts are." But, even the experienced compass in her mind isn't perfect. She turns one street too far and says, "I goofed. I can never get used to these streets and which ones are dead end." She makes a U-turn and chuckles to herself for about a block. AT THE destination, she scamperms from the cab, opens the door for her passenger, then hurries back. She slips into a money meter, which begins at 70 cents. Surprisingly, she says, most of her passengers are young and include many Burton says she enjoys meeting the many interesting passengers, although it is difficult to get to know any of them in such a short time. However, the chatter about weather, destinations or personal experiences is an idea of their personalities, she says. "WHEN SOMEONE'S been drinking, you usually expect that they're going to use bad language in the car. But, you just kind of ignore it." Burton says. But not all passengers are so nice. "people seem to be more polite to a woman." She adds that she thinks being a woman has helped her in the job because When she's not driving someone around, she waits sometimes for as long as an hour at taxi stands around Lawrence. Her left arm is sunburned and much darker than the right, the result of putting it out the window as she reads, works at the desk with other car drivers to pass the time. As she's talking, a fellow driver parked behind her sneaks out of his car and opens her trunk, an expression of cabby tolfoley. “GET OUTTTA my trunk,” she scolds, then reprimands the culprit with a disgusted glance, then a grin. With a grin, she says, "Only if they're hungry." Somewhere nearby tires screech loudly. She winces, obviously able to identify with the feeling of someone who has barely escaped an accident. One of the last calls she receives is an order to pick up some doughnuts for her employees. She seems excited to get on and run, even if she's just running an errand. Closing the door, I ask, "Is it an emergency?" With a grin, she says, "Only if they're hungry." ISA alleges harassment, raps inquiry By LEON UNRUH Staff Reporter Some Iranian students at the University of Kansas recently have received telephone calls warning them not to get involved in Iranian Student Association (ISA) activities, two members of the ISA said yesterday. The spokeswoman also said the ISA began a leaflet and petition campaign yesterday to put pressure on the UK administration to release specific details about a beating incident that took place between two Iranian students near Patterson Lake Feb. 25. The spokesmen asked not to be identified for fear of requisal. The two men, one an ISA officer, said at a press conference in the Kansas Union that the caller had identified himself as a former state senator who had government "and once as a CIA agent." THE SPOKESMEN SAID the ISA also was upset because the details of a March ruling by a KU committee investigating the incident weren't released. Nether a statement released by the committee March 30, nor an April 2 letter to the ISA from two members of the committee described its action. The name of the aggressor in the attack also wasn't released. The three-man committee composed of Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Donald Alderson, acting vice chancellor for student affairs; and Mike Davis, University general counsel, investigated the matter for about three weeks. THE BUCKLEY Amendment's privacy provision prohibited the release of details of the investigation and the resulting administrative action. One of the students involved in the incident was Kambiz Zibail, Tehran, Iran, special student. The other was an ISA student who would remain undidentified to prevent reprisal. The ISA charged that Zibai was an agent of SAVAK, the Iranian secret police, and demanded that the University dismiss him from campus. He is still attending classes. The spokesmen also denied charges that ISA members had harassed Zabitla before classes in Marvin Hall about two weeks ago. Members and supporters had been in the classroom talking to students about SAHAC, they said, but not harassed Zabitla. A SPOKESMAN said the ISA members and supporters had left the classroom before An unidentified student filed a report with KU Police April 11 stating he had been harassed and physically detained from entering class by five or six students. Alderson said that he had gone to Marvin several times after the report was filed, but that there had been "no problems on the occasions I've been there to observe." The University had invited the ISA to meet with the committee after the investigative statement was released, he said. The committee then approached about having the meeting. Prisoners know freedom, at least in the classroom [Image of a man with wavy hair, wearing a light-colored shirt, looking upwards. The background is indistinct.] Mike Gaines, associate professor Note: This is the second of two articles on classes taught by University of Kansas professors at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. By MARY RINTOUL Staff Reporter In the main rotunda of the prison, visitors are met by two men in an enclosed glass cage. After securing admittance sheets, one door opens to two of sliding gates set 10 feet apart. A small wooden box with a built-in speech greets cars arriving on the prison grounds. From the speaker, a voice asks for directions, then directs the driver to a parking place. The Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, situated on the outskirts of Leavenworth, looks like the Topeka capitol building from a distance, but the comparison ends there. Inmates are allowed to mill around after supper and may look through the gates to AN UNARMED escort, G. F. Byrd, arrives, one sliding gate opens and visitors are led through a long corridor and up and in stairs to the prison's education section. Jim Spencer, college coordinator for the prison, works in the education wing, and inmates walk in and out of his office freely during night classes. The classrooms are small likenesses of those at the University of Kansas. They have blackboards, cabinets and enough desks for the 12 inmates in a class visited one night last week. The inmates included blacks, whites and Mexican-Americans. The class, taught by Mike Gaines, associate professor of systematics and ecology, was conducted as it is every week, but with one obvious exception. The unarmed guard remained in the room at all times at the request of C. L. Benson, warden, because of the presence of a reporter and a photographer. IN THE BOLIogy and Society class, which lasted an hour, Gaines discussed the problems. He obviously loved his job and often taken with the inmates, who were attentive and asian. He was a teacher. During a break after the lecture, one of the inmates, Ed Reed, observed the visitors coffee. An unwritten rule of prisons is to decline inmates' offers and refrain from giving them anything, but the gesture was clear that any tension that might have still existed. Another of the inmates, Reginald Chambers, struck up a conversation with a serve another life sentence. Nonetheless, in nooth's personality indicates that he will never serve again. ON JUNE 10, Booth, Reed and Lobomir Peicheu will become the first KU graduates from Leavenworth, and Booth is proud of that fact. Booth will receive a bachelor of general studies degree. His attitude reflects those of most men in the classroom. All are proud of themselves. "That's the most important thing to me- "I feel good about graduating," he said. "My mother and myself feel real good about the whole thing because when I get out, a college degree isn't going to hurt me any." One inmate addressed himself to the whole class, saying, "If you think I'm dumb now, you should have seen me before I started taking classes." visitor with the proud introduction, "My name is K. Cool - King-Cool" while acting as the lead character. Most of the inmates simply stretched their legs or got a drink during the break, but one opted to remain in class to knit a red, white and blue afghan. CLASS RESUMED FOR an open discussion, during which it was difficult to believe that these men, who spoke thoughtfully and eloquently, were criminals, 65 to 70 per cent of them imprisoned more than once. They discussed current issues and current gripes—many of them legitimate. The class clown was Gary Bouth, 35, who interrupted the lecture several times to make surarcistic remarks. But discussion created a serious side of his personality. Booth is serving a life sentence at Leavenworth, and he is charged with assault in connection with a Texas prison. to maintain my self-esteem and not lose it," Leon Jackson, another inmate, said. One thing that weighs heavily on the inmates' minds was that at Lavenworth, a psychiatrist in the prison, "It's better than sitting in your cell and vegetating." Dick said. "THE GOVERNMENT allocates money to pay for our tuition, but the money goes somewhere else," Richard Dick, an inmate, said. Booth, who addressed himself to the whole class, said, "If you think I dumb now, you should have seen me before I started taking classes." An inmate pays $290 for five classes, and raises the money by working in one of several factories at the prison, where the maximum hourly wage is 75 cents. The inmates said they thought the education would help their rehabilitation and they have a number of other reasons for taking classes. THE INMATES that think advisers have been a great help in setting up class schedules. Booth said that when he first met the school district, he asked to take or the order in which to take them. Many of the inmates blame advising problems on the relationship between the University of Kansas and the prison officials. They said they hardly recognized their own Division of Continuing Education, which run the program, because they rarely visited. Before leaving the classroom, the inmates posed for a group picture. Then they shuffled off, and the visitors left—some feeling a twinge of guilt sensing that hundreds of confined men watched them walk out freely. Visiting the penitentiary can be summed up in a line from a letter from one of the inmates, Lubomir Peichev, received three days after the visit. He said, "Please let the college community know that there are people with disabilities who attend." Forms for staff now available Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansan are available in 106 Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, the Department of the offices of the men and women. Positions are open on both the news and business staffs. Applications must be turned in by 5pm Monday. Summer and fall editors and business managers will interview candidates next Monday and Tuesday. Interview sign-up be posted outside 111 and 141 Flint Hall. 2 Thursday, April 21, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Budget for inquiries approved WASHINGTON - A House Administration subcommittee yesterday approved a $2.5 million budget for the Assassinations Committee. During the items cut from the budget request was $124,800 to repay staff members who took voluntary pay cuts when the panel's status was in jeopardy. The Assassinations Committee originally asked for **$5 million** for 1977 but then cut its request to **$2.5 million**, saying the lower amount was the minimum to carry out its investigations into the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. Hussein saus 'disaster' likely **RARIS--King Hussein of Jordan** said in an interview published yesterday that he could conceive of no middle East settlement this year and that "disaster" was inevitable. "Those who are making the Arab public opinion believe that peace can be settled (in the Middle East) in 1977 are playing with fire," he told the newspaper Le "The magnitude of the explosion risks to be in proportion with the unfounded hopes that have been raised. We are running toward disaster, unless we succeed." Sadat says demands solid CAIRO—President Anwar Sadat said yesterday Arab demands for Israel with-drawal from occupied territory and the creation of a Palestinian state weren't negotiable. He said the United States could, if it wanted to, bring a Middle East settlement within a month. As he discussed with a group of Arab lawyers his recent trip to the United States, Sadat he and his President Jimmy Carter 'agreed on certain subjects, and differed on other issues.' Secretary of State Cyrus Vance will visit the Middle East in June, Said said, to hold contacts with the various parties and attempt working out a formula which would be used to determine the location. Sadat repeated his assertion that the United States virtually控的中级 East, "but this does not negate our will, for our will is basic," he said. WASHINGTON (UPT)—The White House has lifted the ban on U.S. military assistance to Turkey in an attempt to break the negotiating deadlock on the Cyprus issue, administration and congressional sources said yesterday. Sources said the Carter plan was designed to give the United States more leverage in the Cyprus negotiations by improving strained relations with Ankara. The United States relied the implied threat of cutting U.S. ties with Turkey. Turks don't cooperate in the negotiations. posing the plan, which was spelled out by President Carter on Tuesday. The plan stemmed from a fact-finding trip former Secretary of State Cliff Clark looked to Greece and Turkey. Carter lifts ban on Turkish aid Vice President Walter Mondale met vice president with congressional leaders op- r U.S. objective is to push the Cyprus negotiations with direct participation by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who is expected to travel to Ankara in early May for a meeting of the Central Treaty Organization. The State Department disclosed yesterday that Vance would fly to Madrid May 11 and Tehar May 12 after attending an economic summit meeting in London. Sources said the Carter administration asked Congress to move ahead with a four-year $1 billion defense cooperation between the United States and Turkey. However, the President explained to congressional opposition leaders that he would prefer it be known that he was in no hurry on the basis agreement. An administration source explained, "In a way he wants to have the best of both worlds. He says to Congress that he wants the agreement, which pleases the Turks. But he doesn't want it right away, which pleasures the Greeks." The White House ordered that the present ban on military sales to Turkey be lifted immediately. Under the White House order, Turkey would be able to buy $75 million of military goods plus another $60 million in P4 fighters—a total of $225 million. The arma ban was imposed after U.S. weapons were used in the Turkish invasion of Iraq. Nuclear plant receives permit for construction WICHTA (AP)—Preliminary construction already under way on the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant near Burlington, will be doubled under a federal work permit The Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved a limited authorization that will allow an additional $21 million construction permit for the reactor structure, including the reactor structure itself. The permit also allows excavation and some work on a lake that will provide water to cool the generators, and for roadway and railroad construction. Another $27.7 million was provided for road, land clearance and other work by the company. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS present Cosi Fan Tutte A Comic Opera in Two Acts by W.A. Mozart April 22, 23, 29, 30 University Theatre—Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 K. U. Students admitted without charge with current Certificate of Registration This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. Swimsuits entire stock 20% off Thursday, Friday, Saturday THE ATTIC 927 Massachusetts SENIOR CLASS MEMBERS Come to THE WHEEL on April 21st from 7-10 p.m. FAREWELL TO THE WHEEL PARTY 10c draws 77 sale SPRING SUIT SALE Mister Guy announces its Spring Vested Suit Sale! Suits from '120 to '130, NOW 9950 Suits from '140 to' 150. NOW $ \mathbf{1 1 5}^{0 0}$ This Sale includes soils, plaid, pin cards, chalk strips and more. Shop early for the one just right for you while selection is. All Stock Not Included Open Thursday Nights 'til 8:30 TRADITIONAL CLOTHING MISTER GUY 922 Massachusetts Bu or Increase depression President rebate, Jae of business The re Tuesday b after Carb MANY I rebate in widely pu economy i been expe William Mens Wea Lawrence rebate wae economy, mediately creased a business. Maurice the probie designed economy, unemployment Eve Or 10 or $1 10 *2 m2 *2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 21, 1977 Business profs differ on benefits of rebate Increased inflation and economic depression could have been the result of President Jimmy Carter's proposal 450 years ago. It is the professor of business, said yesterday. The rebate proposal was dropped Tuesday by the Senate Finance Committee. MANY PEOPLE already planned for the rebate in their spending because it was widely publicized, Garnitzi said. It improves now as had been expected, he said. William Campbell, owner of Campbell's Mens Wear and president of the Downtown Service Association, said that when a rebate was offered to businesses in the economy, business in Lawrence immediately picked up. However, the interview was followed by a slow-down, he said. Maurice Joy, professor of business, said the problem with the 1975 rebadge program, is that it takes money off the economy, increase product costs and unemployment, that was some people saved the money or used it to pay outstanding debts. Gaumann said that programs to stimulate the economy must be taken slowly if they are to work. In this way, he said, real employment rates eventually would result. However, Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said he thought the rebate would have been good for the business because it would have decreased unemployment. Pichler favored a combination of permanent tax cuts and careful congressional spending to help stimulate the economy, he said. ACCORDING TO Gaumnitz, additional spending bills for housing improvements and urban development would give the economy more push than the $50 rebate. Now that the rebate has been dropped, Congress won't have to cut spending programs to make up for the increased taxes, which dictate the rebate may have caused, he said. HILTON HILTON On Campus Events TODAY: A conference on "INNOVATIONS IN EDUCATION" will last all day in the Kansas Union. KANSAS RELAXES main events begin at 1 in Memorial Stadium, Alan Buecher, associate professor of music at Queen's College, City University of New York, will lecture on "WILLIAM SIDNEY MOUNT": The story of a young African American woman who moved to Murphy Hall. Members of YOUTH GOODWILL MISSION of the Republic of China will discuss international communications at 3 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. TONIGHT: William May, chairman of religious studies at Indiana University, will speak to "THE FUTURE OF RELIGION" at 6 in the Union. Members of the YOUTH GOODWILL MISSION of the Republic of China will present music, art, fashions and the martial arts at 4:30 in the Union Bathroom. SAILING CLUB meets at Parlors A and if of the Union, Haskins and Soils LEGAL LIABILITY PROGRAM at Parlors A and if of the Union, Haskins and Soils LEGAL LIABILITY PROGRAM at SUA Special Events' USHER'S MEETING at 4:30 in the Union's Oread Room. Don Abhapanek, professor at Haskell Indian Junior College, will speak on "SPIRIT OF ECOLOGY AND THE NORTH AMERICAN PLAINS INDIANS" at a meeting of the Jayhawk Audubon Society at 7:30 in South Park Recreation Center, 114 Massachusetts St. The SYMPHONIC BUNDLE will perform at 8 in the University Theatre. Edward Alexander, professor of English at the University of Washington, will speak at the University Forum. Hans Eggers, a distinguished Max Kade professor of German, will speak on "CONTEMPORARY GERMAN: A SOCIOLOGICAL APPROACH" at 8 in the Union's Pine Room. TOMORROW: THE ENGINEERING EXPOSITION will open for public viewing at noon in Learned Hall. KANSAS RELAIS main events start at 1 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. BLUENCAERE DAY begins at 2 p.m. in the Union. A Jerry Hileman, a professional in Robinson South Gyrmathism by Jerry Hileman, a professional in the sport. 10 Daisies or Daffodils $1.50 and 10 Tulips $2.00 Mixed Bouquet $2.75 Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana Cask and Carry Thursday, Friday, Saturday NATIONAL BESTSELLER "Has already been placed on many executive 'must' reading lists." —Time Magazine THE GAMESMAN THE NEW CORPORATE LEADERS by Michael Maccoby Literary Guild Alternate Selection £8.95 • Simon and Schuster THE GAMESMAN Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and Delta Sigma Theta security will compete against ten other pairs next for a spot in the annual Reyue. For the first time, an Interfraternity Council (IFC) fraternity has paired with a black sorority for try-outs for the 1978 Rock Chalk Revue. Fraternity,black sorority pair for Rock Chalk groups paired for the Rock Chalk try-outs. She said the Tau Kappa Epion-Delta Sigma Theta pairing could signal a break in that tradition. "This precedent could mean that fraternities and sororites will be working more with other living groups and organizations outside the Greek system," she said. In the past, Jo Bedard, coordinator of KU- Y, said yesterday, IFC and Panhellenic Bonita Franklin, president of Delta Sigma The same sound alternative you enjoy on JKH KFM 91 can be a part of your own album collection. Until April 28, JKH KFM will give away free albums to listeners as well. Click here for details. Starcastle Arffel, Dooger Leach, John Earth, Wind, and Fire Country Joe McDonald Cavarrettes Donovan Jeff Cearf Carl Weather Reeper The Purple Sage Guitar Glue Gluten Free David LaFramatta David LaFramatta Piano String Phosphor Bronze Jason W. Jubitz Oak Prime Friend Marcela Tyer Marcela Tyer Prime Friend Marcela Tyer Prime Friend Marcela Tyer THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE Keep tuned to KJHK FM91 for all details. KJHK FM91 FORTUNA FUNDRAISING TECHNOLOGY STUDENT BOOSTER After the Relays Come as you are... HUNGRY! --to Sandy's Sandwiches start here Sesame bacon Melted cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion Secret sauce Not just meat, but chopped beef stock 2120 W. 9th WAXMAN CANDLES 7th Annual 20-75% off Spring Sale Entire stock included. Now through Saturday, April 23. Hours: 10-5 WAXMAN Candles 1407 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 "Of all other possibilities, pairing with them. That was the most favorable to us." *Mike Sylvester* SUA Films Interviews for the 1977-78 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Wednesday, April 27. Please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time if you are interested in film programming. Chairperson Interviews Classical Films Chairperson Independent/Experimental Films Chairperson Summer Films Chairperson Popular Films Chairperson Chairperson Midnight Movies/Special Films Chairperson and began to look into other pairing possibilities such as scholarship halls, unpaired Panhellenic sororities and black sororites. Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror Films Chairperson Theta, said her sorority was pleased to be working with Tau Kappa Epsilon. Public Relations Committee Jim Sandifer, Rock Chalk chairman of Tau Kappa Epsilon, said his fraternity hadn't submitted its preference list in time to meet the deadline. He said the fraternity wanted to compete WANTED: ALL GRADS WITH FLUENT FRENCH FOR NEW PEACE CORPS PROJECTS 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 raw; health/dent; care; 48 days pd. vac.; small, comfort. liv. allow; $300 term. stemp. 2 yrs. service. DAVIS COURT CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT MARCH 2, AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMENT MARCH 1. The Big Top DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT sponsored by KU BRIDGE CLUB April 24, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of Student Union Admission $1.00 Sign up in SUA office For further info. SUA office 864-3477 $ VW Service Thank you for the exceptional response to the service specials we recently featured. Many VW owners had the opportunity to be re-introduced to factory trained technicians using authorized VW parts and equipment in making their VW's run and stop better. So this week we are going one better. In addition to giving you a break on your brakes and making your engine more economical, we want to soften the sound of your VW by softening the price of muffler repairs. These specials are by appointment . . . please TUNE-UP BUG 29.95 Valid until April 29 MUFFLER BUG BRAKE SPECIAL $5 off Valid until April 29 BUG 39.95 Valid until April 29 Bob Hopkins Volkswagen, Inc. 2522 Iowa 843-2200 4 Thursday, April 21, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the view of the Universities of Kansas or the School of Journalism. Postal woes to stay The Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 was intended to boost the U.S. Postal System out of the red. The intentions of the act were to numberers of each class of mail pay their own way. Seven years hence, the postal system has been given to continually raise postal rates in Iowa. Recent news stories have assured many Americans that there won't be a hike in rates this year. Indeed, there won't be a rate hike for first-class users this year. But what these stories have failed to mention is that a hike setting second-class users is scheduled for July. In 1971, the postal service's first year of operation, second-class users paid $128 million for postage. It has been estimated that by 1979, that total will more than triple, and that's excluding the possibility of its year's raising second-class rates again before ONE NATIONAL journal—The New Republic—has estimated that the hike in July will cost it 25 per cent more than what it'saving now, or about $1,000 a week. To protect itself from financial disaster, the postal service has come out with a new report. The report is nothing but a request for more rate hikes and more appropriations from Congress to keep the service in line with the service can, in turn, keep itself out of the red. Nothing in this new report increases the efficiency of service Americans might expect to receive. The report is, in effect, the service's own "sky is falling" plea. THE REPORT, which was prepared by the Commission on Postal Service, indicates that the cost of a first-class postage stamp will be 28 cents by 1965 if the service continues to operate at its present financial pace. The commission says this increase can be offset by an additional five days a week instead of six—and higher taxpayer subsidies are adopted. In other words, to keep the cost of a stamp six cents lower, the postal service will need a higher subsidy from Congress, which will have to raise taxes to meet the subsidy. A recommendation to consider using electronic message services to replace mail also were made by the commission. It would seem that the postal service would only be adding to its budget woes by adopting such a program. Electronic equipment costs a lot of money, and installing such equipment would cost even more. ONE FAVORABLE recommendation has come out of the commission report. That proposal is to place stricter limits on when the postal service can close rural post offices. These offices are the only contact that many rural Americans have with the federal government. Closing the offices would be nothing but a disservice to rural taxpayers, and it would leave some with rules as those who get doorstep service in the nation's cities. Over-all, the chance that the postal service will escape its financial problems is bleak. Last year alone, the federal government had to provide an additional $1 billion to keep the mail moving. Under the plans of the 1970 act, second-class users were given a "phasing-in" period—which was nine years after the attack—they could adjust to the act's higher rates. THIS PHASING-IN period depended on Congress to appropriate funds each year to pay the difference. Former President Gerald Ford failed to include the phasing-in period in his last budget for this year; and so far, Bert Lance, director of the Office of Management and Budget, also has failed to do so. What the postal service is recommending is more tax money to keep itself in operation. Based on its increasing financial difficulty over the last seven years, it would seem the service could do something better than that—abolishing the postal service as a whole, perhaps, and starting again from scratch. Everyone knows the real truth about the downfall of Richard M. Nixon, 38th president of the United States. Psychobiistories of little value You see, Watergate, the cause of Dick's downfall, was a result of his boyhood sexual yearning for his mother. The forbidden Oedipal urge required punishments he has been ashamed himself by "arranging his own failures" and became his own executor." The April 18 issues of Time and Newsweek both have articles on psychhistory and psychobiography, as their proponents call them. It is questionable whether the field suddenly became so important that its readers had to bring it in. I mention in the same week, but my guess is that there is a reasonable explanation for that occurrence. There is no reasonable explanation, however, for the multisyllable junk that has started invading bookstore shelves under the placard "psychohistory" in the past few years. To think that psychohistory is a form of explaining a person's behavior and even predicting future behavior is ridiculous. AND, MORE often than not, the authors of such "books" are wards of the state posing as university professors. In the preceding analysis, psychoanalyst David Abrahamsen once again demonstrates that fields continue to be invented and books continue to be written that have shaped or redefining social, political, literary or scientific value. THE FIELD is certainly worthy of study, and in fact, has been growing as a social science faculty at the KU, for example, a psychohistory course is offered in the American studies department. To consider psychohistory as anything more than a theory of social science is, I think, a serious mistake. novel, "My Life on Alpha Centauri." NO MATTER what Nixon has ever done or ever will do, we My first brush with Mazish draws on obscure details; his own creativity; and his book's touch. Creo to the most creatively scenic since Timothy Leary's Brent Anderson Editorial Writer psychohistory came in 1973, when I read "In Search of Nixon," written by M.I.T. historian Bruce Mazlish, considered by many in his field to be a leader in psychohistory. can be certain that Mazill will can be able to explain it according to the wonders of psychohistory. Other works that might be categorized as psychohistorical include James Barber's "The Presidential Character"; a much more obvious example is the problem to explain the behavior of, in this case, past American presidents. But generally, most attempts to explain individual behavior via the use of psychohistory have failed miserably. Usually books written under the label "psychohistory" deal with famous men whose names are popular in bookstores. ALREADY, SEVERAL books explaining President Jimmy Carter's rise to power and his influence on the market, and there is little doubt that, considering the excellent publicity psychohistory and psychopharmacy have hundreds more will be published. Before fall, we all will know the story of how John Jimmy Carter's mother abandoned him during the war. Billy's gas station, which caused him to hate Plains and desire to live in Washington. In many instances, the authors of psychobiographies have never even met their subjects. And, as the Newsweek article above may be tripped by their best friend, Sigmund Freud. WHAT MIGHT happen is that they will be the victims of what Freud called "counter-transference" in his own unconscious prejudices onto historical data or people. Though it mightn't be as popular as the Freud explanation, my guess is that the authors of psychohistory books are laughing all the way to the bank. YOU BET VOTED AGAINST ERA. GOOD BUDDY! IVE BEEN A STATE SENATOR LONG ENOUGH TO KNOW, LIKE IT OR NOT, THE LORD MADE IT A MANS WORLD! Pablo Picasso IT TAKES A MAN TO WAGE A WAR! IT TAKES A MAN TO THROW A FOOTBALL! A. IT TAKES A MAN TO LIFT UP THE ANVIL! IT TAKES A MAN TO BUILD A BRIDGE! BESIDES, THERE'S A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A MAN AND A WOMAN! AMEN TO THAT, EH, GOOD BUDDY??! **BILLIARDS** JOHN MORRIS That the administration of this session of the Kansas legislature, and the legislature's issues, is not the issues of marijuana (no smoking) and liquor by the drink (no drinking), the thrill of having a state-sanctioned vice president has been denied once more. Kansas as "the conscience of the nation," serving as one of the last models of deference in the history of decaying society. His fight Liquor battle still going The Rev. Richard Taylor Jr., leader of the Kansas United Dry Forces has reason to rejoice once more for a job annoyingly well done. Every bill containing alcoholic spirits introduced during this legislative session was killed. It has been said that Taylor is out to make and maintain SO TAYLOR has once more managed to consign the free flow of drinks to "private" clubs. They do serve drinks on demand (supposedly to members only), but are not the saloons that Taylor absores to them. There is something else altogether. of other Midwestern states having the lowest rates of alcohol abuse in the nation. The number of alcohol abuse the number of alcohol abuse programs they offer, which makes them eligible for more federal funds to combat the addiction. against alcoholic consumption has been noble, if nothing else. But Taylor apparently has been slipped in his fight to stop the intoxicated flow of liquor in the state and the state the festetual leader Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer TAYLOR SAYS he ignores reports by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) that say restrictive liquor laws confining private clubs have no definitive effect on the amount of alcohol consumed in the state. States with the lowest number of rehabilitation programs, or the soberest states in the Union, are Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, South Dakota and North Dakota. The Midwest would seem to provide some insulation against the flooding that would cover overindulge, Kansas' absence in the upper echelons of the soberest states seems, in light of Taylor's actions in recent years, inexplicable. IT COULD BE that Taylor has only increased the interest in social drinking by his adamant stand against alcohol as a recreational drug. The "forbidden fruit" atmosphere has been known to increase interest. Also, Taylor's parental pressure against drinking have turned people off to the point that many oppose him for personal rather than ideological reasons. Kansas still is a far cry from ranking among the top states for alcoholic consumption. The "drunkest" states are, accordingly, Washington, Hawaii, California, Washington and the District of Columbia. Economic pressures probably will dictate that Kansans will have liquor by the drink by the Rev. Taylor has been right in trying to protect us from being seen as the "evils of alcohol." Drug ban freedom issue WASHINGTON—More than a year has passed since I last reported on the Great Apricot Kernel Gang. It's time for an update. There's good news and bad news. The good news is that the federal courts increasingly are getting to the heart of the issue. Drug Administration and Drug Administration continues to exhibit an obstiny embedded in steel and concrete. Meanwhile, the gang from several state legislatures. For those who came in late, the great Apricot Kernel Gang is composed of several thousand men and women, including quite a few certified doctors of medicine, who cling to the medical system in some therapeutic value for cancer patients in a substance identified as amygdalin. Chemically speaking, MKELLY THE ROMANTIC MEN GIRL (2017) BY GRAND JONATHAN SPECIAL COORDINATOR FOR COORDINATIONAL AFFAIRS DEPTY ASSISTANT COORDINATOR HANNUALLY AMBASSADENT COMMISSION FEDERAL SPECIAL DEPOTTY ASSISTANT UNDER SECRETARY PARTICULATE MATTERS DEPTY SPECIALIST FOR INTERNATIONAL STUFF MANAGEMENT MINIMUM IMPLEMENTATION TAXONIAL, BUSINESS, WATER PROPERTY AGENCY COORDINATED ASSISTANT DEPOTTY FEDERAL FIRE MANAGEMENT COMMISSION FEDERAL BUREAUCRY FEDERAL RUN COMMISSION DISTRICT COMPLAINS ASSISTANT TO THE ROMANTIC MEN GIRL DEPTY UNDER SECRETARY SUPERVISED BY THE INVESTOR CONTROLled BY MOS BOLTONS OWNING FREE ASSISTANT TO THE ROMANTIC MEN GIRL DEPTY UNDER SECRETARY SUPERVISED BY THE INVESTOR CONTROLled BY FEDERAL REEF AGENCY MOTHERS GO ON IN THE SPACE FEDERAL REEF ELEVATION AGENCY FEDERAL REEF LAND ELEVATION AGENCY MOS BOLTONS OWNING FREE FEDERAL BAMEOOZE, AND ORIGINE SCREEN COORDINATORS IN CONDITED DEPTY ASSISTANT COORDINATOR amygdalin is a member of the class of substances known as cyanogenetic glycosides. Amygdalin occurs widely in nature, but can be extracted most readily from apricot kernels, peach pits and bitter apples. A purified and purified form, amygdalin is marketed under the trade name of Laetrile. BUT IT IS not marketed James J. Kilpatrick c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. legally in the United States. It can be obtained in a dozen other countries, notably Mexico, but the FDA regards LaTeule as an unlawful drug and the Bureau of Customs regards it as contraband. In the FDA's view, the drugs are harmless, which it may well be, though the testimonial evidence is getting to be impressive. Our government's position is unbelievably pompous, dictatorial and holy-to-tya. Imagine, if you will, a patient who fails victim to cancer. The doctor receives the treatment recommended by the medical establishment: radical surgery, radium therapy, chemo-therapy. Nothing works. His patient is dying. His body is riddled with cancer. In desperation he says, "I have heard of other cancer victims in my village, and sometimes remission, from Laetrile. Please, may I now try that?" OUR GOVERNMENT's response, to put the matter plainly, is precisely: Go to hell. Die! We say Laatrie is worthless, therefore you can't have it, and we will prosecute any doctor or supplier who tries to make it available to you. This is the government's stuffy rationalization, from the Federal Register of Feb. 18: "The availability and use of drugs demonstrated to have objective value make no contribution to cancer management. Such use can, in fact, interfere with the measures that are known to promote appropriate diagnosis and prompt effective treatment are delayed. The consequence of delay may be needless and unintentional this reason, Commissioner opinion that a drug intended for use in cancer which lacks scientific evidence of effectiveness cannot be regarded as safe." U. S. DISTRICT Judge Luther Bohan, in Oklahoma City, has fatally rejected this specious reasoning. He has ordered Laetrile made available to petitioning patients. Judge Bohan has company. On April 7, Federal Judge Mark Conklin was appointed in New York with "decidely" in favor of providing Laetrile for a 69-year-old retired carpenter, Joseph Rizzos, who is suffering from inoperable cancer of the pancreas. the name of freedom of choice leave the government unmoved. In response to such court orders, the FDA has scheduled a hearing for May 2 in Kansas City, but it is a stacked and rigged proceeding. The FDA's findings are resentful, sulky affirmation of its fixed position, Plainly, the FDA will not budge. Appeals in STATE LEGISLATURES are demonstrating better sense. Indiana just the other day passed a bill defying the FDA's autocratic rule. Alaska adopted such an act last year. Efforts to legalize Louisiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma and Washington. The efforts may be futile, for the FDA's Commerce Clause may be supreme, but the movement has meaning all the same. The gut issue here is freedom. By every rational indication anygdal is harmless. Members of the Apricot Kernel Gang eat it all the time. This being so, in the name of a free society, why can't a free people have it if they want it? A] THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A Pacemaker award winner Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom - 864-4810 Business Office - 864-4328 Black professi tomorr Student Published at the University of Kansas daily August 15, 2008. Subscriptions to *The Journal* June and July, except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday issues, are $1.95. Subscription to real mail are $2 a semester or $18 a year. Outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor Jim Rates The c Alumni Univers will be f Saturda 2nd Base Managing Editor Greg Hack Stewart Brann Editorial Board The p student alumni perien director GREY HACK Campus Editor John Gwin Associate Campus Editors Lynch Smith Assistant Campus Editors Barbary Tennant Jim Cobbs Copy Chiefs Bernard Jukinne Gary Viee Associate Sports Editors Courtney Trump Photo Editor Gordon Millerman Make Up Editors Jay Koehler Maurice Martin Make Up Writers Anne Signaun, Don Vuori Wire Editors Larry Bonaro, Carol Luman Entertainment Editors Bill Sniffler, Bill Uyick Contributing Writers Bill Sniffler, Barbara Rowever Editorial Writers Jay Beniil, Paul Jefferson, Jerry Beniil, Paul Jefferson, Ken Weghal, M BAIL expecte schedul counsel visits The F events mercha Street, Street, The C Lawerer chants against will be compet "We relay," "charge He said board d Andy both siu Business Manager Janice Clements Advertising Manager Tim O'Shea Advertising Manager Randy Grable Advertising Manager Randielle Classified Manager Randielle Assistant Classified Manager Pat Therion Dancer Dana Kovac National Advertising Manager Bob Graber National Advertising Manager Bob Graber [ News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams as, the graphies their newsweek may be friend. ns and gton. is that of what counter- ojection miscellaneous al data be as ad exh at the y books y to the PRIAMI ) of choice inmoved. IRES are r sense. her day ie FDA's adopted efforts to houseset, kansas, huseets, yey, New carolina, oklahoma efforts ie FDA's affordable may be ment has freedom: indication is, Mem- gang being so, society, have it if Alumni to return for first Black Career Dav Black University of Kansas alumni in professional fields will return to KU tomorrow and Saturday for the first Black Student Career Day for KU students. The career day, sponsored by the Black Alumni Steering Committee of the university of Kansas Alumni Association, will begin at 10 a.m. to 9 noon Saturday in the Kansas Union The program is designed to give black KU students an opportunity to meet with black alumni to discuss their professional experience and interests, as well as director of admissions, said yesterday. BAILEY SAID 51 black alumni were expected to return. The alumni are career advisors, career counselors, group discussions and information visits with students. Speeches about the orientation of blacks toward careers also are planned. Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor, has requested that all black students who want to attend the career day be excused from class assignments. The student is responsible for class assignments Friday. BLACK STUDENTS who are interested in attending the career day don't have to be enrolled. The Black Alumni Steering Committee, led by Michael Shim, Detroit, and Jim Dumas, Columbia, Mo., has been meeting the past few months to plan the career day. The day will provide an opportunity, Shinn said, for black alumni from across the United States to get together, many for the first time since they left KU. The Black alumni will meet Saturday Merchants hold own relay The Kansas Relays aren't the only racing events in town this weekend. Lawrence merchants are getting in shape for their upcoming State Championships Street, set for Saturday morning. The event, sponsored by the Downtown Lawrence Association (DLA), pits merchants from the west side of Massachusetts against merchants from the east side in a face-off at the streets. The relay will begin at 10. At about 12 runners will compete from each side. year's winner was the east team with a time of 1:54.5. Andy Anderson, DLA secretary, said that both sides had won twice in the past. Last The official starter for the race is Bill Lienhard, vice president of the First National Bank of Lawrence and a former KU basketball player. "We thought we would have our own relay," Joe Flannery, DLA member in charge this year's race, said yesterday. He said the DLA board of directors five years ago. "It's mostly the younger employees and owners who run," Anderson said. Flannery said the ages of the runners ranged from 20 to 40. The merchants compete for "the glory of timing," Anderson said, because no prizes are offered. The DLA is an association of stores dedicated to building a stronger downtown area. In celebration of its fifth anniversary, the will serve refreshments in front of the First National Bank, 900 Massachusetts St., after the race. MCAT third-year law student, and Mumbi, dean assistant of women. Wintermorte said his office sent out neary 1,000 letters inviting black alumni to return to KU. The list of alumni was compiled with the assistance of other black alumni. Review Tonight Thursday, April 28 Genetics INORGANIC CHEMISTRY by Dr. Bricker 7:30 Room 332 Mallot morning in the Kansas Union for more group discussions and to plan future acco THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS For its Summer Repertory Theatre Company the KRT Season will be: June 11—Aug.6,1977. 35-40 actors and technicians will be needed. AUDITIONS BAILEY, MARSHALL JACKSON, assistant director of admissions, and Dick Wintermute, director of the Alumni Association, are acting as campus coordinators for the career day. Assisting them with the program are Beth Cox Williams, General Auditions—Murphy Hall Sat., April 23 10:00-12:00, 1:30-5:00 Sun., April 24 10:00-12:00, 1:30-5:00 The Office of Admissions also sent letters to about 500 black students at KU, Bailey and DeWitt. 35-40 actors and technicians will be needed. Sandals Several styles to choose from like: Pedwin CHICO (smooth) Pedwin BALBOA (smooth) Leather Hurrache style with long wearing tire-tread sole. Sizes 7 to 13. 15.95 Soft leather sandal with tire-tread sole. Sizes 6-13 13.95 master change THE INTERBANK BANK Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here mCoS shoes POSITIONS OPEN: Security Secretary 813 Mass. 843-2091 SO YOU THINK YOU'RE SPECIAL?? Well, we're looking for special people to work 1977-1978 Special Events Committee SUA University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 21, 1977 Publicity Hospitality Ushers Sign up for interviews in SUA office Deadline 4/27 Heart of America Frisbee Tournament Saturday, April 23 O-Zone Field Entry Fee:1.00 Registration at SUR office or 9:00 a.m. Saturday at tourney site Competition will begin at 1O a.m. Trophies awarded in all events. $100 lst place prize to total event winner Everyone Welcome! Sponsored by SUA, Miller Brewing Co., Rec. Services. HEART OF AMERICA FRISBEE CLUB You're graduating. What happens then? What happens to all the people you knew in school? What happens to all the groups and activities you were involved in? Where do all the graduates from the Class of '77 go? There's a way to stay in touch, not just with the past, but with the present and future as well. Find out now* with and future The University of Kansas Alumni Association invites all recent graduates and seniors to Open House Wednesday and Thursday April 20 and 21 2-5 p.m. Room 403. Kansas Union Stop by, have some refreshments and pick up your free KU memorabilia. Meet the people, find out how they help you stay in touch, find out about the activities and programs they coordinate, learn about the services they offer. Your Alumni Association: Friend raisers 6 Thursday, April 21, 1977 University Daily Kansan Relays start, rain to end The 2nd Kansas Relays will begin this afternoon come rain or snow. More than The Relays were moved back a week this year, partly in an effort to avoid the persistent precipitation that seems to arrive with uncanny regularity during Relays The strategy seems to have failed. Sports however, as rain once again has plagued the Lawrence area for the past week. The National Weather Service forecast for today calls for rain ending this morning, with partly cloudy skies and a high in the 60s this afternoon. The feature event on this afternoon's abbreviated schedule is the Billy Mills 10,000-meter run which will begin at 3 p.m. The defending champion, Ted Castaniaud of BioTrack Gulls, will expel defend his title, but a strong field will be present. HEADING THE field will be Lionel Ortega of New Mexico, who won the 10,000 at the Texas Relays three weeks ago. He also finished fifth in the 5,000 at Texas and was third in the Kansas Relays six-mile event two years ago. Also expected to challenge for the title is Larry Belesley of Kansas State, who was named co-champion. KU will enter three runners in the event. George Mason, John Rosecoe and Tim Tobin. Boston, Mike who finished 34th in Boston Marathon Monday, has a lifetime Castaneda holds the Relays and Memorial Stadium record of 29.17.0. OTHER EVENTS on today's schedule are the preliminaries in the men's intramural 440-mid relay at 3:40 p.m., the faculty halfpipe at 6:15 p.m. and the women's 5,000-meter final at 4:20. The KU women's track team will be represented by 13 athletes, including two runners in the 5,000 meters, the first event to do so on the road. You begin this afternoon in Memorial Stadium. Jayhawk Laura Mordy and Nancy Bissell and Teri Anderson, a graduate assistant for the women's track team, will run in the 5:00, scheduled for 4:20 p.m. Anderson is the top runner in the event for the Jayhawks and should place at the top according to coach Tom Lionville. She ran a 16.32 to 7.27 win the 5,000 at Wichita State, and also was first last weekend at Oklahoma State. Mordy's best effort this season was at Wichita State where she finished second to Anderson and broke a school record when she ran a 19.20.8 Two KU relay teams also are scheduled to run tomorrow. The 440 relay team of Kathy Kennedy, Charmane Kuhman, Joe McIlennon and Sheila Calmese will run in the morning and the mile-rules foursome of Connie Lane, McIlennon, Jennifer Howe and Kuhman run tomorrow afternoon. Lionvale said the mile relay would be interesting because the Jayhawks would be running the event with "fresh" runners for the first time. Lane is usually in the 400-meter hurdles and Howe in the half-mile but neither is entered in those events. Only Kuhman and McMillon will be doubling events. Lionvale said he was looking forward to the invitational 100-meter dash on Saturday, an event in which the Jayhawks' hopes rest with Calmese. Calmese is coming off her best performance of the outdoor season. She won the 100 and the 220 last weekend at Oklahoma State. That she is a fast starter was evidenced last week when she broke both races open at the start. She won the 100 with a 10.9 jump, the same ever, and the 220 with a time of 24.6. Royals stadium security tightened, leniency ends KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —The Kansas City Rangers, shocked by the rodymism and violence that marred their first two home games, shut down security and banned all liquid containers. ROBINSON SAID 12 security officers had been added to bring the force to about 40. Since last Monday night, fans with bottles, cans, jugs, coolers and other containers have been denied admission unless the containers were left outside. The Jayhawks have two entries in the 100-meter hurdles and two in the 1,500 meters. The Royals always have had a rule against bringing liquid containers into the park, Robinson said, but "we've been a little lenient with the fans before." "They serve as possible projectiles that can be thrown onto the field and endanger the safety of fans and players," Herkinson, vice president for operations, said. "And we have found the majority of them contain liquor—and it's against the law to do so." Numerous fights erupted during the home-operate series with the New York Yankees last week. Several young men, including extorcised, ran into the field during play. ON THE first night of the new policy, security guards were told that no "Thermos bottles" were allowed in the stadium. One fan who was turned away with his Among the stars that have shown their talents at the KU relays throughout the country, the Stars in Motion team is one of them. Never heard of him? He is the man that starts the events. Among the events that Ernst has worked in his 29 years as a starter have been the Big ★ ★ ★ Baseball Standings He's been starting things at the Relays for 10 years AMERICAN LEAGUE Wet Chicago 7 3 700 — Oakland 7 4 166 — Tampa 8 1 166 — Kansas City 6 5 349 1½ California 6 5 349 1½ South Carolina 6 5 240 Milwaukee W 7 L Pct. GB Baltimore 6 5 400 Rattlesnake 4 6 300 Boston 4 6 400 Cleveland 4 6 400 Detroit 4 9 300 Dallas 4 9 275 New York 7 Toronto 3 Abbond 4 Milwaukee 2 Dallas 5 Phoenix 2 Detroit 3 Boston 1 Chicago 4 City 2 Chicago 4 Chicago 2 California 2 Toronto (Jefferson 0-0) at New York (Holtzman 0-0), 1 Today's Gear Sports Galleria (10am) at Boston (Coworking) 5:30pm, 8:45pm. Hermes (6am) at Boston (Coworking) 5:30pm, 8:45pm. Hermes (6am) at California (Harbor) 10:30am, 2:30pm. W 8 L Pet. GB St Louis 4 6 401 Minneapolis 6 400 1 Nashville 6 400 1 Pittsburgh 5 405 2½ Cincinnati 5 405 2 Charlotte 5 333 1½ Philadelphia 5 333 1½ | | W | L | Pat. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Los Angeles | 5 | 1 | 311 | 0 | | Atlanta | 3 | 1 | 286 | 1 | | Houston | 5 | 5 | 500 | 4 | | San Diego | 3 | 1 | 407 | 4 | | San Francisco | 4 | 6 | 400 | 4 | | Colorado | 4 | 6 | 400 | 4 | **Yelower (Result)** N. Lloyd, N. Lloyd, N. Lloyd **Morton (Result)** P. Fitzgerald, R. Morton **Yelower (Result)** N. Lloyd, N. Lloyd, N. Lloyd **San Diego at Atlanta, Atlanta** San Francisco at Atlanta, **Tolars's games** Tolars's games There is no charge for today's events. Game canceled Rain forced cancellation of the scheduled softball game between KU and Central Missouri State yesterday. The two teams were to play a doubleheader here. The games haven't been rescheduled. The game of the season between KU and CMS has ended. RECREATION SERVICES Wrestling Tournament Saturday, April 30 11:00 A.M. Robinson College Robinson Gymnasium To enter must attend Wrestling Clinic Monday, April 25, 7:00 P.M. ROBINSON GYM Patronize Kansan advertisers. Eight Indoor and Outdoor Championships, the NAIA Championships and the NCAA Championships. Ernest, who lives in Bloemfield Hills, Mich., said earlier this week that the starter judged the fairness of the beginning of a race. Whenever a record of any type is set at a meet that he works, he has to sign a document attesting to the fairness of its beginning. After a race begins, the starter also is responsible for signaling bell laps and gun laps to notify runners of the progress of the race. Ernest became interested in the job by watching his father who also was a starter. "When I graduated from Michigan State University, my father told me that if I was interested in being a starter, it could be a lot of fun besides being profitable." Ernst said. He said that he made about $150 plus expenses at most meets. An exception is the NCAA Championships, which pay $75 a day plus expenses. "There is more a love of the sport than money involved with being a starter," Ernert said. "My total yearly intake from food is 15,000 cal., so I definitely don't get rich doing this." He said that he probably traveled more than any starter in the country. "There are a few other starters that do a little traveling, mostly on the coasts, but whenever there is a major meet in the Midwest, I am usually asked," he said. The number of meets Ernst starts each year, is adopted weekly, about 20 to 19. He said the main reason for the decline was scheduling conflicts. "For example, the Big Ten has scheduled their final for the same weekend as the Big Eight. As I told them, on this matter, my loyalty is to the Big Eight," he said. Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. sisterkettlecafe Life Spring Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 Coffee House Fri. & Sat. 9 pm-Midnight with live entertainment Bailos Mestizos Bailes Mestizos of Topeka --bottle returned the next night with a Coleman cooler and argued—correctly—that "Thermos" was a brand name and that he was no longer in violation. MEXICAN FOLKLORIC DANCERS In Concert Featuring MARIACHI INTERNACIONAL Thursday, April 21, 1977 Hoch Auditorium 8:00 P.M.-Donation $2.50 University of Kansas Direct from University of Guadalajara, Mexico Presented in part by the Kansas Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts. Tickets at SUA and at the door. Mon., April 25 LA&S ACTION—PEACE CORPS/ VISTA Weekend Special Ten Daisies $1.39 Tues., April 26 LA&S 'So now we've changed it to read, 'No liquid containers', 'Robinson said. Wed., April 27 Education Alexander's Flowers Cash and Carry 826 Iowa 842-1320 Representatives will be at the following placement offices Alexander's Flowers SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW TODAY. EUROPEAN FLIGHTS Provides the academic community with discount air travel arrangements. Let us serve you. Save $$ Be Flexible CALL US LAST TOLL FREE 800 223-1722 --only at the GRAMOPHONE shop COMPLETE STOCK AT DISCOUNT PRICE $6495 S19'95 DIAMOND NEEDLES THORGES TEAC SHOSS POKING EXPRESS CUSTOMER TDK MADE IN USA IBM DISCOUNT PRICE $5495 S1995 DIAMOND NEEDLES CASE LOT PRICES BLANK TAPE O YAMAHA EW. INK. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 1-913-841-1544 25th & Iowa AOTRE-A GREEK CELEBRATION APRIL 24-MAY1 Calendar of Events April 14, Sunday Opening Ceremonies 4:00-5:30 Potter's Lake April 26. Tuesday K.U. Greek Night at Royals' Game 9:00-9:00 Market Place Area Royals Stadium April 25. Monday Greek ArtShow 9:00-9:00 Market Place Area 8th & New Hamshire April 27. Wednesday Greek Art Show 9:00-10:00 Market Place Area Alumni Displaying Animation 9:00-10:00 Alumni Appreciation Banquet 8:00 Union Ballroom Alumni Reception 9:00-10:00 April 26, Thursday Greek Art Show 9:00-9:10 Market Place Area Philosophy-Sports Events Veteran Park High School Greene School 9:00-11:10 High School April 24. Friday Greek Art Show 9:00:00.00 Market Place Area Street Dance=TGIF, Band 2:00:00.00 Stairway Avenue April 10, Saturday Greek Art Show 9:00-10:00 Market Place Area Phillipsen South Bunker 11:00-12:00 April 30, Saturday Greek Art15row 9:00-9:00 Market Place Area PhiPharhaeus Sports Events 11:00-11:00 Holcom Park Countryside course May 1, Sunday Closing ceremonies awards, speakers 1:00-2:30 Pofter's Lake KU BAND MEMBERS 1976-77 Annual Spring Formal Banquet Sunday, May 1, 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom PROGRAM: PROGRAM: Chancellor Archie Dykes—Speaker Band awards Showing of Missouri Game Film Other Entertainment Prepaid to those paying fall band fee. '5.00 all others, including guests, family and friends. Sign up for all reservations in Band Office, Room 214, Murphy no later than Friday, April 22. Paul Gray's Jazz Festival PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE, 926 Mass. upstairs TONITE: Jam Session with River City Jazz Band, no cover, no minimum FRI: the Jay McShann Band Just returned from a highly successful European tour Admission $5.00 No, KU IU's just Arkansas until 7 p. T Although nationwide entering of Kansa SAT: All Star Jazz Band THE L F featuring Claude Williams, violin; Mike White, clarinet; Ray Ehrhart, piano; Paul Gunther, drums; Clyde Bysom, saxophone; Harold Keen, trombone; Paul Gray, trumpet; Pete Wyman, bass. The pr but with tennis co of Allen "I thi without said fol Admission *5.00 includes Free Beer!! drag or enduran wander conclusi match w Clarke a 6, 7-6 w The pl match v automat dark er automat competi to t "WH/ care ho And unt spend o utilized the way "Firs recruits a spect preciate expect; a tenni could've Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. Gates facilitie He woul the fen extende and a w 8 "I'm ment," well as with ( severa we'll h year University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 21, 197 Tennis facilities: add out for now Although tennis has been enjoying a nationwide popularity boom, it's literally entering the twilight zone at the University of Karasas as a varsity sport. No, KU's program isn't going downhill. It's just that when the Jayhawks hosted Arkansas last week the match wasn't over by 7 p.m.—five hours after it began. The problem isn't with the team's ability, but with the facilities. KU's four varsity tennis courts, located on the southwest side of Allen Field House, are inadequate. "I WANT to look at the entire package first and then work on plans to finance it. Once we decide to spend such a substantial sum the cost of something as minor as the tennis courts won't seem like much, and it's more likely to be completed." There is land available on the south side of the present courts that would be ideal for new courts. But, is there the money available to build them? Gates says two new courts would be "a sizable expenditure." THE LACK of courts caused the match to WALKER WOULD only estimate the construction cost of two new courts at a "ballpark figure of $25,000." He said that the construction was feasible, but only as one of many capital improvement projects he had under study. The major proportion of Walker's project is Memorial Stadium, which he said has extensive concrete (but not structural) that was used for renovation of locker rooms and rest rooms. The athletic department needs to stumble across someone like William Kurtu, KU's new $220,000 football dressing facility next to the field house was named in Parrott's honor for his substantial financial contributions. So, if there is a wealthy tennis enthusiast out there ready to serve up some cash, the KU tennis program gladly will step into the receiving court. drag on beyond an average spectator's endurance, prompting many of them to wander off. And if they did, they missed the conclusion of the meet's most exciting clarke and KU RUs 3.1. two teams of Clarke and KU Haskingham trailing to a 3-6, 7-6, 7-6 win. The players themselves suffered when the match wore on, darkness set in and the automatic lights remained off. It wasn't dark enough for the lights to turn on or remain dark enough for competitive tennis. And it was dark enough to turn me off on KU's tennis facilities. "I think we’re the only major university without six courts, coach Kirkhams Gatenate and Jillian Haines." construction of two new courts. And, importantly for the current tennis team, his Walker wants to tag the cost of improved tennis facilities onto a presumably two-year multi-million dollar project to upgrade much of KU's physical needs. "The tennis courts are a part of an overall package for all of our facilities that need improvement," Walker said. "It's one phase of a multi-interest project that would involve improvements to the stadium and final improvements in the field house and permanent baseball stands. Gary Vice Convenience Is Fifth Quarter Sports Editor - Experienced professionals WRITE FOR FILMS AND TELEVISION! Hillcrest Shopping Center • KU Bus Service • Laundry Facilities • Centennial Park • Complete Maintenance Service Traibridge Apartments - Valuable industry contacts Trailridge Apartments - Editorial and marketing aid 2500 W. Sixth - Do not send manuscripts - For information, write SCREEN WRITERS SERVICE 2064 Alameda Padre Serra Santa Barbara, CA 93103 GET INVOLVED IN UNIVERSITY GOVERNMENT 5 Student Positions Available for Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board: The Memorial Corporation Board of Directors is a 36 member board composed of students, University and Union admin-istrators, alumni, and faculty. its purpose is to determine financial and operational policy for all facets of the Kansas Union. "WHAT WE need are six courts. I don't care how we get them, we just need them. And until we get them, a lot of the money we spend on the tennis program won't be fully utilized because our program won't grow the way we want it to. While the board itself meets approximately five times a year, involvement in Union governance is only limited by the board member's initiative. Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union. Applications must be returned to the Student Senate Office by "First of all, it's the facilities you impress recruits with. And secondly, tennis has to be a spectator sport in order for it to be appreciated at this University. You can't play tennis without watching a tennis match. If we had six courts we could've done two hours ago." Thursday, April 21, 1977 Gates would like to improve his tennis facilities beyond the addition of two courts. He would like the present courts resurfaced, the fences around the courts' east side extended to include permanent bleachers and a windscreen put on the eastern fence. BUT HE says he's not angry about the status of KU's tennis funding. "I'm not upset with our athletic department," Gates said. "They fund us well—as well as anyone in the Big Eight. I've talked with Clyde Walker (Athletic Director) on this, and he assures me we'll have substantial improvements in a year or two." H.Watsouz April 18-24 All televised KC Royals baseball games can be seen on our 7' TV screen. MON TUESWED THUR FRI SAT SUN Another trip to the Bahamas! Disco 18-21, Cover $1.50 Peanut Gallery—Reds vs Dodgers Ladies Night—Disco 8-12:15 Specials on beer throughout the night '7 TV open 7:00 p.m. Free Disco for everyone 8-12:15 7' TV open 7:00 p.m. Ladies Night—Disco 8:12-15 On our 7 TV—FV Cinatra Special songs on beer throughout the night Live: "Millionaire at Midnight" '10-12, 15. $20 Cover Peanut Gallery—NBA Playoffs, 10:30 p.m. Rock & Roll with Roxtar, 9:12:15 Come watch all games on our 7' TV Free 12 noon to 7 p.m. Peanut Gallery open 1-10 p.m. for your sports enjoyment Lawrence's Newent 18 Club Millcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa ADVERTISE UDK ADVERTISE GRADUATION Nowcomes Miller time. Milton Extra Dry X Thursday, April 21, 1977 University Daily Kansan Intramural softball season lacks length,fields,lighting By MARLIN BERRY Intramural softball teams at the University of Kansas don't have to worry about long, grueling schedules. The season, for most teams, lasts only three or four weeks. Possible solutions to the pressures that keep the season so short are too expensive, would mean unwelcome rules changes or face scheduling conflicts. Intramural softball doesn't start until intramural basketball is finishing leave little time to schedule games for the 248 teams signed up. Charlie Phrist, graduate assistant in the intramural office, said, "With the time we have, which includes spring break and summer, it's hard to get much of a schedule in." SUGGESTED SCHEDULING alternatives include the possibility of doubleheaders, but too many student scheduling conflicts arose. Pror said. Daylight Savings time doesn't start until the last weekend in April, so most of the season is over before the teams can take advantage of the extra hour of daylight. Lights for night play have been considered, but they would be too expensive, and not safe. "Lights for the tennis courts were about $10,000, but when we're talking about baseball light fields it might be more like $100,000." Marcks said. FRED DEVICET, director of the Park and Recreation Department for Lawrence, said the lighting for Holcom Sports Complex, with its four diamonds, cost about $80,000. The lighting for Holcom is adequate for recreational play. DeVictor said. But Marcks said using the fields both day and night would strain the fields. "We don't have the staff to keep up the belts for that kind of program and they'd be better off leaving it." A total of 125 games are played each week not including rescued rescheduled rained-out games. INTRAMURAL, general fund funding comes from the small intramural fund allocated by the Student Senate. Costs include $2.30 an hour for hupers. League entry fees, $10 for "A" league and $5 for "B" league, pay for tournaments to lead to league and tournament winners. Marcus said more money from the Student Sentate wouldn't solve completely the problem. "A little increase in our funds would naturally help a little," he said, "but we're really running our schedules to the capacity for the number of fields we have." Kansas State University has had programs in intramural softball in which more games were played each season because they were played more quickly. Batters stray with a two-ball, one-strike or fewer. More games are needed and the game is shortened. KU HAS TIS one-swing softball in its co-corporate league, but Marks said the team has no plans. *Co-ice softball is now playing two=swing softball but this area is just too traditional to play.* The more skilled leagues don't like the idea of changing the softball rules, although it would allow more innings to be played, he said. Another change Marcs considered was to schedule softball in the fall. That change would mean moving intramural football to the spring. "SOFTBALL IN the fall would be great because the players would be enthusiastic during World Series time," Marcks said. "Football's spring might not go over bit, though." The change would allow more softball games to be played because of the better fall weather. Although there is a lot of rain in the spring, football could be played on days when softball games would have been rained out, Marcks said. Jay Hurt of Alleghany Junior College in Cumberland, Md., reportedly has become the third jayhawk to sign a national letter of intent with the University of Kansas. Two recruits signed. 3rd possible By RODNEY ANDERSON Sports Writer example for the younger players with the wav he works so hard." Wilmore Fowler of Palmetto High School in Florida signed Tuesday with KJI. Assistant coach Duncan Reid signed Hamilt, 6-4-7 onward, on Tuesday, according to the Cumberland News-Times. Hurtt and Hamilt were placed into a moment when reached at bone last night. Hurt's coach at Alleghany Juco, Bob Kirk, said, "Jay is my silent leader, he goes out and does it and doesn't talk about it. He just listens." He is an equally outstanding person and a great man. Fowler, 6-2 and 170 pounds, averaged 24.6 points per game his senior year. After missing half of his junior year, Fowler compiled a 21.9-point scoring average. **FOWLER WAS** quoted by the Bradenton News as saying, "It's really nice to have someone else talk through my head when I selected Kansas, all at once I was thinking," Did I make the right selection, is the school too far away, must trust to the players and surround?" Fowler was described as an excellent passer and a good leader who could put the ball through the net. KU out-recruited more than 170 schools that bid for Fowler, who once was told by a Home runs, double plays give Royals fifth loss, 3-2 KANAS CITY, Mo. (UP1) - Home runs by Larry Hise, Dan Ford, and Craig Rusk, along with five double plays, carried the Minnesota Twins to a 3-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals last night. The five double plays tied a club record. the third off Royals' starrier Paul Splittorr, Kansas City made it 2-1 in the bottom of the iming on a single by Hai McRa, an and an error on Amos Ols' grounder. Hisle and Ford hit back-to-back homers in The Royals tied the score in the six on singles by Darrell Porter, Al Cowens and Fred Patek. Although the Royals had 10-4 double plays, they also double plays to check Kansas City rallies. "I HAD to wear braces on my legs, but I would always sneak off to the basketball courts, take off the braces and play." KU still has signed only two players to official letters of intent. John Crawford became the first to sign with the Jayhawks from Kansas City's Northeast High School. doctor he wouldn't play basketball again because of a hip problem. Kansas, Fowler narrowed his choices to Oklahoma, Oral Roberts and Kansas. Kusick hit his second homer of the season with two out in the eighth inning against Mark Littell to break a 2-2 tie. It was the first hit in five games this year off the ace Kansas City deliver and dropped his record to 1-3. Before making his decision to sign with Interested In Outdoor Recreation Committee Chairperson positions available in: —Wilderness Discovery Mountaineering and Backpacking Canoe Club Orienteering —Recreation Fair Sign up for interviews in the SUA Office Interviews April 26 and 28 evenings Sponsored By SUA NAZI HOLOCAUST Edward Alexander, Professor of English at the University of Washington and recent recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship to prepare a book on "Literature of the Holocaust," will speak on "THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE HOLOCAUST." Dr. Alexander will examine the causes and the consequences, historical and immediate, of the Jews' inability to lend credence to the threat and actuality of the "final solution." His talk will touch on some of the older Yiddish writers, on Franz Kafka, on Elie Wiesel, on some of the Warsaw Ghetto diaries, and on Hannah Arendt. THURSDAY, APRIL 21st, 8:00 p.m. FORUM ROOM of the KANSAS UNION sponsored jointly by the Department of English, the Department of History, and Hillel SOPHOMORES! (Class of '79) Social A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION SUN., APRIL 24 Recorded South Only GEORGE CARLIN at Kansas University Hoch Auditorium Good Seats Still Available! APRIL'S FOOLE AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT Publicity Special Events DEADLINE-FRIDAY, APRIL 29 SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas TICKETS— Reserved Seats Only $5.75, limit 10 at: SUA Box Office, KIEF'S in Lawrence Here's your chance! Sign up now for Committee positions are open to all. Submit names to BOCO office, 1138 Union between 10:30-3:30 1977 Season Football Tickets at Reduced Rates for Recent Grads 1975-1976-1977 Graduates are eligible to receive up to 2 tickets for the reduced price of *33.00 per ticket Come by or mail your check to: 1. Remittance must accompany your order. Make your check payable to: KUAC. 3. In the event you have a change of address before Sept. 1st please notify the ticket office. 4. Late season licked orders received 14 days prior to the first game, cannot be mailed and must be picked up under name in which ordered at 2. Do not expect to receive tickets before September 1. ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE Allen Field House Lawrence, Kansas 66045 WILL CALL window in Memorial Stadium the day of the game. 5. Please list telephone number on order. 6. People who had season tickets last year and want to reorder the same seats this year must do so before June 1. 7. New season ticket holders will be assigned the best seats that become available. For further info.—Call 864-3141 --- Name: ● Address: ● City, State, Zip: ● Telephone: ● Sa Accomm ment adve are offere sex. color BRING AI CLASSII Sachem senior mei 15 new me The init standing: They a Park jur tlesville, McPhersc junior: AD DEA 15 words fewer Each ado word --- AD DEW to run: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday KU ERRORS The U than ances materi FOUND Found charge days. simply at 864. UDK BU 111 Flim --- --- Canoe be student r mule, 4-6 available. Sparrow on bigwa 456-8371 Reserve or meet me at Kitch Kitchen the new Vermont Fiery Fi entertain 9:00 p.m. 1 and 2 Union, 1 Apartments no pets. Frontier Studios, with stairs door door poor free free farm farmhouse Thursday, April 21, 1977 9 Sachem to initiate 15 members Sachern Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, a senior men's honorary society, will be held at the University. The initiates were chosen for their outstandin scholastic and leadership records They are: William Chambers, Overland Park junior; Gary Ward Davis, Barry McKinnon; Emily Mackenzie McPherson junior, Ken Koengs, Goddard junior; John Mueller, Winfield junior; Pter Oracem, Manhattan senior; James Orr, Shawnee Mission junior; Steve Owens, Salina junior; James Pearson, Concordia senior;Jeffrey Rhoads, Overland Park junior; Jerry Seb, Hays junior; Steve Shumway, Lawrence senior; Dave Tomlinson, Overland Park junior; and Jay Wagner, Beminion senior. This year's honor initiate to Sachem University Daily Kansan The initiation ceremony will be at 10 a.m. at the Rock Chalk Cairn, on the hill between the Campanile and Memorial Stadium. There will be a luncheon in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union following the ceremony. Circle will be Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan. Last year the honor initiate was Kansas Gov. Robert Bennett. KANSAS CITY (AP)- The supply of natural gas available in the five-state Ozark region will be 38 per cent below demand by 2016. A study conducted by a research organization. The study, disclosed in a copyright article in the Kansas City Star Wednesday, said Missouri will be the hardest hit of the five states by far. Projections by Mathtech, a New Jersey research group, show the shortage by 1985 Study indicates natural gas shortage in Missouri will be 64 per cent. In Kansas, the shortage is projected at 39 per cent. The study, which is about two months from completion, is being prepared for the Department of Ecology. Other states in the sturry are Ouahmoun, projected with a shortage of 8 per cent by 1985. Louisiana, where the shortage is estimated at 38 per cent, and Arkansas, which has a projected shortage of 59 per cent. representatives from the states and the commission met in Wichita Tuesday and Wednesday and made some revisions in the study. The report project a shortage of 13 per cent in Kansas by 1980 and 39 per cent five years later. Adoption of the study's suggested conservation measures could reduce the shortage to 15 per cent in 1980 and 10 per cent in 1985, the report said. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their race, gender or ability. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES one two three four five time times time 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 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 must be placed in person or by calling the UK business office at 861-3543. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT 3-piece Ratan plant set, with planters, normal size, placed in two white layers while they stand at Bengal, 260 Mass in the Caesarea. "inhereditity of the Holocaust" (Nazi mass murder of Jews) Lecture in Washington Thursday, April 21, 8:00 p.m. Room, Room Kunion, Sporonto, English Department, History Department Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River, Special trips, on Lake Michigan. $35.00 per trip, 4-hour boat trip, $36.00 other trips available. Write, or phone for free brochure and/or website. 718-277-3900, Oktaona 74438, (914) 542- 8888, Tableauh, Oktaona 74438, (914) 542-8888, on highway 17. Firery Furnace Coffee House—Informal, relaxed setting at 300 yds. south of Saturday afternoon at 11am, 11:16pm, 11:45pm. 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to units, utilizes parking. 835-3579 Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party of over 200 guests. You can rent a large or too large to use, Extra large dance floor, that is very remodeled, 200 W. Blvd., at 89th and Vernon, Call 843-6844 for information. It is open from 10am to 7pm. Apartments and rooms furnished, paid, paid, no pets, 842-5767. if CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX. Rent the Pro Carpet Cleaning Rental locations. Call 5-1013. Frontier Hedges> short term lease available. Hedges have a base fee of $400 with study. Hotel in-room hotel + shag carpet. Hotel pool = disposal + laundry facilities. Bedroom suite = furnished and unfurnished from $738. Cah 821-652-3999. FOR RENT Apartments for rent, walk to KU Med Center. Furnished and unfurnished, laundry facilities, swimming pool, office open 7 days a week and can accommodate either call 913-826-903 or 913-826-7407. 4-21 Gatehouse apartments - C吧 Beekey now. Summer, transitions to Gatehouse apartment C吧 Beikey entracts on all Gatehouse apartments C吧 Beikey 1- bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor. 426-507-9800. Make your plants now. Applications are now available to sign up. Sign up by for free and complete application. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now lodging for call, fall 2014 or stop by 1630 Houseside house 8-342 at 4月30日, Friday, 14 Saturday, Two bedroom apartment with all bills, paid on, rent and taxes. $165 a month. Two-tiered suite $187.95 per month. 183-999 calls to come in at 212-699-2600. New 1 bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 842-321-9700. ROSAALA A HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 62584 The ROSAALA A HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 62584 MAY 10 - LABOR DAY MAY 10 - LABOR DAY Sublease for summer. 2-bedroom apartment. 1-841-364-5844, furnished. 9-841-364-5844, before 9-841-364-5844 4-21 Nice 2-bedroom apartment 109 walk to center of campus. $751. call 842-3453 or contact us online. 2-bedroom apartment $140 per mo. plus elect. after s.p.月 842-8231 4-28 4- bedroom (townhouse, with 2 baths, pool, tennis court, and reasonable rent) Call 841-6437 for more information. Sublease for summer -2 bedroom apartment Cheap Call 849-5200. Keen trying. 4-21 Mark I and II apartments for summer and fall vacations. The apartment has balconies, full carpetting (that or regular) bedrooms, draperies and master appliance closets. Furnishings include four faciliaries. 7 minute walk to Strong, Lockery and convention centers. Room rates vary. 1, 2. 3 roommates needed for Trailrider townhouse 842-2590, 4-41 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 1918 & Mass. 843-9891 6:30-30.pm. Mon.-Sat. 8-8Sun. sublease for summer. Two bedroom unfurnished upper-middle floor apartment, utilities paid: To rent, to be paid 841-603-9150. MOBILE HOME RENTALS. We offer 1, 2 and 3 bureaus with flat-rate cleaning. Free park, tree-free parking. Mobile home rentals. 3800 W. 67th St. 3800 W. 67th St. Excellent condition, spacious two-bedroom att- traction, dishwashers, dryers, washer. $899 Phone: 811-742-3567 Sublease over summer, Trailtailz 2 bedroom 6 a.m. to 4 p.m., furnished, call John 1-800-323-7900 4-22 two bedroom apartment, new four-floor, wooded area, deco. plans, hotel rooms, 1602 rooms, terrace, 845 Subluebie Townhouse, three large bedrooms, two full baths, pool, tennis, bus service, 24-hour security. Sibblee -Pursued school apartment Mid May - Entrance to playground Mid May - As classroom, next to pool, tennis courts, - On the side of main street. COMFORTABLE sublet apartment available. Reduced summer rates: Two-bedroom, A.C. 5 min to hour, modern kitchen, mumy balcony, cafezer, 6246, laundry, quiet parking, neighbor- 4/26 3-bedroom, 1/2 bath townhouse for sublease. Will discount lease $500. call M841-5097-4268 Reduced rates.吃 to camp. to campfire, Refrigerator, ratio, and Food diap. Dishwasher. Call For summer or year-lease House, 1-3 bedroom single room with kitchen. 843-5011 843-9271 Subleasing one-bedroom, Mark II apartment for summer. One block north of Union Call, Suite 1201. Sublease for summer session only. Small furnished house, good location: 841-7137 evening. Summer sublease-two bedroom bathroom apartments; $175 plus utilities, no deposit.qualifying; $160.95/month. Must substel spaceus 3-bedroom, 2-bath townhouse. Pool cove, half of May free. Bett free. Space for two. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator. Specialize. BEL AUF 1400W ELECTRIC, 840-939, 850-909 W. 6th. Western Civilization Note—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 Town Hall. We are the only Full Line Franchise Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, monitors at Aido Audio, 8th floor, Rhode Island. Craig Caswell Tape records final cut to $35 from Rocky Mountain Tapes. $200,000. Ray Bancroft 1929 Mass. Open Thur 11/17 $25. Bay Scroll 1929 Mass. Open Thur 11/17 Set of four new 15x3 12el radials only $12. Other new radials from $3 each. Ray and Dax are sold separately. Final cut on C.B. Radio's and Antenna's. Some audio content is included. Rock Stockholm 929 Mackay. Open thurs. (9:30 to 11:30). Rock Stockholm 825 Mackay. Open thurs. (9:30 to 11:30). RADIAL TREE CLEARANCE. 145 x 13 x 135 mm. FET, MOUNTING and balancing available. Ray Mounting & balancing available. Ray Mounting & balancing available. Ray B26 Rambler, 3 ap, 6 cyl), good shape! **275**-811- R284) after 6 p.m. **426**-811- 1977 W. S. Vacere, only 5000 miles, air, leather Michelin, Interior michelin. Reasonable price. $84 Safety Guarantee. 1976 Firebird Formula, every available option; immaculate condition, light blue with honeycomb capsules. 1709 Honda SL-350. Good condition. $475. 841- 1850 4-21 Gold pocketwich (Ciraa 10041-$180) Tom 841- Gold or leave message 811-6044 4-21 1976 Monte Carlo, maroon with white, lacewood vinyl roof. Marino interior, with ivory bucket front door. Monaco exterior, super sharp, 30 day guarantee. Price negotiable. please call 842-823-2780 between 7:30 - 8:11 pm. Volunteer Chambers House is selling T-Shirts for $25 each. Available in adults and children sizes. You can purchase 100% white cotton shirts—red letters saying "Volunteer Chambers House." Order at tL B, Kansas Union, 844-2692. BALLOON RIDES -Make a date to fly the Miles Balloon Rides in New York City. OZ BALLOONS 41-6753 N 28TH ST. 918-704-3474 172 Chevrolet Intrepid - 4D, PS, PB, AC clean. Must sell. K64-8014-0901 4-21 4-21 27 Pinte- Good condition, low mileage $1,100 best offer. 811-3706 4-21 79 Karaan Ghia Convertible, 4-speed, 38 mm wheel. Calibrated to 225 cm³ of oil pressure. Call: 614-452-2298 or 842-502- 2298. Mobile home, 1724 Blair House 12868 2 bedroom Mobil house, 1724 Blair House 12868 3 bedroom formatted mobile home, down unit, mwt 841-486 formatted mobile home, down unit, mwt 841-486 1975 Bulleto Frontena '360' Better Forks w/NEW nip replenish, new pistil, real fast. 1301 Tennessee Bessons #481. Vista Restaurants Open daily till 11 a.m. Fri. & Sat. fill 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL THE CREWEL 15 8amat 412 3rd 10-5 Mon-Sat. Till on Thursday 27" Penguin for sale. Excellent condition $85 29" MacBook new. Call 842-1089 4-22 Pinnacle AM-MF w/ lounge, speakers, $100 or buff. offer, $89. 4.23 Palliative AM-PM w/ numtrap, speakers, aids best offer. 841-832-981 Must sell 72 pickup. Good condition. Best offer call Don. 841-8613-913 4-22 Honda 360CB, New 5-10.5, windshield and backrest. p. m41-2655. 4-22 call Bn, 841-3618 anytime flood protection unit, F - Shannon metre impact meter, heat unit sun shades, drainage system Lawrence teacher must sell 1744 mobile home, 64 x 12; 2 bedrooms, fully carpeted, fenced yard. Handicap-accessible, enclosed amenities and washer and dryer. Anchored and raised by 8-6 p.m. Friday, 3232 lawn, z123, 152 10-speed Mobility Car (Super-Mirage). In excel. 844-695 for more information. 4-22 844-695 for more information. Craig Powerware cascadate tablet. 2 Dorman Powerware cascadate tablet with hardware. 80-4324-0624 after 9 a.m. Fender Mudmaster Electric guitar and case, very good condition, must sell. B43-625-600-4-20 67 Olds, Delmonto 88. air power, good condition and warranty, $400 or best offer. Call 842-253-1000. Sunn 1901. Tole guitar amp 50 watts, 3-12" speaker. Excellent condition. 841-4848 all-in-one. 72 VW 411 wagon, radio, radio, new VW- destrading radia, very good condition. VW destrading radia. Wedding and graduation gift idea. Unique selection of jewelry and basket items at Bengaluru Mall. Records (over 200) to excellent condition. Dylan, Miles. Yes in Bestleat, Boundary Road, and more. The books are very good and much more. Also couch bed, st. treasury, bedding, chair. Must move soon and will sell cheap. Call Must Move now and will sell cheap. Call 1972 Pat 134 spare scope, $4,000, good thrift-conditioning, nook and look great. 4-26 4-26 4-26 1966 Pip. Vulnerable 3-speed manual, 6-cyl. depend- ent transportation 48-7228. After 5 a.m., and before 8 p.m., contact S&P. Yamaha guitar-with case. Good condition, nice weight, will bargain. Call 842-2573. 4-22 One-room, 115 volt air conditioner; $7. Yamaha 191-109 acoustic guitar and case; $7. 825-802-860 2. Electro-Voice speakers, $55 each; Sanyo, OXT- Rittal Grand Prix W10 Speaker. Call 843-845-8454. 3. Electro-Voice speaker, $79 each; Sanyo, OXT- Rittal Grand Prix W10 Speaker. Call 843-845-8454. Excellent 1973 Honda 250 Motor, worth more than $425. John 843-2877 4-26 TV-RCA 23* black and white Console, real wood fine, piece of furniture, works great. Also, includes wall mount. Pioneer PLX12DJ1 BNJ bev turntable 10.8 Includes included Excled condition 841-2641 4-25 Excluded. For Sale—Artistry letter in excellent condition, price not shown, half Price at 91.540.760 4.26 Brand new 35 mm. Pentax KM camera with All-wheel drive $150,823.474 4-27 Porsche 914 (1970) $2,300 Call: (913) 232-707 or 913) 232-587 after 6:00 4-27 Deluxe elevated wattached in beautiful wood frame with leatherboard, bargain price, will fit your home. 64 Ford Van, fair condition, needs some work, 8325 or 8125, offer bik慕 84-614, 4-27 HELP WANTED Avon open territory in Lawrence. Avon If you were to ask Mr. Lawrence, you would profitably have famous Avons like '5832' and '5842'. KANSAN needs two people to prepare subscriptions for mailing next fall. VERY heavy work, approx. 3 hours per day Mon. through Fri. 8:45-10:45 or Contact Janet Couch 844-358 or in 111 Fllm. **4-26** 20 hr week Tues through Sat. Secretary, and Assistant to Director of new film art at gallery opening. Present at a panel interested in working with the public as recepient, presenter, and co-presenter, but most important the desire to learn about our artists and develop a relationship with them, after 4 p.m. Send 3 references and reason to P.O. Box 3259, Lawrenceville, NJ 07814. TEACHING ASSISTANT Chinese and Japanese (1 each) for summer session (June 13 to August 5). These interested should apply to R. L. Spur, Director, Summer Session, 2118 Wesley Street, 4-25 "Local Lite Delivery" must know area well with he providers. Call Pay - 121-278-3456 or 2-4 p.m. on tue friday. - "Summer Employment" afternoon and evening workdays. * Specialty salary, please contact necessary. * Top salary, please contact work- day supervisor. * Apply online at www.summer职 Waitress. Well established restaurant and club. Summer and fall. Gretchen excuses 41- 841-3888. Wednesday through Saturday. 1st class F.C.C ticket holder for part-time. Send resume to Lee Yazell Box 1280 Topkappa, 60044. AIRFRAME WATERbeds AVAILABLE AT THE FIELDS STORE 7124 DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS AND ASSISTANT OF KANSAS: Administration, University of Kansas. Administrative and financial aid, related matters. Possible responsibility for conducting full-time, year-round appointment. Required bachelor's degree, administrative writing, and communication skills. Preferred experience in relevant areas. Salary expected to be $13,000 to $17,000. Position offered May 10. Submit resume to Dean Martin B. Dickinson, J. School of Law, University of Kansas at Lawrence, Kansas. Affirmative Action Employer. Qualified nominee and candidate. JOBS!!! Spare time/Full time 4-7 p.m. weekdays Call 913-272-2786 --- *"Students," 15 telephone receptionists for new Lawrence Portrait Club. No experience required. Good salary and bonuses A: M and P. M: Call 3:12 and 3-4 p.m. 4:18-769. Honest, fine area restaurant and club, prefer over 21st, part time, evenings, available summer. Code 092254. SUMMER JOB, MAIN $2500 NET THIS NUMBER (412) 637-7900 FOR INFO. HOW TO RELOCATE MORE RELOCATIONS CALL 612-5870 FOR INTERNET Now taking applications for summer help Apply in person, Digapps, 644 Mass. 841-5655 - 625 I'll just use the text. Now taking applications for summer help Apply in person, Digapps, 644 Mass. 841-5655 - 625 TEACHERS WANTED West and other states Air Force Academy 8231 Alquerville, MN 82060 Army Agency 8231 Albany, MN 82060 LOST AND FOUND Late Prescription glass in brown case with a gold ring. Walter's coat, brown jacket. Tome 213 and 214. Walter's shirt, black jacket. Tome 213 and 214. Lost over month ago, red notebook in Wescoe. Very important. Call Melissa 811,7711. 4-21 Last-Blue bound xerox copy of dissertation by Dujou, Stirrup University 1974. Reward. 841-236. Lost wallet and key ring with 4 keys, east of Robinson. Reward: 843-2655 4-25 Found textbook in 4076 Wesco; Call Tim at 843-2 656 and describe. Found a watch on the hill behind JRP Call 84-4 2811 and identify Keep trying Found 4- keys on sidewalk behind Green Hall Call N851-7980 4-25 Found-men's leather wallet belonging to Salem Bitrow. Can be picked up in the Dealer's office. Lost part of glasses in orange cave. If found cast 864-3077 4-22 NOTICE **Swap Shop**, 628 Mass. Made furniture, diaries, books, cloits, elevators. Open daily 12-55. 843-307-3277 KARATE-Learn the ancient secrets of this marital art. Learn self-confidence, self-discipline, confidence, and beauty through a natural number classes now forming. 842-8244, 5-10 ANTIQUE AND COLLECTORS SHOW AND SALE-April 22-24 A-14 Patterson, Lawrence, Hours 10:00 to 6:00 Hours 10:00 to 6:00 Graduates: plan now for cup and gown photos Graduate in Business Administration X 87 - 10 billboard-budget-$4,000 - $82,259 bank-credit-budget-$2,500 Apply for special events committee 1977-78 Sign in to SUA office, deadline April 27. 4-22 Harley-Davidson and Honda Cycles 1811 W. 6th 843-3333 K-U. Baird, Dance Club singing performances, Bat- tenbrook, and Vernon Street, $15.95. Available on www.baird-sound.com. "How to buy a used car." Workshops sponsored by Consumer Affairs Association, Kannan Union Council House, April 20 - 2:30 p.m. Ballard College Library, October 4 - 6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Free film and discussion. 4-22 Don't mix the coffee and tea sale at the Stinky Cheese Shoppe. Wed, April 20th,Wed, April 27th Air condition your feet! Flaps, $1.75, Bengals, 803 Mass in the Cashah. 4-26 BE AWARE: APRIL 30 KANSAS UNION 4-26 Low cost flights to Europe from $20. Israel from $40. plus Africa and the Ear East Gali toll free. International Flights available. "BRAZEN IN THE SUN" GAY SERVICES PIC-CUM, April 14-21, Caucasian leaves from front of the kitchen on own food. For other information on this call, please visit www.gayservices.com if she could see us having so much fun? 4-22 Come one, come all to Ottawa first annual race. Sponsored by Ottawa High School Aquatic Association. Attendance Kamaas, April 13. Registration age 12 and under a.m.-kid. Registration over 12 at 3:39 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alicia at the House of Ubiqui Quick Copy Center. Alicia is available from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday-9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. Gy Counseling Service. Call 845.7555, 612- p.m. for referral. For socializing activities, visit www.gy.com. ENJOY LIFE Experience Spoon River Antibiotics April 22, 2013 24 8 pm Haitong River 11:59am Personalized wounds, cermenities. Universal life Ministry winters; Box 006. Lawrence J. Bainbridge. ANYONE, can become a Universal Life Church Minister—even afflicted! Legally perform marriages, ordain your friends as ministers, and hold ULC members nationwide. Don't delay—become credentialed of Ministry, send $3 and a self-attested statement envelope to Rev. Ted R. Ward, Director of the ULC membership office. REWARD $20 for info leading to acquisition of quiet, 2-story apartment, $65 or under for vacancy. Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of misuse, a drug addition. For help or info, 842-0170 or visit www.alcoholaddiction.org. Why would 90 food business on a tramway platform for their customers be better than their home business? To test tramway capacities and train frequencies, they build three annual FESION facilities — building their third annual FESION FOR DURABLE SAVINGS. At each Field House to benefit the Lawrence Brewery, they have a second FESION for the This is a high chance to win $10 easy dollar money. You can win by collecting the Yellow Pages Contest today at Booth 3, Kansas State Fair. The Rev. T. Miller referred to in previous Universal Life Church, the Ads in the Rev. T.406-426 REWARD - $25 for info leading to rental of furnished furniture. 414-722-2900. 4-26 www.reward.com FOUND: one dirty white dislapping with blue stripes in the vicinity of the Hatter-to-claim call call 216-843-9570. TRU Rose Came Team-You'll be kick in to help the kawaii river. Better back and seek out the best. Seb Ben's greatest race Friday and Saturday, the 1st And 4th sessions宾-Har- M-G M-18 (M-19) THE MARINES ARE LOOKING FOR A FEA GOOD MIN. Memoriam Volunteary Service needs good people. - For Christian social action and service. - On the Union April 22, Min. Volunteary Service 4-21 8th & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 TRY - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey ● Pool ● Snooker ● Ping Pong Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES GARV Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m. MPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Home SERVICES OFFERED Math tutoring - computer, experienced tutors can help you solve math problems. Req's a bachelor's degree in Math or related field and one year of post-prograduation experience. TV's, stresses, and radios repaired. Most makes. Television sets of carry in 'Pine' Radio, TV and Computer Television. STEREO BROKEN) BROKEN. amplifiers, turn-table, tape decks. Preventive Maintenance (turn table clean and label the tape). . . Custom warranty. Jaeger Electronics. 724 Mass. 841-5335. Jaeger Electronics. 724 Mass. 841-5335. TYPING English Teacher, KHU Graduate, has taught in England, New York and Hong Kong. Involvement at Interact University Branch provides an opportunity to participate in Elementary English II, Elementary English III and Elementary English IV. Intermediate second language: $60 an hour. Phone 842-1955. Website www.khutours.org. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tt THEISN BINDING COPYING The House of Ubser's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for heresy and & copying in Lawrence. Lk in help you at $8 Massachusetts or phone #38-524 Thank you. Typtid editor, IBM *Pixe*/elite. Quality work. Reward rates. Treats, disclosures welcome. 21-01-1993 Lyon 865-51-2800 - page 148 Wilson, Jeffrey (N) - title 147 1993-12-12 Lyon 865-51-2800 - page 148 Wilson, Jeffrey (N) - title 147 Experienced Typist—term paper, tests, mike. Experienced Writer—proofreading, spelling corrections, 44-550 9528 Your paper deserves the best Call Pengy for 864-351-3715, 812-899-900 and weekends. Wide experience low paper, thesis, dissertations. Qualify. Woodworking or Reasonable. Fin elect. Experienced typal -form paper, thesis, etc. Plus Experienced typal -form paper, thesis, etc. Plus You are most likely to be employed as a professional manuscript typist. Grammarly spelling expert Access to Online databases. Reasonable, reasonable typing rates.拜客: 864-1371 No haes! just used lying at lower than averavie- ing height, just shortest of deadlines. Harvey v was closest to deadlines. Poggs's disallowed good typing now offers copying and binding. Convenient one stop service $89.00 Female roommate wanted to share apartment next year. Prefer upper class, non-smoker. 842-606-0498, after 5 o'clock on Saturday or Sunday. Can comfortably twin bedroom with AC. Born in 1914. Monthly $104, monthly $435, Lilynn Male roommate for rooftop, house/home until July 1 $75 plus utilities 842-02333 4-21 Female roommate wanted to share apartment with student in classroom, un-mother~ 400, after 5.00 WANTED Female roommate for next fall, spring at Jayhawk Tower, Calli Carlin, Cal. Dana at Dana Female roommate to share one 3 bedroom apartment close to campus Call 641-7478 or 842-7087 Roommate needed for summer. Large 3-bedroom house = 1900. Max = 462 plus 1/8 bedrooms. 3-4 bedroom house for nursery and or next 4-603-8455. bsse for Kerken, Ted Gene. 4-21 164-209) Annulate needed for summer. $70 month plus 1/3 utilities; furnished 2-bedroom apartment. Joan or Krister 841-6800 4-27 3-4-bedroom house for summer and/or next fall. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841-7946 M-S 10:5:30(Thurs. 8:00) NAISMITH HALL THE LATEST BURGER KING AUGUST 20, 2016 --- The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap - Pinball - Pool Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl - Foosball 843. 9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday 9th and Iowa 10 Thursday, April 21, 1977 University Daily Kansan Energy... From page one goals by joint resolution," Carter said. "We could continue to ignore this problem, as many have done in the past. But to do so we must put our people to an impending catacrophe." If those goals are achieved, officials predicted, oil imports in 1884 would be about the same as they were in 1902, rather than the projected 16 million barrels if present growth continues. The White House said Carter's plan, far from having the inflationary impact some economists have predicted, would have a small bat generally positive impact on the economy. They said it would stimulate about 100,000 jobs by 1985, and increase the Gross National Product by 0.7 per cent in 1978 and 0.4 per cent in 1985. "EVEN IF THE standby gas tax were triggered, gross national product would still increase and the inflation impact would still be small," the White House said. Carter attempted to prepare the nation for his proposals, geared to persona sacrifice and conservation enforced by higher prices, in a nationwide television address Monday in which he said the United States must stop catastrophic proportions later this century. He described the need to meet this challenge now as 'the moral equivalent of He said that at first he was discouraged by the task of finding acceptable, practical ways of curbing America's wasteful energy consumption. Yesterday, before he headed for his Capitol Hill appearance, the President briefed his cabinet on the energy package and called it "excellent." BUT HE SAID HE was pleased with the plan hammered out under the leadership of his chief energy adviser, James Schlesinger. "I believe it is an excellent energy policy reform." I'm feeling better and about it. Under the plan, the rebates awarded for production of gas-efficient cars would be available for foreign cars only if the agreement was reached with the United States. The committee will consider which systems would work of the University adopted computerized pre-enrollment. It will also explore the functional nature of computers, including information computing, to see how these areas could benefit KU. Sally Sedelae, professor of computer science, former member of the nine- person, faculty-studied group. MOCARTHY SAID THE extra days would give the finance committee more time to formulate the Senate budget guidelines and the student organizations requesting funds. Electric cars would get the maximum rebate. The recommendation must be approved by the Finance committee before being presented. Students on the committee are: Kevin Flyn, Webster Groves, Mo. senior, Bernard Willard, Lawrence graduate student; and Chris Caldwell, Lawrence junior. "Having the committees formed about one and a half weeks before the budget hearings start would probably improve the entire process," McCarthy said. Tim McCarthy, committee chairman, said that moving the election date up to the first Tuesday and Wednesday in February would not help to form the standing committees earlier. At a meeting to discuss the recent Student Senate budgeting process, a subcommittee of the Finance and Auditing Committee decided on a tentative recommendation to the Senate to make the Senate election date one and a half weeks earlier next year. Members of a newly formed committee designed to study computerized pre-enrolment were announced at yesterday's SenEx会议. In other business, the board postponed the All-University Senate meeting, originally scheduled for May, until fall. The facilities were moved to a new building, Eldon Chairman, chairman of Sen.Ex, said. The subcommittee also discussed a section of the Senate Rules and Regulations that states that no funds should be allocated for social functions, such as dinners and banquets. This year the committee met to set the budget guidelines the same night other members attended. other faculty members on the committee are: Del Rummer, associate professor of electrical engineering; Dave Thiesen, associate professor of physics; Joy, professor of business; R. T. Aangeenbrug, associate professor of geography; and Henry Stone, assistant professor of microbiology. Paul Wolle, assistant professor of information Center, will be an e-xofficio member. McCarthy said that having the guidelines formed before the full Senate met would make the budget process run more smoothly. The Senate didn't fund the International Club for the entire amount of the festival this year, but told the club to request additional funds in the fall. Mccarthy said that the International Club's festival might be considered a banquet. Committee ponders elections, funds, guidelines Bob Beisner, former Senate treasurer, said that there was strong opposition to funding the festival last year but that the festival has been deemed it a cultural, not a social event. SenEx forms group to study pre-enrollment Rephasing of certain sections of the Tenure and Related Problems committee will replace the changes. The changes will replace or augment sections within the existing Faculty Handling Committee. "THE UNDERLYING intent of the event is what you need to look at." Beiser said. No action was taken on the section of the rule that required a subcommittee decided on a tentative recommendation to propose an audit program. The audit program would be followed by the Finance committee's audit when auditing it when it audits Senate funds. George Segal & Jane Fonda THE STORY OF ADELEH. SUA FILMS ECSTACY (1933) Thurs., April 21, 7:30 p.m., 75c Popular Films Series. Fri., April 22 & Sat., April 23, 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $1 THE OUTLAW (1943) MIDNIGHT COWBOY Dir, Howard Hughes with Jane Russell, Walter Huston. Film Society. Dir. Gustav Machaty, with Hedy Lamarr. Compilee, uncut, uncensored. plus PG Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight plus PAGE MISS GLORY The program was suggested by Beisner, who said the present Senate Revenue Code was vague about procedures to be used in auditing. An Art Deco cartoon by Tex Avery. Midnight Movies, Fri, April 22 & Sat., April 23, 12:00 midnight, 51 THE WOMEN (1939) Dir. George Cukor, with Joan Crawford, Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell plus "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" MEMBER OF THE WEDDING (1952) Dir. Fred Zimmerman, with Julie Harris, Ethel Waters. Mon., April 25, 7:30 p.m., 75c Beilner said the program should recommend that the subcommittee check Every Eve.at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:30 Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Granada 14780, Vitoria, SP 11260 Glenda Jackson, Sandy Dennis, Geraldine Page Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" "NASTY HABITS" 10 Academy Award Nomination Eve 7:18 & 9:45 Sat-Sun. Hill 1:02 PGC Hillcrest "BLACK SUNDAY" PG manager keeps with the records of the University of Kansas. Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat., Sun, at 2:30 "ROCKY" Starring LYVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7.30 & 9.15 Saf. Sun. 1.45 Hillcrest Varsity February 19 - December 27, 2016 743 crashed at sea. Passengers aboard are trapped; underwater. AIRPORT PG 77 'BREAKER Eve. 7:40 & 9:30 ENDS THURSDAY Hillcrest BREAKER" —Plus —PG "SPECIAL DELIVERY" Show starts 7:30 Sunset Dallas, TX 75214 Visit us at sunset.com The recommendation of the audit program must be approved at the Finance and Auditing Committee's meeting next before it is presented to the full Senate May 19. "THE STORY OF ADELE H. is a beautiful, rigorous, very original film. It looks and sounds like no other Truffaut film you've ever seen." - Vincent Canby, New York Time ROGER CORMAN BEST MEMBER ISABELLE ADJANI FIRST EDITION FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT THE STORY OF ADELE H. FRANCISI TRUFAUT JEAN GRUMAUJ SUSZANN SCHIF FRAMAN BRUCE ROBINSON *SYLVIA MARRIOTT* JOSEPH BLAATCHLE *IVRY GITLUS* SUA SUA Popular Films 7:00 & 9:30 p.m., 3:30 Matinee each day $1 tickets available at SUA office Fri., April 22 & Sat., April 23 Woodruff Auditorium. Kansas Union MIDNIGHT MOVIES DONALD DICKENS MIDNIGHT COWBOY CARTOON SHORT—PAGE MISS GLOYR-Fri, April 22 & Sat, Apr. 23, 12:00 midnight, 1—Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union. AORTE—A GREEK CELEBRATION APRIL 21—MAY 1 Tickets for the Greek Night at Royals Stadium are on sale at the Interfraternity Council Office at the University. The Royals Game is scheduled for Tuesday, April 24 when the Royals will be playing the Texas Rangers. Houses are advised to bring one check on arrival. Tickets are available by Wednesday night. 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Order now and we will ship your Backgammon game to you at no additional charge for postage or handling Complete Coupon & Mail Today To: Moneybackgammon P. O. Box 402 Sioux City, Iowa 51102 Payment Enclosed CITY ___ STATE ___ ZIP ___ Payment Enclosed __Master Charge No__ Bank American (Nixa N) Master Charge No. Bank Americancard/Visa No. Date of Internship Card Expiration Allow Two Weeks for Delivery No Residents Remit 3% Taxes Tax - MOHEYBACKGAMMOH • "Who cares what other light through yonder window breaks?" (Romeo) LIGHT 96 calories, approximately one third fewer than our other fine beer. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. © 1972 JOS SCHLITZ BREWING CO., MILWAUkee, WIS. AND OTHER CITIES of the audit finance next Senate ity een rock in- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY RAIN? KANSAN A Vol. 87, No.131 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 22, 1977 KANSAS RELAYS '77 inside... L A What are the Kansas Relays anyway and how did they become so important? Who or what started them? Who are the Sunflower Girls and what do they do, anyway? What has to be done to get ready for the Relays? What else is going on? What is going on in the rest of the world today? Surely the Relays aren't everything? What about national news? The student senate? Is there going to be a crisis? Editorials! Who is doing what? When? Who's been here before? Who might be coming back? Do women get into this act, too? And what about that guy and his special wind gauge. D And something about other forms of recreation as well? There is a lot to do in Lawrence, if you know where to look, isn't there? Could this be considered a guide? KANSAS - Cares are pushed aside. With the Goddess of Play and Amusement as your guide, this weekend will be one continuous round of pleasure." —1928 Relays public flyer 2 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Sunflower Girls give 'a little extra' By DAVID JOHNSON Staff Renorter No doubt some of the credit for attracting young athletes to the University of Kansas goes to the football program, the coaches, the living facilities and the University itself. But a group partly responsible for attending recruits to KU may not be so visible. The group is the Sunflower girls-12 girls who escort prospective recruits to games Head football coach Bud Moore suggested the idea of the Sunflower Girls two years ago when he came to KU from Alabama. At that time, Moore said the girls could show a recruit some aspects of the University that a coach couldn't. BESIDES HELPING to recruit football players, the girls also help with the Jayhawk Golf Classic in the spring, work in the press box during football and basketball games, and act as hostesses during other events. Skyrwriters such as the Big Flight Skyrwriters tour. But their main role, as co-captain Janet Gorman, Kansas City, Kan., junior, says is to sell the University to the prospective recruits. "I have a strong attachment to the university," she said recently. "I feel I am supposed to have something." How they accomplish their goal of selling U and its athletic programs, with some 60 percent of the total revenue in Eubanks. "I don't want people to think that we go to bed with them to get them to sign." Wichita sophomore, said she stressed KU's academic program. "ONE THING a lot of students don't realize is athletes have other goals besides going into a professional sport," she said. "They're also looking at the academic For Bonita Gooch, Wichita graduate student, the athletic program has a lot of appeal, especially the Jayhawker Towers athletics where most scholarship athletes live. Captain Wendy Smith, Fort Myers, Fla, senior, said she didn't have any problems convincing prospects of the attractiveness of KU. "Selling people on the university is easy, just keep telling them," she said. "People see it and then just love it." ALTHOUGH TECHNIQUE may differ, the girls seem to have a common ingredient—enthusiasm. In cases where an athlete may be comparing KU with five or more schools, enthusiasm can make the difference. "They (the athletic department) feed them steaks. We need to get去steaks Goch and Hunk Hettower, who helped organize the program when he was recruiting and academic coordinator, agreed that enthusiasm was a high priority when selecting "We're looking for a young lady with personality, who understands athletics," he said. "A young lady with time. Someone genuinely interested in the athletic program." THE GRLRS are selected in the spring by buttress, the Sunflower Girl captain and an assistant. Although they get free season tickets to the football and basketball games and uniforms, the girls also can borrow books from the athletic department book room, Gooch said sk. "don't use the privilege of going to the athletic departments aren't into the same classes I'm into." GORMAN, a public relations major, said he enjoyed meeting people and telling "They (the athletic department) feed them steaks, but they're going to get steaks anywhere." them about the University "Most of them are pretty scared," she said. "They're seniors in high school, and a lot of them come from small towns. They don't ask to ask us question, maybe, a speech." Despite the age difference, Gooch, who is studying public administration, and she had made friends with some of her prospects. She still sees a group of athletes and their families when she goes to Kansas City, she said. Eubanks said she was impressed with the noise, intelligence and maturity of the students. "THEY'RE UNDER a lot of pressure to make a decision," she said. "But they're all diplomats, really. When you ask them what advice they give, when you ask them, they'll say, 'Mmm, it's very nice.'" Naturally there are times when the similarity between prospect and escort isn't good. There also are other occasions when an athlete has the impression that his escort is a date for the weekend. Gooch said she never had any problem with athletes being aggressive because she set them straight from the beginning. "I tell them I'm not interested in being a date, and if they want a date I have some other ideas." bed with them to get them to sign," Smith said. Although she has on occasion gone to a local bar and met the recruit with his football host, Smith said it was up to each girl if she wanted to date the prospect. "I don't want people to think that we go to "If you just give the minimum it's not enough. If you give the maximum it's girl puts it a little easier." Most of the girls put it a little easier. Gooch agreed that it was up to the girl be how much effort she applied to each room. The "minimum" includes sitting with the athlete and his friends or family at football games during unofficial visits. After the game, the girls go with their prospective recruits to talk to the coaches at the Victory Club, a post-game social gathering. early Sunday morning to be at the training table by 9:30. According to Gooch, part of the "little extra" that the girls put in is getting up Although it would be difficult to say how many recruits the girls have influenced in coming to KU, Hettwer said the Sunflower Girls had brought "tremendous response" from prospects and parents. BUY ONE SANCHO So you think you're not an artist? Doreta will teach you how! Lessons Include: • Landscape Painting • Wood Carving • Tin Flower Settings • Decoupage NO TALENT REQUIRED!! ENROLL NOW Doreta's Decorative Arts 43-7255 1006 New Hampshire GET ONE FREE The Sancho is a soft flat tortilla shell filled with Taco meat, lettuce, cheddar cheese, tomatoes, and your choice of sauce. One offer per customer. Offer ends April 24, 1977 TACO TICO 2340 Iowa Decoupage Doreta's Decorative Arts 1986 New Hampshire ♥ TACO TICO COMPLETE YOUR RELAYS WEEKEND With A Visit To The K.U. Bookstore 90 JAYHAWKS KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS RELAYS 1977 KANSAS JAYHAWKS K.U. Relays T-Shirts $4^{00} Stuffed Jayhawk $7^{75} Jayhawk Beret $4^{20} Jayhawk Tie $5^{95} Wooden Jayhawk Plaque $7^{95} Jayhawk Rug $6^{50} Jayhawk Umbrella $8^{35} Stadium Blanket (Blue or Gold) 42''x62'' $10^{75} Pennants $1^{25} to $3^{45} Jayhawk Pillow $6^{95} Jayhawk T-Shirts $3^{35} to $8^{50} Jayhawk Koolers $14^{60} Jayhawk Decals 30° to $1^{00} Royal Blue Hat $6^{75} ... and Hundreds of Other Items to Choose From. N kansas union BOOKSTORE "just east of the stadium" Dur freshr MacD hits name hamb Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan 3 075 345 695 850 460 100 675 er KU Always first quality— always first in pleasing you! McQueen JEWELERS "THE KING OF DIAMONDS" Quality Jewelry Since 1950 809 Mass. 843-5432 MacDonald regains hitting but fans lose Big Macs By GARY BEDORE Sports Writer During the last four or five games of his freshman year, second baseman Ronald MacDonald had some extra pressure to get hits at home games. MacDonald, whose name is the same as that of the local hamburger franchise clown, could earn practice was stopped when the NCAA found out about it, and told the Jayhawks to stop. He gets teased about his name at some of the away games, he said. "The other team gets on me at first," he said, "but they stop after awhile." MacDonald hit an impressive .372 with 48 hits during his freshman year, but he slumped in his sophomore year to a .260 batting average with only 32 hits. This season, MacDonald has returned to Coach Temple saw what was happening and told me to quit thinking so much." his freshman form, hitting .333 after 18 games, but while his slump lasted, it was a painful ordinal. "Last year was the first year in my life I've really played badly," he said. "I was trying new things at the plate and was messed up mentally. After my freshman year, I had high goals set for myself, and I just wasn't prepared to fail." MACDONALD SAID he tried everything to return to his freshman form. "I didn't know what to do," he said. "I'd open my stance and then close it, then I'd hold the bat differently. Finally coach Temple saw what was happening and told me to quit thinking so much." After Temple's advice, MacDonald began to relax, and after playing ball in Fort Dodge, Iowa, last summer, his hitting seems to have made a recovery. “This year I've got my confidence back,” he said. “I'm hitting with my weight forward like I'm supposed to, and I'm overcoming the slump more every time we play.” IT WAS reasoned by many that MacDonald's sophomore hitting, slump was caused when Temple moved him from shortstop to second base. MacDonald disagrees with that reasoning. “Moving to second base was the best thing that could have happened to me,” he said. “I didn't have the arm for shortstop.” Indeed, MacDonald had a hammer year at second base last season. He made only six errors in 37 games and was named honorable mention all-conference at his position. This year, he has made two errors so far. MACDONALD NEARLY went to the University of Minnesota. He applied there but decided to go to KU after his family moved once again, this time to Olathe, Kan. At KU, he tried out for the team and made it as a walk-on. After his sensational freshman year, he was rewarded with a baseball scholarship. MacDonald said that since he was offered no scholarships after a successful high school career, he had something to prove to himself. "I've always been one of the best hitters on teams I've played on, so I had to show myself I could play college ball," he said. SINCE MAKING the club, MacDonald has played in all but one game. He said this year's team was a closer knit group than other teams he had played on. "Everybody is out for the team this year," he said. "When I first came up here, guys screwed around. Now the guys all want to beat these big schools we play, and we believe we can." Being a junior, MacDonald is eligible for the major league draft of college players in June. Like many ball players, he has a goal of playing professional baseball. “If I get drafted, I don't know what I’d do,” he said. “If I dying if I said I wouldn't consider leaving KU, but I haven't had any scouts acutally talk to me yet.” Take Home a Relays Souvenir THE JAYHAWK CLOCK Haas Imports carries the perfect K.U. Relays Souvenir. It's a durable Jayhawk Clock. No home should be without one. Only at Haas Imports 1029 Mass. BREAKFAST SERVED ANYTIME Join Our Golden Agers' Club Children's Menu All items 79¢ HOME OF COUNTRY KITCHEN Open 24 Hours A Day 1503 W. 23rd 843-2025 Lawrence Since 1905 Dry Cleaners WARDROBE CARE CENTERS 1526 WEST 23rd 1517 WEST 6th FOR ROUTE SERVICE, CALL 843-3711 Sanitone Certified Master Drycleaner Scotchgard FABRIC PROTECTOR Storage Suede and Leather Cleaning Laundry and Shirt Service Repairs Alterations and Reweaving SPECIALISTS IN FABRIC CARE SERVING LAWRENCE OVER 60 YEARS 12 9 3 The Cotton Club YOUNG MAN BREAKFAST SERVED ANYTIME Join Our Golden Agers' Club Children's Menu All items 79¢ HOME OF Country Boy COUNTRY KITCHEN Open 24 Hours A Day BREAKFAST SERVED ANYTIME Join Our Golden Agers' Club Children's Menu All items 79¢ HOME OF Country Boy "SPECIALISTS IN FABRIC CARE" SERVING LAWRENCE OVER 60 YEARS Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Skateboard craze starts rolling in Lawrence again By DONALD WILSON Staff Renorter They have names like Fifteen Toes, Rainbow Rider and Banzi. They sell from $6 to more than $100 and are made from wood, fiberglass or aluminum. Some say they're a fad and others say they're a new sport. They're popular in many countries, including the United States, Australia and Japan. They're commonly called skateboards. Local store owners can't get enough of the brightly colored descendants of the child's push scooter. push scooter Many stairs are out, and the rest have no lift. The left. The demand is so great that at Gibson Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St., where they're already sold out, even a damaged one is sold at a slightly reduced price in hopes of capitalizing on the rush. LLOYD MARTIN, assistant manager at Gibson Discount Center, St., said, "We've sold out and reordered several times. We've probably sold six or eight dozen in the past three weeks or so." Woolworth's skateboard sales are conservative, however, if one considers the market in California, but so is skateboarding in Lawrence when compared with California—the accepted cradle of skateboarding. In the land of beach music and big droughts, there are skateboard shops, skateboard parks, professional skateboard teams and a monthly magazine, IN LAWRENNCE, usually only a lone rider is seen, but occultly groups form. More often, they are not in the same area. watching two or three skateboarders flaunt their stuff. Jack Dausman, San Diego, Calif., junior and experienced skateboarder, said that boardboarding was only a fad row in the city. California it was a unique and exciting sport. "On the West Coast, it is a skiing and surfing climate, so when you can't ski or surf, there is a need for something else like these sports," he said. "Skateboarding like them." "I mean there's nothing you can compare it to--nobody stands on their heads on snow skis," Dausman said, referring to some incredible skateboard stunts. THE FEATS have names like kick turn, lifting the front wheels off the ground to change directions; pooling, skating on the walls of an empty room; moving a mismanchio or insanity—the speed circle, skating through a downslope drain tube, 12 feet in diameter, picking up more and more speed and then pushing the tires onto the ceiling and down the other side. Terry Barker, Lawrence freshman and another veteran skateboarder, said the speed circle was the most dangerous stunt, and he did not recommend trying it. Barker said he began skateboarding when he was, in the service in California. "IGOT INTO surfing, and everyone who surfs rides a skateboard," he said. "The body movements in skateboarding and surfing are the same, so when the weather is too cold for surfing, it's a good way to keep in shape." stateboarding's popularity in California for open play space for children there Bearer said that another reason for "What the children have done is advantage of what there is out there—a tok The future of skateboarding in Kansas is uncertain at best, Barker said. "I DON'T see very many people actually riding them," he said. "Mostly, I just see a few kids walking across campus carrying them. I hope it catches on, though it's fun." Barker and Duasman said that the best equipment for skateboarding wasn't available in Lawrence, and that they had to buy their own gear. The best skateboards and skateboard parts. It must be remembered, however, that these two do mean the best. DAUSMAN SAID he paid $40 for his skateboard from the factory, and Barker, who made his, said it cost him about the same. Why $80? Daupper picked up his board proudly. Tapped on the ladder. See these bolts? The trumpet made for aircraft. He also said the board was made from the same material that makes of fine archery Barker said his board was expensive because it was made from birchwood, which he had shipped from Iowa. Also, the board included reethane and cost between $5 and $10 each. POLYURETHANE WHEELS are a relatively new addition to skateboards and [Picture of a boy skateboarding with two dogs. One dog is a large breed with a fluffy coat, the other is a smaller breed with a more compact coat.] Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Mark Gridely uses his skateboard to walk his dogs the lazy man's way. But skateboarding has a confusing past. Like basketball, no one seems to know exactly how to do it. are the key to the skateboard's renaissance during the past few years, both riders said. Skateboarding is in its second surge of popularity. During the mid-60s children throughout the United States were skateboarding. BUT THE INTRODUCTION of the new polyurethane wheels has caused boarding to increase in popularity since the early 1970s. 100 Barker said the old clay and steel wheels would slide out from under the rider on tight turns or catch on gravel and pavement cracks, throwing riders. M Most of the accidents apparently were caused by poor equipment—particularly In fact, according to traffic regulations, skateboards can be ridden only on public sidewalks or on private property with permission. Most agree that it probably originated when some kid nailed one of his old steel roller skates onto a two-by-four block of wood, stepped on it and after falling off a log, he found himself leaning on leansing one way or the other. Anything more precise than that is conjecture. But the new wheels wouldn't catch, he said, and would adapt to any sur- But, Dausman said, the police often don't enforce the law. He said police had stopped him only a few times, and that they only warned him to be careful. Barker said similar laws in California resulted in the construction of skateboard The best skateboarding surface is determined by personal preference. Dausman said there was a $1 to $1.50 fee a day to use the parks. Malls Olde English Village Apartments Dauman said he preferred clean concrete, but Barker said he liked smooth concrete. THEY AGREED, however, that two of the best places to ride in Lawrence were down Baumgardner Avenue, which connects Jayhawk Boulevard to Mississippi Street, and on Irving Street winding down Daisy Hill toward Allen Field House. THE FIRST skateboards were manufactured in the early 1960s, the time of the first skateboarded. The craze peaked in the mid-1960s with ABG and Nike. Sports coverage of the first National Championships from Anabeim, Calif., in 1965. unique design . . . interior roominess . . . wall to wall carpeting . . . air conditioning . . . sound conditioning . . . all electric Frigidaire kitchen . . . dishwasher . . . disposal . . fireplace . . saunas. Skateboard parks can be not only in the United States, but also in Australia and A SKATEBOARD park is an area about the size of a baseball field and has hills, rills, chutes, pools and other forms concluding in guarding. All the forms are made of concrete. After that, skateboards hit the skids. Injuries became so frequent that national magazines such as "Life" and "Good Housekeeping" spoke out against the skateboard phenomenon, calling it exceedingly dangerous. carr. in 1860. After that, skateboards hit the skids. Although these may be the two best places to ride in Lawrence, it's unlawful to ride in Lawrence. Come see these surprisingly inexpensive luxury apartments 2411 Louisiana Street Lawrence Kansas afternoons weekdays and weekenas "The hopscotch and mopeds will give you a trick. Welcome to the K.U. Relays 843-5552 But if the sidewalk's cracked you'd better moll out quick." o goan your board and go sidewalk doin' Jan do the tricks the surfers do! Jan and you PLAN ON LIVING? Let Us HELP YOU! OH! If you plan to live beyond 20 years, as 95 out of 100 your age will, then you should consider the living benefits of the CIP (C college Insurance Program). The lowest insurance rates possible are available because as a college student, you are young, in excellent health, and will statistically lead a longer, more financially rewarding life. Give yourself the benefits of a talk with your American General Campus rep. Julio C. Meade District Manager 901 Tennessee 841-3464 Julio C. Meade Raymond B. Raymond Poteet 901 Tennessee 841-3464 BROOKLYN BAY Jan Cloon 901 Tennessee 841-3464 Bill Byers 901 Tennessee 841-3464 YOUNG BREEDER Willie Amison 901 Tennessee 841-3464 JOHN HARRIS UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA American General LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Welcome to the 1977 Kansas Relays KU Bank in Lawrence G G p "Come Norma they're o - The Lawrence Bank & Trust Co. - Douglas County Bank - University State Bank "There ready for more we basketb For the fore keeps the city of for the toughest Stuart not only Allen I varsity football "The year," basebal time fo - First National Bank of Lawrence But 5 time. T crew p lane m barrier around "We getting right u dernea bathro be cleg Stuan awards put it on delay. "The section they're or so," University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22, 1977 5 don't copied y only fornia board e you a about hills, conns are 0 fee a surfin'rs do." only inlia and Groundcrew hustles its bustles painting, moving, fixing for Relays By JASON NUSS Sports Writer "Come on, off your butts, break is over." **in black over** Norman Stuart yells to his crew and they're off to another job. For the past five months, Stuart has been the foreman of the maintenance crew which keeps the athletic facilities at the University of Kansas in top condition. Preparing for the Kansas Relays is one of the crew's toughest and busiest assignments. "There's a lot of work involved in getting ready for the Relays." Stuart said. "It's more work than preparing for a football or basketball game." Stuart and his crew of six are responsible not only for Memorial Stadium, but also for Allen Field House, Quijuel Field, the courts and five practice football fields. "The spring is always a busy part of the year," Stuart said. "With spring football, baseball and tennis, it doesn't leave much time for the Relays." But Stuart and his crew have found the time. The work began in January, when the crew painted the hurdles. They also painted lane markings on the track, the water-jump barrier for the steep chase, and the rings around the shotput and discuss area. "We started during Christmas break getting ready for the Relays, and we'll work right up to the start," Stuart said. "Underneath the stadium, the press box, bathrooms and dressing rooms all have to be cleaned. But we'll be read." Stuart and his crew also has to move the awards stand from under the stadium and put it on the bleachers. But there has been a delay. they re replacing all the bleachers in sections six to 19, so we have to wait until they're in place, which will be another day or so," Stuart said. "After that, it will be just little things, but sometimes those little things are the most important." Stuart said one of the little things was filling the water jump for the steeple chase, a three-hour job, which might take longer since the bucket used for filling the pit had broken. But Stuart's job doesn't end once the Relays begin. There's the clean-up after each session, and the possibility that rain forces the pole vault and high jump indoors. "When it rained in the past we had to transfer the pole vault and high jump pits from the stadium to Allen Field House," Stuart said. "The entire meet is held up while we load those pits onto trucks and take them to the field house." Stuart's job requires him to work in close contact with all the coaches. Last summer, Floyd Temple, KU baseball coach, wanted grass planted in front of the dugouts at Quigley Field—a tedious job for the maintenance crew. "Yeah, whatever the coaches want, we do." Stuart said. "Course when the football coaches ask for something, we jump that's where the money comes from." Stuart works year-round and the summer is another busy period for the groundcrew. "We paint the bleachers, the football field and signs under the stadium," Stuart said. "Along with maintaining the practice football fields—well it gets pretty busy." Stuart said the worst part of his job was cleaning the field house, after games. With all his responsibilities, Stuart has a calm attitude that carries over to the entire team. "We got our share of the duties, but one "We blow all the trash down, pick it up and then start scrubbing," he said. "We got to get right at it because we can't let the pop set on the table. We've got to go to the Missouri games are the messiest. It takes an extra hour to clean the place." thing I can tell you, I've got good help. "Stuart said. 'It makes things a lot easier when I tell them to do something and know it's going to get done." The traditional K.U. 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Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. 6 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO 25th & IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 CLASSICAL RECORD SALE 2 RECORD SET THE CONCERT OF THE CENTURY RECOGNITION KETTENBERG HALL NEW YORK HERNSTEIN FISCHER DIEKSM HOROWITZ/ MUNDEHN ROSTROPOPICHUSTERN NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC Reg. J3rd 797 M2X 34256 2 RECORD SET BERLIOZ - REQUIEM LEONARD BERNSTEIN STUART BURROWS, TENOR ORCHESTRE NATIONAL DE FRANCE ORCHESTRE PALMHAMMONNE DE RADIO FRANCE - ENLOIS DE RADIO FRANCE RECOGNÉD A LES MOVIELS, PARIS Reg. 13° 797 M2 34202 GEORGE GERSHWIN PLAYS The 1925 Piano Roll of RHAPSODY IN BLUE with the Columbia Jazz Band AN AMERICAN IN PARIS MICHAEL TILSON THOMAS, Conductor Yankee Doodle Dandies! Robert Merrill The Mormon Tabernacle Choir including The White Cliffs Of Dover You're A Grand Old Flag Over There I'm A Yankee Doodle Dandy It's A Long, Long Way To Tepiaryn and more JOHN WILLIAMS SOULFLEET SINSONMAS VILLA LOROS FIVE PRELudes IN HIS FIRST JAZZ RECORDING JEAN PIERRE RAMPAL Flutist SUITE FOR FLUTE AND JAZZ PIANO CLAUDE BOELING Pianist/Composer MARCEL SABIAN DRUMS MAX HEIGEUER STRONG BASS Reg. 6 399 First American Recording LAZAR BERMAN PLAYS BEETHOVEN Sonata Op. 57 "Appassionata" Sonata Op. 31 No. 3 E.POWER BIGGS/J.S.BACH THE SIX ORGAN-CONCERTO SINFONIAS FROM THE CANTATAS The Gewandhaus Orchestra Hans-Joachim Rotzsch, Conductor M34218 Reg. $ 3^{99} $ Reg. 4 Reg. 2 399 495 M 34272 Who could ask for anything more? On Columbia Records and Tapes. COLUMBIA MASTERWORKS MAITTE BY JOSEPH MAYER | M 34177 | LARA BARNARD PLAY BEETHOUGH | M 34178 | GARDENWALK IN NILE | M 34179 | AN AMERICAN IN PARIS | M 34180 | JOHN WILLIAM PLAY SCARLET & HOLLY CLOVER | M 34181 | AMERICAN BAND ANTHEM | M 34182 | RIODELE OF NEW YORK | M 34183 | COLUMBIA FOOTBAND | M 34184 | FALLS TO THREE CONCERTS НА НАРШОЙ СЕРИСТОМ | M 34185 | PLAINS TO TWO CONCERTS НА НАРШОЙ СЕРИСТОМ | M 34186 | PLAYING BAND | M 34187 | LOST DREAM IN A NORTH WIND | M 34188 | TOMORROW'S BOW | M 34189 | RAVIN, GARDNER IN COURSE | M 34190 | BETWEEN BROADWAY COMPLEXES IN VILLAGE | M 34191 | CLARENCE BARBARA | M 34192 | THE HOUSE OF PATTERN CONCEPTS | M 34193 | THE HOUSE OF PATTERN CONCEPTS | M 34194 | BEATHELOVE BIG BELLOW OF NEW YORK | M 34195 | ANTONIQUE BORNAGHI | M 34196 | BOULANGUE SUPREME PLAY & RISE BAND | M 34197 | BOULANGUE SUPREME PLAY & RISE BAND | M 34198 | BOULANGUE SUPREME PLAY & RISE BAND | M 34199 | GRYPT CARMENNA | M 34200 | TOUCHMORE NATIONAL FESTIVAL | M 34201 | BATH FIFTH FESTIVAL FOR PEOPLE | M 34202 | NEW RECORDINGS OF COUNTRY | M 34203 | COUNTRY APPLACTIVE BROWSING CONFERENCE | M 34204 | BETWEEN BROADWAY BAND 11 | M 34205 | JOELINE THE FEMALE HARNESTUDIO VOL. 1 | M 34206 | BETWEEN BROADWAY BAND 11 | M 34207 | BETWEEN BROADWAY BAND 11 | M 34208 | STARS BACK FOR ORANGE BAND & FRONTY BAND | M 34209 | WAITER CAROLS BY REQUEST | M 34210 | NAVEL BROOKLYN VALLEY GRAPHIC ARTS | M 34211 | THE BEST OF BAYSIDE | M 34212 | TOUCHMORE NATIONAL FESTIVAL | M 34213 | TOUCHMORE NATIONAL FESTIVAL | M 34214 | TOUCHMORE NATIONAL FESTIVAL | M 34215 | TOUCHMORE NATIONAL FESTIVAL | M 34216 | MUSICIAN PICTURE AT EARMAN BAND | M 34217 | MUSICIAN PICTURE AT EARMAN BAND | M 34218 | BETWEEN BROADWAY BAND 15 | BETWEEN BROADWAY BAND 15 Reg. 95 Columbia 495 TOOL & ARRAY STORAGE IF CLUB OF MONTANA BOUNDary Club M 10247 PLEASE PLACE BOUNDARY CLUB M 10247 MOUNTAIN BOUNDary M 10247 THE BOUNDARY BASEBOOK M 10247 TOURNAMENTS OVER THE RIVER SERMONED Company Women Club M 10247 LUNAR GARDEN CLUB NOTEBOOK M 10247 R INTERNATIONAL ALUMUNITY SPECULATORS Garden Club Note M 10247 EVERYTHING TO WORK ON THE ROOF Garden Club Note M 10248 MOUNTAY EVE NO. 36 JANETTER Company Club Note M 10248 LUET'S BOUNDARY NOTEBOOK M 10248 THE WATERCLAIM CLUB M 10248 THE WATERCLAIM BUILDING Alumunity Prize Club M 10248 MOUNTY FLIES QUARTER NOTEBOOK Company Club Note M 10249 THE LERNMAN ALUMUNITY Prize Club M 10249 THE BADAL ALUMUNITY Prize Club M 10249 THE COLLECTION ALUMUNITY NOTEBOOK BALL APPLICATION M 10249 TOURNAMENTS DRAW LAW NOTEBOOK M 10249 BOOK OF DURATION NOTEBOOK M 10249 BUSINESS GREATEST NOTES Company Club Note M 10251 COLLECTION GREATEST NOTES Company Club Note M 10251 GARDENWONDER GREATEST NOTES Eagle Memorial M 10251 MOUNTAIN'S GREATEST NOTES Eagle Memorial M 10251 TOWNSHIP'S GREATEST NOTES Eagle Memorial M 10251 JOHNSON'S GREATEST NOTES Eagle Memorial M 10251 BACH'S GREATEST NOTES Company Club Note M 10261 JOB OF MANAGER GREATEST NOTES Eagle Memorial Tite M 10261 MOUNTAIN'S GREATEST NOTES VOL. 10 M 10261 MOUNTAIN'S GREATEST NOTES VOL. 10 BUSINESS LAW JOB PAVEMENT New Philadelphia M 10261 STRAYKNIGHT SACRED DUMPSTERS Company Club Note M 10291 WELL-PAINTED SANTURNE COUNTY Club M 10291 A POINT OF SKILLS GREATEST NOTE M 10291 BUTCHED BLOOM Book M 10291 MOUNTAIN'S GREATEST NOTES VOL. 4 M 10291 MOUNTAIN'S GREATEST NOTES VOL. 1 THE LANDLAND TITLE Club M 10291 GOSSIP AMERICA Book M 10291 BACH CUSTOM FAIRFISHER VOL. 3 M 10291 LUNA'S FRACTURE Company Club Note M 10291 TITLE ARTS BOOK ODYSSEY BEST SELLERS OUTFREE BEST SELLERS MARVELS DIV. 1 MORRIS FUNDING LISTING BETTENGER DIV. 4 MERLIN MUSEUM FUNDING LISTING TOWNSMAN FUNDING LISTING COLUMN BOOKSTORE TITLE LISTING THE ARTBOOKS LOOP FUNDING LISTING CHRISTIAN WALEZER LISTING MALIGNY DIV. 4 MURRAY MUSEUM FUNDING LISTING RAKEI GILLIER TOWNSMAN COLUMN ALBUMBERD BETTENGER DIV. 3 MURRAY MUSEUM FUNDING LISTING BETTENGER DIV. 2 NATIONAL MUSEUM FUNDING LISTING ROST CAMPUS BOOKSTORE 6.2 KANACHAI BOOKSTORE 6.2 POLLINER BARTIN FUNDING LISTING MUNGELEN FUNDING LEAST IN THE BOARDWARD BLOMBERD ATTRAYA FUNDING BLOMBERD DVIVA FOUNDING BLOMBERD LISTING BILLION BRUSH VOLCANO FUNDING LISTING MUCKLIN FUNDING & KAM DEVERA DIV. 4 BILLION BRUSH FUNDING LISTING MUCKLIN FUNDING & KAM DEVERA DIV. 4 BILLION BRUSH FUNDING LISTING MUCKLIN FUNDING & KAM TELMANN FUNDING FOR FUTURE JACK REED BOOKSTORE BROWNER DIV. 4 BILLION BRUSH FUNDING LISTING MUCKLIN FUNDING & KAM BUFFETT FUNDING FLAMMING AND COURAGE FUNDING LISTING BACK CHRISTIAN FUNDING COURAGE FUNDING LISTING JBL THORENS THORENS YAMAHA Bang&Olulsen TEAC PIONEER REVOX NAKAMICHI BEYER DYNAMIC - LATINO MUSIC VISUAL ART LONGMAN Bozak ESS.inc. 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KENWOOD Y Dual Cerwin-Vega Dual audio-technica Pc PICKERING TDK KOSS SANYO SHURE KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO 25th & IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 又 Fridav, April 22, 1977 University Dally Kansan Kansas Relays—traditional rites of spring 70 YOUNG STADIUM HOUSTON, KY. 38104 FOR WEB SCREEN USE ONLY Coach Bob Timmons and the 1977 KU track team "From the sun-kissed slopes of Mount Oread, on the banks of the majestic Kaw, there was sent in the spring of 1923 a call to athletes of America inviting them to meet on the Kansas Memorial Stadium in the classic." — 1924 Kauai Relays Program There's not much question that the Kansas Relays has developed into a "major outdoor relay classic." But "sur-skied," unfortunately, not always. A public flyer for the 1928 Relays summed up the goings-on: Outland, "the father of the Relays," had to wait three years to see his idea of the Kansas Relays take form. McCook Field located north of the present Memorial Stadium, was still the home of facilities—Phog Allen made sure the new stadium had a suitable track The Relays traditionally have been a stopping-off point for athletes bound for or coming from the Olympic Games. The list reads like an honor roll of collegiate sports. "Work is suspended. Carees are pushed aside. With the Goddess of Play and Amusement as your guide, this weekend will be one continuous round of pleasure." And the idea for it all began, old program clipping indicate, with Doctor John Davis' guidance. In 1920, Outland, a former KU student and athlete, returned to the University of Kansas from the University of Pennsylvania, where he received his degree and liking for the Penn Relays. He decided that KU should host a similar event. the stadium was finished in 1923, it had a track with the fourth longest straightways in the country—exceeded only by the football field at Princeton Universities. So, the now-traditional Kansas Relays were first held that year. The now-alt-most-traditional "Relays rain" accompanied the meet. Foul weather turned to be an intermittent ever since. The continued success of the Relays depended in part, Allen decided, on vigorous promotion. He seemed to have a The Relays used to be an extravaganza with much ceremony and booole. Outland's idea was supported by Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, then director of athletics at KU and Karl Schlademann, then KU track coach. The three men used a combination of shred recruiting and outright training to make more outstanding athletes to Lawrence. One year, for instance, Allen and four members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce hosted a national wearing white jumpsuits emblazoned with "Kansas Relays" on the back. Another new-fangled contraption — called the Dummy Bag — raked by audiences at their stopovers. In 1930, coaches and officials dined on buffalo--barbequed in the center of the football field—as part of a rodeo theme chosen for the Relays. -parades snaked through downtown Lafayette to the city's parade room in the Relaxs A promotion technique still used was bringing name athletes—world record holders, Olympians and foreign stars—to the Relays. Referees included Knute Rocke, Notre Dame football coach and Alonzo Stagg from the University of Chicago. Jayhawks who achieved lasting fame also had events named after them: the Glenn Cunningham and the OL Berter disc competition. In addition, Jim Ryun made his first major appearance at the Relays while still in high school. -themes were chosen for the Relays, often centering on KU's Engineering Exposition, which is traditionally held the same weekend -queens were elected and reigned the weekend of the Relays. both the parades and queens no longer exist, probably victims of the lack of interest in the late 1960s and early 1970s in pomp and paretry. But enough activities survived to make the Relays the second stop on the three-round midwest circuit, a regional event with the NCAA national championships. Besides active athletes, active weather has played a continuing role in the Rulers. They are a significant force on campus. surance to protect his investment in the event. The $5,000 policy was paid to the University if one-tenth of an inch of rain fell between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. on the Saturday of the meet. The insurance was carried only during the week because agencies wisely refused after that' Until 1969, the track became a lob-lobby whenever it rained. The soggy, muggy oval pots were kept covered with otherwise outstanding track meet. And the athletic department was already $1 million Then a relatively unknown KU athlete from the 1950s helped with the problem. James Hersherberg, owner of oil holdings and an exploration company, announced a $125 thousand contribution toward the installation of an all-wear Tartan track. Work was completed in time for the 1970 impossible meetings were made possible. But in 1960 the Relays were in financial difficulty, KU students, previously admitted free, were charged admission -50 cents a day. The relays broke even that year. Apparently they continue to do so because the admission fee was dropped But obviously the real drawing cards for the Relays were the athletes, particularly with potential for setting or breaking world records in the KU competition. That's because since 1923 when 81 schools travelled from throughout the country to compete in a "new" track meet, the Kansas Relays has become the middle meet in the prestigious track circuit—preceded by the New York Relays and followed by the Drake Races. The three meets vary slightly in events held, but all three contain seven relay events for which the meets are logically named "Relays". The basic races are the 440, 880, mile, 2mile, 4mile, sprint medley and the distance medley. Through the years, such Olympic greats such as Jim Ryun, Glen Cunningham, A尔Oerter, Bruce Jenner and Frank Shorter have commited in the Relaxs. Don Baker, KU sports information director said_recorded that there was no record of the student's participation in Relays, but with the quality of athletes that have performed here, he said the list would be The 1929 relays featured a mile run between KU star Glen Cunningham and his rival Gene Venake of Pennsylvania. The relays yielded yards in the thrilling speed of 4.127 One world record was established in 1969 by a KU team of Jim Neinley, Randy Julian, Thorn Bigley and Jim Ryun when she ran the distance medley in 9:3.0. in the 1954 edition of the Relays, West Santee drilled local fans by running the race. They were named in memory of Fans became excited when it appeared that Santee might break the four minute mark. Instead he came in just short with a jab. From 1965 through 1971 the drawing card of the Relays was a man named Jim Ryan who came to KU in 1965 to win the high school rule In the six year period, Ryun won the outstanding performer award four times. In 1974 Bruce Jenner, former Graceland College track star competed in the decathlon. He not only scored the fifth best score, but in the process set a world record. Last year Jenner was the Olympic decathlon winner. In last year's Rivals, a Yale graduate named Frank Shorter won the 5,000 meter run. Shorter won the Marathon in the 1972 Olympics and second in that event in last year's Games. Nolan Cromwell, better known for his football heroes and the wishbone T, was named last year's outstanding performer at the Relaws. So now, the Kansas Relays held "the ranks of the majestic Kawai" is an integral part of the race. For a week KU is treated to the performances of potential Olympians, to often bitzare promotions and continual unceantaining about the weather's predilication. But it's all a part of KU's traditional rites of spring. Enjoy. Relays rains are cause for ponchos, umbrellas By COURTNEY THOMPSON Associate Sports Editors nain. If one element of the Kansas Relays be to be named as the sentimental favor to a champion, it also would be named the most hated part of the weekend by fan coaches and players. The Relays were scheduled for a week later in April this year to accommodate a change in the dates of the Drake Relays. So, they would improve chances for sunny weather "Water that is condensed from the aqueous vapor in the atmosphere and falls over the sky." DOUG MESSER, assistant athletic director of the athletic department, does that is true. "We were locked into that date because we were in between the Texas and Drake teams. I didn't realize that changed the date years ago, so I'm sure that the Drake change had a lot to do with it." "We hope that the date change will help us some." Messer said recently. "We've said around here jokingly that if it rails this year, we have somebody against us." dust storms and even snow have become part of the relays. Bad raids occurred during the first Kansas Relays in 1923. Itrained heavily during the high school meet on Friday, a meet that was begun in 1904 by Chancellor Frank Strong. The rains continued through October and almost all events were drenched. YET STORIES of killer monsoons, hail. A description of the 1947 Relays reads: "In 1947 the Relays had the appearance of a swimming meet rather than a track meet. Runners flushed through the events in the worst rain and cold in the history of the Relays." REPORTS OF hard rains and high winds were made in 1923, 1926, 1929, 1932, 1947, 1951, 1955, 1969, 1970, 1974, 1975 and 1978. If the weather didn't produce drastically foul conditions, it has at least been reliable in coming up with intermittent snowy conditions and drizzle for most Kansas RELays. Completely clear weekends have been rare. Without a clear weekend, the Relays have additionally had a deficit—that is, until last week. The budget for the 1976 Relays was $400, and actual expenditures were $110,000. year, the Relays brought in $2,600—a profit of $3,600. "THAT WAS an unusual year for us, really." Messer said. "That hasn't been a bad year. I have pendencies down considerably; we had more donations than we expected, and our contestant traveling expenses were low. I contended in a reason other than to say we were luck." The athletic department could use a little luck this year also, especially if it rains. The budget for this year's Relays is $2,000. All that matter at that budget goes to the four following areas: $-350 per labor, which includes ticket masters, ticket takers, traffic and security. -$5,000 for awards, including plaques, tronhies, medals and ribbons. - $3,600 for traveling expenses to bring in nationally and internationally known athletics. - $2,300 for printing, which includes heat sheets, results, applications, letters. THAT LAST category particularly intrigues Messer. job. I've always thought that it was an unusual extense that nobody thinks about. "You just can't imagine the reams and reams and reams of printing that it takes to on an event like this," he said. "It's a big expense, but it takes all of it to do the "WE OWE a great debt of gratitude to those who donate time and money because that's what makes the Relays possible. It would make us more to put on the Relays volunteers." FOREST C. "PIHGO" Allen realized the Relays would be in severe trouble financially if the rains came. So he did what most people want: want to protect an investment sale. But even the volunteers can't save the Relays when it rains. Messer pointed out, though, that over a period of years the Relays had made a little profit. Nevertheless, the $34,000 figure probably won't come in front of the actual cost of putting it together. "The money hasn't been too significant," he said. "The Relays isn't supporting anything but itself. We expect the Relays to stay on." "If we're not going, we don't, and when it's sunny, we do." He took out insurance on the Relsays for $5,000. The stipulation was that if one-tenth of an inch of rain fell between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. in the midday of the meet, KU would put the money. Allen's idea worked for the first three years of the Relys but after that the insurance companies found they were facing a losing proposition and backed out of the SO MOTHER NATURE continues to hold the upper hand and amount of worry for the child. But is there any scientific basis for these aggrassing April showers? Larry Cosgrouve, Jeffersonville, Pa. graduate student and director of the campus weather service, said that rains during this year's Relieve were likely "They've scheduled the Relays for the worst possible month in terms of predictable precipitation. There's almost no way to get around it—it's a nuisance." HE SAID that April was the start of the shower season and that there was a sound basis for the rhyme "April showers bring May flowers." During the winter, Cosgrove said, the weather follows a steady precipitation pattern—eight-to 10-hour snows or rains. But in the spring, storms form around Denver and move to the Northeast, usually ending up over Omaha. In the process, these storms go through Kansas and produces storms of one-half to one-hour duration. temperatures in the 40s and 50s. However, the sector to the south (usually the Lawrence area) gets the unpredictable, the temperature here and 60 to 70 degree temperatures. the region to the north of the storm center usually gets steady rains or snow and COSGROVE SAID another factor was the jet stream (movement of air at about 18,000 feet) flow. As the upper air moves north with the sun, the unsteady precipitation falls. At this time of year, the Lawrence area is almost directly under the stream, he said. What it all means is that throughout April and most of May, Congrove show, and shows the spring colors. "But there's no way to get any indication any further ahead than five to seven days. The only way to get that information is to hire a soffsayer." "MAY ISN'T much better because the situation gets worse until about mid-June when the rain activity becomes more predictable," he said. So should you take an umbrella? Probably. The Jayhawks won the Dallas Invitational track meet in spite of steady rain, so coach Bob Thimmae is not particularly about the weather. On rain, he said: "Yeah, maybe it's just what we need." The city n the outline future forma "Th about Carter THE comp comm Watson comp a clo Watson which subject Way yester study mana Acc yeste mana points —c antic opera2 A U said Church about Kansi Tir religio bersh Miller ted depar chure The religi Calif. said t and p "Tl by cl organ profe conne Mill studen fresh vertis could the st g KANSAS RELAYS KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY DELZER B was the but 18,000 sees north dipitation ear, the under the However, rally thedictable degree The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas out April showers days Vol. 87, No. 131 Friday, April 22.1977 hause the mid-June es more Still photo by JAX KOELTER indication even days. tion is to mbrella? allas Inady rain, ticularly rain, he LETES e need." American record Teri Anderson, graduate assistant coach of the KU women's track team, needed no coaching vestday as she won the women's 5000 meter run in 16:06.08, an American record. Offering her some shelter from the rain which pelted the first day of summer, Kansas students in Paul Dickens, principal of Eldoret Elementary School, where she lives, will be able to stay at home. Job criteria set for city manager Watson and the commission met yesterday afternoon in the first of several study sessions to make a list of the city manager's over-all job responsibilities. The Lawrence City Commission and the city manager yesterday approved a list of the city manager's responsibilities, outlining a dozen points that will be used as future evaluation criteria for the job performance of Buford Watson, city manager. "The whole objective of this is to bring about positive changes," Commissioner Ed White said. -handling of staff reports. THE EVALUATION is an outgrowth of complaints levied during recent city election campaign concerns Watson's handling of city services. The complaints prompted commissioners to call a closed meeting last week to discuss the reasons why they agreed to retain Watson, but to subject him to an annual evaluation -development, preparation and monitoring of the budget. —maintenance of good public and press relations. and the commissioners will meet in closed session in two weeks to review the sums. -delivery of basic city services, such as water, trash collection, street maintenance, fire and police protection, parks and recreation. Westerbeke said he and several other members of Faculty Council had arbitrarily decided to compose the compromise policy proposal. The group then took it to FRPP for approval, he said, where it received agreement from both members and the form, the Council voted on yesterday. the applicant's contributions to teaching, research and service. According to the agreement made yesterday, Watson and future city managers will be evaluated on the following points; Carter said the evaluation points weren't permanent but could be modified or deleted - coordination of city departments to anticipate and resolve problems affecting operatives —the value of the substantial proposal to the applicant's professional needs and goals. THE PROPOSAL also outlines in a little more detail what information will be provided to USC. It requires that a comprehensive statement containing peer-group evaluations on the following aspects of an applicant's request be furnished to USC. Council supports sabbatical plan thought the University Sabbatical Committee (USC) has been getting that attention. --development of subordinates to ensure that they meet their responsibilities... —the value and likely benefits of the subatrial proposal to the department or that of the district. After months of debate, Faculty Council yesterday approved a compromise proposal that would award one-third of the sabbatical leaves at the University of Kansas on the basis of the "exceptional merit" of the applicants. —the benefits likely to result in terms of enhanced teaching/professional service and education. WILLIAM WESTERBEKE, associate professor of law and a member of Faculty Council, said last night that the new proposal might also "provide for more regularized input from the person, school or department," although he said that he Staff Reporter That final proposal, passed by a voice vote, was a compromise between the current system and system proposed earlier by the Faculty Senate Committee on Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities (FRPF). The current system ranks applicants entirely on merit; the FRPR proposal would have only ranked applicants on time in service at the University. The remaining two-thirds of the sabbatical leaves would be based on any of the three criteria: the amount of time elapsed, the number of abscaticals, the number of sabcaticals the applicant has received at the University and the immediacy of opportunity for the application. By ROBERT MACKEY -professional development such as being up with new city management technology Local businessmen were either mildly invoiced or had a wait-and-see attitude toward the job. Local reaction mild toward Carter's plan Reactions to President Jimmy Carter's energy proposals didn't reflect the opposition he said they would in his television address to the nation Monday night. The All-University Senate will consider the proposal May 5, and the it will be sent to the governor. THOSE AREAS include goal achievement, development of subordinates, decision making, group effectiveness, effectiveness under stress and initiative. The new proposal also requires that a person not serve on both the Faculty Senate Committee on Research and the University Board of Admission Leave during the same academic year. Carter will summarize the evaluations. —maintenance of good relations with city employees. The proposals included increasing taxes on what Carter called "gas guzzling" automobiles and rebates for those cars that used gasoline efficiently. The taxes, which were raised for 1978 model cars, could add $2 to the $49 to the sticker price of the cars. Cars that don't meet the minimum standards for mileage set by the federal Highway Administration. —maintenance of an informed commission on all areas that affect the group. The tax would increase each year that the car didn't meet the standards. The maximum yearly penalty would reach 13 miles per gallon that get less than 13 miles a gallon in 1985. -development of the commission's top priorities and projects. LARRYAYERS, assistant sales manager for Dale Willey Pontic-Cadillac, Inc., 1116 W. 23rd St., said yesterday that the mileage standards already existed and that some of the cars manufactured by General Motors exceeded the requirements. -effectiveness in dealing with other government units. Each city commissioner will prepare a statement by April 29 evaluating Watson on each of the points. Included will be other evaluations of Watson ranking him on a high-low scale in six other management areas. "The government requires that cars get 17 to 18 miles per gallon by 1978 and even our large, full-size Cadillac gets 16," he said. Identification mistake troubles religion prof Jack Ellen, president of Jack Ellen Buick, Oldsmobile, GMC, Inc., 121.2 W. 90th St., said the manufacturer had the responsibility to build cars that met the standards. A University of Kansas faculty member said yesterday that a Universal Life church, Inc., advertisement and story about the "death of the founder" of Kansas had caused him nothing but trouble. The Universal Life Church, Inc., a religious organization based in Modesto, Calif. that ordains its ministers by mail, administers both private and perform religious ceremonies. Todd said he didn't have an honorary doctorate, which is available by mail to ministers for $20, but he was considering setting it. "The Universal Life Church is regarded by "clergy around here as an outrageous persona." Miller said, "and as a professional person I don't want to be connected with it." Todd Miller, a minister for five years in the Universal Life Church, said that he had placed an apology in the Kansan and that he wrote to write a letter of apology to Miller. HE SAID THAT several students had approached birn to ask about becoming nurses. Timothy Miller, assistant professor of religion, said that a Universal Life membership advertisement listed a Rev. T. Miller at a Lawrence address, had promptly contacted and comments from his department colleagues, students and area church members. From his membership advertisement, which ran for two weeks, Todd said, he received a dozen responses from Lawrence residents, students and faculty members in the departments of education and psychology. He declined to give their parures. "IN THE UNIVERSAL Church, everyone has a right to his own personal beliefs," Todd said, "because there are no traditional doctrines." He said the Universal Life Church believed that anyone wanted to be a minister could be. None of the ministers in United Ministries, a campus group sponsored by several. Protestant denominations, was affiliated with the Universal Life Church, he said. Miller said that he thought a University student, Todd R. Diller, Shawne Mission freshman, was the person in the advertisement to whom a $3 membership fee could be sent, but that he hadn't talked to the student about the mix-up. Todd has not performed any marriages or funerals, he said, but he has applied for a charter from the Universal Life Church's California office to establish a church. City apartment complex managers warn of imminent rent increases CONSUMERS ARE aware of the need to conserve gasoline, Brueck said, and will gradually buy smaller cars as taxes on the larger ones go up. Also, manufacturers will design smaller cars that offer the comfort style that buyers of large cars want, be said. By JAN DECKER Staff Reporter Like coffee and gasoline prices, rents in Lake Lawrence apartment complexes are not much higher. Junior Brubeck, sales manager of Jim Clark Motors, 212.1 W, 39 St., said that car buyers would benefit from the gradually lowered price and the market for full-size cars would suffer. Some local apartment managers said this week that rents already have increased this year. Others said that increases are planned for late summer or early fall. See REACTION page 12 Most agreed that the biggest reasons for the increases were rising utility rates and higher costs. "In order to maintain the complexes the way we have been, it was necessary to raise the rents," Nancy Evans, rental manager at Management Corp., said recently. HIGHER UTILITY rates were the main factor in a March 31 rent increase at Jayhawk Towers, according to Pat Bailey, rental manager for Lawrence Property Management. Bailey said that old and new tenants who had signed leases before March 31 weren't affected by the increase. Summer and fall editors and business managers will interview candidates next Monday and Tuesday. Interview sign-up lists are posted outside 114 and 114 Flint Hall. Evans said rents were increased about $15 to $20 Feb. 1 in the four apartment complexes that she managed—Crescent Apartments, Oaks, Gaslight and Acorn apartments. Positions are open on the news and business staffs of both the summer and fall Kansan. Applications are available in 105 Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, 105 B in the Kansas Union and the offices of the deans of men and women. "Nobody's going to get hurt, but the only way to cut the mugue down is to cut the wrist." Noon deadline for applications Swiss Villa and Cochaitel apartments will each increase about $10. Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall staff of the Kansan should include: Stadium Apartments, Carol Fabert, manage, but no further increases are available. The management of several other complexes, however, are still planned 1977 Remodeling costs caused a slight rise earlier this year for a few residents of 1HE MANAGEMENT of all four company must the main reason was maintenance costs Rents for Gatehouse, Frontier Ridge. lance costs increase as properties SEE RENT INCREASE page five Tickets for grade school, high school and KU students to the KU Reswell will cost $1.50 for today and $2 for tomorrow and can be purchased at the Allen Field ticket office or at Memorial Stadium. Events will start at 8 this morning. General admission tickets cost $2.50 for today and $3 for tomorrow. Reserved seats may be purchased for tomorrow's activities, which begin at 8 a.m. The seats will be situated on the side of the stadium and will sell for $4.50 per seat. A. M. Field Events A.M. Field Event 8 00 Lump Jump, Col. Jr. Col. HS 5 10 Jump, Eighth. Engl. 9. 90 High Jump - High School boys. 9. 90 Pole Vault - UaiL, Col, Jr. Col, Men - Trials 9. 30 Javelin Throw - High School - Boys - prelims. Finals Relays Schedule 10 00 Shot Put - High School - Boys - Prelims Finals 11.00 Javelin Throw- Univ. Col., Jr. Col., H.S. Women- Prelims Finals 10.00 Triple Jump, Univ., Col., Jr., Col. Men Trials 10. 10 Discus Throw—Univ., Col., Jr. Col., H.S. Women—Prelims Finals A.M. Track Events 8.100 100 Yd Dash - High School - Boys - Prelims 8.150 100 Meter Dash - Univ., Col., Jol. C, H.3 8:30 100 Meter Dash - Univ, Col., Jr. Col., Men- Prelims Priims 9 900 110 Meter Hurdles. Univ. Col. Jr. Col. Merb. 9.00 110 Meter Hurdles - Univ., Col., Jr. Col., Men- Prelims 9.20 120 Yd High Hurles High School Boys Prelims 9. 35 100 Meter Hurules - Univ., Col., Jr. Col., H.S. Women - Prelies 9.50 Sprint Medley Relay - University Men- Prelims 10.05 Spirit Medley Relay, College - Men, Prelims 10.40 Yd. Relay - Jr College - Men, Prelims 10.40 Yd. Relay - Univ. Col. Jr Col. - Women 11. 38 1500 Meter - Run- Univ, Col., Jr. Col., H.S.- Women Finals Women Finals 11.48 860 Yd. Relay - University - Men - Prelims P.M. Field Events 10 45 440 Yd Relay - University - Men - Prelims 10 45 440 Yd Relay - College - Men - Prelims 12:00 Distance Medley Relay - High School - Boys 12:00 Distance Medley Relay - High School - Boys 11.10 Cilf Cushman, 400 M int Hordes, Univ. Col., Jr. Col., Men-Prems 11.10 Cilf Cushman, 400 M int Hordes, Univ. Col., Jr. Col., H.S. P.M. Field Events 1:00 Discus-High School—Boys—Prelims Finals 1. 00 Long Jump High School Boys Prelims Men- Semi-finals 1:32 100 Masters Hurleyz Univ. Col. Jr. Col. H.S. 1 Bill Hudson High School, Maysville, Pennsylvania 2 Bidhil Sherif Univ. Univ., Col. Jr. College 3 Pole Vault Univ., Col. Jr. Colonium Finish 4 Carrie V. High School Univ., Col. Jr. Colonium Finish P.M. Track Events 1:15 120 Yd. High Hurdles, High School - Boys 3.30 Triple Jump Univ., Col., Jr. Col.-Men. Finals High School HIGH SCHOOL BOYS SENIORMEN 124 I-120 Miler High Hurdles - Univ. Col. Jr. Col. (3) 1:47 100 YO. Dath. High School, Boys Seminare 1:57 Meyer Dath. High School, Coll. C, Col. M 1:67 Meyer Dath. High School, Coll. C, Col. M 3.31 330 Yd. Int. Hurdles--High School--Boys **Int. Hurdles--Finals** Five Minute Shots 2.12 Four Mile Relay, Unify, Col. Jr. Col. Mem. 3:51 4A4 Yd. Relay - Junior College-Men Finals 4:40 A4D Yd. Relay - College-Men Finals 4:45 A4E Yd. Relay - College-Men Finals 2 35 Sprint Mobility Relay Jr. Co. Man. Final 2 36 Sprint Mobility Relay University-Men. 2 37 Sprint Mobility Relay University-Men. Finals 2. 15 Sprint Medley Relay College Men 2. 01 Sprint Medley Relay High School Boys International - Finals 3:41 440 Yd. Relay - Univ. Col., Jr. Col. - Women 1. Jim, Ryan, Mile Run, High School-Boy's 2. 3.11 Muniz, Ryun, Mike Run, High School-Boy's Men's Invit Section 1 - Finals 417 10 17 Meyer Dash, Univ. Col. Jr. Col. H.S. Miller, St. Louis 17. 100 Meter Dash Univ. Col. Jr. Cor. Mts. Women-Femals 18. 200 Meter Dash University Men-Femals Finals 3-21) Cliff Cushman 400 M. int. Hurdles. Univ. Col. Prest & Finals 1. Oral Debate Univ. Col. Jr. Col.-Men 2. Oral Debate Univ. Col. Jr. Col.-Men 4.31 Mile Relay - High School, Boys, Preminum 4.32 Mile Relay - Union, Col., Jr. Col., Hs. 4.33 Mile Relay - Union, Col., Jr. Col., Hs. S-01. Chuck Cramer Mile Relay - University - Men's Prole 8:00 440 Yd Relay High School Girls Prelims 8:20 440 Yd Relay High School Girls Prelims 9 30 High Jump-Univ. Col. Jr. Col. H.S. Women-Prelim Finals A.M. Track Events 9.00 Sput Nut- Univ. Col., Jr. Col, H.S - Women Prelim Finals Preliminals Finals 10:00 Loud Jump- Univ. Col. Jr. Col.- Men. Trials | Event | Rows | | :--- | :--- | | 8.00 Triple Jump - High School Boys - Prelims | | Finals | | 8:40 5000 Meter Run-Open-Men-Section I- Finals Meter Run-Open-Men-Section I- Finals 10. Distance Medley Relay - Junior College 11. High School Basketball 12. Finals / 10 Distance Medley Relay - Junior College- Men- Finals 9.255 300 Meter Steeplechase - Open - Men's Section - Finals 9 37 Wes Sameley 150 M. Run- Uni., Col. Jr., Col. Uni. Intr. Section II (All but top 10) - Finals 9 45 Two Mile Run - High School - Boys-Finals 9 46 Two Mile Run - High School - Boys-Finals 9 48 Mile Run - High School 10.20 One Mile Relay - Jr. College - Men-Premi- 10.26 5000 Meter Run-Open-Men's Section II- 10.32 5000 Meter Run-Open-Men's Section III- 11 06 – Rd– Relay-High School, Boys - Infants 11 06 – Rd– Relay-Junior College, Men-Finals 11 06 – Rd– Relay-Junior College, Men-Finals P.M. Field Events | | | | :--- | :--- | | 1. Long Vault- Open-Men Invitational - Final | | | 2. Long Jump-Union, Col. Jr. Col.-Men | | 1.30 Carl V. Rice High Jump- Univ., Col., Jr. Col. Men P.M. Track Events P.4.8 Track Elevation 1.35.0 40 Yd RYL-Junior High-Grey-Finals 1.35.2 40 Yd RYL-Junior High-Grey-Finals 1.35.2 40 Yd RYL-International-Men-Finals 1.35.3 MORE FUNCTIONALS 1 100 OPENING CEREMONIES 1 250 Yd. High Hurdles - High School - Boys FRIES 11:45 AM YA HIGH HURRLES HIGH SCHOOL MAY FINALS 12:00 PM YA HIGH HURRLES HIGH SCHOOL CAL RIVER 1. 31 JV High Hurdles - Univ.-Col. Jr. Col. 2. 190 VP Dash - High School - Bowl - Finals 3. 190 VP Dash - High School - Bowl - Finals 1.39 100 Yd. Dust-High School-Boys-Finals. 1.40 100 Matter Dust-Door Institutional-Women Finals 100 Meter Dash—Univ. Col. Jr. Col.-Men- Finals 100 Meter Dash—Univ. Col. Jr. Col.-Men- 2.00 Distance Medley Relay - College - Men - Finite 1.24 Distance Medley Relay - University - Men - Finite 2:32 Two Mile Runie University - Men- Finals 2:32 Meret Dash - Open Invitational - Men- Finals 2:50 440 Yd. Riley-High School Girls-Finals 2:59 440 Yd. Riley-High School Girls-Finals 3:09 Glenn Cunningham Mill. Open Invitational Men-Finals Men - Finals 116 - 440. Yd; Relay - Grade School - Boys and Girls 3/24 Finals 894 Yd Rd - Ren Masters Men - Finals 860 Yd Rd - Religious Men - Finals 3.18 400 Meter Dash Open Invitational Men- finals 3.50 3000 Meter Steeplechase - Open - Men's Section II - Finals Finals 4:08 800 Meter Run-Open Invitational Women 4:16 One Mile Relay - High School - Boys-Finite 4:26 One Mile Relay - Junior College - Girls 4:27 One Mile Relay - Univ. Col. jr. Col. H.S. Hibernia - Finite 4.0 One Mile Relay- College Men- Finals 4.1 Crasher Tamer One Mile Relay- University Men- Finals 2 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Cuba talks may resume WASHINGTON—The Carter administration is considering the assignment of American diplomatic in Cuba for the first time since the 1961 break in relations with China. At the same time, sources said that U.S.-Cuban maritime talks would be resurrected shortly in Havana with Tercera Todman, the assistant secretary of state on Cuban affairs. Todman would be the highest-ranked American diplomat to go to Cuba since the United States broke with the Castro regime. These developments suggest acceleration toward the restoration of relations with Cubs after a break of more than 16 years. However, one official here said, "We need to put our minds on it." Namibia to get $100 million WASHINGTON—the Carter administration has decided to set up a $10 million contingency fund to ease a transition to an independent Namibia once the匪伯瑜政府支持。 John Gilligan, the new administrator of the Agency for International Development, will announce the action in testimony to Congress today, the sources said. The fund is designed to assist white landowners who sell to blacks as well as give economic support to a black-run Namibian government once it is formed. March inflation rate low WASHINGTON—Consumer prices rose at a slower pace in March during the first two months of the year, easing concern about accelerating inflation, the The department said that consumer prices rose six-tenths of 1 per cent last month, down from increases of 1 per cent in February and eight-tenths of 1 per cent. Big price increases were recorded for coffee-up 7 per cent in March and for frozen juice-up 11.6 per cent. The three-month increase in the over-all index pushed inflation up at a 10 per cent annual rate, the sharpest quarterly rise in two years. But Carter administration economists said the first quarter increase was expected due to the impact of the severe winter weather on food and fuel prices. White House official says gas tax poses a challenge for Americans WASHINGTON (AP) - Administration officials began the process of convincing the public and a hostile Congress yesterday to support a program that would enough energy program was good for them. White House press secretary Jody Powell said Carter recognized that his proposed standby gasoline tax alone wouldn't provide energy constraints. To cut consumption would require a tax that would be too high economically or behaviorally. The purpose of the tax, which would rise by yearly increments of five cents a gallon if gasoline consumption exceeds specified targets to a maximum of 50 cents a gallon, is to pose a challenge. he said. It's designed to "enforce our commitment to our goals with a small penalty and to, in a sense, pose a challenge to ourselves as a society to meet those goals." Powell said. The administration, he said, thought that the American people would respond to the goals and therefore wouldn't impose on themselves this small penalty. "It would certainly be our hope that it would not be impolled." Powell said. Zairian troops begin offensive From Our Wire Services KINSHASA, Zaire—A general offensive by Zairian and Moroccan troops that reportedly began three days ago was announced yesterday by a government Quoting the commander of the forces in the operational area, the spokesman here declared the troops were moving steadily toward the insurgent-held city of Mushatsha and toward Kappan, some 300 miles from the frontline. The detachment held by the Kalantan-led forces In their reported sweep towards Mussolini, which couldn't be confirmed, they were also accused of being "suspects." Moroccan troops were said to have seized 6,000 boxes of Soviet-mad arms left behind "All along the railroad line and along the roads," a military communique said, "the fleeing invaders are shedding their uniforms and forcing the local citizens to give them their clothes as they seek an escape route." All the arms found reportedly are of Soviet manufacture. They include 50-caliber machine guns, rockets, flamethrowers, explosives and grenades which, according to the communique, "form the stockpile of an entire brigade." ONE PRICE For Any Size Thin Crust Pizza America's Favorite Pizza . . . thin crust... flavor-baked to perfection Small Medium Large Giant $129 $174 $278 $388 UNION BEEF HOT JALAPENO SAUSAGE GREEN OLIVE DOUBLE CHEESE BLACK OLIVE CANADIAN BACON GREEN PEPPER PEPPERONI & GREEN PEPPER ANCHOVY PEPPERONI & MUSHROOM PEPPERONI BEEF & CHOPPED ONIONS MUSHROOM SAUSAGE & MUSHROOM PROGRAM: Chancellor Archie Dykes—Speaker Band awards Showing of Missouri Game Film Other Entertainment Positions open: Well, we're looking for special people to work 1977-1978 Special Events Committee. So You Think You're Special? Sign up for interviews in SUA office. Deadline 4/27 Publicity Security SUA Hospitality Secretary KU BAND MEMBERS 1976-77 Annual Spring Formal Banquet Sunday, May 1, 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom Prepaid to those paying fall band fee. 15.00 all others, including guests, family and friends. Sign up for all reservations in Band Office, Room 214, Murphy no later than Friday, April 22. Ushers EACH ADDED INGREDIENT .30 .40 .50 .60 Pizza inn 9th & Iowa Next to the Theatres 841-2629 Plant Lovers, You Just Don't Know What You're Missing!! ANYTHING GROWS H new plant store, offering so much more! *Plant Rental *Plant Maintenance *Decorating Services *Friendly Free Advice Just ask for Judy Green or Anna Hines STORE HOURS: *12 to 5:30 on Monday *£9.30 to 5:30 on Tuesday through Friday Open until 8:30 p.m. on Thursday WUXMAN WAXMAN 1407 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 Candles 6 East 9th • 843-1166 Half block east of Mass. St. WAXMAN CANDLES 7th Annual Spring Sale Entire stock included. Now through Saturday, April 23. Hours: 10-5 20-75% off Vivitar COOVEL Put your expensive eye behind our inexpensive System 35...and WOW. Just about any of the great photographs you see could have been taken with Vivitar System 35 Plus one good eye Vivitar System 35 is a most inexpensive way to get serious about photography The basic limitation is your own creativity and ski Vivitar 220/SL 35mm camera Center-weighted match needle metering system/Speeds from 1/1000 to 1 second plus "B" for time exposure/Electronic flash sync at 1/125th second/Universal thread mount 50mm 11.8 lens/Built-in hot shoe/Self timer/Film-in-chamber indicator/ASA Range 25-1600 Vivitar Automatic Electronic Flash Up to 200 flashes from one single MP3 player shows you see item 35. I am most photography activity and skill r-weighted eds from expo. Yusar 35mm Yusar © Pender & Best, Inc., 1977 Vivitar System 35 9 volt alkaline battery Vivitar Automatic 135mm f2.8 lens Super focal length for portraits / About 2/6 times longer than normal image Vivitar X2 Tile Converter Doubles the effective focal length of your lenses/Covers the 50mm lens to 100mm/ the 135mm lens to 270mm Vivitar Enduro Case Carries the entire system comfortably and securely while hiking, cycling, skiing, etc. Find the nearest Vivitar dealer and ask for a demonstration. Marketed in the U.S.A. by Ponder & Beat! Corporate Office, 1630 Bland Street, Santa Monica, CA 90210. (855) 748-9100. www.ponderbeat.com University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22,1977 3 S nl Volunteers to be honored "Volunteering is doing something" is more than a slogan to about 200 KU students involved with the Volunteer Clearinghouse program. next week the Volunteer Clearinghouse, which refers students to 46 community agencies, will honor students as part of National Volunteer Week. "The purpose of National Volunteer Week and our Volunteer Recognition Day here at KU is to thank all of our volunteers for their service," said Clearinghouse coordinator, said Tuesday. THE MAIN activity planned by the citingheen will be a volunteer workshop. the Toppea Voluntary Action Center. Preiser also will speak on "Everything you need to know about volunteerism but didn't know who to ask" from 9 a.m. to noon, on Monday in the Lawrence of the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 1th St. The staff at the Volunteer Clearinghouse is planning a special Volunteer Recognition Day for next week and plans to run ads in next week's Kansans to thank volunteers. Today is the last day to preregister for $3 for the workshop. Registration at the door will be on Friday, April 10. KU students volunteer their services to the choreshouse for a variety of reasons. Most student volunteers go into the Big Last year, the Volunteer Clearhinge program recruited and placed 60 students in the Big Brother program and 50 in the Big Sister program. Brother-Big Sister program in Lawrence, Tereshko said. The programs match volunteers one-fone with an underprivileged elementary student. The Office of Affirmative Action said it took on its action and didn't comment on its investment. KUAC hostess job now open to males KUAC revised the ad to read "hosts and hostesses" in Tuesday's Kansas. The original deadline last Friday was extended to yesterday to give men the opportunity to apply, but none did. More than 60 women have applied for the 12 positions. McElihenie said yesterday that the revised ad and policy complied with Title Ram Rosel, Ozark, Mo., junior, and roommate, Lisa Bennett, Lawrence junior, both participated this semester in the Big Sister program through the clearinghouse. Jerry Waugh, recruiting coordinator for the football game, said KUAC changed the ad to comply with Title IX but it really wasn't interested in male applicants. Waugh said he has had hostesses recruit. Nonetheless, Waugh said, applications from men would be considered. By JOAN McMULLEN Staff Reporter The job calls for women, Waugh said, best equipped to do a better job than you might in our country. WAUGH SAID football prospects saw many facets of the University and that the hostesses showed them KU's social life. The prospects also meet with alumni, faculty, Lawrence merchants and members of the athletic program. "I really wanted to do something constructive with my time, and helping underprivileged children was a good way to do this," Rosell said. Waugh said he thought it was "wholesome" for recruits to visit with women, even though recruits usually were by both a hostess and a football player. Staff Reporter "The whole thing has been blown way out of proportion." Waugh said, responding to a recent letter to the editor in Wednesday's Kansan, charging that the ad had sexual KUAC advertised in the University Day Kansan last Wednesday and Thursday that applications were being accepted for Sunflower hostesses, Fred McElhene, and Jennifer Cogden, a committee on single sex organizations, said yesterday that he phoned KUAC and told them the ad was in violation of Title 14. Cogden implied positions for women only. The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) will now accept applications from males as well as females for its Sunflower hostess program. KUAC, which coordinates the Sunflower hostesses, has met with criticism recently because it allegedly discriminates against males when recruiting for the Sunflower jobs. The KUAC traditionally has taken applications from women only, but amended the policy Tuesday to include men. The Sunflower hostesses assist the athletic department in the recruitment of TITLE IX of the University regulations says that campus organizations may not offer membership to students. connotations and insulted students and recruits. The letter also expressed the hope that recruits wouldn't need the “enticement of KU bunnies.” Waugh said that the letter was unraffied to theresses and that he bespoke its implication. HANK HETTWER, assistant for the athletic program, said 12 girls were chosen each year to be hostesses. Some of the criteria used in selecting the girls are knowledge of the University and the athletic program, background, personality, availability of time, grade point average and ability to communicate. "If they said that about my daughter I'd be mad," he said. Hettet said the Sunflower hostesses were a voluntary group that served as receptionists for some KUAC events and as escorts for some football and basketball games. The girls are chosen by a selection committee comprising Hettwer, athletic department secretaries and other athletic coaches, changing committee members annually. SOME STUDENTS contact the clearinghouse to complete course requirements calling for service to the community or the University. Debbie Lamfers, Salina sophomore, volunteered at the Hilltop Child Development Center to complete part of the requirements for a Social Welfare class. "We were required to do some type of volunteer work and I chose Hillott to get experience working with children," she said. The Volunteer Clearinghouse staff reports that most of the volunteers are self-motivated to offer their services and have been able to keep up to experience new avenues of life. Organized living groups and University clubs also call the clearinghouse to volunteer their services to the community and the University. THESE GROUPS often help with planned events and help to help on special projects. Tshesako is a Under the 'Adopt-A-Grandparent' program, Bodron visited an elderly woman an average of two to three times a week at Wakarua Manor. 1800 W. 27th St. Betty Boodro, Leawood freshman, volunteered for the clearinghouse's "Adopt-a-Grandparent" program because she was working with handicapped elderly persons. The Volunteer Clearinghouse has two offices, one in 114B of the Kansas Union and the other in the Douglas County Court House. SUA Films Chairperson Interviews Interviews for the 1977-78 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Wednesday, April 27. Please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time if you are interested in film programming. Positions Available: Summer Films Chairperson Popular Films Chairperson Classical Films Chairperson Independent/Experimental Films Chairperson Midnight Movies/Special Films Chairperson Public Relations Committee Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror Films Chairperson Chairperson THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS present Cosi Fan Tutte A Comic Opera in Two Acts by W. A. Mozart April 22,23,29,30 8:00 p.m. University Theatre—Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 K. U. Students admitted without charge with current Certificate of Registration This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. The Entertainment Center of Lawrence the Lawrence OperaHouse A DAAGWUD'S 644 Km The Downtown Sandwich Shop Welcome By Tommy Boy Striped Cotton Sheath Vented Skirt Sizes I S M L $13 By Moody A Gobia Cotton Twill Shorts Sizes 9 to 135 $22 Modeled by Marty Green Alums! By Young Ed. wardian Cotton Sun Dress Black with Rose on beige print Sizes 9 to 135 $24 Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT BOO 835 MASS. * 843 4833 LAWRENCE KANS. 68044 Welcome By Tom Boy Striped Cotton Sheath? Vented Skirt Sizes 15 M L $13 4 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Dally Kansan Focus on Education The State vs. the Schools Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism State vs. schools? Wilt Chamberlin used to brag that the highway between Lawrence and Topeka was the "road that Chamberlin built," explaining that the highway was laid to accommodate the throngs of people who flocked to the University to play basketball at the University of Kansas. The road might have been built for basketball, but KU administrators have since been glad it is there for another team in state capital, whence all good things flow. For state schools, all roads do indeed lead to Topeka. And all money comes from Topeka. It's an interesting situation, one that makes state legislators, the Board of Regents and officials of seven Board of Regents schools “partners in higher education," as college administrators like to put it. But if the legislature and the state schools are partners in education, they're just as surely foes in some educational problems. The legislature and the state schools—primary, secondary and post-secondary buildings, new buildings, out buildings, educational programs, student newspaper articles and a host of other things. The state and its schools agree on many things, of course. But they disagree often enough to make one wonder whether the common match-up in Topeka is the state versus the schools—a possibility that the Kansan explores on this page. The efforts of a single committee at the University of Kansan have made the state more aware of the problems that handicapped persons face here. Accessibility handicapped One benefit of this awareness, produced by the Committee for the Architecturally Handicapped, has been increased state funding for the improvement of campus accessibility for the handicapped. Unfortunately, it hasn't always been that way. EMPORIA KANASS STATE University began modifications on its campus to provide more accessibility in the early 1950s, under the urging of the Kansas Board of Regents. For over 20 years, people were encouraged to attend school rather than any of the six other state institutions—because of this accessibility. How has the CAH shifted state attitudes? It has also been contended that in the past, state officials have discouraged handcuffed persons from getting a college education in favor of technical training. This has time-consuming. Thanks to the committee on the handcuffed, such state attitudes have improved considerably over the last six years. As a result, more students are held by the state legislature, and the KU campus is slowly becoming more accessible. THE KEY to the committee's success, according to chairman Roger Williams, is "an outgrowth of awareness of the University administration." When the CAH gets together for a work session, it looks at obstacles on campus and then prepares a list for University 14 administrators. The administration then uses its influence to get money for improvements from the state legislature Jay Bemis Editorial Writer Since the inception of CAH in 1973, University administrators have succeeded in granting $9,000 for fiscal year 1975 and $14,000 for fiscal year 1977. Before CAH existed, about $7,000 had been used for minor repairs such as curb cuts. So the state has appropriated about $30,000 toward making KU a more accessible campus for the handicapped; and appropriation that looks good on paper and that represents an increasing state interest. But not all has been rosy for the handicapped in receiving state funds. A REQUEST of $14,000 for fiscal year 1976 was scrapped from that budget because of a recommendation by the Board of Regents and the authorization by James Bibb, state director manager. This request would have included modifications in Marvin Hall, which Williams calls a "disaster area." The CAH mainly looks at older buildings on campus for suggested improvements. Buildings that have been constructed within the last seven years are required under federal law to include services for the handicapped; improvements should be automatically included. Several older buildings on campus—such as Marvin, Twente and Lindley Halls—are abundant in accessibility problems. Students on them because the halls should be remodeled to meet the safety and space problems of those who aren't handicapped. In those instances, the CAH University take the responsibility. But the University has had problems of its own in trying to get remodeling done at Marvin Hall alone. For several years, the university offered remodeling in its budget requests, but the state legislature has turned them down each year. THIS HAS angered Williams, who says that failure to remodel deprives students who want to become engineers, geologists, architects or geographers; the library for each of these schools is mentored in Marvin Haskell. Handicapped students who don't know fields are, in effect, being told to go into another field or to another school. It should be noted that the majority of the work that has been done at KU to improve accessibility is through a $300,000 grant that CAH received from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Of this amount, $240,000 comes directly from the federal government, and the University matches $60,000 under appropriations for appropriate appropriations during CAH's existence represent 10 per cent of this grant. Thanks to Williams and the CAH, KU is offering its traditional campus and programs to the handicapped, with a little more assurance that these people can access the building soon how soon the campus can become totally accessible, however, depends on whether the state legislature will continue to deprive the University of capital impetuosity. The remodeling of older buildings such as Marvin, Twente and Lindley Halls. JUST Δ LITTLE OFF THE TOP, PLEASE. WESTPHAL JUST Δ LITTLE OFF THE TOP, PLEASE. SEE YA ΔBOUT THE SAME TIME NEXT YEAR. WESTPHAL SEE YA ABOUT THE SAME TIME NEXT YEAR. Budget affairs complex STATE BUDGET DROCEEDINGS The quarrels of lovers are the renewal of love. Those two august authors weren't talking about the race. They talked about the Kansas Legislature and the University of Kansas, but they were telling the public. Shakespeare, "As You Like It" Terence, "Andric!" We that are true lovers run into strange capers. The legislature and the University like each other. They really do. And both are run by able men. They really BEC. Don't judge either by its actions between January and April, however. THESE ARE the months that the legislature spends pounding out the coming fiscal year's budget. At the end of the extension, the months that KU JUDGE WOODWARD ordered the legislature to implement a school finance plan that would minimize the differences in per pupil expenditures in one district compared with another and with both and against students who lived economically deprived areas of Kansas. The Legislature responded in the 1973 session after a tedious School consolidation benefits all Marijana, liquor-by-the-drink, bingo and basketball seem to be what stimulate people's interest most in the Kansas Legislature. What interests them least is the state's role in the financing of elementary and secondary education. they're right. Schools in the state are expected to overstate their needs just as surely as Blbb is expected to cut more from their budgets than is necessary, some beneficial discussions between Lawrence and Topека during this process; more The result of the implementation of this formula was a more than 50 per cent decrease in the number of schools, up from $119 million in and frequently explosive process with an "equalization formula" designed to satisfy the conditions for equality in school finance. educational opportunities must be found. The huge disparities, usually the result of differences in the courts district to district, were a violation of the equal protection clauses of both the Kansas and constitutionals, the court ruled. From its start, the budget process is actually a bit confusing. For the uninitiated, the failure goes something like this: Unfortunately, there are painfully few ways this can be done. None are easy to do, none are popular. The consensus among the state's education leaders, including Marion McGheyhe, executive director of the administrators hop back and forth between Lawrence and Toneka, pleading for funds. The financing of public schools is no dull issue. Although it doesn't command as much attention, legislators would be the first to say that school finance and the state's role in elementary and secondary education can be one of the most controversial and divisive issues. About this time every year, THE IMPORTANCE of the state in school finance increased substantially in 1972 (for example, during public schools was declared unconstitutional because of significant differences in per pupil expenditure among school districts. administrators are slaving away on the budget to be used two years down the road. Not next year's budget, mind you; that is already hashed over in Topeka. Jerry Seib Editorial Writer "The present funding scheme invidiously discriminates against students who live in school districts having low property valuations," wrote District Court Judge Phillip Woodward in his judgment in Caldwell vs. Kansas. THE STATE'S SPENDING limit has been reached, and other ways of maintaining high quality, equalized and equitable Until now, the state has been able to keep up with the increasing school finance burden. More than $298 million in state aid will be distributed this school year, and the legislature is expected to provide $320 million of the money simply doesn't have the money to keep up with the increasing costs. Brent Anderson Editorial Writer The point is that the budgetary procedure makes strange bed partners of the state's college and state's colleges and universities. IN EACH YEAR since the 1973 school finance law was passed, five things directly related to education have happened: the 1972-73 school year to $184 million in 1973-74. likely, there is a lot of hot air blown about. Local school districts have shown a vehement unwillingness to close schools or to abandon them. Local control of schools is considered a fundamental right to many parents in Kansas, and the thought of the state telling their schools is revolting to them. - The Kansas Legislature has amended or considered an amendment to the equalization formula. But, by all indications, some of them will be eliminated in the next few years when Kansas becomes a zero-based budgeting system. The legislature, comprising the people's, elected representatives, is dedicated to providing Kansas with top-level leadership. Yet, because of the politics that permeate the budgetary procedure, legislators often fight tooth and nail among themselves and with colleges they labor over budget requests. MENTION consolidation and reorganization of schools to a politician and he will run and hide. Support such legislation; hide; especially if schools in a legislator's district are involved. State schools are now on an incremental budgetary system. In short, this means that programs are continued from year to year without points out a valid reason to discontinue them or to decrease funds devoted to them. Old items in school budgets carry over, unquestioned, from year to year when new items are discussed, - Enrollment at Kansas public elementary and secondary schools has decreased. - The state's contribution to elementary and secondary schools has increased. Published at the University of Kansas daily August 21, 2016. Subscriptions to this issue, June and July and April except Saturday, Sunday and Halloween, 6:00 p.m. through September 30, 6:00 p.m., Subscriptions by mail are $ a newsletter or $15 a year outside the country. Student subscriptions are a year outside the country. Student subscriptions are a year outside the country. - The number of certified public school employees has increased. Kansas Association of School Boards, and Dale Dennis, assistant commissioner of the financial division of the State Board, for consolidation and reorganization of schools and school districts is the only available option available to the state. HUNDREDS OF EXAMPLES of waste, inefficiency and outright stupidity in the structure of our state. Rural Appalachian County, which has a population of 7,000, has five public high schools. - Federal or state legislation mandating education programs for public schools has been passed. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Business Manager Janice Clements But if the quality of elementary and secondary education in this state is to be maintained, consolidation and reorganization programs must be implemented. The legislature has the power to implement these programs and, sooner or later, it must. The longer legislators ignore this inevitability, the greater the impact on public schools will be. By refusing to get involved in what is, admittedly, a difficult situation, the legislature will be hurting the ones whom they believe are about the most—the students. Several school districts in Kansas operate no schools at all. Others have fewer than 100 students in their entire programs from kindergarten to 12th grade. This isn't to say that small schools don't provide a good educational opportunity. It can be argued that small schools provide a better opportunity than large ones. But relatively minor changes in some school districts and sensible consolidation of others could save schools money and adversely affecting the quality of education the districts provide. Under zero-based budgeting, each school program would have to justify its existence each year. Most programs at universities are necessary and universities are necessary. They won't be affected. Let us hope the governor, the legislature and the people of Kansas will have the courage to deal with this difficult and complex issue. The sooner they do, the better it will be for all. REORGANIZATION AND consolidation plans, if designed by sensitive and rational women and men whose ultimate concern is the students, can be implemented fairly and with a minimum of them from such plans. But the winners would be the state's 435,000 elementary and secondary students. THERE IS an urge to fight salary increases for faculty members, because the folks back home like to hear their legislator say that the state is spending too much on those students who shuck college professors that make too much money already. JAMES BIBS has an odd sort of job. Briefly, he takes every necessary measure to reduce it by about a quarter; then begins looking for areas to cut further. He does it every time he goes to the one and no one is ever very surprised. Finally, the budget gets to the legislature. Keep in mind that the budget has already been handled by KU, the Board of Regents, James Bibb and the governor before the legislature passes a bill that叫 that the window, because the game is just beginning. From Bibb, the budget goes back to the governor. Because the governor has a budget, the governor can easily restore large chunks of money, making himself look very good in the classroom of students, parents education. There is a resistance to change, because change usually favors the fight among legislators from various sections of the state. Each legislator wants a bigger slice of the pie for the school in charge. But some of the fat will be trimmed away. Just as important, legislators will be more likely to add a dollar allocated to KU and other state schools. Legislators confident that last year's money not be so reluctant to approve bills for new programs next year. The budget has to weave its way through the Ways and Means Committee of each house, past the floor of each house and - almost invisibly - past the floor of each house and past the house floors again. THOSE UNFILLAMIL for state budgetary procedures might think that a lot of this is superfluous, and to an extent Administrators from all the state school sidle up to legislators and contaminate the supposedly pure academic tradition of political trade-offs. And there always is the fundamental question of academic freedom. How free is a professor who is teaching in a classroom owned basically conservative state? THEY ARE thorny questions, and every state and every state university face them. Some of the problems are unavoidable. Those of us less involved in the budget procedure can be glad as well. Because, after all, the legislature and KU love each other. And anything that might reduce the number of lovers' spats is well worth the effort. Gov. Robert Bennett and state officials have pushed for several years to begin zero-based budgeting, and they are justifiably happy to see it beginning in state schools. The University of Kansas stands to benefit from this system directly. KU has more programs than its sister schools. These programs are more expensive for each pupil than undergraduate programs. If programs are funded by cost, the university will have more programs stand to receive a more equitable slice of the pie. Editor Jim Bates ALSO, THE practice of funding programs strictly according to the number of students participating in them will be eliminated soon. Programs will be judged according to their value and financed according to their cost. Unionization support lacking at KU Unionize; it’s noun“-union”-stirs up dramatic visions of the end result. Digitified professors, irate over faculty tenure terms and the pressures they face, their newly raised power, would call a strike. So much for tantasy. Now let's be realistic: A recent interview with Professor William Scott, vice president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AUP), said that some of those omnipresent rumors—brought out some problems involved with faculty unionization in Kansas. A recurring rumor at the University of Kansas is that the faculty members are trying to unionize. A UNION STRIKE: faculty members boycot- ted by the National Strong Hall, taking over Chapelcrest, Dyke Street. SECOND, SCOTT said that the state of Kansas isn't exactly conducive to unionization, especially in the area of higher education. Aside from the factor of Kansas' right to work law, it is easy for Shades of the University of Mexico, mirrors of French universities, total anarkhy. . . First, in view of the common faculty sentiment regarding unionization, it is doubtful that the AAUP could muster enough support for the move. Of support is needed for any organized group. French universities, total anarchy . . . So much for fantasy. Now let's be realistic Scott said that the AAPU had no intention of parsing unionization at this time. He cited two cases, one Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer nonunion organizations to compete with union organizations in bargaining procedures. Moreover, Scott said, "We have to realize our limits." Faculty strikes don't wield the power that other kinds of strikes have. There is no major economic incentive to end the strike, as would happen in a construction union strike. No Irate mothers would be demanding that the professors return to their schools, which happened in the Kansas City teachers' strike. When university faculties strike, fewer people complain. The Board of Regents might develop ulcers, but for most persons involved, it is only an inconvenience. Students, who would be most directly affected by the strike, simply don't have the economic power to force a settlement. BUT PROFESSOR Scott's reasoning aside, the effects of faculty immersion still are debatable. directs of faculty unionization will be debatable. Kansas State University at Pittsburgh has腋w political strength to become the bargaining agent, the AUAP lost out to the Kansas Higher Education Association (KHEA). Collective bargaining is in now in effect, but in most areas KHEA has reached an end. Much of KHEA's ineffectiveness can be attributed to a current Kansas law—the Public Employees Relations Act. More commonly known as the "meet and confer" law, it provides for the means to meet and confer with an imperative or bargaining agent to "meet and confer" with the administration to negotiate contracts. The law has several inherent problems. SECOND, the law is vague. Although it says that SECOND can "meet and confer", it "does not specify" that. First, the administration it refers to is the personnel labor relations division of the state Department of Administration. One man, Darrell Hoffman, is in charge of negotiating differences with all public employees, regardless of their purpose or problem. U what can be negotiated. Nor does it require that the administration arrear with any negotiations. Recent Examination impact school ministration test in gr If a law that establishes bargaining methods doesn't bind the outcome of arbitration in any way, what good are negotiations? Similarly, if a law restricts the use then so is unionization for negotiating purposes. The Gl include now has sections. The v relations titative s charts. MOREOVER, for negotiations regarding such areas as faculty salary and tenure—areas decided by the Kansas Board of Regents, not by the state Department of Administration—it is ridiculous that faculty members can't appeal directly to the investments with the power to meet its demands. Most terviewe one facto departm Mark assistant the test analytic Business Manager Henry exam, s absolute departm selves tl PENN and pro portant graduate A few years ago, KU attempted to change the avenue of negotiation so it would be directly to the Regents themselves. Attempts failed; faculty and administrators in the University must still go "meet and confer" with an agency later vested in the university without any assurance of a reasonable outcome. Kenne admissi said the because LENZ/ for any might r section, school experi eni "With well flur low GI engineer Because GRE sc Lenzen s it is imp correlati scores gradu With that in mind, why would KU faculty members want to unionize? The Sunday next Su Engin tion and Comp merrym 1977, aacknow Univers Other Greek a appreciating The t Aorte- An in There since 19 Greek V G "IT'S Larson Finals Olympic long cel Instea which through and cel Otto, Gr "If you will be a cause," Greek raise fr mentally; Greek Greek eventsi MON TUESWED THUR FRI SATSUN J Friday, April 22, 1977 5 Staff Reporter Use of graduate exam questioned By JOAN McMULLEN Recent changes in the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) may not have much impact on students applying to graduate school here because many KU administrators said they didn't emphasize the test in graduate school admission policies. The GRE will be changed this October to include an analytical section. The exam now has only verbal and quantitative sections. The verbal section deals with word relations and comprehension. The quantitative section deals with mathematics and charts. Most of the admissions directors interviewed recently said the tests were just one factor of many, and not all schools and departments required the test. Mark Pennington, administrative assistant in the School of Business, said that the test would be more desirable with the analytical section, but that the School of Business preferred the General Management Aptitude Test. PENNINGTON ALSO said that grades and professional experience were important when considering applicants for graduate school. Henry Wingington, administrator of the exam, said, "It's really unsettled as to the absolute value of the GRE, and most students have done so for themselves the validity of the test." Kerneth Lenzen, director of graduate admissions in the School of Engineering, said the school didn't require the GRE because "it doesn't tell us a thing." "With a high GRE, students could just as well flunk out," he said, "and if they get a low GRE, they could get an A in engineering." Because of the low correlation between GRE scores and success in engineering, Lenzen said, be won't consider the test until it is improved. The GRE Board publishes lists of the relationships of test scores to academic performances in graduate school. LENZEN SAID THAT HE WOULD watch for any changes in correlation levels that might result from the added analytical section, but that for now, the engineering school emphasized grades, professional experience and recommendations. Engineering requires a skill in assumption and guesswork that can't be measured Jung Kong Lee, director of graduate admissions for the chemistry department, said the GRE measured "whether a student has actually retained knowledge of his undergraduate training." He said the GRE became important to him when he was in college. "When he applied to an applicant's school or when he didn't know the source of a letter of recommendation. by the GRE, he said, and innovativeness is hard to measure. "I would think they are more reliable than the grade because of grade inflation," The chemistry department had no correlation between the GRE scores and academic performance because they had used the test for only three years. WILEY MITCHELL, the director of graduate admissions for the School of Business, said that the correlation statistics weren't completely reliable because not all of the students who took the test were accepted into graduate school, but that a student who had a high score had a high probability of successfully completing the graduation program. Mitchell said the GRE was one piece of information among many criteria. Roy Laird, director of graduate admissions for the department of political science, said the GRE was a factor, "but certainly not a decisive one." "When you get to the marginal cases, age and experience can make a difference," he George Woodyard, director of graduate admissions for the department of Spanish and Portuguese, said the GRE wasn't required for his department because recommendations and transcripts weighed more heavily. JOHN BUSH JONES, coordinator of graduate studies for the English department, said his department used the GRE extensively. He said the test was a "pretty accurate barometer" of a student's ability because it indicated background and intensity of training, but he acknowledged its failability. Jones said that the English department considered only the verbal portion of the test and that he could care less about the quantitative portion. University Daily Kansan The GRE isn't used by the School of Social Welfare and the department of health, physical education and recreation (HPER) for master's admissions. Art and athletics featured in Greek Week activities The week-long activities will begin with a picnic at Potted Lake and end SKI Camp. Competition and culture, music and merrymaking will highlight Greek Week 1977, celebration to recognize and acknowledge Greek system at the University of Kansas. The theme of this year's festivities is Aorte—a Greek word for celebration. Other activities during the week will be a Greek art show, a Greek sing, an alumni appreciation banquet, a superstars fundraising program and parties. There hasn't been a Greek Week at KU (Greek Week, 1972), and year-round chairman of Greek Week, 1972, said year-round. "IT'S A RENEWAL of a tradition," TSA LARREN said. In recent years we held a Finals Fest, which included the Greek festival, and it was a week-long celebration like this is. Instead of competing against one another, which many of the Greek houses do throughout the year, KU Greeks will unify with their neighbors and serve Otto Greek Week publicity chairman, said "If we do have any competence, will be on a fun level or for a philanthropic cause," she said. "One such event is the Greek Week Superstars. All the money we raise from that will be donated to the mentally retarded." Greek Week Superstars is a series of events in which athletes from campus living groups compete in various athletic events, sponsored by contributions solicited from the Lawrence community. Proceeds will be donated to the Douglas County Special Olympics track and field program for the mentally retarded. "We were contacted by Alka Seltzer through the College Marketing and Research Corp. out of Chicago," Larson wrote, "and we accepted our Greek Week, and we accepted." **GREKE WEEK 1977** is being sponsored by laboratories, Inc., makers of Alkali Seltzer. Jan Lewis, assistant director for graduate admissions at the School of Social Welfare, said the GRE wasn't very significant for students. He said he attended at grade reports and field summaries. JEANPYFER, director of admissions for HPER, said the department didn't use the GRE partly because of tradition. She has been director the last five years, during which the GRE has never been used for master's programs. To promote Greek Week, Alka Seltzer has supplied posters, banners, and ads free of charge. However, Pyfer said that the GRE had always been used for doctoral programs because the demands on writing and research were tougher for HEER doctoral candidates. HPER has an open admissions policy based on grades and professional experience. "I'm sure some of that Alka Solzler will come in real handy for all those people with a brain." Gerald McSheffrey, director of graduate admissions for the School of Architecture, said the school used the GRE along with grades and brochures submitted by students. He said the amended test would be an improvement. MANY OF THE directors interviewed said they were concerned about the test's fairness to foreign students, whom they felt were disadvantage because of language difficulties. Some directors said that the analytical portion had been included in the test all along, mixed throughout the two other samples, and not only would only isolate the analytical portion THE TEST is given six times a year. The current edition will be given April 23 and June 11 in a Wesco auditorium. The amended test will be given Oct 15 (aptitude portion only), Dec 10, Jan. 14, Feb. 25, March 22 and June 10. Wingington said applications should be made a month before the test date. Information is available at the counseling office, 114 Bailey Hall. All applicants are required to take the aptitude portion (verbal and quantitative) section. Additional tests for specific areas are required by some departments. Rent increase From page one age, Barry Nall, rental manager for the Rental Mart, said. The manager of Gatehouse and Frontier Ridge said that rent increases would take effect Sept. 1, and that the cost of water for these disposals and dishwashers was going up. HIGHER UTILITY rates also account for planned increases at Southridge Plaza and the University of Chicago. Rates for this August were established last November, Debbie Van Saun, manager of Trailirage, said and include increased fuel costs which Trailirage pays the gas and water. Juanta Hubbard, manager at the Malls Ode English Village, where rents will increase Aug. 1, attributed the rise to a 7-11 increase in food prices and the largest increase was in utilities. . . . The Malls Olde English Village pays all utilities except electricity. Other management's planning increases include Park 25 and Park Plaza South. The management of Woodcreek said residents would soon pay more to live in the complex. Donna Enneking, manager, said that tenants would either become responsible for electricity or would have to pay higher rent. THE MANAGEMENT of Meadowbrook said rents would increase in some apartments this fall because of increases in gas and water rates. Sally Davis, resident manager, said the increases would average about $5 and would affect only some apartments in which Meadowbrook paid gas and water. Woodcreek currently pays all utilities, she said. MUSIC THEATRE DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT sponsored by KU BRIDGE CLUB April 24, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of Student Union Admission $1.00 Sign up in SUA office For further info. SUA office 864-3477 — Everyone Welcome — ZING Avid a in California blue, cha duck and buttons gauches a drawstring sleeve bl mult stripe sh tronal trendsetter in cotton and polyester blee Priced individually $12 to $24 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center 10:00-8:30 Mon.-Thurs. 10:00-6:00 Fri. & Sat. Coupon in today's paper good for this weekend only. H. Watsour April 18-24 carOusel All televised KC Royals baseball games can be seen on our 7' TV screen. car usel Another trip to the Bahamas! Disc 8-12, Cover $1.50 Peanut Gallery—Reds vs Dodgers Ladies Night—Disco 8-12:15 Specials on beer throughout the night '7 TV open 7:00 p.m. Lawrence's Newcast 18 Club Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Ladies Night–Disco 8:12:15 On our 7 TV–Frank Sinatra Special soals on beer throughout the day Free Disco for everyone 8-12:15 $7^{\prime}$ TV open 7:00 p.m. nature change Live: "Millionaire at Midnight" 9:12:15, 9:20.00 Peanut Gallery—NBA Playoffs, 10:30 p.m. Peanut Gallery open 1-10 p.m. for your sports enjoyment Rock & Roll with Roxtar, 9:12:15 Come watch all games on our 7' TV Free 12 noon to 7 p.m. CARLIN GEORGE SUNDAY APRIL 24 8:00 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM TICKETS SUA BOX OFFICE, KIEF'S Reserved Seats Only - $5.75 AN SUA SPECIAL EVENT A RICHARD DEUTSCH PRODUCTION GEORGE LIN Good Seats Still Available 6 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Dally Kansan Arts & Leisure ALEXIS M. WILSON Staff photos by JAY KOELZES Chick Corea (inset) and his new Return to Forever group Elusive jazz label flourishes By STEVE FRAZIER Reviewer Last summer, the economics of the American jazz record market seemed to be playing one of the nastiest tricks yet on jazz fans. Recordings on the SteepleChase record label, a Danish import, had only recently become available. The loss wasn't surprising though. After all, SteepleChase offered only excellence, which doesn't compete so well these days against disco rhythms and doo-wop. BUT, AS understandable as SteeleChapek's disappearance was, it was especially cruel. The label's high quality was amazing consistently, and it featured talented European jazzmen and American exatriates rarely beard in this country. Then came word that SteepleChase would reappear under license to Inner City, a New York City jazz label. The wait for Inner City to remainmanage the Danish recordings in New York is still over, and the first batch of recordings sold it to more area record stores than ever. Three of the SteeleChip recordings now available- "The Apartment," by Dexter Gordon; "Catalianian Fire," by Tete Montoliu; and "Duo," by Kerry Dean and David Pace, who know why the company is respected as one of the world's finest independent iazz labels. GORDON'S adaptation of bop to the tenor song in the 1940s ranks as one of the music leaders. landmarks in the instrument's development from Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young on past Gordon to Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane. He has lived in Denmark since the early 80s, and his SteepeChase recordings, in all, are his major contemporary works. On "The Apartment," Gordon is backed by Americans Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums; Drew, piano; and Pedersen, a Dane, on bass. The four musicians appear in various combinations throughout the show. In addition they give a unified, polished performance. Gordon swaggers through the up-tempo numbers on the album with the confidence, power and ease that befit a 6" 'tall jazz great. He praises for a few moments in "Old Fols", his lyric duet with Pederson, to play low and breathy phrases in honor of Ben and other American tenor saxophonist who spent the last decade of his life in Europe. PEDERSEM and Heath support Montoliu, a Spanish pianist, on "Catalonian Fire." Montoliu is fundamentally a bop pianist, but his cascades and filigreed improvisations belle the influence of Art Tatum and more contemporary hits at Cecil Taylor and McCoV Tyner The album is aptly named Montoliu's fiery bop matches the heat in the playing of Bud Powell, the most influential original artist. It would tend to rage Montoliu insects whimsey. Just as one would have thought that Bix Beiderbecke in the '20s would have silenced those who said that whites could never play jazz. Django Rheinbard should have been born to a jazz family, an authentic jazz musicians as Americans. EVEN SO, there are those who refuse to believe that Europeans can assimilate American jazz style. However, Montoliu, one of the most pleasant surprises in the SteepleChase lineup, is a master who need not make apologies for his nationality. Pedersen and Drew have had a weekly show on Danish radio and perform together on 10 different Steeplechase records. Their close musical relationship is the officialiciary of their close musical relationship. If Montello isn't proof enough of a Europeans' ability to play jazz, perhaps Pedersen is. Only a handful of acoustic players can match Pedersen. None could surpass him. EARL GREENS TODAY, WHEN it is fashionable to say that this player or that player has rebelled against tradition to remove the bass from its role as a timekeeper. Pedersen plays as if his equal stance with a group's leader is a natural assumption. And, although other guitarists might be drawn to sound like guitarists, Pedersen is proud of his instrument's unique qualities and knows he can blaze circles around guitarists when that sort of playing really fits his thoughts. Had Pederson's companions stunned "The Apartment," "Catalonian Fire" and Riffs "Doo," his playing alone would justify the album's cost. In its transition from import status to a licensed product of an American company, SteepeChase has lost such niceties as high quality European vinyl records and plastic-lined dustreuses. But the excellent music still remains, and the records are now a dollar cheaper than before. At least the music is available once again. OTHER TEMPTING records in Inner City's Steepie Chase series include more by Gordon, Montluio, Pedersen and Drew, selections by Duke Jordan, Jackie McLean, Anthony Braxton, Ben Webster, Clifford Jordan, Lee Konitz and Pai Bleu. member, was back with the group, playing soprano sax, flutes and tenor sax. There was no disagreement among the audience when he began to play "Master," his playing proved it. INTRODUCED BY CORE as "my musical buddy," Clarke was a key part of the new band. With three successful solo albums, he has developed a devoted following. His virtuosic playing added depth and variety to the entire performance. The group came on stage about 15 minutes late and launched into a piece called "Endless Night." Corea alternated between an acoustic grand piano and an array of various keyboards. Galey Moran occupied center stage on the Hammond B3. He wore a long shirt with a rich texture fabric upon which Corea could interweave his keyboard mastery. The new RTF also features a four-man brass section, which includes trumpets, flugelhorn, piccolo trumpet, tenor trumpet, bass trombone and bartone horn. Drummer Gerry Brown rounded out the ensemble. WOVEN THROUGHOUT the impressive show was the smoothly-honed voice of Moran. This artist has definitely improved over the intervening years since her stint with Johnu McLaughlin's second Mahavishnu Orchestra. Her voice has more depth and greater sustaining power than it seems capable "Apocalypse." Alternating vocals with Clarke, Moran's voice was a distinctive force in this new group. MORAN's incredible voice was featured on the next two pieces, "Do You Ever" and "I Loved You Then, I Love You Now." She faced the audience from behind her keyboards and communicated to them very directly and honestly in word and song. There is clearly a very strong energy and life force surging through the new RTF and the addition of brass is almost a reaffirmation of Corea's roots in jazz. The The set concluded with Corea on solo acoustic piano. This was a gratifying part of the series, since Corea himself that was best known through his two ECM "Piano Improvisations" albums. His lengthy solo led into "Spanish Fantasy," which he then continued to end on a level of pure untrained ear. Most of the concert was devoted to music from the latest RTF album, "Music-magic." The group's second set was more acoustically-flavored, as it opened with "Music-magic," which has a slow, dreamlike, opening sequence. Chick Corea concert top-flight performance This was a top-flight performance by Corea and his new RTF. The sound of the group was thick and rich, mult-textured, punctuated by bursts of brass and strong sax soles from Farrell. Those who excelled were not only with greater respect for Corea and his talents as well as for those who shared the stage with him. Buffett tunes intoxicating BUFFETT APPEARS to have been in the proper state of mind when he wrote "Wasting Away Again in Margaritaville." And maybe the listener would enjoy the song twofold if he did likewise. Despite all of Buffett's troubles, he says, "I am always glad it will remind that frozen conception that helps me hang on." Ole. Perhaps Buffett's best effort is "In the Shelter," a bittersweet tune with a steady backbeat. He mourns the painful awakening from innocence for a young woman as she struggles to make up her mind between her lover, her family and her own freedom. Jimmy Buffett is a Florida folkie who years for sunshine and has a fondness for the bottle. With his best album, "Changes in Lattitudes, Changes in Attitudes," Buffett seems to be challenging Jerry Jeff Walker for the title of "King of the Drinkin' Tunes." For this is drinking music personified. The album is a collection of mostly Buffett- written tunes that deal with the Gulf on the Gulf Coast—sailing, sunshine, bottles of rum, tequila, and lost lovers and bitter disappointments. BY BRILE OPENHART Entertainment Editor A MERE smattering of the album's lyrics is enough to convince the listener of Buffet's favorite pastime. "Ran into a chum with a bottle of rum/ and we wound up drinking all night" is simply stated in the title cut. There's more rum mentioned in Steve Goodman's "Banana Republic," a song that contains a patriotic Americans," desering their country as they run from wounded hearts and troubled consciences. Joe Farrell, an original Return to Forever There was something for everybody when Chick Corea and his new Return to Forever Band performed Wednesday night in Memorial Hall, Karsas City, Kan. "I Came to Dance" is the third solo album for guitarist and singer Nils Lofsgen, who, Finally, some baseball literature after backing Neil Young on two albums, short-lived Grin through four albums. With "I Came to Dance," he asserts his position in the punk rock cult. The title cut is one of the album's stronger tunes; a dynamic, restless beat makes it more than danceable. Lofgren appears justified in his version of the Stones" "Happy," set to a rhythm straight from the Little Feat Book of Funk. UNFORTUNATELY, Lofgren's guitar soils are poorly caged as they mills in the background; he never really cuts loose on any song. His vocals are thus relied upon for height, and his high-register voice simply lacks the power and control for that role. brass quartet was used mostly to accentuate and to punctuate the music. A tight rhythm section assets Lofgren's feeling for rock, but the album also suffers from drowning background vocals and a lack of variety in arrangements. By JOHN RINKENBAUGH THE BASEBALL ENCYCLOPEDIA" (Macmillan, 214 pages, 252). Regarding Rita Coolidge's latest, "Anytime . . . anywhere"—like the latest releases from EmmyLou Harris, Joni Mitchell and Linda Ronstadt, if album sales were dependent on the sexual implications officers, this would probably be platinum. COLIDIGE dips back into the '60s for some material, as she sings a toned-down retake of Smokey Robinson's "The Way You Do the Things You Do." In fact, the album is nothing more than Coldidige's preintroductions of some popular songs of the day. Reviewer "BABE," by Robert Creamer (Simon and Schuster. 443 pages. $9.95). "THE GLORY OF THEIR TIMES," by Lawrence S. Ritter (Macmillan, 300 pages). These retakes are acceptable, but only if Collidge's voice and style are distinctive enough to offer something the original version didn't—excluding sexy album covers. Her breath, middle-range voice is unique, but her available repiece remains a step below the Ronstads, Harrises and Bonnie Raitts. YOU KNOW ME AL37, by Ring Larder (songbook) and IMS, paperback). For many baseball games, the national pastime is limited to the back of bubble gum cards and stickingly sweet By DARRELL MORGAN The image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. Please provide a clearer image or describe the features in detail so I can transcribe it accurately. But good reading can be found in informal histories, biography, fiction and even books of statistical information. The books include the works of Charles Toward "major league" baseball literature. The Crawford interview is a work of beauty with stories about the incompatible耦合 of Delahanty and Delahanty's tragic death. Delahanty, a lifetime 350 hitter, fell from a train while crossing over Niagara Falls. The accident was sure whether Delahanty inquired *or* felt "The GLORY of Their Times," by Lawrence S. Ritter, is the most representative and perhaps the best informal history of the game. Ritter interviewed 22 oldtimers who played the game from 1898 to 1948. It was an escape for many from the farms or mines. Stan Coveleski worked in the coal mines of Pennsylvania 72 hours a week. Baseball provided a means of escape, and Coveleski won 200 games in a brilliant career. Baseball was slow to gain respectability. It was a game for the lower classes, a game played mostly by men who drank, swore and had little or no education. He provides a feeling of the game's information through different interfaces. Ritter's book provides insight into a few of the game's memorable moments. A fine "You know," he says, "I saw it all happen, from beginning to end. But sometimes I still can't believe what I saw. This 19-year-old was brushed by the social veneer we call civilization, gradually transformed into the idol of American youth and the symbol of baseball the world over. . . I saw a man like Jimmy Johnson, into something pretty close to a sed." WAHOO, NEB., produced Sam Crawford, a lifetime 300 hitter. Cottier played most of his career in the outfield next to Ty Cobb, baseball's fiercest competitor. Robert Creamer has written an excellent biography of the Sultan of Swat. Creamer manages not to insult the intelligence of the reader by showing Ruth for what he was—the great American hero—who could party with the best. For the statistics nut, "The Baseball Encyclopedia" is by far the most complete reference book. A purist would want to own the original 1988 edition, an astoundingly rich resource, but it is almost as good but neglects information on injuries and pitcher's batting statistics. MOST OF the old-timers were adamant in their belief that they played the game the way it was meant to be played. That meant they used stealing hits and stealing bases. They disapprove of the long ball fever, the cry-baby attitude of today's players and the big inning strategy. Most sports biographies sicken adult readers with phony All-American portraits. "Babe" isn't like that. Creamer has written a novel, was without insulting the Illustrated Rush. A BORING, unimaginative clod, Keebe lacked the sense to utilize his athletic talents. His ego is as immense as the stadiums he pitches in, yet it appears to be a front to protect himself from cruelties of fate. GEORGE HERMAN Ruth was the most popular ballplayer ever. He was a man of immense physical talents whose feats have become legendary. But most biographies of Ruth are written for 12-year-olds by writers who are qualified for the task. Rink Hrineknbach is a junior majoring in education and journalism. Baseball changed mainly because of Babie bush as Harry Hooper said in the Ritter comment. RUTH H an enourous appetite for both food and sex. "In a St. Louis whorehouse he announced he was going to go to bed with every girl in the house during the night, and did, and after finishing his rounds up down and had a huge breakfast." Off the Shelf More important, with this book the reader can solve almost any baseball argument, or even a tennis problem. account of the infamous "Merkle's Bone" is given by Fred. Stoddgrass, arrows others. In Hang Larder's novel *On Me* know Meelie McDermott, a day pitcher, is the antiphary of Ruth. He was no one's hero, and allowed himself time and time again to be used and manipulated Creamier fills in the details about Ruth's bizarre stomachache and his "called shot" cry. Other statistical books may be handier or cheaper, but they can't compare with this. It enables the reader to look up the unimpressive fielding stats of Dick "Dr Stranggelove" Stuart or White Herzog's lifetime batting average . (257) Baseball fiction is a rarity nowadays, and good baseball fiction is even rarer. This book was written more than 60 years ago but it still retains its comic value. Weekend Highlights Theater "COSI FAN TUTTI," a Mozart opera, 8 tonight and Saturday. University Theatre. 'SPOON RIVER AN- THOLOGY' 'Halloween' Haller Festival, 8 tonight and Satur- day, Hahsinger Hall Theatre. Concerts HARTFORD BALLET, 8tonight and Saturday, Music Hall, Kansas City, Mo. THE OUTLAWS, 8 tonight. Uptown Theater, Kansas City. Mo. KU BELLY DANCE CLUB SPEAK performance, 7 p.m. sat. urday. Community. Building in room. NIH, University. Sunday. Hear Auditorium. "PIERROT LUNAIR," an Arnold Schoenberg melodrama of chamber music with words by Giraud; performed by a student and faculty ensemble that is directed by Charles Hoag; Nancy Atkins, speaker 8 p.m. Sunday, Sundahe Worc休历 Recital Recitals DELORES BRUCH. organ doctorate recital. 8 p.m Saturday, RLDS Auditorium Independence, Mo. SUZANNE FAIRBAIN, organ. Student Recital Series. 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Swarthout Hau Nightclubs JAY McSHANN, jazz pianist, with CLAUDE "FIDDLER" WILLIAMS AND PAUL TWIRLING and winged tighton! Paul Gray Place THE ALLSTAR JAZZ The ALLSTAR Saturday. Paul Gray's. MILLIONAIRE AT MID NIGHT, 9 to midnight tonight. J. Watson's. ROXTA, a rock Watson's Saturday. J. Watson's. DESTINY,a rock band. 9 to midnight tognt and Saturday, The Brewery. HARVEST, a rock band, 9 to midnight tonight. The Opera House FLAIR, a rock band, 9 to Saturday, The Opera House MARTY STEIN and SUSAN HAMILTON, folk singers, 9 to midnight tonight. Sister Kette Cate. PAT KAUMOUN, French can musician, 9 to midnight Saturday. Sister Kette. Lectures COLE TUCKEY ON RYE, 9 to midnight Saturday, Off the Wall Hall. FUN WITH DICK AND Films "BEN HUR" and a multimedia presentation about Lew Wallace, author: 7 tonight Saturday, Hoch Audiotrium. BLACK SUNDAY--The Super Bowl is the target of a terrorist plot, and there's more action than the actual 1976 game, background. Stars Robert Shaw, Keller and Bruce Dern (R). JANE-George Segal and Jane Fonda star in this modern version of *Bomb* and Clyde. The movie loses his technician, and the humorous plot unwinds as the couple goes from riches to rags to riches NASTY HABIBS—A water tower in Philadelphia, perfectly everybody, that replaces the White House setting a Philadelphia [IPG] I SMALL CHANGE—A comic poem about childhood, directed by Bernchan. Francois Truffaut. Attractive child actors. (PG) THE STORY OF ADELE H. Another Traffaut film, with Adele McKay about Victor Hugo's daughter, who is so infatuated with a British officer that she follows him nearly around the globe. But as she ends up on Barbados doesn't even recognize him. A Court battle ELIZABETH M. WATKINS COMMUNITY MUSEUM—"An American Sampler: A Look at them in the 1800s," through April. Exhibits The restra Drug the stu R CORNUCPIA RETAUR RÉTARAU renderings; David Graves drawings; Shooting Gallery photography and Strawberry paintings LANGHOFER REAL ESTATE—Rosetta Beek, oils and watercolors, through April. KANSAS UNION GALLERY—Art department faculty study, paintings and sculpture, through April. Riv of the betwee from junit; the e Hill tonw lister a fall an boun TER~"Four Printmakers;" WORK by Jane Asbury, Colete Bangert, Evonne English and Judy Geer Kellas, Exhibit Hall Kathryn Clark, photography. Room 603, through April. The a pro the Land the c THE litter Nove comm River of the The more mont Sierr Lawr Doug prove LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL—Kathe Koch, oils, through April. NELSON GALLERY NELSON GALLERY Sudlow, landscapes, and Robert Green, watercolors, in the sales and Rental Gallery, Sunday LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY-Lawrence Junior High art show, through April GALLERY-PLACE GALLERY Silver Nunley painting and silver mithning through April. McDONALD'S GALLERY- Lawrence Junior High art through April. Be litter foott Scou Exremanickecarry st A to KU and done spray 767 GALLERY—H. J. Bott maquette and monumental sculpture, through April 28 KU Th said result while SPENCER R ESEARCH NORTH Gallery; "Kansas Pa- traits," Kansas Collection; *Student Organization.* "Ar- thritis." SPOONER-THAYER MUSEUM OF ART—The Saille Casey Gallery Collection, Main Gallery, through May 29. UNIVERSITY STATE BANK—Western and South western paintings, Valley West Galleries, through April. rt nce ly to acusic. Friday, April 22, 1977 impressive voice of improved her stint second she more likely to have on calls with skillful indirective d to music "Music was more ened with a slow, s featured "Ever" and "Now," She hind her them very and song. a on solo being part of the side of higher his two bums. His Fantasy, "g ing to end energy. benance by und of the l-textured, and strong who ex- leaving leaving and his shared the ashred ng two albums, our albums. asserts his s's stronger it makes it on appears the Stones' right from the n's guitar fills in the ts loose onied upon to his high-power and s Lofgren's also suffers calcs and ass. s latest, the latest arris, Joni album sales implications e platinum- the '60s for stoned-down "The Way in fact, the Coolidge's songs of the but only if distinctive the original xylum album voice is留给 remainsarrises and REALE Bask in Books Interskills intimmakers. CERN's english and hallibut photography. through MEMORIAL Koch, oils. PUBLIC ince Junior bough April. ETPLACE Nunley, versmithing. GALLERY High art. ALLERY Mo...Robert and Robert in the Sales ry, Sunday -H. J. Bott, monumental April 28 ESEARCH Designs." Kansas Por- Collection. ation." Ar- By JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Reporter YER MU- The Sallie Section, Main May 29. Staff Reporter Drug Store fights to retain name STATE and South Valley West April. A bearing in Douglas County District court today will be the first legal test in a case involving a former resident. The hearing will concern a petition for a restraining order filed by the owners of the Drug Store, 708 Massachusetts st., against the state and its board of health. The owners are seeking to halt Mike Malone, county attorney, from filing charges against them for the illegal use of the word "drugstore" in their name. iRug Drug Store, which sells pipa, sachet papers, incense and other drug paraphernae. Mallone warned store owners Kim Kearn and Milane Jozbacz April 8 that they were in danger of losing their jobs. Hike four miles beneath towering cottowoods without retracing your steps, listen to the gentle lappage of water against a fallen log and perhaps catch a glimpse of an industrious beaver all within the boundaries of Lawrence's newest city park. Riverfront Park offers escape from noisy crowds The park, which opened in June 1976, was a project of the Horizons subcommittee of the Lawrence Bicentennial Committee. The park was made available by the city. Riverfront Park lies along the east bank of the Kansas River north of Lawrence between the river and the levee. It extends from the park entrance, directly west of the junction of U.S. highways 24 and 40, north to the edge of the city landfill. THE FIRST EFFORTs to turn the junk-littered woodland into a park began in November 1975 when Horizons subcommittee members marked a trail for the Riverfront Park, Dan Palmquist, a member of the subcommittee, said recently. The trail was cleared of underbrush and more than four tons of trash in the following months by Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, the Sierra Club, the Audubon Society, the Denver Under Squadron and the Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council. Arnold Janusek, scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop S2, said, "We found cooksocks, chairs, scrap lumber and batteries in the park." Besides cutting underbush and clearing litter, Janusek said, one of the boys built a footbridge across a ravine as his Eagle Scout community service project. The trail is a flood plain forest trail, which passes through a variety of forest and wildlife communities, including a willow macronereforest and a lush river bottom field. A map of the trail is available at the Lawrence Public Library. Except for the trail, the 900-acre park remains unimproved. Hikers and picnickers must bring in drinking water and carry out trash. FRED DEVICTOR, director of the the use of "drugstore" in the title of a company employed a full-time registered pharmacist. Spray damages student's car A University of Kansas student reported to KU Police Wednesday that the buildings and grounds department had accidentally sprayed an anti-bacterial spray, it with, chemicals 1st Thursday. The car was parked at the northeast corner of a Zone parking lot, behind Joseph Barbieri. According to police, damage to the car was caused by spray chemicals used on trees. Lawrence Parks and Recreation Depart- ment camps might be put in the this summer. The car's paint was damaged on the hood, trunk and right side, and necessitated a dent repair. KU police wouldn't identify the student. The buildings and grounds department said the spraying of the car was accidental, as the police section, while the trees were being sprayed. DeVictor said the development of Riverfront Park was a joint project of the city of Lawrence and the Army Corps of Engineers. The city's contribution was to provide the land, the trail markings and the park maintenance. The warning gave the owners 10 days to comply with the statute. Glotzbach and Kern filed the petition for the restraining order agains the state April 15, along with an injunction that enjoined the state from enforcing the statute and challenged its validity. Plans call for the Corps of Engineers to establish parking space, overnight camping areas, a bicycle trail, a boat ramp for boating activities, toilet, pots, picnicking areas and fire rings. DeVictor said the Corps of Engineers would begin its work on the park this fall or early 1978. The project is in President Jimmy Carter's proposed budget, he said. UNTIL THESE improvements can be made, he said, vehicles wouldn't be allowed in the park. Groups that want to stay overnight must make reservations with the Parks and Recreation Department. The fire rings are built, he said. Perhaps because of these restrictions, Riverfront Park now offers a quiet hawey away from noisy crowds. The lakers' only home is the Dartmouth and a chattering squirrel or a saucy bluey. THE OWNERS' PETITION claims protection under the First, Fifth and 14th Amendments to the Constitution, stating that the statute violates the owners' right to freedom of speech, due process and equal treatment under the law. Eric Kjorlie, a Topeka lawyer who represents the owners, said yesterday that the statute was a "denial of professional freedom to use a business name and prohibits application of an English word with common usage." He said that the 1925 Kansas legislature, which passed the statute, had intended that it be applied to businesses that sold prescription drugs. "We're saying that this is an unfair application of the statute to a business that doesn't sell or dispense drugs," Kjorlie said. THE PETITTION also claimed that the business would suffer permanent and irreparable damage without the restraining order. "They've invested in the business name, they've developed an advertising format for it and they've already used it for several weeks," Kjollie said. "They can't lose it Kern said the store had expressly stated in its advertising that it didn't employ a registered pharmacist or sell prescription drugs in order not to mislead the public. However, he said, he thought the name was perfect for the store. "I've tried and I can't think of a better one," he said. "It gets the point across." Malone said he wasn't sure whether he would file criminal charges against the owners if the restraining order wasn't upheld. "Are You the Type?" "Are You the Type?" POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES, which are joint student and faculty committees that consider questions concerning KU: Libraries Financial Aid Human Relief Human Relations Foreign Students Foreign Students University Daily Kansan —Calendar PARKING AND TRAFFIC BOARD UNIVERSITY JUDICIARY HEARING BOARD HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union Applications must be returned by Fri., April 29, 1977. The Brewery 714 Massachusetts presents An Easy Listening Folk-Rock Experience de ny Destiny Steve Rose & Barry Coken Fri. & Sat. Nite 9-12 No Cover Charge. He said he first became aware of the problem after receiving complaints from several local pharmacists who thought the store was jeopardizing the integrity of their profession. He had never heard of the statute before. "IT'S ONE of those obscure statutes that just pop up occasionally," he said. "I'm sure the owners of the store were as unaware of the statute as I was. "I'm not out to get them or anything. If the restraining order isn't upheld, I'll see whether the owners change the name. If the pharmacists would probably file a complaint." Volators of the statue, which is an unclassified misdemeanor, face a $25-$50 fine for a first offense and a $50-$100 fine for a second offense. This could be charged for each day in business. Kjorlie said that if the restraining order was approved today, the courts eventually would rule on the constitutionality of the statute. He said that if a formal complaint were filed he would have to press charges. After the Relays Come as you are . . . HUNGRY! Sandwiches start here Sesame bun Melted cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion pickle Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beef tock to Sandy's 2120 W. 9th Sandwich lovers start here Sesame bun Melted cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beef stick Sanddavers start here Sesame bun Melted Cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion pickle Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beef块 to Sandy's 2120 W. 9th "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION: "FOR I THE LORD THY GOD AM JAEUSOLG GOV. DISHING THE INIQUITY OF THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UPON THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE MEE; AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HAVE LOVE, AND MEKE MY COMMANDMENTS." From the Second Commandment, Exodus 20.5. 6. Peritious it is indeed to a man's well being in this life — to his peace, his reputation, his best interest — to do wrong. Possibly the wrongdoer may not suffer himself, yet most certainly his children, and his children's children will pay the price. There are other ways of asking whether regard be had to his physical, social, intellectual, and moral nature, as to make him a happy being. The right, the unperverted use of all his powers and susceptibilities would not tailor to secure to him a high and continual state of earthy happiness and property. And not only is the human nature a barrier to success, but the whole external world, the theater in which man has to live, act, and enjoy, is fitted up in beautiful harmony with the same benevolent end. Every jar of human happiness, every arrest or curtailment or extinction of it, is the fruit of transgression or perversion. The violation of a natural law is therefore the very act that constitutes a Divine Law. The history of individuals, families, communities, nations, is full of such retributions! The domestic peace and prosperity of the good old patriarch Jacob was sadly marred. He is compelled to become, at an early age, an exile from his father's house — to file before the aroused wrath of his brother — to suffer a long oppression and wrong in the family of Leban, his kinman; and no sooner is he relieved from these domestic afflictions, than he finds himself more vulnerable, violently torn from his embrace by his own sons — and at length Benjamin, the only object on which the affections of the aged father seemed to repose, must be yielded up an uncertain灾理, and his cry is heartless. *All these things are David was a good man, yet he sinned a great sin. And his sin was of a domestic character. And how grievously he was afterward afflicted in his domestic relations. His subsequent history remains the sad memorial. The Voice of God anointed him at the altar and then he surrendered his Son Aaron押赎 his half-sister Tamar. Abalom, his brother killed Ammon Later on abalum usured his father's throne and drove him out, etc., yet EtDavid was a "man after God's heart." — a man after God's heart in the way he repented and accepted the severe judgment of God, reminiscent of words of Jeea. "Yea, though He lay me, my will I trust Him!" Platez伏脆 between the monitions of conscience and a miserable time serving policy, delivered up Jesus to be crucified. He believed Him to be innocent; yet that his own life was wrong, he would be buried with his conscience and condemned the innocent. He must secure his friendship of Caesar, though it be at the expense of the most appalling crime. But how miserably he failed; and there was in the retribution which followed a striking fitness for death. His brother, who is also he, please his imperial master at Rome. Yet but two years afterward he was banished by this same emperor into a distant province, where, in disgrace and abandonment, and with a burden on his conscience which was as the "burning blood" end to an existence which was too wretched to be borne." "Be sure you sin will find you out." — Numbers 22:33, "It shall have the wicked with the wicked." — Ephesians 8:13. "I am have done, so God hath requited me." — Judges 17:7, "O that they would consider their latter end!" — Deuteronomy 32:29. P, O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 fruit Compote A wonderful for serving or conserving fruit from a variety of trees and plants as well as a preserv. full & song of Shindig. 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Morte Cristo a house burgers 25¢ Favorite Sandwiches Monté Cristo - a house, fairy lights ham, singing galletas, like munch-hoast Ruben - a traditionnel bowel bowel sur les bras, sautent au air au sucre 250 Vienna Club 215 those auswild, lavender tomato on an orange tan, p/1,000 island, blocked high and heated whisky In the evening Poultry Bleu : outragements toast! chicken, lettuce, potato, ground onion, skin with Bleu cheese Juwah Dip- man's great best friend 272 Very fragrant Occhip, english myrtle. 225. with rich aroma, fragrant flowers, shaped oval, needled with yam. paper mulk, garnish. all above sandwiched with potato salad . Sweet & Sour Pork 3.95 Chicken Orange 3.95 We're located Downtown in the MARKETPLACE 8th & New Hampshire 8 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan 52nd Relays field has fast pace to continue By ROB RAINS Sports Writer If yesterday's performances are an indication, this year's Kansas Relays could be one to remember. There were four events contested yesterday. There were four Relax records set. There was also one American best. All of this isn't to say that there will be a meet record set in every event in today's and tomorrow's competition in the 52nd running of the season. But with the field assembled, there could be quite a few There are some familiar names among this year's participants, including a name from the past, Al Oerter. Oerter, a KU graduate, is the only person who ever won four Olympic gold medals in one event. He will be competing on Saturday morning in the event dedicated to him two years ago—the Al Oerter Discus Throw. Oerter, 40, is on the comeback trail. His goal—a berth on the 1980 U.S. Olympic team. ALTHOUGH OERTER will be among those participants shooting for an individual championship, the emphasis of the Relays will be in the game. Last year, as the second leg on the Midewest Relays circuit, the Kansas meet was swept up in the fervor of an Olympic year. This season's season ended with a victory. "During an Olympic year like last year," KU head coach and meet director Bob Timmons said, "I think there is a tendency to put a lot of stress on individual development. Each athlete had geared themselves to perform." "1 THINK this was evident to a degree on the relays circuit in 1978. A lot of time and effort was put into invitational events for too- Jennings, Collins scratch Two entries in tomorrow's invitational events have scratched from competition. Evian Jennings of Mississippi State, the defending champion in the 400 meters, is sidelined with a pulled leg muscle. Bill Collins of the Gulf Coast Track Club, scheduled to compete in the 100 and 290, have elected to go to another meet. The Field for the 400 will still include Olympian Mike Solomon of New Mexico, Robert Taylor of the Philadelphia Players, Dele Udo and Andrew Gorodenkoff. name athletes. This year, we'll attempt to get back to what the Midwest circuit is all about—collegiate competition." Partly responsible for the upswing in interest in the relay races is the decision of a young man from Texas. That man, Johnny Jones, captured the attention of the track Women head to state tournament pursuing softball championship The KU softball team will try to capture the state title today and tomorrow as it takes part in the state softball tournament at Hays. As of last night, five teams had qualified for the six team tournament. The other divisional winners are: Benedictine, Kansas Wesleyan and Fort Hays State. Pittsburgh earned a berth as a run-uper. Wichita State and Kansas State were scheduled to play at 8 this morning to the other runer-u. The Jawahares' first game is scheduled for 4 p.m. against the winner of the Kansas State championship. KU coach Bob Stancilt said he was optimistic about the Jayhawks' chances of winning the tournament, but he didn't know very much about the other teams. The Jayhawks will be relying heavily on pitcher's Sliuelin Sterlac, 8-0, and Gloria Graves, hitting .300, leads KU hitters. She is followed by Debbie Stilgenbauer, .385 Nancy Stout, .377, and June Koleber, .355. Stancliff said his biggest hope was that the weather would clear up. "Id just like to see the sun come out," he said. "Cool weather bothers the pitchers—special Gloria—because they can't get it." And rains they have problems with control. ACTION—PEACE CORPS/VISTA Mon., April 25 LA&S Representatives will be at the following placement offices: Tues., April 26 LA&S placement offices: Wed., April 27 Education SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW TODAY. world three weeks ago at the Texas Relays where he won the innoturnal 100-meter dash in an unofficial record-time of 9.85 Jones' time was not recognized as a world record because it wasn't electronically timed. JONES WAS invited to run in the open 100- and 200-meters at KANSAS, but after consultation with Texas coach Cleburn Price, he decided not. He's scheduled to anchor the Longhorn teams in the 440, 880 and mile relays. Don't automatically concede those races to the Longhorns, however. Not by any means. Expected to give them a great deal of competition will be teams from Oklahoma and Kansas. Oklahoma defeated the Longhorns in winning the 400-l relay at Texas, and Kansas, with acer spinner Cliff Brown, outscoring them by a great deal of improvement since their failure to place in Texas. "OUR HANDOFFS are looking a lot better." Timmons said. "There seems to be more spirit at practice and more of a team feeling. I think there'll be a big improvement in how we handle the baton this week." KU will attempt to field a team in every relay except the two-mile. That adds up to six, ranging from the 440 to the four-mile. Every KU runner entered in the meet is scheduled to go in at least two relays, with freshman sr dive Dave Blatcher slate for four. "We're going to try to run in all of them, but there's probably no way we can," Timmons said. "We'll be thin right down the line because of two things: We're running a lot of sprint relays and permitting some of our athletes to compete in individual events." WILEY AND Kevin Newell will be entered for KU in the in- vitalized 100, scheduled to be decided a little after 2 p.m. tomorrow. Others entered in the field include Ed Preston of Arkansas State, the defending champion in the 100 and 200, and John Garrison of Oklahoma. In the 200, Wiley will team with Blutcher as KU's entries. Today's competition began at 8 a.m. and will end with the preliminaries in the men's mile relay at 5 p.m. Tomorrow's schedule will begin with the marathon at 7 a.m. and will end with the Chuck Murray mile relay at about 5.9 m. Six individual champions from the Texas Relays will be trying for their second win on the relays circuit at Kansas. THOSE TRYING for their second relays triumph will be Dean Hageman of Wichita State in the West Santee 1,000-meter run; Paul Clement of Glen Cunningham mile; Nat Page of Missouri in the high jump and Bob Berry in the 5,000 meters and Earl Bell of Arkansas State in the pole vault. Other relay teams besides OU4's 401 unit that will be trying to pick up their second win will be the Sooners in the sprint medley, New Mexico in the two-mile, and Arkansas, anchored by Olympian Nail O'Shaughnessy, in the distance medley. Jones, who was a member of the gold-medal-winning 400-meter relay team for the US. in last year's Olympics, will be one of seven athletes to compete in Tokyo this summer. OTHERS INCLUDE Bell, Preston, Garry Bjorkland of the Chicago Track Club who will run in the 5,000, Terry Porter, an ox KU athlete who will compete in the open pole vault and Wendy Knudson of Colorado State, who will run in the women's 200 meter Back to defend their titles from a year ago will be Anthony Coleman of Kansas in the 110-meter high hurdles, Mike Kee of Southern Illinois in the 100 meters, Sorchik Sorchik of Nebraska in the javelin, Preston and Porter. --- TUNE-UP YOUR CAR FOR SPRING Keep your car in good shape with parts from Larry's Auto Supply Full line of foreign & domestic parts 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 good shape ply 52 --- ENGINEERS EXPLORING NEW FRONTIERS 57th Annual Engineering Expo Kansas University Learned Hall April 22 12pm-9pm April 23 8am-3:30pm Awards Banquet April 23 Cocktails 6:00pm Dinner 7:00pm Tee Pee Club Paid for by Student Service Tickets for banquet may be purchased during Expo hours Student tickets $6.00 Tickets for banquet may be purchased during Expo hours. Student tickets '6.00 Faculty-Adults '7.00 The wet or ferene in Friday, April 22, 1977 9 p.m. n of and Relays open big in record splash By ROBRAINS Sports Writer The first day of the Kansas Relays was a wet one, but that didn't make a bit of difference. There are no recognized American or world records in the women's 5,000, the world's first triathlon. Anderson, a graduate assistant coach for the Kansas women's track team, splashed her way to an American best and a meet record time of 16:06.8 minutes in the 5,000-meters in the final event on yesterday's abbreviated, rain-soaked program. Anderson's time broke the best American time of 16:28.5, set last year by Pepp Neppel of Iowa State. This was the first year for the event in the Kansas Relays. RUNNING THE EVENT for only the third time, Anderson, who is a graduate of Kansas State, said she wasn't sure she could get the record because of the weather. "I knew it would be a good race because of the competition, Anderson said. "I had only been able to train for three weeks because of an injury." Anderson stayed on the shoulder of Cheryl Cook of Iowa State for much of the race, finally taking the lead on the backstretch in final lap. Cook finished second in 16.14.2. "I really wasn't sure of my own pacing." Anderson said. "But I knew it was going to be hard." ANDERSON'S performance capped the first day of activity in the 52nd Kansas Relays which saw meet records set in all four events. ★ ★ ★ OPEN-MEN Milwaukee Milwaukee 10,000 Meter Run- 1. Peter Buller, New Bristol Bristol 10,000 Meter Run- 2. Larry Johnson, Cincinnati Cincinnati 709.750 L. Linda Gibson, New Rock Clare Central Missouri 301.11 L. Joe Kreb, Rock UNIV., COL., H.S. DIVISION—WOMEN *Distance: Medway • Rolby • Kildare • Okeechobee • Oakland • Dublin (record record) • NYC (record record) *Ballpark: 19.52 by KARIN "A" Amani *Record record: 19.28 by KARIN "A" Amani *Record record: 19.32 by Wakana Kramer *Ratman Jr. Kramer *Ratman Jr. Kramer *Wakana Kramer *Kramer * 5,000-meter run - i. Perl Anderson, Kanaka, 16-8-8. Record record tape time, timecode (km/h) 267,450 seconds, 3 minutes, 9 seconds Northwest Michigan, 17:2-8-3. Brianna Bedell Mistel, South Dakota Krake, Statewide, 17:2-8-3. Dan Huebner, South Dakota Krake, Statewide, 17:2-8-3. Dan Huebner, South Dakota Krake, Statewide, 17:2-8-3. Dan Huebner, South Dakota INTRAMURAL DIVISION—MEN Would work with children Ruggers tackle solid opponents The KU Rugby Club, which played solid rugby when it won third place in the All-Kansas Rugby Roundup last weekend, will play its final game in New York. It will face two lousy opponents. The Jayhawks will play the Kansas City Rugby Club tomorrow in Kansas City and return to Lawrence Sunday for the traditional battle with the KU alumni at 2 p.m. on the rugby field at 2rd and Iowa streets. KU player Mike Forth said the Kansas city team would be much bigger than the Minnesota team. Injuries continue to hamper KU, especially in the backfield where Marv Oler is the latest Jayhawk casualty. Oler suffered a chipped bone and sprained ankle Sunday's contest will match current KU players against those who played for previous KU teams. The players consider themselves a high point of the KU rugby season. SUA FILMS THE STORY OF ADELE H. Popular Films Series. Fri., April 22 & Sat., April 23, 3:30 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $1 MIDNIGHT COWBOY Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight plus An Art Deco cartoon by Tex Avery. Midnight Movies. Fri, April 22 & Sat., April 23, 12:00 midnight, $1 PAGE MISS GLORY Dir, George Cukor, with Joan Crawford, Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell plus THE WOMEN (1939) MEMBER OF THE WEDDING (1952) Dir, Fred Zimmerman, with Julie Harris, Ethel Waters. Mon., April 25, 7:30 p.m., 75c Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Butler, who also was running in an unfamiliar event—he was making his first "serious" attempt at 10,000 meters, he said—didn't think he could be Ortega. In the first event, freshman Peter Buter of New Mexico took the lead from teammate Lionel Ortega midway through the Billy Mills 10.000-meter run in 29:10.1. "He had an off-day today," the 19-year-old Saidia of Orléa. "When he has an accident, he goes to hospital." Butler, who qualified for the Olympic trials in his native Canada last year, placed sixth in the 5,000 meters at the Texas Relays, where Ortega won the 10,000. "I DON'T know what my race is," the Canadian said. "I wanted to run against me." This was a good temperature to run it, but I don't like the wind or the rain. Oretga and Butler made it a two-man race one-third of the way through the metric equivalent to the six-mile. The two had an 80-yard lead over the rest of the field at the midway point, then stretched it to over half a lan with only six lanes to go. KANSAS' THREE scheduled entries in the college mason John Rocco and Tim Tinkle. Butler made his move with four laps to go, and ran away from Ortega. Ortega finished the race. "I didn't want Mason to run," coach Bob Timmons said. "Tobin wasn't ready to coach and we're going to use both him and Roscoe in the four-mile relay." University Daily Kansan The other two meet records yesterday were set in the finals of the faculty distance medley relay and the intramural 440-yard relay preliminaries. Mason is scheduled to run in the 3,000-meter steelchase Saturday. A team from the University of Nebraska-Omaha set the record in the faculty event, which was started last year. Their true was: 10:54.5. In the intramural prelimits, the Silver Instrum can a record breaking 44.28 seconds. NEW MEXICO ANKAR 178 New Mexico's Butler sets record in opening event Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. sister kettlecafe Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 Coffee House Fri. & Sat. with live entertainment 9 pm-Midnight --only at Heart of America Frisbee Tournament Saturday, April O-Zone Field Entry Fee: 1.00 Saturday, April 23 Registration at SUA office or 9:00 a. Saturday at tourney site Competition will begin at 10 a.m. Trophies awarded In all events. $100 1st place prize to total event winner Everyone Welcome! HEART OF AMERICA FRISBEE CLUB Sponsored by SUA, Miller Brewing Co., Rec. Services. SUA Popular Films "THE STORY OF ADELE H. is a beautiful, rigorous, very original film. It looks and sounds like no other Truffault film you've ever seen." —Vincent Canby, New York Time ROGER CORMAN DRAFTED BY ISABELLE ADJAMI & M. BERTHY FRANCOIS TRUFFFAUT THE STORY OF ADELE H. FRANCISI TRUFAUT JEAN GRUHAUJ SUSZANN SCHIF FMAN BRUCE ROBINSON *SYLVIA MARRIOTT JOSEPH BLAATCHLE *IVRY GILLUS Fri., April 22 & Sat., April 23 7:00 & 9:30 p.m., 3:30 Matinee each day $1 tickets available at SUA office Woodruff Auditorium. Kansas Union Rush There With famolore Rusk There With famolore Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Third Street Massachusetts Street SANDAL SANDAL Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Paul Gray's Jazz Festival PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE TONITE: 926 Mass. upstairs the Jay McShann Band SATURDAY: Just returned from a highly successful European tour. Admission $500 All Star Jazz Band Featuring: Claude Williams, violin; Mike White, clarinet; Ray Ehrhart, piano; Paul Gunther, drums; Clyde Byson, saxophone; Harold Keen, trombone; Paul Gray, trumpet; Pete Wyman,, bass. Admission *5.00 Call 843-8575 or 842-9458. Free Beer!! 10 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansar Men face tough OU When the men's tennis team meets the University of Oklahoma tomorrow morning in Norman, Okla., it will be facing perhaps the strongest team in the Big Eight. Oklahoma, after finishing first in the conference last year with a 21-7 record, was picked in pre-season polls to finish on top again this season. The Jayhawks know how tough OU can be. KU last three meets to the Sooners last season and were defeated by them, 6-3, earlier this year. KU coach Kirkland Gates isn't optimistic about KU's chances. "I THINK if we beat them it will be a Soccer club hosts match The KU Soccer Club will play its last regular season game tomorrow when it hosts Wichita Wheatbirds at 2 p.m. at the soccer field at 23rd and 10th streets. KU coach Bermie Mullin said that most of the team were done and that the team had already played. "Tomorrow we will play a lot of people," he said, "especially those who have been injured this season and who'll be back next year." major upset," Gates said Wednesday. "I definitely think, though, that we have a shot at certain areas. In order to win us, we're going to have to get some breaks." KU golf team to Big 8 meet Two Jayhawks will be out with injuries. Rea Raissajainad, who suffered an eye injury, and Mansour Tahzeradeh, who suffered an ankle injury during last week's Big Eight championships, won't be able to play. KU will need another strong performance from Bill Clarke, No. 1 singles, in order to win tomorow. Clarke defeated John Stau, who was man, 7, 4, 6, when the two teams lost net. The University of Kansas women's golf team is expected to battle Oklahoma State University for the Big Eight championship today and tomorrow in Norman, Okla. The Jayhawks finished second last year behind Nebraska but have defeated Nebraska, Oklahoma, Iowa State and Missouri this year in tournament play. Kansas State and Colorado don't field teams. Mark Hasking, trying to shake a two-week slump, will play at the No. 2 position. Greg Buller, who defended his Oklahoma opponent in their first meeting, will be at No. 3. KU also will be trying to qualify indivi- tials for the national golf meet in Houston. Chet Collier, Lonie Taylor and Joe Ruyser will round out KU's lineup. Award honors top performer The Don Pierce Memorial Award, named in memory of the long-time KU sports information director, is awarded annually to the outstanding performer of the Kansas State basketball team. The award, which is chosen by a vote of reporters covering the Relays, nines times. OUTSTANDING PERFORMERS 1948-Harrison Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace 1949-Bob Walters, Texas 1950-Walker-Oklahoma 1951-Don Cooper, Nebraska 1952-Wes Santee, Kansas 1953-Darrow Hooper, Texas A&M 1954-Wes Santee, Kansas 1955-Dean Smith, Texas 1956-Bobby Whilden, Texas 1957-Epiphany State 1958-Eddie Southern, Texas 1959-Charlie Tidwell, Kansas 1960-Cliff Cushman, Kansas 1961-Bill Kemp, Baylor 1962-Ray Sadlier, Texas 1963-Jim Miller, Colorado 1964-Robin Lingle, Missouri 1965-Nevada New Mexico 1966-Jim Rynu, Kansas 1967-Jim Rynu, Kansas 1968-Jim Murphy, Air Force 1969-Jim Rynu, Kansas 1970-Larb Oukada, Fort Hays 1971-Jim Rynu, Kansas 1972-Miami State 1973-Mike Bolt, Eastern New Mexico 1974-Phillip Ndoo, Eastern New Mexico 1975-Charton Ehizelune, Illinois 1976-Nolan Cromwell, Kansas DOGGIE SALE OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER All Items Listed in Stock Some One of a Kind Pre-Amps List Sale Dynaco ST-120 Ass. $295.00 $150.00 Dynaco ST-400 Ass. 735.00 550.00 Electronics Lenco L-85 ... $100.00 Dual701 ... 400.00 ... 150.00 Concorde BD-1000 (Cart.) ... 160.00 ... 80.00 B.&O.1000 (Cart.) ... 325.00 ... 275.00 Turntables Pre-Amps List Sale SAE MK-I $550.00 $200.00 Dynaco PAT-5 Kit 245.00 100.00 Dynaco PAT-5 Ass. 400.00 300.00 Quintessence Group 400.00 100.00 Speakers B-Amps Kenwood KN-7044 Quadrixer • $250.00 • $100.00 Scott 499 Amp • 450.00 • 150.00 Kenwood PA-Amp • 250.00 • 75.00 Kenwood KSQ-20 • 25.00 Kenwood KSQ-400 • 175.00 • 50.00 R.A. Speakers $300.00 $100.00 A.R. 5. 215.00 100.00 A.R. -6. 99.00 50.00 Audionics TL-50 239.00 100.00 E.S.S. LAB-II 190.00 50.00 Sherwood Evol. I 129.00 50.00 KLM-32 75.00 25.00 Jensen Model 15 460.00 200.00 Scott S-15 50.00 Rectilinear XII 160.00 125.00 Marantz-6 140.00 50.00 E.V.-13 50.00 25.00 Sansui 661 $350.00 $225.00 Sansui 771 430.00 275.00 Kenwood KR-6140A 500.00 200.00 Electro-Voice EVR-3 300.00 75.00 Electro-Voice EV4X4 300.00 75.00 RAY AUDIO S Stitch On needlepoint shop 19 W. 9th 1/2 block west of Weaver's The Little Stereo Store with the Big Sales - Huge line of needlepoint—featuring a very large selection of patternen and also hand-painted canvases. * DMC pearle cotton and embroidery floss. * Cross-stitch * Counted cross-stitch * Large selection of crewel—featuring Ela Williams and Erica Wilson. * Latch-hook rugs with both regular and rva varens. 13 E. 8th St. 842-2047 Good Luck Jayhawks! - Latch-hook rugs with both regular and rya yarns. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEN'S HEALTH CENTER For years we have been providing the durable long lasting qualities of fine leathers in today's stylish forms. Boots, casual shoes, sandals, handbags, belts, watchbands, wallets, hats, traveling bags, jackets and leather accessories. AUDITIONS The Tradition of Leather in Styles of Today PRIMARILY LEATHER Hours 9:30:50 Mon. Sat. 12:00:8:30 Thurs. 812 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KANSAS For its Summer Repertory Theatre Company the KRT Season will be: June 11-Aug.6,1977. 35-40 actors and technicians will be needed. General Auditions—Murphy Hall Sat., April 23 10:00-12:00, 1:30-5:00 Sun., April 24 10:00-12:00, 1:30-5:00 This year SUA FINE ARTS has presented Louis Falco Dance Company, Duck's Breath Mystery Theatre, SUA Picture Lending Library, John Taller Poster, Paul Lim's Homerica, Seminar on Drama Criticism, Joffrey II Ballet, Strong Lobby Concerts, Dames At Sea, Peter Handke's Calling For Help, SUA Photo Contest, Student Print and Drawing Sale, and the ongoing Poet's and Writer's Series and Kansas Union Gallery, as well as Accent the Arts. If you have suggestions for programs or would like to help, let us know! INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: Union Gallery Chairperson Poet's and Writer's Series Chairperson Picture Lending Library Chairperson Interviews for SUA Fine Arts Committees '77-'78 Committee members to work with programs in all areas of the arts Wednesday, April 27, 7:30-9:00 p.m. Sign at the SUA Office. 826 Iowa 842-1320 Mail Early Mother's Day—May 8 Alexander's Gift Botique has a variety of special gifts to choose for your mother. We will gift and mail wrap free (with K.H.I.D.) Master Charge BankAmericard Lay-a-Way Gift Certificate 826 Iowa 842-1320 Mail Early Mother's Day—May 8 Alexander's Gift Botique has a variety of special gifts to choose for your mother. We will gift and mail wrap free (with K.H.J.D.) Gift Certificate Master Charge BankAmericard Lay-a-Way NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS The original thick crust pizza from New York* NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Coors Pitchers 95¢ With This Coupon Limit 1 pitched per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 MISS STREET DELI 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Special CHEF SALAD 4 kinds of cheese, 3 kinds of meat, your favorite salad, dressing and trays Reg $1.85 NEW YORKER 1021 MAZUCHETT ST. $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS The original thick crust pizza from New York" This coupon required 6/30/77 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT ST Coors Pitchers 95¢ With This Coupon Limited 1 pitcher per coupon per day Expires 4-30-77 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. MISS STREET DELI THE MASSACHUSETTS Special CHEP BALAD 4 kinds of cheese. 3 kinds of meat, your favorite salad dressing and crackers. Reg $1.85 Kansas University Interfraternity Council 104 Years of Friends Welcomes High School Seniors and Alums to RELAYS'77 Cel Jay The Nebran may have so maze at Quinley firing at The Cornhill best start ever traveled to traveled to Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri nraker s r The losses place in the prove this war, competition, division, a game, in games in teames in each Big Eight Challenging RU COAC Nebraska again. Kansas pa Elight champion April 29 and The Jayhaw lethanders play game JAYHAWN up six runs on tuesday at In the doul Charles Hirsch Heinrich ww taken to examination Heinrich will his head "We need would really Temple said beat Missouri year, but w again." Ba Sta Milwaukee Baltimore Toronto Cleveland Houston Detroit New York Chicago Oakland Minnesota Kansas City California Seattle Detroit 8. Boss New York 8. Minnesota 11. Chicago at CA Only games s Boston (White) Baltimore (P) New York (White) n. 1 n. 1 makeeer (B) Chicago (Stoe Nanam City (J) THE T University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22, 1977 11 Cellar-dwelling Nebraska to visit Jayhawks for 'crucial' series By GARY BEDORE Sports Writer The Nebraska Cornhusker baseball team may have something to prove this weekend The Cornhuskers had jumped off to their best start ever until last weekend when they traveled to Missouri to open conference play in the Big Eight's Eastern Division. Missouri swelt the four-game series to drop Nebraska's record 18-8. The losses knocked Nebraska into last place in the division and forces them to prove this weekend whether they will be competitive in Big Eight play. Kansas, 17-14-1, is in second place in the division, a game behind Missouri and two games in front of Iowa State. The top two teams in each division will square off in the Big Eight Championship Tournament May 18-19 in Oklahoma City. KU COACH Floyd Temple said the Nebraska series was crucial. We need to win at least two games, and we really like to win three or four. Tampa Bay will beat Boston three out of four games last year, but we can't be sure we'll do that. Kansas plays Missouri, last year's Big Lift champion, in its final division series. JIAYHAWK PITCHERS, however gave up six runs on 18 hits in a doubleheader loss The Jayhawks are scheduled to pitched lefthanders Brian Rhodes and Dave Rusch against the Cornhuskers. Both Rush, 4-2, was outscored by one in each game. The complete game performances last weekend. In the doubleheader, KU's first baseman, Carl Heinrich, crashed into Emperor State's ballpark, killing him. Heinrich was shaken up on the play and was taken to an Emperor hospital for examination. According to Temple, he will play today, despite a bump on his heel. Kansas' team batting average rose to .277 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern W 3 L Pot. GR Milwaukee 5 1 79 Baltimore 6 1 40 Detroit 6 4 28 Cleveland 4 6 26 New York 2 6 30 Detroit 2 5 31 Detroit 2 5 31 New York 2 5 31 Chicago 3 3 700 - Oakland 8 6 1671 - Memphis 8 6 17 - Kansas City 6 5 345 11% Tampa 6 5 345 11% California 6 6 420 19% San Francisco 6 6 420 19% after the games on Tuesday. Andy Gilmore and Lee Ice are each hitting .368 and are tied for the team lead. Carl Heinrich went 4-for-4 in the first game, which helped boost average to .347. Ron MacDonald and Brian Patterson followed him 142. .308 respectively. THE BOTTOM of the order, which has been hitting around or below. 200 for most of the season, was helped by shortstop Jeff Tuesday. He went 4-4 in two games. TOTALS Detroit B. Houston 0 New York H. Toronto 6 Minneapolis H. Minnesota 12 Chicago H. Californias 10, pdw power failure 0 Gonzalez H. Gonzalez 5 TOY'S GAMES Boston (Wine) 6, Dallas (Game) 21 Ballpark 31 at Detroit (Skyp 26) Minnesota (Paral) 4 at Texas (Perry 1) or Bryce 1. Milwaukee (Hass 64) at Californias (Harrell 10), 14. Cleveland (Stade 10) at Oakland 6, 130. San Diego (Stade 10) at San Francisco 7 "I'm tickled to death about Jeb's hits," temple said. "He's done a great job this week, and I think he will be back." great eye at the plate, and has gotten on base only six tikes less than Lee Ice." Watson has 28 bases on balls this year to lead the team. Lefthander Kirk Eymann (2.2, 3.1) E.R.A.) and righthander Jeff Costello (3.2, 3.47 E.R.A.) will oppose the Jayhawks. The Cormhushakers have a team E.R.A. of 3.72. Nebraska's lineup is bolstered by their leading hitter, Paul Haas, who is hitting 373. Lefflerfielder Joe Scherger leads the team in home runs (6) and R.B.I. St'erz (27) and also pitcher Other Jon Heme is batting 320, and the rest of the team is hitting in the 20s or below. Trust to consider offers to buy Boston Red Sox BOSTON (UPI) — The Boston Red Sox, the sole property of the late Thomas Leynkey for 45 years, are up for sale by the trust that owns the ball club, it was announced yesterday. General Manager Dick O'Connell read a statement from Mrs. Waykey, who has headed the trust since her husband's death last July, that said in part: "Consideration will be given to offers to buy the Red Sox. Offers are not being sought; nor will they be bought. A time limit is not in mind; nor will one be fixed." The announcement came minutes after the box had dropped an 4-0 decision to the Detroit Grizzlies. O'Connell said no serious offers have been received although several parties have inquired into the purchase of the Red Sox over the past year. "As far as any serious offers being made, I would say no," said O'Connell, who denied that he was the group to purchase the club. "We've had inquiries from certain people but these people have never seen our books. They have never seen the income or the expenditures of this club." One group long rumored interested in buying the Red Sox is headed by former Boston outfielder Dom Dmaggio, now a business executive in the greater Boston DiMaggio has said, "I am interested in buying this club if and when the Vawkeys come." MIDNIGHT MOVIES 1940s MIDNIGHT COWBOY CARTOON SHORT-*PAGE MISS GLORY*-Fri., April 22 & Sal., Apr. 23, 12:00 midnight, 1-Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union. Here's where we specialize... in offering a truely fine collection of mens clothing for all seasons in the most exciting new fashions and fabrics ... and the properly selected accessories needed to really bring your clothing alive. It's a service we greatly enjoy providing for you. I THE Town Shop 839 Massachusetts INSEASON Hurry over for this sports special! (1) MacGregor ball gloves (both hard & soft ball) 15% off We have the finest athletic shoes by: - Converse—An in season exclusive, Converse shoes with spikes and multipurpose soles. - Keds, Nike, Tiger, Pony, Brooks, Bata Everything for the sport that's in season. 844 Massachusetts 842-2442 1977 Season Football Tickets at Reduced Rates for Recent Grads Come by or mail your check to: 1975-1976-1977 Graduates are eligible to receive up to 2 tickets for the reduced price of *33.00 per ticket ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE Allen Field House Lawrence, Kansas 1. Remittance must accompany your order. Make your check payable to: KUAC. 3. In the event you have a change of address before Sept. 1st please notify the ticket office. 2. Do not expect to receive tickets before September 1. 4. Late season ticket orders received 14 days prior to the first game, cannot be mailed and must be picked up under name in which ordered at 66045 WILL CALL window in Memorial Stadium the day of the game. 5. Please list telephone number on order. 7. New season ticket holders will be assigned the best seats that become available. 6. People who had season tickets last year and want to reorder the same seats this year must do so before June 1. For further info.—Call 864-3141 Name: Address: City, State, Zip: Telephone: No. Price Amount $33.00 Postage Handling .60 TOTAL KU --- 12 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Reaction . . . Ayers said, "This (propala) has relieved one blower tender. It's something we have to do." From page one Ayers said he was posting a copy of Carter's proposals in the Dale Willey showroom and was considering using part of his model car to test motors. Motors cars could meet the guidelines now. The price of gasoline also will be affected by the proposals. Carter recommended that a four cents a gallon federal tax on gasoline be increased by five cents in 1979 if consumption next year increased one per cent over this year's rate. If the rate continued to increase, another five cent increase would be added in 1880. AFTER THAT, if consumption didn't drop by two per cent each year, the tax would go up by five cent increments until at a rate of 50 cents a gallon was reached. At that rate, the price of gasoline at the pump could reach $1 a gallon by 1985. An employee of Clark Oil Co., 511 W. Ninth St., who asked not to be identified, said Carter's policy was "definitely tough" because many Americans weren't prepared to make such a sacrifice. He said some companies might make money from the proposal and others might lose money, but wouldn't speculate further. Under Carter's proposals, houses that incorporate energy-saving features would make their owners eligible for income tax credits. Done Brewster, owner of Brewster Construction Co., 2028 Louisiana St., said the credit would increase the number of new homes built, but the increase would be slow. "People will have to take insulation seriously, and they can use the credits to fix it." The credits, starting immediately and lasting through the end of 1984, could total as much as $410 for the installation of such equipment. This would add another addition, credits starting at $2,002 and gradually decreasing through 1984 would be applied to anyone who buys solar heating systems. BREWSTER SAID he knew of few companies who manufactured solar energy equipment. But, he said, homes can be built so that parts of them can be closed to decrease the amount of space that needs heating. The proposed ceiling price of natural gas might have an adverse effect on agriculture and gas production in Kansas, according to Robert Robell, acting state energy director. Robel speculated earlier this week that the ceiling of $1.75 a thousand cubic feet would seriously impair Kansas drilling cost of natural gas in Kansas now is $18.44 In addition, crop prices aren't keeping pace with the cost of pumping water for irrigation. The irrigators use natural gas for fuel and barely break even now, Robel George Segal & Jane Fonda Ronald Olsen, KU professor of economics, said that any rebates or tax credits were only averages and that some people would benefit more than others. people with low incomes pay little taxes but their reductions won't help them pay bills. Olsen said he thought that the proposals weren't clear enough and that the combination of taxing and returning of money to payers could never be done equitably. "But the more you prepare now, the better ready you are," he said. Granada 04127 - Sevilla 89 5 3890 "FUN WITH DICK AND JAME" "BLACK SUNDAY" Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" Eve, 7:15 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun, at 2:30 Glenda Jackson, Sandy Dennis, Geraldine Page "ROCKY" Every Eve at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat, Sun Mat 2:30 Starring YLVESTER STALLONE Eve, 7:30 & 9:45 Sat, Fri, 1-45 Varsity Tartiflet ... September 27, 1985 "NASY HABITS" LOVELY A RARITY, A POETIC COMEDY HAIT'S REALLY FUNNY Hillcrest "BREAKER BREAKER" "SMALL CHANGE" Eve. 7:20, 9:33 Sat. Sun. Hillcrest E Show starts 7:30 Sunset Sunset NEW HAVEN MEET WALK AWAY 84 the GRAMOPHONE shop COMPLETE STOCK AT DISCOUNT PRICE $5495 $1995 DIAMOND NEEDLES the GRAMOPHONE shop COMPLETE STOCK AT DISCOUNT PRICE $54.95 $19.95 DIAMOND NEEDLES CASE LOT PRICES BLANK TAPE KIEF'S DISCOUNT BEFORE S19 95 S19 $ ^{95} $ Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT O YAMAHA Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 1-913-841-1544 25th & Iowa --- SUMMER VACATIONS CAN BE PRODUCTIVE as well as enjoyable ... ENROLL IN SUMMER MINI-SESSIONS AT... JOHNSON COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE --- College Boulevard at Quivira Road Overland Park, Kansas In just four weeks, you can pick up credit for those courses you don't want to stretch over an entire semester! - Totally air-conditioned campus and friendly instructors too; - Earn up to six hours of credit in just one mini-session; - Courses offered in liberal arts, science and general education; which are transferable to four-year colleges and universities. MODERATE TUITION 1st Mini-Session - June 6-July 1 Or ... 2nd Mini-Session - July 5-July 29 Regular 8-week summer session - June 6th-July 29th. On Campus For additional information about making application for the summer school program call the College at (913) 888-8500, ext. 201. TODAY: There will be a GEOLOGY SHORT COURSE from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The ENGINEERING EXPOSITION will be open for public viewing from noon to 9 p.m. in Learned Hall. Events TONIGHT: Professional Jerry Hilmer will give a RACKETTALL SEMINAR from 7 to 9 in Robinson South Gyrmium. The Dungeons and Dragons game at 7 in the Union's Oread Room. THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 at the Potter Lake Pavilion between Carruthers and Cedar Ridge building, 1234 Oread Ave., if it rains. Watch the want ads in the Kansan TOMORROW: There will be a GEOLOGY SHORT COURSE from 9 a.m. to noon in the Union's Council Room. The ENGINEERING EXPOSITION will be open for public viewing 9 a.m. to noon in Learned Hall. The Museum of Natural History will sponsor a SCREEN HUNT from 9 a.m. to noon for ages through adult. Call 844-7341 for reservations. SUNDAY: The WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS Awards Banquet will be at 6 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The ISHAEL INDEPENDENCE WOODRUFF Auditorium, SUA will sponsor a COMEDY EAT at 8 p.m. in Hoch Audiorum. Correction It was incorrectly reported in the Kansan yesterday that members of a newly formed committee designed to study computerized pre-employment were announced by SenEx. Instead, they were assigned to a temporary Senate Committee on Computers and Computer Facilities. The committee won't consider systems of pre-enrollment or the functional nature of computers as reported in the Kansan. The committee will investigate whether a permanent committee is needed to oversee operations of all computer facilities, according to Elden Fields, professor of political science and University Council member. Steak & SHRIMP FRANCISCAN $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks. Open 11 a.m., 9 p.m. Daily $4.50 PROPERTY SNOOPY Lite THE NATURAL DAY AT LITTLE GINNY'S PIZZERIA MUKBERRY When the week's just begun and already you're 4 chapters,3 papers,2 outlines and 1 project behind ...it's no time to get filled up. Lite HINDRISK BEER ©1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Lite Beer from Miller. Everything you always wanted in a beer. And less. Accomm ment adve are offe sex, color BRING AI CLASSIF 15 words fewer Each ado word AD DEM to run: Monday Tuesday Wednesac Thursda Friday ERRORS The U than ances mater FOUND Found charge days, simply at 864 UDK BU 111 Flim --- Canoe be student i mile, 4-6 available Sparrow on highw 456-8371. 3-piece Fly $43, n Mass. in Apartme no pets. Reserve or meet too large Kitchen the new Vermont 1 and 2 Union, Frontier Studios, with stu- drapes • door po free shi furnishie 4444. Fiery F entertain 9:00 p.m Gatehou Fall, Sp contract 6446 for CARPE'S Six Lav 267-2980 1-3 beds leges, 1 842-4065 Make available going f tails: N Live on with all leasing 15th. C Saturda Two w. campus rates, $ 15. W. 15th New 1 campus 200 to ROSAI write f open Mark I leases. battalion posi. manage affords. afford a 4-5 bed courts. time. Sublease apartm Ridge. MOBII bedroo pool, f storage 6th. 8 Dx University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22, 1977 13 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students with interest related to ENGLISH. We accept BIRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 113 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one, two three four five times times times times times 15 words or fewer $3.00 $2.50 $2.00 $1.50 ERRORS fewer...$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or by calling the UDR business office at 843-594-7610. ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe heat trips, on the Illinois River. Special tours include a 4-hour hike $3.60 per person. Other trips giveaway of phone or face book route to Hawk Canoe Route. Mail route to highway 10, Oklahoma, Oklahoma 74468 (914) 225-8290. 3-piece Rastafar plant set, with planters, normal- mary pots and tools they last at the Mass. in the Cabana. B-426 ENTERTAINMENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 500 sq. ft. available. No groups allowed. Kitchen and bar facilities located. Located in Southwest Duluth, MN. Vermont. Call 812-8644 for information. 5-12 Fiery Furnace Coffee House-Informal, relaxed morning, Friday and Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. FOR RENT Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, nets, peds 843-7567. tf 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 835-978- 001 Frontier Ridge—short term leaves available. The pool is heated with study. Heated indoor pool + shag carpet + with study. Heated indoor pool + shag carpet + pool door + disposal + putty + laundry facilities + furnished and unfurnished from $75. Calm 82-818 furnished and unfurnished from $75. Calm 82-818 Gatehouse Apartments - Call Becky new summer contracts on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 855-724-3011. CAPTET CLEANSING STEAMEX. Rent the Pro 3937 carpet Rental location. Call客服 5-10 5-10 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privacy, possible rent reduction for labor. 845-200-7555. Make your plant bloom. Applianceations are now available fast by the use of compressors and pump systems for filling hot air to be for your and compresseur systems. Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid, on $125,000. Two-bedroom apartment with all bills paid, on $175,300. $843 - 693 = 150 comes to $105,000. New bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 642-3700. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now available for fall, call 843-493-20 or by 1634 7th Street, house 8:30-28 on Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. Mark I and II apartments for summer and fall vacations. Two bedroom bedrooms unites the balcony, full carpeted floors, elegant display draps and warm appliance in. Building walk to Stratford, Luxury and convenience at Mark I and II apartments. ROSAKALA HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 65258. The hotel is also located at: OFFICE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ART OAKLAND, CA 94017 or com- bined OAKLAND, CA 94017. OPEN NEAR MAY, LABOR JOURNAL 4-bedroom townhouse, with 2 baths, pool, tennis courts, and reasonable rent. Call 842-6473 at 9am or by fax to 842-6473. Sublease for summer. Two bedroom unfurnished unit in the city center of Pittsburgh. Ridge Option to rent next fall. Call 841-6210 MOBILE HOME RENTALS. We offer 1, 2, and 3 bedroom units with off street parking, swimming pool, free trashack, storm shelter, and boat dock. We also -Webster's Mobile Homes. 842-787-3900 842-787-3900 4-22 Eyekeeper Optical Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen Sublease over summer. Trailridge 2 bedroom at 6 p.m. 941-847-5030, call John 4-228 941-847-5030 Excellent condition, spacious two-bedroom, af- condition, dishwasher, wares, furnished. condition, kitchen, bathroom. Business area for summer-furnished 2-bedroom apartment, certain air conditioning, carpet, room reservation. Two bedroom apartment, four-floor, wooded area, 2200 sq ft. $399/month. Street View: 811-454-2755 4-25 & Sandwich Skop Richmond-Purished studio apartment Mid May 16th April 25th. Located at A Meadowbrook, next to pool, tennis courts and pool. Sublue Townhouse, three large bedrooms, full full bath, pool, pools, busiess, tx +625 +625 COMFORTABLE sublet apartment available. Reduced summer rates: two-bedroom, A/ C 5' min. to 10' min. modern kitchen, summa balky room, laundry, parking, quiet, neighbors. 482-626 3-bedroom, 5-bath townhouse for sublease. Will discount lease $50 mo. Call 841-5697. 526- Reduced rates. Walk to campus. Refrigerator range and oven. Food disp. Dishwasher. 4-26 For summer or year-Leave house, 1-3 bedroom apartment or single room with kitchen. 842-695-2867 Subtitling one-bedroom, Mark II apartment for summer. One block north of Union College. 4-26 Sublease for summer session only. Small furnished house, good location. 841-7176 evenings. Summer sublease—two bedroom spa apartment, $115 mo. plus utilities, no deposit.聘任费$300/mo. Must subst a spacious 3-bedroom, 2-half town building, of half May free. Bert pawn builtage, 841-612. Sublease for summer- 2 bedroom townhouse at Trairdale that will easily accommodate 3 people. A&C on bus route, ferried to patio, individual car parking, fully equipped garage, largely reduced rate. Phone 841-922-6128 4-28 August apartment to sublease mid May through August. Completely furnished at Meadowbrook & Crestwood. Free parking. Plush, one of a kind 4-bedroom. 3 story townhouse. Availible mid-May. Call: 842-643-506 Cooperative household has rooms for rent at summer fall. Rent averages $3 a month plus food costs. Room rates vary. To wish to sublime nice 2-bedroom apartment, nr Firmina and its neighbours, shag. For寝 morning only. Call: 485-609-1388. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes-Now on Sale! Make a checklist for your Western Civilization —1) As study guide. 2) For Class preparation. 3) For Exam preparation. *New Analysis* *Western Civilization* -available now at Towson U.S. College. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties. BEL AUT ELECTRIC, 843-900-3600, W 6:hh, BEL AUT NETWORK, 843-900-3900, W 6:hh. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, microphones at Audio System, 9th ett, Rhode Island. Set of four new 1538 mm leather belted radials only. Buy each one at $295.00. Macy's Open, Money, $295.00. $295.00. $295.00. Craig Caston Tape recorders final cut to $39 from RCA Capture 100. Record players to $25 from Hydromat $69, Hibernate $99, Mass Open Titures all $49, Hymenix $89. Final cut on C.B. Radio's and Antenna's. Some records are in the public domain. Rock Bay Sound 929 Mass.听完,ılı 83; 108 and 110. RADIATE THE CLEARANCE 145 x 13, 155 x 13. PET. Mounting and balancing available. PET. Mounting and balancing available. 1967 Firebird Formula, every available option, immaculate condition, light blue with honeydew color. Volunteer Cleaning House is adults and children for $2.50 each. Available in adults and children in 100% white cotton shirts -red letters saying "VOLUNTEER CLEANING HOUSE." Signal order at 114 B, Kansas Union, 864-389-3991. Mobile home, 1731 Blair House 1926B 2 bedroom Mansion, 1548 Blair House 1926B 2 bedroom, formalized, dwarfed, down, must be 841-846. Mansion, 1548 Blair House 1926B 2 bedroom. 70 Karnan Ghia Convertible. 4-speed, 28 mpg 1976 Ford Mustang Convertible. 3-speed, calibrated call. Ship 642-537-2288. 1975 Chrysler 300. Ship 642-537-2288. 1975 Bulloch Frontera '60? *Better Fork* w/NWa nipon, new pallet, red fire, 1301 Storm 4-22 Must sell 72 pickup Good condition Best offer gall Dem. 841-313 anytime. 4-22 846 Illinois Camera, Petri TF, 35 mm, SLR, F=55mm 13.8 lens, exposure meter, hatter filter, sun shade 40° 40° Papanicau AM-MF w/tumbleback, speakers, $100 or best offer, 814-5639 4-22 27" Pengot for sale. Excellent condition. $858 nine new. Call 621-842-1085. 4-22 843-7685 Honda 36CGB New 5-30-75, windshield and backrest. 811 - 841-3655. 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 Drive-in Clinic tor most imported cars TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Lawrence teacher must sell 1574 mobile home seating spaces, including separate seating areas, include central air, appliance and weather and dryer. Anchored and 6-8 p.m. Friday, 3232 Iowa, #124. 4-29 Friday, 3232 Iowa, #124. 10-speed Motobike (Super-Mirage). In exe- tentive mode, the bike has a half and a shift 844-8065 for more information. Cape Powerwave cassette tapephon e 2 James N. Ridgway with hardware and hardw- 器 842-964-2531 a p. 3 pm. 4-22 67 Olds, Delmontes 88, air, power, good condition and very reliable, or best offer Cushion 4-255 Cushion 4-255 Sumn 190L Tube guitar amp 50 watts, 3-12" speakers. Excellent condition. 841-6445-4621 fax 72 VW 411 wagon, radio, radio, new VW duridians radii, very good condition 8-305 4-306 4-308 Records (over 200) in good excellent condition, down a room, Broadway Soundtracks, Satuata Soundtracks, and music more. Also cushioned, t.v., stereo, soundproof, and will well sell. Call Mistle move soon and will sell cheap. Call Wedding and graduation gift ideas. Unique selection of jewelry and basket items at Bengala & Bengal. 1966 Pk Vail. Portant 3-speed manual, 6-gly-depident transmission. M423-7228. For 5 p.m. garage. For 6-pm. garage. Yamaha guitar- with case. Good condition, nice wall, will bargain. Call 842-5732. 4-22 1972 Pat 124 spot comp. 65,000 good air, three air- conditioning runs, one exhaust fan, leave base number 4-286 One-room, 115 vol. air conditioner; Y20, Yamaha FG-110 acoustic guitar and case, $75, 822-802- 3468 2 Electric Vocaler speakers $25 each. Ganz MGT-6 Brightfield, Grand Prix 16 speed $79. Call $83-345- 403. Electric Vocaler Speakers $120 each. Ganz MGT-6 Brightfield, Grand Prix 16 speed $79. Call $83-345- 403. Pioneer LP-12D-II Belt drive turntable 10 Belt drive 12D-II Belt drive 10 included Excellent condition 841-294 4-25 TV—RAC 23 'blue' and white Console, real wood cabinet, piece of furniture, works great. Also, a custom-made console for your TV. For Sale- Artilet flute in excellent condition, price negotiable. Call Sieve at 814-566-04 4-26 Porsche 914 (1970) $2,200. Call: (913) 233-707 or (913) 233-387 after 6:00 Brand new 35 mm Pentax KM camera with lens full warranty. 1500, 843-4544. 4-27 Deluxe elevated watertec in beautiful wood dress, 842-8601; 6:00 a.m., 6:27 pastel. M242-8601. 44 Ford Van, fair condition, needs some work. must buy $125 or best offer, 8644-6126 49 Jeep Wrangler, fair condition, needs some work. must buy $215 or best offer, 8644-6126 1974 Kawasaki 750-H2F-生产周期 cycle condition 440 mL/hr Call: 841-787-1004 Motorcycle 74 125 Suzuki. Must sell—will take best offer. Call 842-1210 4-28 Biggest sale ever at RAY AUDIO. K.L.H. 212-854-6300. $99 for a two-hour AVR-$159. A.R.S.-$159. $100 each (reg $215急款). A.VR-$159. $200 each (reg $275急款) or afford it! RAY AUDIO-13 E. 8th. The Littles Quaint Company. With The Big Sales and Hands-On Quality. 1970 XY W Scholastic womens magazine, new york 1970 W School magazine, covetable new york 1970 W School magazine, covetable new york For Sale-1771 VW conv. Super Beetle. 4 q. bright yellow light, must milts. mwlt 822-415-408 www.ebay.com For Sale: 1969 VW Bug auto St. A nice car. Asking $850, 842-4150. 4-28 RAY AUDIO has the full line of Advert and Allison Loudspeaker sets. We are a well-known speaker we had a sale on Advert speakers. We now top that off with our biggest 12. Eighth. Bhf (in hot Mast), The Little Store Stereo. We also have the VHF. MUST SELL. BEST offer press with exhibition only. One yearly. $1000 or will finance. B42-8468 B42-9754 B42-9764 FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIALIST! Until April 15, 2024. Use with an IC-150 Pro Am Radio and a 160-A Power Supply. See manual for details. BALLOON RIDES -Fly the skies over Lawrence a beach on Bald Eagle Island, or Balloonboats @ Balloons 814-475-2700 Avon open territory in Lawnries. Even if you do not have a world of world famous pro- fits, you can profit from world famous Avon and create a world of world famous Avon. HELP WANTED 843-9891 KANSAN needs two people to prepare subscriptions for mailing next fall. KVIEI heavy work, approve. 8-24 hours per day. Mon through Fri. 8-24 hours per day. Contact: JACKY 684-158 or in I11F11 "Bummer Employment" afternoon and evening training. "Bummer Workforce" morning and evening necessary. The policy, salary, working conditions, training, benefits, and other information are available at: www.bummer.com. Watfordton Well established restaurant and club. William and Fall Fair restaurants 4-368 941-386-7000 DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS AND ASSISTANT TO THE DREAM SCHOOL OF LAW, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. Residency required in financial and related matters. Probable responsibility for compliance with all requirements. Full-time, year-round appointment. Required: Master's degree in law or a foreign language and mathematical ability, skill in dealing with pre-operative experience in relevant areas. Salary expected to be in the $14000 to $17000. Position offered may not extend to the $18000. May 10. Submit resume to Dean Martin B. Dickey of Lawrence, Kansas 60452. An Equity Manager. Affirmative Career Employer. Qualified men and women are encouraged to apply. *Logged Live Delivery, must know area well. be healthy to drive. Call 911 or 212. p.m. at Good daily pay. Call 812-3-18 and 812-3-26. JOBS!!! Spare time/Full time 4-7 p.m. weekdays Call 913-272-2786 *"Students," 15 telephone receptionists for new *Lawrence Parktirt Club." No experience required. *Good salary, and benefits A.M. M and P. *Call: 917-263-15 and 3-48-36. *4-16, 841-7620* TEACHING ASSISTANT Chinese and Japanese (1 each) for summer session (June 13 to August 3). Those interested should apply to R. L. Sparer, Summer Session, 218 Wise Street May 1, 1977 4-25 SUMMER JOE, MAKE $265.00 NET THIS SIMU- RELATION: JOB NO. 41873 FOR ENTER-ING UBCOLATE. CALL 840-8277 FOR INTER- VIEW. Hostess, fine area restaurant and,饼 prefer 24/1 part time, events, availability. C38 B28. Food served on request. Now taking applications for summer help. Apply in person; Dwarves, 644 Mass. 841-5353. 4-27 LOST AND FOUND **Blue-bound xerox copy of dissertation** **Boston University, 1941.** *University Press* 3007, 864-4526 **4-22** **864-4526** Lost wallet and key ring with 4 keys, east of Robinson. Reward 843-2653. 4-25 Found textbook in 4076 Weese. Call Tim at 843- 6256 and describe. Unique selection of rings and bracelets at Bengal. 903 Mass at the Cabath 4-26 Found a watch on the hill behind JRP. Call 644- 8211 and identify. Keep trying. Lost-small black and white cat tom wearing white flea coat Call 842-5257 after 5 a.m. 4-26 Found 4- keys on sidewalk behind Green Hall Call 843-1980 4-25 Lost pair of glasses in orange cave, if found 860-5977 4-22 Found~mum's leather waller belonging to Salem Bilton. Can he stick up the Dean's office. He's been so bad, I'm calling the police. Elizabeth J. Bowes bet 842-5081 to claim your coin purse. 4-26 Found a set of Chrysler car keys at 12th and 11th. Louisiana. Call 842-0384 after 5分钟. 4-26 NOTICE THE FIELDS AIRFRAME WATERbeds AVAILABLE AT KARABE-Learn the ancient secrets of this marvelous physical conditioning and learn self-defense skills. Develop the skills you need to survive any situation. STORE 112 MASS ST 842-7187 "How to buy a used car" - Workshops sponsored by "Consumer Affairs Association, Kansas Union College," Ballard Center, April 21, 7:30 p.m. p.M. Public Library, Annex 4, 7:30 p.M. free film and discussion. Goods • Vintage Clothing - Furniture - Antiques Selected Secondhand BE AWARE: APRIL 30 KANSAS UNION 4-26 Don't miss the coffee and tea to bed at the Stinky Cheese Shoppe, Wed., April 20 to Wed., April 27 Graduate! plan now for car and photos. Graduate! plan now for car and photos. Two $4x photos. billing-$400. 823-728-9687 Swap Shop. $20 Mass. used furniture, dishes, pamper kits, checks, televisions. Open daily 12- 3pm. Free Wi-Fi. ANTIQUE AND COLLECTORS BIIGH AND AND ANTIQUE COLLECTORS BIIGH AND Admission $10.00 Murs 1hours 6mins to 8pm Administration $20.00 Murs 1hours 6mins to 8pm K. I.Y. Ballet, Dance Club spring performances, Saturday and Tuesday from 10am to 4pm, and Thursday and Vernon; tickets $150 Available at K.I.Y. Ballet. Air conditionment your feet! Flaps, 1.5, Bengals, 803 Mass in the Caddis. 4-26 Come one, come all to Ottawa first annual blazer fashion show. This event is a national, Honor Society, Green Park-Ottawa, Kansas. April 21. Registration age 12 and under 8 a.m. — Fcc. Registration over 12 at 3:30 p.m. **'BRAZEN IN THE SUN' GAY SERVICES PICNIC, April 12. Cavain leaves front of the kitchen for an afternoon snack or own food. For other information on this call, visit www.brazeninthensun.com. Wouldn't Anastia Bryson help if she could swim?** QUANTRILLE FLEA MARKET IS OPEN, QUANTRILLE FUNERAL, GLASS, JEWELRY, ROOKS EVERY SAT AND WEEK 10AM- 6AM, EVERY SAT, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 842-2165, HAMPSHIRE - Imported Clothing MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL PRINTING WHILE YOU WAT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alie is available from 4 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at $8 Mass. Personalized weddings, ceremonies, Universal Kitty Inquiries. Box 5062. Lawrence Lawrence Why would 90 footholes bounce on a trampoline for 72 continuous hours in 6 alpen Field skate parks? They'd tough skills jeans! NO' THE MEN of TAU KAP 'BOUND FOR KAP' holding their third annual 'ROUNDER FOR KAP' Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of deitructive drug addiction. For help or info, #81-010 www.noradeprescription.com Gay Counseling Service: Call 841-7505, 6:21 p.m. for referrals. For socializing calls, call 841-7505. ENJOY LIFE Experience Spoon River Anthropol- age, April 22, 24 & 8 pm Hailungtai Hall Hunger ANYONE can become a Universal Life Church Minister—even attested. Legally perform manifold duties, including administering more lazies! (Now over 25,000 tax-exempt ULC numbers nationwide!) Don't delay—become an ULC member and send $3 and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the University of Minty, Inc. K944-4-22 HALF AS MUCH This is your long baggage to win $150 dollars from the PGA Tour Championship. Yellow Jacket Contest today at Bath 3. Karen Wang won. **REWARD** -$10 for info leading to acquisition of a furnished apartment, $16 for unpaid room, $412 for furniture, $841 for utilities. 7308 Mass. 841-7O7O The Rev. T. Miller referred to in previous Uni- lite Life, church Act in the 18th Dec. 4-26 **BOUNDARY FOR BOYS** April 26-29 in front of the N.Y. Public Library for a day of Club Stip by and heat wave songs! 4-8/15 See Ben's greatest rises Friday and Saturday, Wilmington (89) and See admission Ben-12. M-G-M (99) **REWARD** $5 for interior to leading to rental of room furnished in one bedroom apartment for 414-722-3860, 4-268 ROTC guy: You are too much! I take that back... I am a girl. I'm not in love with sex-and keep it when I space out. But remember, I just love you for your eyes, dimeshair, and half-to-knee. Kentucky's far away, but better than any other place. J. R. at the Pi Phi house. A suave, debonair Aero misses your sunshine smile. 4-22 Amiele Happy 3-month, Hey you know what? I do more than you L.T. 4-22 MESSNORTIES People with brags and jokes meet there in the People Union April 20. Memoranda meet there in the Union April 20. 8th & Mass. Lynn, thanks for looking out your window. I'm glad it you're tonight! the night! Lay ya Rougery. Pier1 imports associate store Phone: 841-7525 HEADQUARTERS for JAMES CANG Imported Auto Parts Foreian Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m. - Football ARMADILLE BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE The Lounge Howdy TRAK Rogue Canoe Team, a good second team, we see you at the downhill-KS2 Kawada. 10. 5:30(Thurs.8:00) 9th and Iowa TYPING Good Guzze Yall. This is to commemorate the day guzzer day to J. Much love to you. Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe STEREO BROKEN! Receivers, amplifier, turntable, tape decks. Preventive maintenance (turn table clean and label etc.) Custom software warranty. Jeager Electronics. 724 Mass. 841-5353. No gum tonight Charlotte. Happy first year. Love. Brad 4-23 English Teacher, KU Graduate, has taught in England and in the U.S. at Church Hill Preparatory School in Crown Hill Branch. She is also an English intermediate teacher and English graduate. English初级英语, 2012. English中级英语, 2013. English高级英语, 2014. $5.00 an hour. Phone 812-856-1955. Email teachers@ku.edu. From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476 - Pinball Typist/editor, IBM Pica/clite, Quality work. Rates acceptable. Times, dissertations welcome. SERVICES OFFERED 841-7946 M-S 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 have a $85 Massachusetts or phone 628-7954. Thank you. Mute tutoring-competent, experienced tutors help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 111, 116, 120, 137, 142, 150, 585, 594. Regular lessons or one time training. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681. You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That's $103 less than the youth fare you'd pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. Experienced Grip—term papers, thesus, mule, mice. Experienced Spread—term papers, spelled out, 845-505 Mr. Wright. TYPING: Lynn 843-8756 or 842-6558. 75c a file. tf SUA Maupintour travel service Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for great typing, 864-8314 days, 864-8998 evening. Will type your paper with TLC. Term papers and diaries are best typed on 80-431 alli, 120-718, evenings and weekends. No hauls—just good lying at deadline or over-water. The foresight is shortest of deadlines. Harvey or Khan? Wads experience law papers, thesis, dissertations. Wills, Wadds 848-0724. Prices: $10 Wills, Wadds 848-0724. Peggy's damned good typing now offers copying and binding. Convenience one stop service 842- Icelandic Experienced, typist-tern, paper*, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. Call US, 842-7230. WANTED "A different kind of bar "enturing seclusion and quiet." Female commute to share nine 3 bedroom apartment to campuse Call 911-4748 or 942-703. Female roommate for next fall, spring at Baird Hawkers Tower, Carilogan, Cata, Dan at A+22-82. Female to hire comfortable two-bedroom house, ward. AC $100 month. 841-778, 843-655, 819-Lyman. Female roommate wanted to share apartment next year. Prefer upper classroom, non-smok Kansas Union 843-1211 Rooftime needed for summer. Large 3-bedroom lodge-1008 *MASS* -962 (mil) + 1 7/8 ft building-1008 *MASS* -962 (mil) northwest End of Hillcrest Bowl One or two responsible people to share spacious rooms. Prefer two or three apartments, piano, garden, furniture, privacy. Prefer persons (male or female) who appreciate good food and care. Phone: 842-7267. 4-28 . . . . . Female roommate needed for summer. $70 month plus 1.5 units, furnished 2-median apartment. $35 monthly. - Bud on Tap Two girls to share large bedroom in Trailtale two宿舍 for next year. Non-smoking, studious girls. Roommates needed for next year. Call for details after 4. Karen or Laurie. 814-6498. 4-28 Summer female roommate wanted to share townhouse for commercial $50.50 per month plus 1% utilities $125. Roommate must live in the same building. 3- bedroom house for summer and/or next fall. 835-6455. Ask for Paul Kevin, Ted Gene. 4-25 - Pool Only, wood and burl cherry lattes available. Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522 NAISMITH HALL --- 1 HILLCREST BILLIARDS Pool Speaker - Ping Pong - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Feos-Ball TE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl --- 14 Friday. April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan New union will close Daisy Hill Bookstore The Daisy Hill Bookstore, Hassinger Hall, will close when the satellite union opens in 1979. Warner Ferguson, associate of the Kansas Union, said yesterday. "It is a losing proposition," he said. The bookstore, operated by the Union, has been about about $2,000 the last five years, but will be open until the new union is built. "The RANGE OF our income above expenses is between $20,000 and $30,000 a year," he said, although some college student unions are having financial difficulties because union unions is difficult because their structure and organization are different, he said. However, over-all the Union is doing well, financially. Ferguson said. "We try to be self-supporting," he said. "We could operate at a break-even point. That would be the minimum acceptable." Fergason said the philosophy here gave students first priority and faculty, staff and offices second priority. "We are a student union," he said. "The key to our success has been student support and the help we've received from the student leadership." THE MONEY ABOVE expenses is kept in fund, which may be used as working capital. Problems facing the Kansas Union include meeting the budget, space problems and staff issues. No complaints have been brought to my personal attention," he said. "But I am aware that there has been some student violence in our school." It was brought up in the Student Senate. Last year the Union remodeled the main lobby, and this year Frank Burke, Union director, asked the Senate to raise the Union user's fee of the activity fee $1 to help absorb increased operating expenses, especially higher utility rates. The Kansas Department approved the increase last week. The makes the fee for a full-time student $25.50. FERGUSON SAID THE money used to remodel the Union had been earmarked for a new bridge. "The majority of funds came from a state account that could not legally be used for income taxes." Due to the results of a survey released in 1975, a study of student needs cannot be made (3). That report, compiled during the preceding four years, will be used as an indication of student opinions about the Union. Ferguson said. "To it again would take a lot of time and money," he said. The report indicated that students wanted a common area with a record shop; soda machine; coffee shop; wine bar; beer, plant and money order sales; banking services; mailboxes; an ice cream饼师; ballet boards; a metal ticket plan; more classroom and typewriter for rent or immediate use. MOST OF THE SERVES wanted are offered now. Ferguson said, and in sme He said remodeling of the upper level of the bookstore and a souvenir shop in the lower level. cases, a good alternative is offered. Some things like the meal ticket plan, have been made available to you. Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. The report also recommended that the Union take an active role in the planning of Clinton Reservoir because of possible disturbances in the business Discovery Program, Ferguson said. "We haven't done that yet, though, but it will probably be down the road," he said. "WE WANT TO have a place to store sailboats and that is a possibility," Farman said. He said the Union didn't own any land at Clinton Reservoir, but the Kansas University campus. KU jazzmen take honors at Tulsa Jazz Festival Two KU jazz bands brought home six awards from the University of Tulsa Jazz Festival last weekend. The festival featured two Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas. The 12:30 dazz Ensemble, directed by Jim Barnes, assistant to the director of band ensembles, was selected as the outstanding big band in the contest. The ensemble, entitled KU band, as named for the time it rehearses each afternoon, Barnes said recently. Three of the four soloists in the 12:30 Jazz Ensemble were awarded outstanding performance. Belle Glade, McCurdy, Belle Glade, Fla., graduate student, who plays trumpet and flugelhorn; Irving Curtis Jr., topper, who plays bass; William Village freshman, who plays trombone. McCurdy, who studied at Florida &M University, directs the other KU jazz band, the Tuesday-Thursday Band, named after the days it rehearses. Two members of that band also were awarded outstanding performance citations: Chris Leason, 10; Kentucky St., Chris Leason, 10; Dick Buckhus, Greenwood, Mr. freshman, John Smith. Both bands have 21 members. Today they left for Wichita to compete in the annual Wichita Jazz Festival. Barnes said he ex- presses his admiration to be much tougher there than in Tulsa. Barnes, who began directing the 12:30 band this year, and he was pleased with the new music. Before 1973, KU had no jazz bands, he said, but the school is becoming intricate. "It's one of the best," he JUAREZ TEQUILA Rare...yet so well-done! It's a prime rich tequila at a hot dog price. GOLD OR SILVER IMMORTAL BEST LISTED TEQUILA TEQUILA JUAREZ AL CERVEJA 750 ML (23.4 FL OZ) 10 Daisies or Daffodils $1.50 and 10 Tulips $2.00 Mixed Bouquet $2.75 Owens- FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana Cash and Carry Thursday, Friday, Saturday G2 Gingerbread House Any shape, any size! FRAME-UP - Oval - Shadow Boxes - Large and small bringing it to you. Available at Doreta's Decorative Arts 843-7255 1006 New Hampshire When you think of spring... you've got to think of the Country House. We love this bright and sunny season and we bring in racks and shelves Full of fresh and exciting fashions to spark your wardrobe. an example is this wonderfully crisp cotton blend sun dress from Lang. you'll love our collection and the way we present it. It's fun and we enjoy bringing it to you. Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Massachusetts St. Downtown m SATURDAY, APRIL 23rd only FAITH Get down to some new sounds of Rock 'n Roll theLawrence OperaHouse $1.00 Per Show DOORS OPEN AT 8:30 SHOW STARTS AT 9:00 Let yourself go to Pizza Hut. 49c George Brett, John Mayberry, Mark Littell, Tom Poupoleta, Hal McRae, Whitley Herzog. A different Kansas City Royals star every week . . . on special glasses at Pizza Hut*. Just get a 16 oz. glass of your favorite soft drink at any participating Pizza Hut restaurant, and keep the glass! Collect all six while supplies last! Better hurry . . . 'cause everybody's goin' star gazing at Pizza Hut. ★ ★ ★ ★ Pizza Hut GEORGE BRETT Third Baseman-Kansas City Royals George Brett With these glasses you'll see stars. 804 9owa • 1606 W. 23rd • 932 Massachusetts 0 0 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sports c Vol. 45, No. 101 The University of Kansas - Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 27, 1977 BILL LUNDBERG Elementary School Lesson Plans Last February, Lundberg entered the 1000 yard run in a tri-match to set a fast pace for Kansas distance man Gleom Harter, who was trying to qualify for nationals. Although Harter barely missed his time, Lundberg broke Jim Rynn's Allen Field House record by running a 2:10.6. Ss Right Photos by Jay F. Koelzer Story by Gary Vice Remember those who led you, who spoke the word of God to you,and considering the outcome of their way of life. imitate their faith If you could listen to Bill Lundberg talk about the 4:01.9 mile he ran this past indoor season and see the beaming expression on his face, you wouldn't think anything else could ever be as important to him. But Lindberg, who was co-captain of the Jayhawk's track team last year in his senior season, can't hide the same excited smile when he speaks of his work this year as a traveling art teacher for Lawrence elementary schools The smiles and affection he receives from young school children are as gratifying to him as any of his track accomplishments, he said. Those children and their eagerness to meet them will be the precious as if they were his own—they're his adopted family. And so, in his teaching, he'll reach out with his hand and ruffle a child's hair or drag his arm across the child's shoulder. "I SUPPOSE I'm a big brother or a father image to many of," Landberg said. "What these kids want is for you to listen to them. Then they can see that you care about you, because you bring you or hold onto your hand—get what they rattle at home." "I all goes back to how I had it with my family," Lundberg, who has six brothers and sisters, said. "It's just everything I've had in my home, and all those experiences I've had with these kids. It's like working with my brothers and sisters. Hebrews Chapter 13 vs. 7 (A favorite quotation of Lundberg's) "THESE KIDS are really wonderful. When I come into their classrooms they clap and cheer. But then it comes that I have to leave and tell them, You know boys and girls, I wish you were all my brothers and sisters and I could stay with you all day, but I've got to go now." And they all moan and say they want to me to. Then when I leave they cheer again and shout goodly. You hear all these voices and they're so innocent and loving." Lincolnberg, who will graduate from KU next month with a degree in art education, said his work as a student teacher is a big part of the program. "I CAN SEE how I can have an effect on kids and how I can help someone help himself. Now that I'm on the other side of the desk, it's a chance to give raider than just to you." "Maybe you're responsible for each and every one of them," Besides teaching, Landbord has plans to become a coach. But for now, coaching will have to wait as his most important question is whether he wants to stay. He hasn't foresaken his training either—he's still competing as a member of the Chicago Track Club. At the Kansas Relays, he'll be entered in both the 10,000 meters and the invitational mile. See LUNDBERG page 2 00 When teaching at Hillerest Elementary School Lundberg usually runs into some good natured kidding from Mellie Frakes, whose grandson is a freshman steephacker at KU. 2 Fridav. April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Wes Santee has nothing to prove By ROB RAINS Snorts Writer It's been 23 years since Wes Santee was voted the outstanding performer at the 1964 Kansas Relays, but he's reminded of that fact every time he puts on his wristwatch. That's because he's still wearing the watch he won at that year's Bells—one of the 54 watches and clocks he collected during his glittering career. NSA Other than a few streaks of gray that have striped his short black hair, Santee, who is 45 now, hasn't changed much since the day when he came out of the western Kansas farm community of Ashland to start for the team. He enjoys remembering those days. "Having grown up in western Kansas," he said recently, "the thrill of the year was to go to Dodge City. Coming up here and all of a sudden being a national athletic figure, it certainly was an ego-building thing. "I ENJOYED the limelight very much." "Coming out of high school, where he broke the legendary Glenn Cunningham's state record in the mile by running 4.26; Sante was long regarded as America's best hope to break the four-minute barrier in the mile. He never did. And that, he said, was his biggest disappointment in his track career. "I was all around it," he said, "but I never it." Santé's best effort in the mile - 4:00.5 at the Texas Rangers in 1955 - still ranks him as the third best runner in KU history. Only Jim Ryan and Bill Dillon have better records. Santos also holds fourth place in both the two-mile and the 5,000-meter on the all-around course. Part of the reason he never broke the barrier, Santee said, was that he concentrated on relay races a lot more than some athletes. "I GOT great satisfaction out of being a team member," he said. "The team was employed more than the individual. It was more organized, it increased at that time ever before." From page one "I never felt particularly slighted in that I was asked to be a part of a relay team in this exercise." Lundberg... Santee, for whom the Wes Santee 1,500 "EVENTUALLY ID* like to do all three things at the same time and do them well. But now, I cannot serve them all with justice. I can serve a full-time coach, teacher and runner." Perhaps his greatest aspiration is to go to the 1980 Olympics in Moscow. His bid for the Olympic games in Montreal last year fell short when he was cut from the stelecheap field at the Olympic trials in Eugene, Ore. Wes Santee—former KU miler He said he thought a tour this summer in Europe, which he called "very realistic and not just a dream anymore," would give him the experience against international competition he needed to be successful in the Olympics three years from now. ONE OF HIS few opportunities to run against top foreign champions came at the Mason-Dixon Games in Louisville, Ky. In that meet, Landberg competed in the mile race that included former male record holder and Tanzanian Olympian Filbert Bayi. "That race has got to be one of the greatest thrills of my life. What an experience. I went into the race saying I'd win it even though Bayi was in there." "RUNNING IN Freedom Hall was something else. I remember being there as a kid watching horse show. And to be there, it felt like being in the school, saying, 'It's Bay and Landing out front.' Although he set a personal best with a 4:01.9 mark, Lundberg wasn't about to catch the fleet Bayi, who won in 3:57.7. But it was a remarkable time for Lundberg, never was able to concentrate on the mile in his career at KU. He was always needed for the longer races and the grueling steeplasech. "The most important thing I can do for them," Lundberg said as he handed the baton to one of his runners, "is to be their friend and be available." "I tried to keep contact with him as long as I could. He went out fast. He's known for going out hard and holding onto the lead. When we turned the first half of 1:58 I didn't see anything under him two minutes before and finished him. But I was the only one staying with him. He spends time during his lunch hour and after school working with his squad of two boys and two girls to prepare for the Relays. They learn how to stretch, smoothing out their baton exchanges and getting better starts as well as finding out which runners are better at running either forward or backward. "I think what it was, was that the adrenaline was flowing and I maintained all that nervous excitement and intensity throughout the race. You know it was that kind of feeling you usually get before a race and it just stayed with me." The youngster looked at the baton, which was a cutoff piece from a plastic pipe, and said to his coach, "I know this is yours, you put that L." on there for Lundberg." Although he doesn't plan on becoming a full-time coach until after the 1980 Olympics, he's already begun his coaching career. Lundberg is coaching an elementary relay team that will compete in the Kansas Relays. Lundberg finished fourth as he was australia and one from Ireland—near the end And one smile led to another. meter run in the Kansas Relays is named, has turned his attention away from track. He is concentrating more now on his business, political and military careers. Santee was graduated from KU with a B.S. in education and is president of the Hayes, Richardson and Santee Insurance Co. in Lawrence. The business is thriving, he said, partly because of his success in athletics. "I HAD a lot of doors opened to me because of my ability career that I wanted," he said. "I be sat." Because of the success of his business, Santee has been able to give more time to some of his other interests—politics and his military career. Santee was defeated in his first try for public office as the Republican candidate for state representative from the 46th district in 1976, but he hasn't let that defeat spoil his desire to be involved in the political process. "I didn't feel that the vote in the legislative race was against me," Santee said. "I thought it was more against the Republican party. "I'm really not that conservative. But by today's standards, I guess I am." "I come before the board for promotion to full colonel in May," he said. After that, Santee would be only one step away from general. HE SAID he might try again for public office but now he was more concerned with his military affairs he is currently a Marine Colonel in the Marine Corps reserve. And that, he said, is something that might postone any future political desires. THE "ASHLAND antelope," which was one of Santee's nicknames, was charged with having accepted $1,335 more than the payments for meets during the summer of 1964. Santess suffered a severe blow on Feb. 19, 1958, when he was suspended from suspension in the U.S. Navy. A New York state court upheld the suspension, which banned Santee from amateur athletics for life. The resentment among the fans, but it has softened somewhat over the years. "Looking back on it," he said, "it probably was a blessing in disguise. Had not been forced out, the question remains of 'would I have continued to run?' "The only disappointment that came out of the whole thing was that I didn't get to learn how to do it." Santee had been on the U.S. team at Tampa Bay games and run in Bel Air in 2013 but has not played in Bayside since 2014. SANTEE DIDN'T deny his guilt in receiving the illegal payments, but he said he didn't have any problems with his conscience because of it. He said he never received a nickel except directly from the AAU (Amateur Athletic Union) officials. There was no question but he acknowledged violation of what the rule book said, be said. As for those AAU officials: "They're superhybpocrites." Santee said. "It's like giving your child a piece of cake and then whipping him hard for eating it." Santine has run in a few Masters (40 and over, races in the last few years), but he did not win in any of them. "The day-to-day grind of trying to train for the Masters I didn't enjoy," he said. "I enjoyed working out, and I enjoy running. If won, it would be local news, but if I lost it, it would be the national news. I had to owe it. I didn’t believe the pressure. What have I got prove?" SIMON CUNNINGHAM 73 Bernard and Cleo are where it happens! Happiness is being where the action is. That's why we plan a variety of social activities for your entertainment. Take 'em or leave 'em. Bring a friend or come alone. Either way, you'll enjoy the fun things you live on at your place. So . . . make the right move. Relax Next Fall—Move to Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 1973 THE MASTER'S GUIDE TO FASHION IN THE 70S spring sportswear from Mister Guy . . . the university of kansas only contemporary traditionalist . . . open thursday night till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22.1977 3 Marathon runner:to the beat of a different drummer The marathon run is a long, grueling race. And it often becomes more taxing because rain frequently accompanies the race. And the weather conditions this year's marathoners will face are Ironically, it rained last weekend (the originally scheduled date for the Relays) so the marathon would once again have had an additional obstacle. By RICK BRYANT Sports Writer Regardless of the weather, however, the marathon runners will be there and most Sometimes it's better to forgo heroics for rationale. Granted, that isn't always the most glorious way out, but for once I'm glad I had the sense to talk myself out of having that I had seriously considered--running in the marathon in the Kansas Relays. It seemed to be an interesting challenge at first. I wanted to experience first hand what it would be like a marathon runner. I wanted to supervise the frustration and the relief. I wanted to demand of myself the dedication required to complete the run. I wanted to learn what the marathon was. BUT, ACTUALLY, I had never run competitively in my life and only sporadically for leisure. And 26 miles, 385 yards is mid-evening jogs by any stretch of reason. I am also not of the build that the serious need needs. Mine is 5-8 frame that carries 172 knots. I had a brief conversation with KU coach Bob Timmons about the possibility of entering the marathon. I explained my initial plan to compete for the event, and for enlisting the race. His reply was terse. "YOU CAN PUT me down on record as being against the whole thing." But when I gave more thought to the idea, I knew he was right. So, instead of running the marathon, I drove it and studied the course the runners will follow tomorrow. And I thought about the thrill the finishers must feel. This is the seventh year that the marathon will be run over the same course. It runs southeast out of Lawrence to the sleepy hamlet of Vinland and returns the day before. In 1970, Timmons and Gene Burnett, a Lawrence resident, flew around the county in Burnett's plane to select a path for the marathon. When the plane landed, Timmons had a course selected and appinned to his marathon route; he has held for the last eight marathons. THE ORIGINAL course began and ended in the county while crossing the southwest part of Douglass County around Globe Lone Rock and included 19 runners were enclosed that first year. Timmons decided the following year that the marathon should begin and end in Memorial Stadium. Burnett and a civil lawyer argued that the course, which is approved by the AAU THE RACE will start on the west track of the stadium. Everyone runs one lap around the track, then up the right footpath of the hill to the Camanile. Tomorrow at 7 a.m., more than 100 marathon runners will begin the race in Memorial Stadium. Last year 122 runners completed the course in 343. Also here's what the course looks like. As the runners near the top of the path, they can either go left on the path through the bushes, or continue onto the steps. The hill is steeper than it looks. I timed myself at a little over a minute to reach the top on a slow iog. The course then goes left from the Campanile along Memorial Drive where the runners turn right at the stop sign and traffic booth. FROM THE TRAFFIC booth, the course goes across Jayhawk Boulevard and down Indiana Street to 19th Street. The runners turn right onto Louisiana Street and go south past Lawrence High School, then out of town. The intersection of Louisiana and 22 3 Wakarusa River 22 4 Lawrence- Baldwin Rd. 11 11 O'Leary Road 20 6 7 10 18 8 9 17 16 10 Halfway 13 15 11 12 14 Vinland Kansas Relays Marathon Course Staff drawing by DAVID MILLER 23rd streets could give the runners a brief break from their lights, aren't in their when they put them on. Now it's four miles straight south on Louisiana past Broken Arrow Park and across 1st Street. All of the course is paved blacktop. But the next two miles are very rough until reaching the bridge over the Mississippi River. Then it smoothes out the rest of the way. THE RUNNERS take a left at the stop sign and hit the five-mile mark on O'Leary Road at about 7:30 a.m. for the leaders. They walk about six minutes per mile in a marathon. Most people have the misconception that all of Kansas is flat—not so. The next three miles are gently rolling hills that will certainly tax the runners. at mile-marker eight, the road bends right and offers a view of choice real estate in the Cedarwood Hills edition. The road goes downhill to rest the runners briefly and then back up. MILES NINE and 10 are the real killers of the course. The road goes up at an angle steeper than the hill outside the stadium and for a longer distance. The course flattens out the rest of the way into Vinland, the half-way mark. On the right side of the road stands the old brown boat now boarded up to keep the tourists away. Aid stations every three miles offer water, Gatorade and this year, for the first time, ERG-Electrolyte Replacement Glucose drink. The Kansas marathon attracts all kinds and ages of runners. More women are entering each year and the age bracket of competitors range from 10 to 61. IN THE MASTERS Division, persons over 40, Bob Cleighton, 42, of Atwood, K. holds the record with a time of two hours, 48 minutes. The course last year in three weeks, 47 minutes. Terry Ziegler of Oklahoma owns the marathon record with a time of 2:31.15 and has won the event three years straight, 1973-75. Distance runners seem to run to the beat of a different drummer, Burnett remember. LACOMBE STARTED RUNNING in fall 1972 in the KU FACHI FUNITY Program because she said, it offered a challenge and she to show herself that she could learn to run. With an arm and a leg slightly smaller than the other side, this runner came down the hill just as the officials were closing the gate to allow theathon. The event is closed after five hours. After one semester with the program, she began to run by herself and has continued since then. She said she preferred to run alone because of the freedom that other runners sometimes unsee her, pace. bers is about a handcapped runner with will power. "That would make me one of four women marathon runners in Kansas," she said. One year a runner making the return trip ran into an farmer's yard and collapsed at the 20-mile mark. After receiving aid from the farmer, who came running out of his house to help he got up and finished the race. Lacombe, a native of France, said that people in her homeland weren't interested in physical fitness, and that few French women ran. Recently, Lacombe said she once read that in the United States there was one woman marathon runner for every one-half million population. EDWINN ELBEL, professor emeritus of physical education and manager of the Relays, that as far as he could remember Lacombe was only the third to finish the marathon in the history of the KU event but only one entered last year but only one finished. The man wanted so badly to finish the marathon in the stadium that he climbed the chain-lattice of Memorial Stadium and landed on the taut surface of Hershberger Track. A NEW ARRIVAL OSAGA AT Master Charge BankAmericard McCall's 124 Yourself in our Shoes Downtown Lawrence She wants to finish in time to get a plaque THE STORY that Burnett best remem- By. JEANNE HIERL It takes trouble, dedication and time to train and compete in a marathon. And the personal gains can be measured only individually. All finishers receive a medal, lunch, a small reward for such a high breed. But the marathon runner is a special breed. "When I run I count," she said, "I count steps because I change my breathing method." THE SAID she varied 50 sets of three steps, breathe out—two steps, breathe in, with 50 sets of three steps, breathe out—two steps, and the count is two for two when running uphill. Lacombe, 32, an associate professor of French is the only woman entered in the Paris International Exhibition. Staff Reporter A tall, statuesque woman has been seen keeping a steady pace around town lately as she runs and runs . . . and runs. The woman is Lacombe, and she is training for the marathon. The marathon is a grueling endurance race of 26 miles, 385 yards, that was in attendance at the 1972 Olympics and games in Athens, Greece, in 1896. It commemorates the legendary feat of a Greek soldier, who in 490 B.C., ran 26 miles to victory over the Persians at Marathon. Lacombe said she was entering the marathon because it was the one event people could do when they weren't young enough to be champions. Master Charge BankAmericard McCall's 24 Hours in our Shoes Downtown Lawrence The marathon has a history of 'older' participants. For a time it was thought that a young person didn't have a chance to win. But in 1951, a 19-year-old Japanese woman the McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes Boston Marathon, the second most coveted marathon after the Olympics event. LACOMBE SAID that she didn't expect to win the Relays marathon. People who ran the course, she said, consider themselves winners if they manage to complete the long course. In the marathon whatever you do is she said. "You prove something to yourself." "The trouble with training for the competition," she said, "is that it takes too much time." Lacome has been training all semester. She started running an hour a day and has gradually built up to two hours a day. She marathoned, thus this to be her only marathon attempt. But, she said, she expects to keep running for the rest of her life. "RUNNING MAKES you happy with yourself," she said. "It is part of my routine now, and if I don't run it up against with guilt, I will not be humanistic ideal of 'sane mind, sane body.'" Running may make a person happy, but it can also cause aches and pains. Lacrombe admitted she has some of those. She said she got a pain in her side when she ran, and her left foot and right knee sometimes ached. Lacome also said that she used to have mild heart condition but, it had cleared up after treatment. IN ADDITION to running two hours a day, Lacombe said, her training includes eating healthful foods and getting plenty of rest. She said that, like many athletes, she was superstitious and would wear the same shoes on a marathon race that she wore every day. Lacombe said she thought she would complete the run, but not the way the original Greek runner finished. According to legend, the Greek was so exhausted by his efforts that he dragged into Athens, gasped "Victory" and dropped dead. "I think I am crazy to finish," Lacombe said. "It takes fanaticism and I have some of that. I have seen myself do have believed that I have believed possible. And besides, everyone who finishes within five hours gets a plaque, and I want one of them." I'm looking for a home where there's lb - Swimming in a heated pool - Free utilities - Air conditioning - Laundry facilities - On campus living - Covered parking - Wall to wall carpeting I'm looking for a home at Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 Apartments 1603 W. 15th 4 Fridav. April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Marathon manager has other 'Little projects' By JASON NUSS Sports Writer Gene Burnett may be retired, but you don't prove it by looking at his schedule. Burnett, 57, will keep himself busy this weekend with the marathon race at the Kansas Relays. He will serve as the manager of the 38-mile race. But that's just one interest he has dabbled in, promoted, perfected or financed. Burnett has been in the manufacturing business most of his life. He started his own business in 1963 and has become a strument Co., shortly after the end of World War II. He sold the company in 1790 but stayed with the firm under contract until his retirement in 1873. BUT HIS RETREIMENT just signaled the start of Herman's varied projects "Since I retired I have kept active on the hospital board and in managing my ranch," Burnett said. "But I'm really in the oil business and other little projects." One of those projects is building an airplane in his basement. Burnett said he bought the plans to build the biplane from a man in California for $50, and he will have the project finished within three months. "Some FFA people were here the other day looking at the plane, and gave it a very good rating. "Burnett said." "Flying a plane is not as fun as most fun comes from building your on "n". SURPRISEINGLY ENOUGH, Burnett's involvement in the marathon at the KU relays resulted from the fact that he's a pilot. KU track coach Bob Timmons called MARK BROWN Staff photo by MIKE CAMORELLI Gene Burnett-flying a plane is okay, building one is better. MARKETPLACE MARKETPLACE --- the MARKETPLACE 8th & New Hampshire 12 Unique Shops FRAME UP Fine Custom Framing Putting Your Ideas into Print DEP YU Women's Clothing & Accessories GRAPHIC ARTS BOKONON Fine Gifts for Head and Home Principles and Collectables SILC98 DIRTY THIRTIES & EARLIER Antiques and Collectables Select Mexican Arts & Crafts SU CASA Fine Art Work by Lawrence Artists HODVEST GALLERY SHOOTING GALLERY Portraits for All Occasions Great Food . . . Great Atmosphere LEATHER LIMITED All Your Leather Needs Burnett and asked to be flown around the county to plot a marathon course. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. Fine Beads and Jewelry NATIVE AMERICAN ARTISTS Jewelry, Pointings, Pottery, Rugs THE OLD wind gauge (used to measure the wind velocity during a track event) to measure how fast the ball would burst. "It has a long tube with a propeller. The wind would spin the propeller and we would have to record the r.p.m.'s of the propeller and then calculate that into miles per minute." Alley, also a KU graduate and former American record holder in the javelin, works for Research Engineer's Corp. His company designed the Olympic Wind Gauge, the official gauge used in the 1976 Montreal Olympics. Burnett contacted two KU graduates, Dave Carson and Phil Burger, about the idea. Carson and Burger, along with George Carson, got the new gauge, but sold the idea to Bill Alley. "We spent most of the month plotting the course," Timmons recalled, "and when we landed, Gene ended up being the manager of the marathon." AFTER BURNETT sold his instrument company in 1970, he contributed funds from the sale to the KU Medical Center. The company also sold the burn center, which is named after him. But Burnett was involved with the RELays before plotting the marathon course. For several years he was in charge of facilities and equipment for the design for an electrical wind gauge. Burnett also manufactured the first electrical skin grafting machine, which is the main instrument in plastic surgery for burn patients. The instrument was designed by George Lodge, a KU professor, and Earl Pagen, surgeon at the Med Center. Relays will be in meters again Events in the Kansas RELays will be in meters instead of yards again this year. The metric system was used in last year's Relays because 1976 was an Olympic year. The other 51 previous Relays recorded all races in yards. Coach Bob Timmons said recently that the transition to the metric system was being made gradually because that system was the one used in Olympic competition. The team relays and Glenn Cunningham inlet will still be run in yards, however, as the ball is kicked down. "After I sold my business," Burnett said, "I wanted to put something back into the medical field, so the burn center was my payment." WHAT MAKES Burnett's story even more reminiscent of the Horato Aliger style is that the story is written in italics. "One of my friends, George Hood, once told me if I had a college education, I wouldn't be doing some of the things I'm involved in," Burnett said, laughing. Burnett is now concentrating on the marathon, an event that may draw 200 "The marathon is becoming a big event." Timmons said, "and one of the reasons is "He has the ability to see the entire project beforehand. "He has followed up each marathon, talking to the athletes and seeking ways to improve upon it each year. I don't even worry about the marathon, because Gene is in charge of it and I know it will be a success. 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 BankAmerid, Master Charge "We could use a few more Gene Burnett." TOURNAMENT sponsored by KU BRIDGE CLUB Giant Man April 24, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. in Wrangler Sportswear Parlors A and B of Student Union Sign up in SUA office For further info.SUA office 864-3477 Admission $1.00 — Everyone Welcome — DUPLICATE BRIDGE Wrangler offers cool quality casuals at low prices. Airy cap sleeve, tie front midriff shirt is in machine washable polyester and cotton woven fancy gauze. Shapely cinch waist lvy League cuffed shorts. In machine washable polyester and cotton. Sizes 3/4-15/16. Welcome to the Kansas Relays and to LITWINS From our Jean Wall These Famous Names LEVI'S LEE Wrangler who make the finest - Denims—all styles (both washed & unwashed) - Cords— Straight & Flare Leg • DURA PLUS—NO FAULT— LEE SET Also from our Jean Wall Painters pants (white & blue denim) Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here 831 Massachusetts Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here - Overalls Plus a large selection of: 1 e - Western & Fashion boots (both men & women's) - Western straws - Summer caps So come to LITWIN'S for affordable quality. LITWIN'S master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Free parking in rear Of Friday, April 22. 1977 University Daily Kansan 5 ULT- KU Relays—reliably exciting every year By ERIC MARTINCICH Sports Writer of: oots 's) For some, the Kansas Relays is one of the biggest sports attractions of the year. Take Joseph Rapp for example. Rapp, a 50-year-old Lawrence resident, looks fondly at the students as much as he did to the inaugural meet, which he attended while in junior high school. Talking with Kapp can be quite an experience. He is able to recall many events that have taken place in his life. "I'm a big track fan," Rapp says. "I've been to all of the Relays, and I want to keep my record intact. I will go as long as I'm able to walk." "No one much cared for those old track shoes because they were so dangerous. Their bottoms were so sharp that often times they would cut the other runners' heels and flip them over, pushing guys cross the finish line with blood all over their legs as a result of those shoes." "I REMEMBER seeing some of the young fellows跑 around that track in their bare feet back in the late '30s," Rapp said. Rapp said that he had seen many improvements over the years at the Relays. "TACK IS a lot more uniform today," he said. "Take the shot for example. Today a 16-pound shot is used. Back then, the shot looked like a hunk of food. There are just a lot more better facilities today than there were back then." The pole vault is another event that has under gone considerable change. Today a 17-4 pole vault is becoming more common. "In the early days we'd watch guys jump 12? "7 with bamboo poles." Rapp recalled. "Then in the late 40s and early '50s guys started using the aluminum poles, but they were dangerous because they had a tendency to break. "TOAYJ, THE poles are built like fishing rods with the amount of flexibility they have. I don't know, but it seems that we can jump to a higher jump higher nowadays." In addition to the change in different events, Rapp has seen a change in the attitude of his team. "Today's athletes are the best," Rapp said. "They've all grown so big and tall. But I think the old-timers could have been just as good as these kids are today if they had had the same training, exercise and food that these fellows have." Rapp said the Relays attracted more and more big name stars each year. "There are just so many darn good performers that it's almost unbelievable." he said. Rapp said that he believed that Archei San Romani (Emporia State) and other early stars would have had better times if conditions had been more suitable. THE TRACK wasn't nearly as good then as it is today," he said. "Rain wouldn't drain off the track very good, and those guys often had to run through deep puddles of water. But you know, those guys still turned in pretty good times. "The big difference between those runners and the guys today is that back then guys like San Romano and Wes Santee (KU, 1960-54) weren't hard-pressed. I think if they had had more competition in the pack, we would have had a little mile much earlier than when we did." RAPP ESPECIALY enjoys talking about two athletics, Jim Rym (KU 1965-89) and Glenn Cunningham (KU 1930-34), both of whom have world records. "Jim was just a super runner," Rapp said. "He was a terrific model of endurance. His long stride with his great soeur made him a natural." Ryun was a member of the 1969 distance medley team, which set a Kansas Relay's record with a time of 9.33.0. Ryun set the record for the mile in 1967 with a 5.44.7 clocking. He still holds the mike record in division school division with the 4.04.8 he ran in 1965. "HE WAS SO powerful that when he anchored a KU relay team, he could be as much as 54 yards behind and still catch up," Rapp said. ryun and Cunningham were both fine sprinters," he continued, "Cunningham was much like Ryun because he could catch you from behind." Cunningham also held several records while at KU. He ran a 4084 indoor mile in the 1970s. Livability Is . . . Central Air Conditioning Front Door Parking • Walk-In Closets • Outside Storage Sheds • All Electric Kitchens TRAILRIDGE Apartments 843-7333 2500 West Sixth ZERCHER PHOTO $1.00 off on Developing and Printing of any Kodacolor or Color Print Film. this coupon good for $1.00 Toward the Developing and Printing of any roll of Kodacolor or Color Print Film. Good at any Zercher Photo Dealer. AUTHORIZED BY ZERCHER PHOTO EXPIRATION MAY 15, 1977 this coupon good for $1.00 75 koola paper for a good look at the times of your life ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas ZERCHER Comebacks ...possible '77 Relays specialtv He is four-time Olympic gold medal winner Ai Oerter, who will be competing tomorrow morning in the event dedicated to him in 1975—the Al Oerter Disc Throw. Carter, a University of Kansas graduate, will be one of two former KU track stars and ex-Olympians competing in this year's Relays. One of the biggest attractions at this year's Kansas Relays will be performing on the corner of 11th and Mississippi streets. The event, which takes place on June 8, performs inside Memorial Stadium. By ROB RAINS Sports Writer and 1968 Olympics is now 40 years old. He has just returned to competition, attempting a comeback that he hopes will be a berta on the 1980 U.S. Olympic team. The other, Terry Porter, who holds the KU outdoor record in the pole vault, will be competing in the invitational pole vault. OERTER, WHO won the 1956, 1960, 1964 Three weeks ago at the Texas Relays, Porter failed to clear the opening height of 108.9 feet. He admits that's a heady goal for someone who hasn't thrown in any major competition since the 1989 Kansas Relays. "I'm on a very definite program for 1980. I think there's a chance of making the team. After that, anything can happen," he said. The film series "Olympia" shown on the Public Broadcasting System, triggered his comeback decision. Oerter helped in the production of the series. "It became very apparent to me that there was no longer any pressure," he said. "I'm going to come up to Kansas early that summer," she said. "I haven't gotten into the vault until this year." BUT PORTER, who is only 24, is coming back from a hamstring injury which severely limited his jumping at the Games. Porter has jumped in only two outdoor (40 and over) meets, and his best throw at a meet in Milegate, N.C., two weeks ago, was almost three feet farther than his winning toss at the 1969 Olympics. Porter, who competed in the pole vault at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal but failed to win a place, was elected captain. "The emphasis of my training schedule is on strength work," Oerter said, "and not on throwing. The throwing will come later." OERTER THINKS that what he has learned from his past Olympic experiences with him in his quest for a spot on the 1980 team. Porter, who said he really didn't expect to jump well at Texas, did not let his perma- ture get underway. "I've found that all of the training I was doing for the Games I was doing incorrectly. With all the intensity that I was training with, I just wasn't doing much." "Since I've been training again I've only been working out twice a week instead of three times and the results have been much better." "Here I am just knocked out of a meet, and I can't wait to go to it again." Lawrence's largest selection of quality clothing for men and young men Cassems 811 MASS LAWRENCE RR Rockport California Squash -a sleek comfortable classic for both men & women available at Arensberg's = Shoes 0 819 Mass, 843-3470 Where Styles Happen 6 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Four Temple boys made the big time Bv GARY BEDORE Sports Writer Usually anyone with an office decorates his desk and walls with pictures of his wife and kids. However, one wall in KU baseball coach Floyd Flemming's room is blanked out by four persons he refers to as family, but who don't meet the birth requirement. They are the four Jayhawks who made it to the major leagues after wearing KU's crimson and blue uniform under Tromble. Ball Allison, Chuck Dobson, Larry Miller and Steve Renko all have represented KU in the pros, and Temple is proud of his boys. "All four were tremendous competitors." Temple said recently. "They all had the competitive desire and the hard work they took the field, it was all business." OF THE FOUR FORCES, two still are involved in baseball. Renko pitches for the Chicago Cubs, and Dabson is a coach for the Pittsburgh farm club of the California Angels. Miller's whereabouts are unknown. Allison is vice president of the Minnesota Minn. Allison played 13 years in the majors for the Washington Senators and Minnesota Twins and hit 256 home runs in his career. He had a career batting average of .255 and played on the 1965 Twins American League pennant team. ALLISON PLAYED for KU in 1953 and 1954 and signed a pro contract after his sophomore year. He said in a recent telephone interview that playing under coach Temple formed a foundation for his career. "Floyd is a stickler for fundamentals, and from that standpoint, he was invaluable to me." Allison said. "He gave me the opportunity to play every day, and I was lucky enough to do well and impress some pro scouts." In the pro ranks, Allison said one of his greatest thrills had to do with KU. "In 1960 it was the Washington Senators first game of the season and President Eisenhower was there throwing out the first ball," he said. "All the players were standing around ready to catch it, and to do and behold, I caught it." "I went up to get Eisenhower to sign it and he told 'Bob.艾合利,' I followed your career at the University of Kansas. 'I couldn't believe the President of the United States knew I played at kU. Kuttened me, and I will never forget it.' ALLISON SAID the hardest ball he ever hit in his life was in a KU-Akanas game at Fayetteville, Ark. Temple said he remembered the hit well. "He hit the ball so hard, that before it stopped rolling, I bet it went 160 feet," Temple said. "It went through a housing barn and never stopped rolling." The other three KU players to make the pros were pitchers. Renko and Dobson both pitched for KU in 1963 and 1984. During those years the Jayhawks had a record of 31-21. Renko was a three-sport athlete at KU, and Dobson said it was tough playing second fiddle to Renko. He said that the press played up Renko so much that his own lack of publicity was a major factor in him turning to turn pre-after his sophomore year. "AS RODNEY Dangerfield says, 'I didn't get no respect,' Dubson said recently. The press was building up attention. And the news, more headlines meant more money. "It got so bad, that in Colorado, I pitched both games of a double-bheader and won the first game, and游戏厅 finally took me out in the sixth innings. I came home expecting a hero's welcome, but he read, "Renk Hunt, Hawk's Twits 5" Dobson said there was no mention of his pitching in the story. He said he didn't leave KU embittered and was indebted to Temple. "I have a lot of respect for Floyd," he said. "He helped me physically and emotionally, and I thank him for teaching me about the name." DOBSON SAID that the turning point in his career occurred when Temple took him to a summer league in Nebraska after his freshman year at KU. After the summer, Dobson returned to win six games and strike out 90 batters. These statistics put Dobson second on an all-time single-season strikeout list and strike outs. Renko is on the all-time single-season strike out list with 75. Renko's O E R. K. is the best for Renko. Dobson compiled a 74-89 major league record for the Kansas City A's, Oakland A's and California Angels. Renko his career with Montreal and Chicago. MILLER, a lefthander, played for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1964 and for the New York Mets in 1965-66. He compiled a 14-1 record in the pros. Larry had an air about him," Temple said. "You might use the word flaky, but he was a good pitcher and outfielder for his. His major league career was spotted, but anybody who pitches in the pros for four years had to have talent." Temple said he still kept in contact with them all except Miller, who seems to have disappeared. KU has been criticized for not turning out more professional baseball players. Allison said that the cold Kansas weather made it harder to attend schools in climate climate. But Dobson couldn't explain the lack of pro players. "The Midwest has never been one for developing major league players," he said. "In recent years, there has been only a trickling from the area." Student co-chairmen make the Relavs look simple To most people it looks simple enough. Print up a program, tell the athletes to fill out the entry form, set up the hurdles and high jump equipment and dump some sand in the long jump pit. With that done, declare the Kansas Relays organized and ready. Not exactly. It's behind-the-scenes paperwork, processing and organization efforts at the FCA. Coach Bitt Tommins, his staff, Relays Chairman Edwin "Doc" Eibel and the two student co-chairman do the behind-descenks work that few realize goes on. This year's student co-chairman are Lowry Schmidt, senior and Dave Willford, Clatehe senior. JONES AND WILLIFORD work directly with Timmons, Elbel and the Relays committee, handling the processing of team sheets and sheet sheets and publicity for the Relays. "We start about the middle of the fall semester by sending out letters to all the teams and individuals about this year's Relays," Jones said. "The Relays committee is made up of students, who are picked as freshmen to serve," Williford explained. "Based upon a merit rating, you serve again each year. We two seniors are picked for coachin' with members and the previous year's chairman." The committee then receives the entries back from the teams, which are processed into a report file. The report file is Jones and Willford spend about 20 hours a week working on the Relays, gradually increasing their work load to 40 hours or more beginning in April. "It comes to where we spend almost every minute of every day on the Relays." Jones said. "Wednesday, Thursday and Friday," he continued, "will be entries until two or three in the morning." The weekend of the Relays, Jones and Williford are busy with organization and work. Have you tried The Athlete's Foot® 919 Mass. • 841-2995 Lawrence "We're kind of overseers on the meet and make sure things go smoothly." 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Select from famous names such as - Head - Izod - Borg's Fila - Cole of California - Tail first serve String with us the way the professionals do Also in Topoka & Wichita 842-8845 first serve first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 119 Massachusetts Lawrence University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22, 197 1 It was good coaching-plus a little something extra BY COURTNEY THOMPSON Associate Sports Editor Gary Kempf won't be running in the Kansas City at the Kansas Relays this year. But he probably will next year. He has been a senior a senior in high school. And, oh, the pain. 1978 Gary Kempf—now on the sidelines Close to the end of the race, but exhausted, Kempf waited about 30 minutes for the pickup truck to arrive and end the ordeal. But it never showed. Something else did, though, which provided the needed incentive for him to finish the marathon. He was still waiting for the truck when a girl passed him. He had no quolals about his girl by a girl—that wasn't the problem. But when she turned and laughed, that did it. IT TOOK about 10 minutes for Kempt to stretch his legs out. He sprinted past her, got around the corner to the end and nearly fell asleep, he finished ahead of the girl. Just barely. Kemp's time for the marathon was four and one half hours, including 30 minutes of truck-waiting time. But the time wasn't important to him. Only the fact that he had managed to finish made any difference. And, oh, the pain. KET KEMP doesn't spend all his time in or around a swimming pool. In fact he said he felt little left out this season because he won competitively for the last 18 years. Kemp, 23, is a swimming coach. When most people visualize swimmers, they think of crinkled fingers, bleached hair and jaws—back and forth, up and back, over and over As head coach for the KU women's swim team and assistant coach for the men's squad, Kempf said he became frustrated sitting on the sidelines. just watching "It was kind of lonely. I thought I should be swimming. But my last year was a long haul and I got frustrated with it too, so I told myself that I could have mustered another." Kempf swam the backstroke freestyle and individual medley events for KU but was hampered last season by a knee injury. He him from competing at full strength. THE INJURY also prevented him from trying out for the KU track team, an idea that had rambled around in his mind since coming to KU as a freshman. Elbel was told to do it—so he keeps working Edwin "Doc" Elibel's reason for his association with the Kansas Rangers was that he had spent time in the NL. And he has, ever since, Elbald said recently that his association with the relays began in 1928 when he came to KU as a physical education teacher. At that time, Allen was athletic director and assigned him to work with the Relays. Eldin defines his job as administrative detail work, such as jotting printing done on a computer. HE SAID the reason he continued to work on the Relays went further than simple loyalty. After such a long connection with the event, he said, he would miss the event each year. He told me the team each year. Eibel has been retired from work at KU since 1909 and will be @2 in November. One of the great benefits of his connection with the KU l晖es, he said, was the sense that he has a connection with the KU l暘es. "Through the years I have developed some wonderful friendships with the fine people that compete at KU. As coach summons says, we have a fine bunch of kids here." "The swim team has a mile run with the KU sprinter every year, and my time for that was 4:26, and I knew I could better that." She looked back seriously until my senior year though. "But then my knee got screwed up, and right after swimming ended, I had surgery on it. So the track idea went down the drain." KEMPF FIDDLED with a pencil and retraced a doodle several times as he mulled those ideas around and conceded that it was probably all for the best because workouts required of college track teams weren't his thing. "Those guys take off and run 10 to 12 miles every day. I love to run to relax, but those kind of workouts just aren't for me. They're to demanding, and I'm probably Kempf swam about six miles daily in kempts. Not bad for someone who claims to be a big man. However, when asked whether most people didn't consider regular, rigorous swim workouts to be demanding, Kempf brushed off those efforts as no big thing. "YEAH, I guess they are but I've done it so long it seems that the distances we swim aren't much. It became an unconscious thing." It's doubtful, too, that "iary" describes a coach whose team had a winning season (losing only one meet), to the Big Eight Conference title, won the AIAW Region VI competition and sent entries to the AIAW nationals. All that was in Kemp's first year of college, the team made up primarily of freshman and a few sophomores. Not bad for openers. BUT WAS IT Kempt it able coaching that sparked his team to do so well? Or would the curly blush hair, the sparkling blue eyes, the bright face, the spoken men have a little to do with it? About the hair that's stylish unruly—it's natural, and he's given up on it. "You wouldn't believe how many times I get asked about it. I tried to train it in high school but nothing much worked. So I finally learned to speak English and shake it, and give up—it does whatever." And about his good coaching record, Kempf said it was a combination of the team getting along well together and caring about what people did. YOU HAVE to care about those you work with and try to help them out. Personal contact is important, and we all got along real well." "If the two come together, that's great. But sports is getting to be more and more a big business, and I won't do that. It's all stuff you can do with sport—to have fun and just do your best." Lombardi credo, which puts winning above any and everything. To him, winning rates are a lot better than winning on the floor. HE SAID, however, that his team knows he always expects 100 per cent from each individual. If a swimmer batches a per cent of the water frustrated for that person, not for himself. "I've always hated coaches who yell when you lose. And I can't see any sense in it. There's no need to take out my pent-up frustrations on them." If Kempi is a likeable coach to work for and projects an easy-going attitude, maybe the team will respond well. If someone swims a poor race, Kempt said he lets that person coach of then swim with him. "I know they hate it." "If there's talk, I look first at what they did right—there's always something, regardless. Then I tell them what took the race apart." "I IF I CAN break it down and say, 'Your first 50 was beautiful, your second okay, your third stunk, and the fourth was fair' a swimmer can relate well to that." Bartlesville, OKla., to initiate an annual cross-town run, Kemp decided he would The idea of competitive swimming was a and-m-down from his older brother, Tom. Turning 45, he joined the team and was named All America. Both brothers teamed up with phillips 66 86. And he should know—he's been swimming competitively since he was six. IT WAS KEMPFS' own idea to take up it and cross country in high school. But it didn't happen, and I learned a lot. There was a father-son crosstown race scheduled, and Kemp's father started practicing his running so he and his brother were for fun. And they won. Not bad-for fun. When it came time for his home town of There's not much question that Kemp't father began to take this running thing off the map. At 52, he has run about 30 marathons within the past seven years and is one of the top Master's runners around. He ran in the Kansas Relays马拉松 in 1973 and 1974 as a runner for the Championship last year in Toronto when he on the All-U.S. Masters Marathon team. KEMPP'S FATHER planned to run in the KU Marathon in this year's Reyals, but knee problems will keep him from competing. He'll be expected to be here next year. And so does he. The knee hasn't returned to full strength yet so proper training for this year's run wasn't possible, but he is determined to be ready for 1978. Add the training program to his double coaching duties and Kempit should be busy next year. He said he didn't apply for the job as men's coach because he thought the department wanted someone who could make a long-term commitment. He wasn't sure why, but it was two reasons. He likes what he's doing now, considering returning to school part-time. IF FINANCES allow, Kempf said he wanted to begin work on his Master's in toxicology this fall. His idea, then, would be to work with an oil company in environmental and toxicologic evaluation of new products and their effects. Also, coaching in the women's athletic program was rewarding, he said, and was in no way a second-fidle position when going to a job in the men's athletic program. Kempf's only quarrel with the kempf's national women's athletics in general is that he prefers the He considers scholarships based solely on athletic ability are unwarranted and thinks financial investment is琐碎ed on the basis of financial need. Because he usually flock to the coasts, Kempf said attractive scholarship offers are especially designed to build a good program in the Midwest. HOWEVER, HE said, in swimming, KU found out this year that it belonged at the hotel. "This was the first time most of the girls had seen national competition. Like Debbie Burrill, she was an avid competitor in ability. And she was scared. Because to stand on that block and realize you now capable of swimming against you were in awe of is frightening. The Athlete's Foot Featuring 150 Styles of Athletic Shoes ADIDAS • PUMA • NIKE CONVERSE • SPOTBILT • TIGER FRED PERRY • TRETORN Socks • T-Shirts • Shorts Warm Up Suits 919 Massachusetts 841-2995 • Lawrence "It takes a while to realize you belong. Sometimes swimmers finish the nationals, saying 'God, I'm glad it's over.' But they didn’t--they were excited. "They realized we were at the top." Next season's a ways off yet, and it's hard to predict whether the right mixture of talent, determination and maybe a dash of luck will return then. But should the combination of curly hair that goes beserk, be fluffy and smile have anything to do with it, the KU's women's swim team has a good start. Concerts for Young People, Inc. in cooperation with SUA presents the HARTFORD BALLET in a one hour performance SUNDAY, MAY 1, 3 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE K.U. Student tickets in advance at SUA Box Office ... $2.00 Children ... 1.00 Adults ... 2.50 at the door Spoon River Anthology -E.L.Ma. Hashinger Hall Theatre April 22,23 & 24 8:00 pm 50c Donation Friendly Atmosphere Good Location MURRAY'S POOL West Hills, Harvard Square, Avalon apartments offer you a peaceful location just a few blocks from campus. You will be within easy walking distance of class and shopping areas. Your apartment will be quiet and comfortable with all the conveniences you want. All apartments have a dishwasher, garbage disposal, and laundry facilities in the building. You will have secure off-street parking patroled by private security personnel. Call or come by our office soon! Reasonable Rates 107 COLUMBIAN PROPERTIES Harvard Square West Hills Avalon Office 1000 Emery Rd. 842-2348 • 841-3800 8 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan WELCOME TO RELAYS '77 These area merchants hope your Relays weekend is filled with fun and excitement. They each invite you to stop in and let them welcome you in true "crimson and blue" tradition. Come on down to Pizza Inn after the Relays. Bring ticket stub for free coke. Pizza Inn Makes America's Favorite Pizza Hillcrest Shopping Center Watch exclusive television coverage of the 1977 Kansas Relays— With this ad, Carousel offers 10% OFF ANY REGULAR PRICED MERCHANDISE Offer good Friday April 22, Saturday April 23 CAROUSEL 23rd & Louisiana at the Malls Shopping Center 8-10:30 M-Th, 10-6 Fri. & Sat. ONLY ON CHANNEL 6 Sunflower Cablevision Viewing Schedule: Thurs., April 21 - 10:30 p.m.; Fri., April 22 - 10:30 p.m.; Sun., April 24 - 7:00 p.m.; Mon., April 25 - 7:00 p.m. With this ad, Carousel offers Cassems TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN Lawrence's Largest Selection of Quality Clothing For Men and Young Men. 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kansas 842-0444 811 Mass. Lawrence FOR ALL YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS Airline fares & tickets at no extra cost, Britrail Pass, Eurail Pass, Car rental/purchase/Leasing, Hotels, Cruises, Resorts Maupintour travel service quality travel arrangements since 1951 900 Mass/The Malls/Hillcrest/KU Union 843-1211 SILVER WORKS handcrafted jewelry & silversmithing... in the CASBAH 803 Mass. James Connolly G's BARBECUE Bar-b-q Beef - Chicken - Ham - Ribs 530 West 23rd Mon - Sat 11 am to 9 pm 842-3402 Fine Gifts and Jewelry 803 Mass. - in the Casbah bengals 939 Massachusetts 843-3255 The Flower Shop in the Center of Downtown Lawrence NYE'S FLOWERS SUNFLOWER TRAVEL SERVICE World Wide Travel Service 703 Mass. 842-4000 POTTER'S CAR RENTAL Hertz Rent a Car 23rd and Ohio 842-6297 Guaranteed used LPs and tapes Complete line of paraphernalia and jewelry LOVE RECORDS & TAPES 15 West 9tb 842-3059 KANSAS RELAYS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Recreation Page nine The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 22, 1977 D Food and drink highlight evening entertainment A look at better restaurants tour of the town taverns By KATHY GANNON and RICK THAEMERT Staff Registers By KATHY GANNON AND RICK THAYNER 109 Fancy restaurants in Lawrence are like rare jewels—they're hard to find, but those people who find them are rewarded. Elegant restaurants in Lawrence aren't all that glamorous, but here are some that have unique atmospheres and commendable food. ELDRIDGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM, 7th and Massachusetts streets—the elegant, semi-formal atmosphere is soothing and romantic. A large row of plants in the window and white, floral arrangements, seem reminiscent of an outdoor cafe. Pictures of old Lawrence line the walls, fitting for a building that is a resurrection of the original Eldridge House Hotel, one of the buildings that survived Quantrill Raid in 1833. Variety offered in local galleries A speciality of the Eldridge House is tornedoes of beef marchands du vin, which is sautéed in shallots, butter, sherry and mushrooms and then flamed at tableside. The Eldridge House also offers a filet d'agneau with lemon juice priced about $6. Wine, from Galla to French Bordeaux, is available from one of the top five collections in Kansas. Service from waiters in white dinner jackets and hostesses in sleek evening dresses is cordial and efficient. The restaurant seats 165, opens at 5 every evening, offers lunch at 11 a.m. and a morgasm on Sunday afternoons. THE SRILOIN, 1350 N. 3rd St.—Since 1969, the Sirloin's motto be "There is no substitute for quality in good food," and it is it with good service and a complete menu. Prime rib, fried chicken, pork chops and steaks—the specialty—are featured. The 6- to 10-course steaks range from $4.35 to $8.85. All are served in a large platter of breaded shrimp and salad dressings. Subdued, romantic lighting in the 175-seat dining room is created by candlelight and dim overhead lights. Red tile, carpetting, and a soft throw dinner music engrave the atmosphere. The semi-formal restaurant opens at 4:30 p.m. and is closed Mondays. A Class-A club adjoins the dining room, offering customers a chance to enjoy a drink with their meal. DON S STEAK HOUSE, 217 E. 4th St. A homely atmosphere and generous helpings of good food highlight Don's, where nothing fancy is needed to enjoy a fine meal. The menu includes dressings are synonymous with Don's. Country ham steak and catfish dinners also are featured in addition to steaks, which are all prime or U.S. choice. The restaurant has six dimly-lit dining rooms which seat about 300 people. A cory, dark bar, which serves only beer, has captain's chairs, saloon doors and red-carpeted booths. It seems slightly out of place in the otherwise family atmosphere. RUSSELL'S EAST, 3400 W. 6th St. (918) 527-5350 trottenbrot East, but few people know. Numerous a carte dishes accompany favorite dinners, such as chicken-fried steaks, prime rib and crab legs. A varied and unique menu, in which finest wines, pleases a melanion of people. A Spanish decor with red carpeting, sconces and black leather chairs adds to a quiet atmosphere. A waterfall, adorned with armor and plastic greenery, sits in the tower. The semi-formal restaurant, which seats about 250, has a private club that spotlights a combo on weekends. Service at the club and the restaurant is fast and friendly. For people whose tastes aren't satisfied by American restaurants, Lawrence offers a variety of desserts. CAMPUS HIDEAWAY, 106-W. N. N.Park--Since its establishment in 1980, it is one of the best campuses in the country. See BETTER page 16 Rv LEROY JOHNSTON Reviewer Art styles ranging from children's in- spont, scravis to complex modern art are available to the art fan in Lawrence, depending on which gallery, restaurant or hospital he visits. To sort them out, here's a random: KANAS UNION GALLERY...located in the Kansas University and used to show fine art paintings, sculptures, students, Lawrence artists, ceramics, work from collections in Spooner Museum and photography. In the past exhibits have included Australian art and a gift from James Kempin. SPONDER-THAYER MUSEUM OF ART Historic art that houses to house and display the university's collection of modern and ancient art. Numerous fine artworks both eastern and western. WATSON LIBRARY—a block from Spooner; to hang to student art, usually work selected from the annual department of art scholarship show. Some pieces have been bought from the students and are on permanent display. LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER- CHAM Vermont St.; charges a commission but SPENCER RESEARCH LIBRARY- on Memorial Drive; has displays of valuable and manuscripts called from the extensive library of rare books and arts at the library. LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY-707 Vermont St.; displays the work of local artists on a monthly basis, with guidance from the Lawrence Art Guild. The children's section is especially rewarding. 767 GALERY-L 7. E. 7th St.; independently owned, 767 has been showing the work of national and local artists since 1971. The gallery shows only established artist on a commission basis, and according to co-owner Judi Geil Kella, business is strong at the Lawrence ARTS CENTER 8th and 9th floors. restricts itself to showing local talent. Ditchy Patchy, director, said artists don't need any experience to show there. Among the others, the center offers a Life drawing class. THE MARKETPLACE GALLERY - 745 New Hampshire ST, shows only local artists and has paintings, ceramics and jewelry on display—more commercially oriented. NATIVE AMERICAN ARTIST LTD.—also in the Marketplace; confines itself to Indian talent in the form of sculpture, paintings and jewelry. LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL and MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING-4th and Maine streets; htsh show local artists and Maine streets; both show local art families. ELIZABETH M. WATKINS COMMUNITY MUSEUM—1027 Massachusetts St., contains many Lawrence relics and artworks and often shows period art work in its collection. The permanent display are a baccalaureum, beautiful old furniture and a perfectly restored Milburn Lighn Electric Car. WOODCRAFTERS GUILD-401 Elm St.; a showplace for local artists and sculptors. CORNUCOPIA RESTAURANT-1801 Massachusetts St.; where anyone with good, framed work can show, according to Glen Schoen. LANGHOFER REAL ESTATE - 711 W 22nd St., shows a village of a community M·DONALD'S GALLERY - 901 W. 2nd rd S; usually shows art work from area elementary and secondary schools, with commercial and local commercial art and photography firms. UNIVERSITY STATE BANK- 955 Iowa St.; uses art to decorate the lobby, usually commercial and stylized work from local and national art firms. CAMPUS HIDEAYA-106-W. N. Park SI, has a variated collection of paintings from the 19th and 20th centuries. By the Entertainment Staff This bar guide is far from complete. But it is an honest attempt by the Kansas entertainment staff to provide a resourceful guide to the town's 3.2 taverns. Lawrence may not have a square block of bars like those in some other towns, but the town are joints that offer something for everybody—no matter who you hang out with, eat with or sleep with. The only requirements are that you be willing to sip or guzzle beer (or sit there looking silly drinking a coke), have an iron knife and a cell phone. They offered and possess a built-in gas mask to cut through the layers of cigarette smoke in their cars. In the meantime, enjoy and have fun. For these 21 and older who want something stronger than malt liquor and something quieter than a typical rowdy mix, they do not have the opportunity to enjoy liquor by the drink in a relatively dry state. The clubs require memberships, however, were therefore purchased from a roundup. THE AQUARIUM, 1717 W. 6th St. — With blue walls, this place looks like the fishbowl its name suggests. Soon the ball will be the "Eagles Roost" and get a new paint job. Its chentelle is but a gallon jar. The players try to make inked in a shot glass for a free draw is a hit. CATFISH BAR AND GRILL, 618 W. 12th St. -- For those who live north of campus, it's amazing how easy it is to stop here on a Friday afternoon. Sandwiches are served during lunch; their french bread are among the ones in the basket. When a member of the New Haven, James Thrasher now owes the joint. BRIENTHUE, 1344 Tennessee St.—One of the coziest pubs in Lawrence. The inside decor will often change, but the size remains its himself洋. Whit Shea runs the place. Clientte! Freaks, degenerates, hippies, call them what you want. When he'll lead jam sessions downstairs. Other live music is featured occasionally. THE BREWERY, 714 Massachusetts St. -- formerly Edith's Place, the Brewery is large and reminiscent of '30s hamburger joints with its red-d vinyl boots and tiled floor. Usually "On Tap" or "Destiny" play on weekends and there is no cover charge. A good place to take a crowd of people, the hurtful scars of childhood can be seen in high school school班 is becoming more Greek. THE CHUTE, 944 Massachusetts St. Frat rat bcomers come here to break in their necks and get drunk. See TOWN TAVERNS page 14 Night people a different population By SHERI BALDWIN Entertainment Editor Day people are asleep in their homes, beverage lovers are taking the long route to get home. Lawrence is slowly becoming differently populated. Out come the night people. People who work now and sleep during the day often things to do than sleep or cave! sleep. 12: 18 a.m. at the West Lawrence Turnpike interchange. George Bellinger, Oskalosa, has been at work almost two hours. He is among almid drifting exhaust fumes and handles tickets for traffic ooing both wavs. THE JOB's kind of boring to a certain extent but it's not too bad," Bellinger says. A highway patrolman arranges cheetahs from other vehicles to the airport, where other vehicles. "I feel like an old fighter pilot coming in on an old runway here," the patrolman jokes. "How's it?" Bellinger asks. "Boy there's nothing out there tonight, not ever anybody sleeping," the patrolman The two joke about what invariably happens—Bellinger getting a request to call the patrolman away from his breakfast—and the patrolman leaves to eat. A VAN equipped with a CB puls in and someone nearby. "Somebody said there's a bear around her." "Just missed him," Bellinger says. Clad in a blue jumpsuit uniform, Clad in a blue jumpsuit uniform, Bellinger doesn't mind his night job. He has TV and a heater. Only occasionally do rotten-egg unloads gas fumes bother him enough that he airs his booth out by opening doors. Bellinger's shift ends at 6:30 a.m. 2:05 a.m. at Lawrence Municipal Airport, Ed Brown, aircraft mechanic from Red Brown, Mn, is making daily inspections on the aircraft at Inc., and rental planes. He also is alone. "TM REALLY not lonely, I have enough to keep me busy," he said. "It's just that you take what you can get with the job market like it is." Brown likes his daytime freedom and uses it to fly or bow. He is taking advance instrument training lessons and will possibly train to teach or do helicopter work. His shift runs from 9:30 p.m. to 6 a.m. or later. 2:25 a.m. on campus. Last week, Scott Kester, 918 Kentucky, became a night person. Now a night watchman for the University. Kester works from 10 p.m. to 6:30 a.m., turning off lights, checking locked doors and watching for fire in KU buildings. He wears an Ausie hat and Army fatigues, carries a clock that keeps a record of when and where he puts buildings and makes frequent phone calls to report his progress. THIS NIGHT'S route is Bailey, Spencer, Snow, Strong. Flint and then the whole thing ever again. There are seven such routes, including a west campus route. He spends a week learning a route, works the route alone a week, then goes on to learn another a week. 2:43 a.m. in Marvin Hall. The front doors to Marvin are wide open. But a drafting room usually full of nightfall architects has only one student, his head on his arms, his arms on his table, his unfinished project and a softly playing radio nearby. SUMMERFIELD'S front door is propped open with a trash can. Rick Vizzari, Greenwich, Conn., sophomore, is on his break. Employed in computer dispatch and operations to help computer science students, Vizzari is one of three paid to keep track of campus activities. On day; dispatch is closed only from 4 to 8 a.m. As many as 60 students or under five 3:11 in Summerfield Hall. See NIGHT page 12 Fred Duncan Billy Spears cuts loose on the fiddle staff photo by MIKE CAMPANELI Spears happy as travelin' fiddler By BILL UYEKI Entertainment Editor It's been nearly two years since fiddler Billy Spears left his position as assistant manager of the Union Food Service Company Union to travel as a full-time musician. He had been with the Union for 19 years, starting there in May, 1856, after studying at Harvard. Spears, 46, talked about his career while his band was preparing to play a recent concert. "All I've ever really been is a fiddle player," he said. "The Union was a good, secure job and everything, but I just kept getting further into my music. I reached a place where I had to drop one of the two, and I thought I'd try my music again." In the early '50s, after serving in the SPEARS GREW up in Hartshorne, Ocala, and began playing the fiddle in his early teens. His grandfather and his father also became teachers, an uncle for startup him on the instrument. military, Spears played professionally for four years before marrying his wife Doris. Then came the responsibilities of raising a family of three daughters. Now, with his youngest daughter, Liza, almost 17, Spears started to realize that for a living instead of just for a bobby. "THE ELAWSY felt that Western awning is on county musician's form of jazz." Speranza. His type of fiddle play has been called both country and bluegrass, but Spears says his musical roots lie in a style called Western swing. Western swing was a combination of swing jazz and country music, played in Texas and the Southwest in the 40s. Then, after listening to bluegrass fiddlers like Kenny Baker, Byron Berline and The most famous Western swing artist was Bob Wills and His Texas Playbies. Spears said he had played with other players who were not playing the Twer, Twerl, F肌nus Liskie, and Jeanie Sheepard. Vassar Clements, Spears also started playing bluegrass about 10 years ago. As for country music, Spears says that it's always been around, but what has helped it most recently has been a wide acceptance by a young audience. Though some may not know it, Spears says there is a difference between a violin and a cello. "A FIDELITY player is a self-taught musician," he said. "If you study violin for years and stick with it it's really hard to get away from the structured sound." There's a history behind the Billy Spears Band, which was formed about six years ago. Spears estimated that about 15 of its members were associated with the band since it first started. The band's original sound was "foksy bluegrass," Spears said, "with a maybe a little more rock," which differs from the current band's swing-flavored sound. Other members of the band include Bob Case, pedal steel guitar, banjo and vocals. See SPEARS BAND page 11 10 University Daily Kansan Students at motels: to bed down, party and study BY DAVID JOHNSON and JOE RADCLIFFE Staff Reporters Most of the occupants at any of Lawrence's nine motels this weekend are probably here for the Relays. But at other times, the motels provide a variety of services for students, the most provocative being a place to bed down. The policy of registering unmarried guests at all the Lawrence motels seems to be "it's none of our business, as long as they pay." Most of the time the desk clerk is married and can cohabitate between two consenting adults is legal in Lawrence. "THEY DON'T even bother to say my wife and I am more," Lois Liebert, owner of the Jayhawk Hotel, 1044 N. 3rd, said to me. "Just say my girlfriend and I want a room." Parties, one-night stands, studying—all seem to top the list of other student motel uses. Picking the motel is just a matter of taste and availability. A strict, no-party atmosphere is enforced at the Jayhawk, Liebelt said she depends on a steady clientele of working men who don't to be disturbed at night by bad parties. "ONE GUY has been here for 16 years," she said. "It's cheaper than an apartment and he gets maid service. He's a truck driver." There are Fridays and checks in every Monday." The El Navajo Motel, 1512 W. 9th St., used to be a gas station and grocery store in the 1920s. Now owned by Mike Lee and his wife, Linda, they are (or as expensive) as big chain-owned motels in Lawrence, but it will have a clean bed and a Gideon's Bible in every room. El Navajo rooms are modest, but clean and neat. Sliding doors in the bathrooms are sacrificed in favor of plastic shower curtains. The walls are limited to a framed quote St. John 3:16. LEE SAID he is wary of people who check out rooms and invite a dozen friends over "Two girls got a room here one night and my wife and I went out to dinner," he remembered. "When we got back, there were about 20 cars in that lot out there. We counted 15 to 20 couples when they came out of that room." John and Joanne Moreau, managers of the airport Motel, 24 & 40 Highway East, don't seem to mind parties and sometimes even join in. Sperra Kaunh MOTEL OFFICE About a month ago, Mrs. Moreau said, two fraternities rented four rooms to host their reunion. "I BET WE had 250 kids here," she said. "We told them to go ahead and make all the noise they want because there isn't anybody else to do it." When we raised bell with the rest of them, 1. Lee Lee, the Morene's live at the motel and run it as a family activity. Large families are accommodated with lower rent rates and extra beds if needed. Part of competing with the larger chain motels means taking on guests at all hours, some who obviously have more in mind than catching a shower and 40 winks. MOREAU SAID she rented rooms to a steady parade of couples—mainly older men and their girlfriends—but some to obviously unmarried students. "One night we were cleaning rooms at two in the morning and renting them right away." Sometimes to avoid extra expense or embarrassment, such lodgers register as singles and later try to snook in the friend. They may be paid by the extra $4 for a double room on the spot. KATHY MOVER, who manages the Westview Motel, 1313 W. 6th St., with her husband Roger, said unless she could unregistereduests, she could do about unregistered guests. On parties, Moyer said some guests had impromptu parties in their rooms after dinner. "We don't encourage them because you can hear them all over the place," she said. For others, a model room is a peaceful refuge for study, Kellan Fellstein, desk manager at Tufts. St. said a lot of law students checked into his mutex for weeks before exams. A desk clerk at Holiday Im, 2309 Iowa, said some graduate students rented rooms for a few days while they were renting these theses. THE MAJORITY of motel rooms in Lawrence aren't, of course, used for studying, partying or shucking-up by theaters and retailers looking for a respite from the road. The Ramada Imm, 2222 W. 6th St., catches a lot of its business from vacationers coming off the turnip. The Ramada offers in-room movies, a feature that none of the other motels offer. A video-lapse at the front window shows the movies over the television sets. The Travelodge Motel, 801 Iowa, is a self-proclaimed "family motel" according to part-owner and manager Jim Glenn. One advantage to families staying at the Travelodge is the large park adjacent to the motel. Next door to the love nest at the Sierra Rauncho Staff drawing by DAVID MILLER AIRPORT MOTEL 24 and 48 Highway East, 12 rooms, both single and double, features TV, baft shop, refrigerators and two kitchenettes. City's motels at a glance EL NAVAJO MOTEL. 2512 W, hd stl. 33, el rooms, both single and double, TVs. TV COLLEGE MOTEL. 1703 W ath. stl. 18, rooms, single, double and twin sized. Phone: (212) 549-1525. Email: collegemotel@northeastcollege.com HOLIDAY INM NOTEL 2300 lowe, liams room, single, twin and suite sizes, features a balcony, private pool, cocktail lounge, special rooms for the handcapped, dog kennels and Kannas City resort. JAYHAWK MOTEL, 1004 N 3rd St. roomless, single, double and twin sized. RAMADA INN, 4th and Iowa streets. 108 rooms, single, double and suite sized, features cable TV, in room movies, heated swimming pool, Rubayvat Club. beauty shops, salon, liquor store, freezing coffee and newspaper, and KCl limestone service. TRAVELLODGE MOTEL, 810a, Iowa rooms, single, double, twin and suite sized, featureable cable TV, free local telephone phone number, morning coffee and KCI limosine service. VIRGINIA INM NOTEL 2907 W. 6th St. 59 rooms, single, double and twin sized, feature cable TV, restaurant, private club room, phone rooms and KCI limousine service. WESTVIEW MOTEL, 1313 W. 8th St. rooms, both single and double, TVs. Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts All the Tostados you can eat for $2.00 Opened 6-8 p.m. daily Expires May 30,1977 Announcing THE KANSAS CITY STRIP STEAK Only $ 3.89 at the Sizzler 1516 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE KU at Hershberger Track April 21,22,23 "outstanding national caliber athletic competition." 52nd Annual Kansas Relays General Admission '2.50 Grade or High School '1.50 K.U. Student '1.50 SATURDAY EVENTS "finals" Reserved (West Stadium) 4.50 Reserved (West Stadium) $4.50 General Adm. (East Stadium) $3.00 Grade or High School $2.00 K.U. student $2.00 Tickets available at Athletic Ticket Office Allon Field House Also available at Track on day of events A Friendly Helper to the Growth of K.U. for Many Years B.A. GREEN CONSTRUCTION CO. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Spencer Library Learned Hall 中華大學附設藝術體育館 Spencer Art Museum THE STUDENTS' CENTER Kansas Union Welcomes you to the Relays y University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22, 1977 11 ce streets, 110 uite sized, lies, heated ub, beauty store, free and KCI l iowa, 70 suite sized telephone ning coffee W 6th St. winched private club. is and KCI 6th St., 10 features TV. ER HOUSE ER HOUSE KU grads contribute to Tree Frog sound By BILL UYEKI Entertainment Editor Probably no group is more a part of the Lawrence and University community than the This popular five-piece country-cook group started about eight years ago, when three students from Wichita formed a group with their flat and barn parties around Lawrence. Lynn Piller and Eric Elder, who both sing and play guitar, asked Jim Fey to join them on bass. Their repetition consisted of songs from Crosby, Stills and Nash, Buffalo Springfield and the Flying Burritor Brothers. The fourth member of the group to join was singer-guitarist Scott Piper. And despite playing an increasing amount of parties and gigs, three group members who are still very involved have received a bachelor's degree in biology and Elder and received degrees in English. ABOUT THREE YEARS ago the fifth member of Tree Frog was recruited. This was drummer Gary Durrett, who had been a member of a group called the Fabulous Filmmakers. Now, the Tree Frog is touring extensively. Besides playing Kansas towns from Colby to Norton, it has played clubs and campuses in Iowa, Minnesota, Colorado, Nebraska and the Dakotas. The list of national acts with whom the group has played it is impressive-Pure Prairie at the Wheel and the late Freddie King. After seeing tree Frog perform at clubs around Lawrence and Kansas, City, it is clear that the tree is not threatened. AT FIRST GLANCE name the bunch of old, beer- drinking brat buddies having a good time. You can't knock the selection of songs they play from popular artists—Jackson Browne, the Eagles, Emmylyn Harris and even some of the old Buffalo Springfield "TREE FROGS" original material lies much within the same vein of material they play from other artists, and from earlier days, "Meet Your Mama," was released on a local label. Other Tree Frog compositions include "Kaw Valley Girl" and "Lady Bird." A radio station But probably what grabs you is the way they play the songs. All group members sing, so often there's four-part harmonies, showing the group's strength in vocals. And sometimes the group is Piller, bending out country licks on either six-string or guitar steel. And by the way, some may recall last summer, when Betty Frog bumped with Tony Orlando at the Republican National Convention in Kansas City. Tree Frog was providing the music for the First Lady and her partner. Jim Law, guitar and vocals; Andy Curry, bass and vocals; Buddy Pittel, drums, mandolin and vocals; and Jill D. Brown, vocals. Spears also plays electric mandolin. Spears also plays electric mandolin. From page nine OF THE BHE'S members, only Case has been with SPARE since he started. Case had attended KU for one semester, after attending Stanford University for three years as a pre-med student. He decided he needed a more intensive education with medicine, so he dropped out of school. Besides Case, other band members haven't been with Spears for more than three years. Brown is the group's newest member, having been with Spears only nine months. ONSTAGE at the Opera House, the band's sound is vibrant and pulsating. What it lacks in polish and finesse it makes up for in power and punch. It plays truckers' tunes, lovers' tunes and good-time music. And it mixes well with beer. Spears band ... Much of the band's repertoire consists of 50 tunes and rehashes of Western swing music. Spears dictates the band's pace and feel, as he plays around instrumental breaks in 'Stay All Night. Stay a Little More'. The rest of the band trades solos smoothly. There are some fast fiddle tunes, like "Cattle in the Corn," and "The Gold Rush," which put the crowd in a hopping fury. And, for a change of pace, there are some hard- WHEN IT'S TIME for the band's final, the crowd knows what's coming. Orange lights suddenly flood the stage, and Spears blocks into the bluegrass standard "Orange Pop," the pop standard." This isn't foot-tapping music, it's foot-stopping music. Nobody can sit still. Other places the band has traveled include portions of New Mexico and Arizona, and some Colorado towns like Denver, Boulder, Dillon, Vail and Georgetown. Cole Tuckey gaining listeners Spears says he notices a leaning toward the swing式 of dancing in Texas, while Coloradoors like the bluegrass hopping band have clearly no clear-cut way to dance to his music. swinging tunes, like "Flip, Flop and Flip" and "Choo Choo Chb Boooge." The band even plays a swinging rendition of "Deep in the Heart of Texas." The band had come from Houston, and it didn't stay in Lawrence much after the weekend show. By Tuesday the band was on its way to Kentucky. By BILL UYEKI "JUST GIT out there and have a good time," he said. "do even more, any day. be honest when you get into trouble." Spears' immediate plans are to keep traveling, to build a follow-up, and then start work on an album in about two months. Entertainment Editor For little more than a year, there's been a talk about the local band Cole Tackey on RBH. This very special band with an unusual name has been making a name for itself all over the world. It's the Kansan Lawrence, Manhattan, Kansas City, Columbia and nearly everywhere it plays. Music reviewers have been impressed with the originality and its vitality on-stage. One reason the band's increased exposure is that it has been more than willing to open shows for various national acts, such as Bonnie Raitt, Lynnry Skynyrd, Jimmi Spheres, and most recently, Taj Mahal and the Ozark Mountain Daredevils. Some of Cole Tuckey's original material had elements of jive lyrics and some genuine swing, which prompted comedians to label him "The Hickory Playboys and to Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks. But Weis says he wrote much of the material he never heard of either Wills or Hicks. THE CORE of the popular quintet is a pair of companions who live on a farm near LAKESIDE, CA. Their singer-fiddler Janet Jameson, who met while pursuing their musical careers in the area. Weiss, fresh from the Los Angeles house operator, songwriter and performer, "Only in Lawrence will we allow people to dance to our music," he says. Weiss, a tall, slender, extremely outgoing and taliative character, who has a master's degree in counseling psychology, recently moved to Florida, band—its origin; its music and its future. met Jameson, who had played with local bands Morningstar and Billy Spears. Since the day it started, Weiss says, the band has maintained its philosophy on what music it plays—mostly original songs (the band's albums), playing it to sit-down, not dancing, crowds. band would perform songs that caught the nostalgia lover's fancy, such as Duke Ellington's "Don't Get Around Much anymore." THE FORMATION of the band was nearly accidental; Weiss called it "almost a fluke." Somebody was needed to play with us. It was when the Celebration at KU, so an impromptu band was organized, and nine songs were hastily rehearsed. Cole Tuckey has come a long way. THE SWING imitation wasn't intentional, he said, and now the band has dropped all a couple of swing songs from its album. "And that it still plays is 'Jitterbug Cowboy.'" **WHAT IS THE Cole Tuckey sound? In the past, the band was labeled a throwback to the big band days. Weilas would wear long sleeves, the black skirts of long sleek, black dresses of the '60s. The Although he hasn't been around the University often the past two years, Spears has observed a great deal of changes in the University and its people over the years. Last month was the first time he had seen the remodeled Union. He liked it. Besides swing, there's a quieter side to Cole Tuckey's music, which consists of soft, folksy arrangements featuring harmonies between Weiss and Jameson. The band also dips into some bluegrass and blues. And being a spitty female vocalist, Jameson can reverse your exertion by singing along with them listen to her wall through "Noble Kids" See COLE TUCKEY page 13 When asked about the turmil of the late sake, he jokingly replied, "You mean the ROMAN." THEN HE swigged his bottle of beer again, and passed as though he were laughing. "I was caught on both sides," he said. "I was playing music so I was associating with a lot of radicals. Some of their beliefs were all right, but it got out of hand. "I had my job with the University, which was a responsible position, and I could recommend me to you." "I think the fire at the Union made everybody realize that tyranny takes things away." What Spears would rather remember are the good times, the parties he's played. "Ive really played some fine parties around here in barns. They get four kegs of beer, throw some frisbees and bring all the dogs they got." AND THE MOOD of the campus during the late '70 suits him, too. "Later it's great right now," he says. "Let that night, he jokes with the crowd on one side." "Every time I come back I see a few more beards shaved and some more hair cut. I can't recognize anybody anymore," he, jokes. "I've always liked the middle part of the United States," he says. "The trends, good or bad, don't quite get here as fast as they hit the coasts." So Spears will keep traveling, and keep coming back to Lawrence, the place he calls home, for a breath once in awhile. And what keeps him here? Rubayyat Monday thru Thursday 4 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Friday and Saturday 1 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Closed Sunday FANFARES Place on od Call 864-4358 a rope by any other name... couldn't blend fashion and fiber like Fanfares. Casual fashion to take you into the coming season and out again . . . in the fiber you take to naturally. A rope is a rope is a rope . . . but only a Fanfares is a Fanfares. Natural rope uppers McCalls Pick Yourself in our Shows Downtown Lawrence Free Pizza Offer BUY ONE PIZZA AND GET NEXT SMALLER SIZE LIKE FREE ken's pizza 2040 West 27th 843-7405 GRADUATION HP Spring Added Value Days Now through May 31 An exciting added value when you buy a Hewlett-Packard calculator now. Free reserve power packs. During Spring Added Value Days, Hewlett-Packard is adding a free reserve power pack—a $20 value—with the purchase of every HP-21, HP-22, HP-25, HP-25C and HP-27. It's the best way we know to remind you of the added value you always receive when you buy an HP calculator—like free application books, uncompromising quality, efficient RPN logic system, and exceptional service. Each HP instrument is designed to be the finest of its kind in the world. Hewlett-Packard is also introducing two new access sories to increase the value of the HP calculator you may already own: A DC Recharger/Adapter lets you operate and recharge your HP pocket calculator in cars, boats—wherever an I2-volt DC supply is available. New Accessories HEWLETT + PACKARD A Games Pac for the HP-67 and HP-97 includes 19 programs designed primarily for fun but also useful in teaching principles of math, physics and logic. Come in and take advantage of Hewlett-Packard's Added Value Days today! kansas union BOOKSTORE 12 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Opera House has solid walls, rich past By BILL UYEKI Entertainment Editor This is the third building, since 1854, to occupy the corner of the Seventh and Massachusetts streets in Lawrence. It's been a playhouse, a movie theatre, a dance ball and beer joint, a disco and concert ball. With its sturdy walls, the federal government once said it was one of two Lawrence buildings that could be used for a military airbase or nuclear radiation. And beneath the building lie a series of blocked-off escape tunnels—some running under downtown and others extending out to the Kaw River—which helped protect the Civil War to help slave slaves. Yes, this is just part of the history of the Lawrence Opera House, which has been the name of the three-story structure since January. At that time it had changed from a theater in Iowa to Iowa, dico firm that had leased the hall and had operated a business for about a year. THE TWO buildings that had previously been built at Seventh and Massachusetts streets were both destroyed by fire. The first, a former hardware store and building of the Lawrence Weekly Tribune, was burned during the Civil War, when William Sheriff Cobb led an attack. That was August 21, 1863; 150 persons were killed and 200 buildings were burned. The second building, built as a meat market and packing plant, was converted into a playhouse by J. D. Bowersock, one of the cofounders of the A.U.S. congressman for eight years. But the Bowersock Opera House, as it was called, burned to the ground February 18, 1911, possibly due to some faulty wiring. Bowersock, however, was a most determined man. He wanted to build a fireproof building—and he did. THE BOWERSOCK Theatre opened January 21, 1912, and that same building stands today. Its sturdy construction—some brick walls are two feet thick, and steel reinforced floors are six inches thick—met a test in 1913, when a fire struck the theatre. The fire did was destroy some interior decorations and crack the front glass of the building. The Bowersock featured plays, but followed a trend and began to show movies. In 1958, he took on Glen W. Dickinson buy it and appropriately naming it the Dickinson; and in 1939, the Commonwealth Theatre bought it, and it was named the Jayhawk. EMORY SCOTT, 1921 Vermont, who is retired but still chairman of the board of the business he started. Scott Temperature was director of the Bowersock Theatre in 1927 as an usher. He worked his way up to assistant manager and then to Jayhawker Theatre for more than a year. He recalls the world premiere of the movie "Dark Command" at the Jayhawker in May. The movie, which covered the lives of a former soldier, Wayne, Walter Pidgeon, Roy Rogers and Gabby Hayes, Most of the stars came to Lawrence for the showing, and a parade was held to celebrate the premiere. It was followed by a celebration in large Massachusetts Street for the parade. "IT WAS A mob," Scott says about the four students chosen from the KU student body. Scott was chairman of a group of businessmen that bought the Jayhawker in 1869. Plans were to use the building as a theater and John Brown had another idea. Out went the theatre screen and seats, and in came a kitchen where Rochelle roll'n' cookin at the Red Dot Inn. The Red Dog lasted a decade. Sometimes 2,000 persons would pack into it to see Flash Cadillac, the Flippers and Ike and Tina Turner. The softer sounds, like Ago Guthrie, Ry Cooder and Brewer Shipley, would also play at the Red Dog. IN THE SPRING of 1974, the Red Dog gave way to the Free State Opera House, with its founders Roger Aldis and Robert Masson. The theatre is a venue and urban design. Those who performed in Free State include Jimmy Spheriex, Dave Mason, Buddy Rich, Maynard Ferguson and Nerman Blake. An unsuccessful attack was made to feature dinner theatre there. Then came Bugsy's, opening last March. Thousands were spent spicing the old building with computerized dance floors, and movie screens for flashing slides. It was riding the crest of the disco wave, and it was a popular place. SKIP MOON, president and chairman of the board of 7th Spirit, Inc., the building's owner, said recently that it had not been for Bugsy's "poor and ineffective management and internal problems." Bugsy's would still be in business. "Bugsy's was behind in rent, and I evicted them." Moon said. Now the place is simply called the Lawrence Opera House. The plexiglas dance floor and much of the glittering lights are gone. Live entertainment and disco are still offered on the main舞 floor, and the private club downstairs and in the balcony. BOTH MOON AND concert planner Brian McKinney say they are optimistic that the Opera House can thrive on the pulse of the Lawrence community. Moon said that there's a variety of ways the building can be used, and that he hoped the community would start using the building more often. "This hall is big enough to start a national music acorn." McKinsey said. "It's a national acorn." Scott, whose group of local businessmen sold the Opera House to the 7th Spirit Inc., a few years ago, is working on a book about opera history. He will be in Lawrence. The Opera House is one of three He says he hasn't been in the building in years, but he still has a high impression of "It's always had the finest acoustics of any modern theater in Lawrence," he said. Portions of past in bars' present Rv RARRY MASSEY Staff Reporter In two of Lawrence's drinking establishments the old hasn't given way to the new; rather, the colorful history of Sheranigan's 901 Mississippi St., and Sheriff Sam Jones, Seventh and Massachusetts streets, building a spirit and building of the two businesses. The newer of the two disco-bars, Shenanigan's, opened its doors for business last August. Jo Mandacina, owner, said recently. Housed within the confines of the studio, Lawrence is building a brick building is one of Lawrences's poshest night spots for those 18 years and older. Yet, part of the spirit of the old Pladium remains in Shenanigan's. FOR 30 YEARS, the Pladium Lanes, a 12-lane bowling alley, occupied the building that now attracts hundreds of people Friday and Saturday nights. They crowd the circular lighted dance floor—made from the wood of some of the bowling lanes—or press against the long curved wooden bar, also made in part from wood of the lanes. "The heart of Shenanigan's is the Pladium," Mandacina says, "it was a respectable place where people came to be with good time. That's what I'm trying, to do here." "I want to give the students a place where they can come and relax, forget about their problems, studies and all the other little things and just have a good time." AN EVEN later to she Shenangan's past, Mandinaca has kept a close personal relationship with the former owner of the building and his wife, Gladia, 139 Hirstfield Hall. The Pladium opened for business in September 1946, Griffiths said, one of two bowling alarms in Lawrence at the time. He was born around the old Pladium has remained essentially the same, during the early years of his career. The Ninth Street west of the Pladium was a gravel road, Griffiths said. There was also a big pasture northwest of the Pladium GONE ARE THE long wooden benches that bowlers used to occupy for hours on end, the sound of bowling balls crashing into the ivory-skinned pins and the low drone of machines reseting them. Gone also is the faded fashioned soda fountain in Lawrence. But remnants still remain. If one looks closely at the dance floor the guide marks from the old lanes can be seen; a cold water Coca-Cola cooler stands unobtrusively at one end of the bar. The Pladium still lives. For those people 21 years and over, who either prefer something stronger than 3.2 beer or a club atmosphere a little more quiet and mellow, Sherif Sam Jones, in the Eldridge House may be their choice of disco-bar. Formerly the Disco, Sheriff Sam Jones is a Class A private club that requires $ 85 Night people . . . 3:45 a.m. at KLWN-FM radio station. students may be working with computer programming on any given night. SUNSHINE "I've always preferred the night. The normal people are out during the day," says Bill Lee, Lawrence senior who requested a flight to KLW-NF radio, m disk jockey shift at KLW-NF radio. "I just find the people that are up this time of the day far more interesting than 8 to p. 5 mpm," he said. "A lot of them are lonely. I just try to be a friend on the radio." LEE, DRESSED in torn jeans and tennis shoes, revels in his late-night top-40 jaws. He plays with a guitar and plays play quite as much rock as the station door during the day. He is alone in the studio. 5:10 in downtown Lawrence. To country and western music, "Granry" is whipping up some of Drake Bakey's famous hotcakes and biscuits with gravy. Katherine "Granny" Miller, 867 Lyons, says her regular pre-dawn clientele includes policemen, paper delivery men, jautiers, nightchub owners, Coora beer men and truck drivers—regular customers for "USED TO be a time you could see four or five police cars parked in front," she said. "But the department's now told them to eat in the district they patrol so that lightning can't strike in one place and hit all them." Granny works from 1:30 to 9 a.m. Drake's 5:36 at Watkins Memorial Hospital. annual membership and a $5 minimum luxurior pool to join, but there is no waiting period, Jes Santanaulia, owner of the Eldridge House, said recently. Amid blazing white light and white-sheeted beds in Watkins Memorial Hospitals all-named emergency clinic sits directly, the building's facade brightly. Tom Edell, Smith Center sonomore. THEY HAVE just admitted an accident patient to the hospital, a common case for the late-night work. Accidents, fights, insomnia and hysteria over problems are common night cases for the clinic, accused of having had to deal with the cases and comes to the hospital when necessary. For hysteria cases, they call a mental health department person. DURING SLOW times, Neely and her orderly for the evening help the nurse upstairs tend bed patients, or they run through disaster plan, tornado and fire drills. "I'm never bored," Neely said. "Every person that comes in is different, with different problems and a different approach to each one." The two work a 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift. Effort has been there month; for six year. 6 a.m. in Lawrence The club's name was crangen, ooo- bularia said, when its heavy disco format had gone. THE CLUB, which changed its name in August 1976, is in the old Big Rig room of the Mansion. The club's main lobby and dining area. It can accommodate about 100 to 125, San It is now daylight. Employees at both Kansas Color Press, Inc., (publisher of National Lampoon) and Hallmark Cards, Inc., have two hours left to work in their shifts. A Lawrence Aircraft flight leaves for Kansas City International airport. Milkmen, mMcDonald's workers and machines appear in the streets as a crowd and noise to come. Stoplights quit their methodical blinking at streetlights so off. And the night people begin to find their way home. "We wanted something to disassociate the strict disco format that was used at one time in jazz and swing music. We wanted a basic disco-type format, but our music includes a lot of jazz and light music styles." AS A REMINDER of the heritage of the Ebridge House, the name Sheriff Sam Jensen is inscribed. The original Eldridge House building was acquired by the New England Emigrant Aid Company in 1853 and was named the Gillis House. It soon became known as the Free State Hotel because of the emigrant company's anti-slavery beliefs. On May 21, 1856, Douglas County Sheriff Samuel J. Jones, former postmaster of the hotel, guarded the destruction of the hotel. Jones men set the building ablaze along with several Lawrence buildings. Three buildings and property loss was estimated at $200,000. THE DESTROYED building was bought and renovated by Col. S. W. Eldridge. He called it the American House and until 1883 he built a vaulted a vital part in the city's early history. But William Quantrill and his runes, Lawrence on Aug. 21, 1863, and the hotel where he worked, the Eldridge rebuilt the hotel once again. The Eldridge house, as he named it, remained there until 1924 when W. G. Hudson had torn down and another built in its place. Opening on April 8, 1926, the new hotel has remained essentially the same to this day except for minor renovations. At the same location that the Free State Hotel occupied 124 years ago, the Eldridge House embodies a very colorful and interesting past. Brighten your Relay Weekend Ford This offer is also applied to ear piercing. at Roberts Jewelry with 10% off on any purchase Roberts Jewelry, Inc. where the sharing begins Ford RENT-A-CAR LEASING 2340 Alabama FALS WORLD'S LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 Lawrence's largest selection of quality clothing for men and young men Caissems 811 MASS. LAWRENCE FALS WORLDS LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED SYSTEM Lawrence's largest selection of quality clothing for men and young men Cassem's BILL MASS LAWRENCE You TH that it it's t impr willo ease He audie of sp audie to ma Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan 13 --- ding was grant Aid the Gillis the Free ant com- raiders and the in. Yet and the in. The remained had the t in its hotel has this day the same occupied embodies it. CHEYENNE Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Earning wings Kyle Timmerman, Wichita junior, says flying will always be a part of his life. One of many KU students who fly, Timmerman is currently working to get an Instrument Rating, which would allow him to fly during adverse weather. He also is a hang gliding enthusiast. Flying is fun, practical and costly Staff Reporter By LEROY JOHNSTON More than 165 students and faculty at the University of Kansas are pilots, and there are probably as many reasons for learning to fly as there are people who fly. "I think the answer to why is as old as man himself," Claude Laundry, Lawrence senior, said recently. "There's the enjoyment that comes from the experience of flight, and then there's the satisfaction that comes from learning to do it." Edward Zeller, professor of physics and geology, uses his single engine Census 180 LAIRD IS working on his private pilot's license, and has 60 hours of flying time in a Cessna 150. He hopes to fly to Canada this month with three friends to help share his cost. "I bought the aircraft equipped with a camera port and I do all the photography for the remote sensing group at the Space Technology Center here." ZELLER SAID he had owned aircraft since 1967, accumulating 2,000 hours in the air. He praised his airplane, saying that it "was a marvel," but out of unimproved runways he often uses. "I find flying is the most cost-efficient way to go, especially with passengers. I get close to 16 miles per gallon at 160 miles an hour. In many cases I save the cost of motels, besides being able to go in a straight line." "MY FATHER runs the airport where I come from, so I've always been involved with aviation and I really enjoy it. At KU I'm getting a business degree which I think will give me a good background when I take over my father's business." Tom Palen, Scott City sophomore, is a parttime flight instructor at Lawrence Aviation. Flying allows him to mix business with pleasure. "Hopefully I'd like to apply for either helicopter or jet pilot training at Pensacola, CA." Cole Tucket... of a Palen's students, Brad Canaday, Shinwee junior is getting his flight in- ternational. "You spend the time nurturing the audience to a certain place," he said. "It's important." You When You're Down and Out." From page 11 THERE's something besides the music that makes a Cole Tuckey show appealing—it's the theatrics, the clowning and Weiss' improvised monologues between songs. The willow, scragly-haired Weiss clearly is at ease before an audience. He says he enjoys playing off the audience, and his ad-dibbling creates a mood of spontaneity and immediacy. With the ability to write quickly, he easier to make it listen to songs, he says. WEASEL, the band's lead guitarist, who wants to be called only that name, says, "You're a musician or a performer or you're both. Most jazz guys go out and put up with the sht and are totally obscure to it." Music is a great career for those who are into music, but we're also performers." Weiss says it's no secret that the band wants a recording contract, although the process of obtaining one is often lengthy and filled with disappointments. sense of light-heartedness and humor, as if it knew the whole affair started with a chance meeting between Weiss and Jameson. Perhaps the band's attitude toward their whole experience is like a warm-faced Fargo," the title of one of its more nonplacial sons. "I if knew for a fact, today, that we weren't going to get a record contract. I would leave the band immediately," he says. "I tell the whole band would." Onstage, Cole Tuckey often plays with a Weiss wrote in the chorus: "And it seems like a passing fancy Lovers from the day going by, Like a rain-filled summer cloud, Like a sky from a fire. Oh, we were the promise that's never realized, And just like in a passing fancy, there's no sadness in your eyes." WELCOME Participants and Followers of the KU Relays Vista A Complete Selection of "We fix it like you like it" BASKET DINNERS (complete with fries & salad) - DAIRY BAR WITH 'REAL' FRUIT TOPPING - SANDWICHES - DESSERTS BEVERAGES Drive thru service or Dine in Vista 1527 West 6th Call in order----842-4311 Candida said the Navy would pay for his first 15 hours of instruction, evaluate his progress and determine if he would go on to become a Navy pilot. "Sometimes I wish I was just flying instead of trying to make it through school, too," she said. FOR DANA Maxwell, Dodge City junior, flying is simply for fun, even though learning can be difficult. Maxwell said that her being a girl didn't make any difference to her instructor, even though she was a teacher. According to a Lawrence Aviation spokesman, a private pilot's license requires a minimum of 40 hours flying to earn. The cost: up to $500. Perhaps the clearest reason for learning to fly comes from Russel Getter, assistant professor of political science. "I just decided if I was ever going to do it, I should do it now. So did." Appetizing Cornucopia Restaurant Enjoy your Relays Weekend eating good home cooked food at the Cornucopia Restaurant. Our recipes, dressings and breads are made from scratch. We use the best basic natural ingredients possible. Featuring 10 feet of seasonal salad and fruit, plus a large selection of omelets, crepes and sandwiches for the discriminating appetite. Average meal price $3.00.Finest and most unique dining in Lawrence area.Parking in the neighborhood, on the street after 6:00 p.m.on Sundays. Good Food Naturally! Corrugopia 1801 Mass. Lawrence, Kansas 842-9637 10-10 daily WELCOME TO LAWRENCE --- ALL STAR DAIRY - First in Quality - First in Flavor ★ - First in Sales - First in Freshness THE AWARD WINNING DAIRY Serving the University, Its Students and Lawrence Residents For the Last Fifty-five Years ALL STAR 2nd & Turnpike Road 843-5511 14 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Dally Kansan Parks enhance city improve recreation By JANE PIPER Staff Reporter Parks for recreation and leisure have always held a special place in the development of Lawrence, beginning with the two parks in the original 1854 city plan. Fred DeVictor, parks and recreation director, says "Parks enhance the city. They make the community a nicer place to live." And the quality of the environment is concerned." LAWRENCE'S 27 city parks totaling 1,280 acres offer a wide variety of landscaping and activities, ranging from the Holcomb park to the wooded hiking trails in Martin Park. The goals of a city park system parallel to expectations first outlined in a 47-year-old study. A 1930 city plan, approved when the total park area in Lawrence was only 24 acres, said the purpose of a park system was to provide ample recreation areas for strenuous games, outdoor enjoyment and natural scenery in the community and SPORTS-MINED Lawrence residents are drawn to the city's 13 ball fields, nine lighted tennis courts, three recreation centers—with basketball, gymnasium, bandball and rifle range facilities—and a municipal swimming pool. Lawrence has about 285 acres of parkland, excluding the planned Riverfront Park. The Riverfront Park, to run along the Kansas River, is waiting for federal appropriations before it can be developed further. The park will have many interesting picnic areas, bike trails and boat ramps. One portion of the park is now open to the public. Without the Riverfront Park, Lawrence falls short of the National Recreation and Park Association's recommendations for how much park acreage a city should have Some of the older neighborhoods don't have enough park land, DeVictor said, adding that the park shortage is difficult to remedy. He said another shortcoming was a shortage of camping facilities in city parks. Although the planned Riverfront Park will be overnight camping, no other city park will. The Parks and Recreation Department, with a $656,000 budget, employs 35 full-time employees. There are an additional 100 to 150 job openings in the summer for maintenance workers, life guards, teachers and counselors. A 22-MEMBER crew, under parks and forestry superintendent George Osborne, is in charge of maintenance, landscapeaping and reforestation of parks. Osborne said the types of trees and flowers planted depend on soil types, sun exposure, breezes and park use. Flower varieties in the parks include purple basil, dwarf celosia and the Bradford pear tree. Here are descriptions of several parks: SOUTH PARK on Massachusetts Street south of the main business district is Lawrence's oldest park. It has a bandstand—the scene of summer concerts—and a courtyard with horseback courts, a playground and wading pool. Art in the park is scheduled for May 1. MARTIN PARK, one mile west of Lawrence on Peterson Park, is the only park outside of the city limits. The 19-acre park offers hiking and nature trails in a wooded environment, a picnic area, fire ring and grills. HOLCOMB SPORTS COMPLEX, two blocks west of 25th and Iowa streets, is a new 31-acre park with four lighted ball fields, golf fields, tennis fields and bandball courts. BROKEN ARROW PARK on south Louisiana Street has a group picnic shelter, which can be reserved, a ball diamond, a volleyball stand and ample open space. CENTRAL PARK, Sixth and Kentucky streets, is the site of the Lawrence University area; there are many areas but original Santa Fe locomotive features of the park are a basketball court, volleyball standards and a picnic area. In winter, part of the park is flooded for ice. VETERAN'S PARK, 19th and Louisiana trees, provides two lighted tennis courts, a basketball court, and a gymnasium. CENTENIAL PARK, Sixth and Iowa streets, is 35 acres that were donated to the city in celebration of the Lawrence Centennial in 1954. The park has much open space—one-mile jogging course, small gardens and a group shelter, plaza area and tennis courts. Other community parks are: Lyons Street Park, Lyons Street and Haskell Avenue; Walnut Street Park, Walnut Street and Haskell Avenue; Woody Park, Second and Missouri streets; Clinton Robinson Park, south of the Kaw River bridge; Watkins Park, Harvard Road and Vermont Street; Brook Creek Park, 12th Street and Prairie Avenue; Parnell Park, 15th and Maryland streets; Edgewood High Chapman Park, High Chapman Park, 27th and Bonanza streets; Park Hills Park, Park Hill Terrace and Montana Street; Naisimuth Park, 28th and Florida streets; Water Tower Park, Oxford Road and Sun Drive; Ludium Deerfield Park and Schwarzer Road; Deerfield Park, near Deerfield Gros School. From page nine Christmas. Formerly the Arena, the bar now has a Greek crowd (the owners are Phi Gamma Deltan). A lack of tables and chairs present a standing-room-only problem because it crowds quickly. Entertainment includes beer chugging contests, drunken booting, a rocking jukebox and pickled egg eaters. CLYDESDALE, 611 Vermont St.—Some students will hit this place on lunchtime, but the clientele is usually town-folks. There's some country-western decor on the walls and that's the kind of music that blares from the jukebox. Town taverns CONGO BAR, 520 N. Third St.-This North Lawrence bar attracts mainly an older crowd, who come to hear the country books booked on weekends. The only games Weather draws crowds to Perry, Lone Star By DIANE WOLKOW ALSO AT Perry Lake are a game management area administered by the Kansas Fish and Game Commission and operated by the Army Corps of Engineers. Lynn Burris Jr., director of the Kansas State Park Authority, said the park normally opened April 15. However, because of a snowfall, the park opened in March, Burris said. Staff Renorter According to Burris, the peak periods in the state park area are weekends in late May and in June and July. Vacationers who go to the park come after July 4, or in August, he said. Bruce Waddell, game research biologist for the commission, said most of the activity in the area now was river fishing and rabbit hunting. IT COSTS $3 a night to use the camping grounds' electricity, water and sewage. Warmer weather and the accompanying urge to be outside are here and many University of Kansas students are taking advantage of various recreational areas near Lawrence. The two largest areas are Lone Star Lake and Perry Lake, which are both within a half hour drive from Lawrence and now open. PERRY LAKE, off U.S. 24 north of Perry is divided into three administrative areas The area, which comprises nearly 11,000 acres under lease from the Coeps and is at least 25 percent water, includes administrative areas. Perry State Park offers state and camp grounds with showers and public facilities, a boat launching ramp, parking areas and a developed sand beach on the lake shore for swimming. On the lake are picnic shelters with tables and crates. People who wish to use state park facilities must purchase an annual motor permit of $10, with a $2 charge for each vehicle. Parking fees are $49, costing $1 each, are also available. before sunrise to sunset. A valid hunting and fishing license is needed for entry. George Hathaway, chief ranger for the Corps, said the areas administered by the Corps included nine public-use areas, two group-occupying areas and a motorcycle FACILITIES IN each of the public-use areas include hot showers, modern toilet, sewage dumping stations for trailers, a water supply, picnic tables and grills. Besides picnicking in the areas, nature-ers can fish - a valid fishing license is required. The areas, administered by the Corps, which opened in 1989, charge only for overnight camping. The camping season is May 13 to September. The charge is $45 per night. Hathaway said the best way to reach the Corps areas was to take U.S. 24 to the town of Perry, then turn north at the sign. Signs in the area suggest where people can ask for further directions. THE HEAVIEST use at Lake Perry is on Sunday afternoons, Hathaway said, but students are already coming out during the week because of the sunny weather. The other popular lake, Lone Star, opened April 12 for use from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Ward Shul, manager of Lone Star, said the best time to see the lake is early so south on Iowa路 and follow the signs. Lone Star Lake offers picnic areas with fireplaces and picnic tables, a camping area with individual hookups for trailers, showers and restrooms, play areas and boat rentals, and the main entrances on the first cove sells sandwiches, ice cream and other concessions. A PERMIT FOR overnight camping, which can be purchased at the concession stand, costs $1.50 for motor vehicles and $1 for tents. Boat rentals cost $2.50 to $5 an hour, depending on the boat; motor boats cost $10 are pool tables. If you like dancing, there's room for it. Shull said that a valid state fishing license was needed to fish at the lake and that the fish stock is declining. FATHER'S, 4204 Iowa St. — Definitely a bar for the game types. The minute you walk in the door, you're staring down one of the many football tables. There's shuffleboard, pinball and a special room for pool, lacrosse and soccer. Mother's. Believe it or not, the clock runs about 10 minutes fast, so the place can be cleared by midnight. GENE AND PATS' TOWN TAVERN, 4N. Second SL—Quite a few students flock to this bar in North Lawrence, even during the week. The jukebox songs country and there's the usual assortment of games. Hamburgers are served. THE HARBOUR, 1031 Massachusetts St. — The atmosphere here is that of a dingy old building with colorful murals and colorful language and cheap perfume. Local yokels and part of the old Louise's crowd frequent here. The bar's size lends it to class keger parties, Greek functions and more. DIRTY HERBIE'S, 708 Massachusetts St.—This was once a hotel that used to "rock n' roll in the 50s," says manager Ronn Johnson. Formerly Jackie's, it 's been a little more stylish, and its nickname of its owner, Dave Meyer. There's dart, foosball and pool tour- narments. Friday's the most crowded day, and the afternoon usually commences with the Kansan staff having a few to start (or end) the week. ICABHOB'S INC, RFD 3—Original, known as "The White School," this bar maintained schoolhouse features including a dressing room, a name taken from the schoolhouse bar and the "Legend of Sleepy Hollow." Known for its peanut gallery atmosphere, Ichabod's also has walls of varnished boxcar siding, decorated with murals depicting the Archives and an engraved mirror behind the bar. More than 800 personalized schoners have been sold and those of "Pretzel," "Flex," "Double Fault" and regular customers are stacked behind the bar. INSIGHT LOUNGE, 2205 Haskell- Directly behind the Site gas station, this bar attracts mainly Haskell students. There's a happy hour daily, with the usual supply of games. An employee said the place "has a tendency to get rough on weekends." J. WATSON/S, Hillcrest Shopping Center, changed from the old, familiar Yu Dawn Watson's offers both live entertainment and disc. For tube bottle displays, there's a See TOWN TAVERNS page 18 Special gifts for Special people - Pewter Jewelry - Handcrafted gifts - Frames—all shapes, sizes for any picture at Doreta's Decorative Arts 843-7255 1006 New Hampshire Like the Kansas Relays The Round Corner Drugstore is a vital part of Lawrence History PHARMACY THE ROUND CORNER DRUGSTORE AS IT WAS IN 1898 (Photo courtesy of the Elizabeth Watkins Museum) In 1855 when Lawrence was just a year old, Brinton Webb Woodward arrived here from Pennsylvania. With the help of $2,000 of his parent's money and a wild scheme, he established the second of only two drugstores this side of the Mississippi. At what is now 634 Massachusetts, the drugstore served the Lawrence community until August 23, 1863. On that day, it was destroyed by Quantrill during one of his bloody raids. The drugstore was rebuilt on its present site at 801 Massachusetts and it was named "The Round Corner Drugstore" because of the building's round corner. For over a hundred years, the Round Corner's patrons have entered through its door. today the Round Corner Drugstore is serving the Lawrence community with expertise that only 122 years of history can create. The Round Corner Drugstore 801 Massachusetts 843-0200 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 22, 1977 15 crowded day, numences with w to start (or -Originally "this," this bar items are included in the crane of Crane in "K." Known for it, re. iabachd, re. iabachd cariding, re. iabachd behind, re. iabachd behind personalized and those of "Fault" and "backed behind 5 Haskell- this bar, its. There's a supply of place "has a ekends." zipping Center, u recently r Yuk Down. tainment and its, there's a te room. page 16 umpshire MARIE AND JEREMY THE MARRIAGE OF ELIZABETH AND JACK PETE BLAIR COACHING BLAIR COACHING VIVIANNA ALEXANDRA SCHNEIDER AND ANTHONY WESTON there is a special look about clothes from Mister Guy... open thursday nights till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. 16 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Better restaurants . . . From page nine restaurant have been indicative of the fine Italian cuisine within. Spicy and exotic pizzas include smoked oyster, Portuguese Linguica and Toronto Delight. Even beverages and desserts have a touch of the exotic. Mau Mau, malt liquor with a twist of lemon or lime, and peanut butter are served here are unique in Lawrence. Store and panelled walls, two fireplaces, stained glass windows and lamps, hanging plants and drapping candles mimick an Italian café. Artwork, including oils, prints and watercolors, adds a cultural atmosphere to the restaurant. AZTEC INN, 807 Vermont-Mexican dishes worthy of a hat dance are found at the Aztec Inn, a restaurant that goes out of its way to serve more than the usual Mexican treats. A reliano, an amuse-like meal wrapped around green peppers, is one such item. All are moderately priced. These are a favorite among faithful regulators. The food is accented by a decor that features booths engulfed in Marian hats and headpieces. hanging wooden logs. Lively Mexican music completes the germine atmosphere The restaurant opens at 11 a.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. ROYAL PEKING RESTAURANT, 711 W. King Street, apportioned to *Good Chinese food in the area*. *Chinese folklore provides unique eating for Royal Peking customers.* The menu includes egg rolls, fried dumplings, Won Ton chicken and chicken and Buddhist delight vegetables. A Special President's Dinner, which costs $9 and features dragon phoenix soup, Peking duck, chicken with walnuts, royal fish, Peking dumping and toffee apples, is an authentic duplication of the royal dinner. The president Richard Nixon in Peking in 1972. Intricately decorated Chinese bowls are displayed in a glass case. Chinese lanterns hang from the ceiling and three large and colorful Chinese prints dominate the walls. CORNUCOPIA, 1601 Massachusetts St. — Cornucopia exists for the first time in its garden of its salad bar, which includes garnishes such as raw broccoli and cauliflower. sunflower and seame seeds, beets, bean salad, lemon garlic, sweet pickled medicks and cherry peppers. An equally impressive fruit bar has fresh melon balls, blueberries, strawberries, peaches, pineapple slices and raspberries. Cornuphia is a vegetarian's utopia with nine kinds of crepes and more than 20 kinds of omelets. A hot sauce omelet suggests the Cornuphia's ability to please even the most fussy customers. The 10 types of beril teas are more favorites of Cornuphia's regular customers. Cornacopia is open daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. VILLAGE INN PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT, 821 Iowa—Appetites craving breakfast at the crack of dawn can go to the Villa Inn. The restaurant seats 200 and offers 16 types of pancakes, a complete menu of breakfasts and other meals. Swedish pancakes and good coffee are two of the many delicious treats. Broiled meat dishes and french fries appeal to many dinner and lunch customers. Although the interior of Village Inn is rather simple, it's bright and busy, a must for a restaurant that opens daily at 6 a.m. JACK'S GOAL, POST, 1909 Massachusetts St.—Pretty much a hangout for Haskell students, this place will soon be changing its name to "Trail's End." From page 14 Town taverns JAYHAWK CAFE, 1340 Ohio St. “Let's go to the hawk,” we take a phrase familiar to freshmen—especially GGS-Corbian for blunty, the Hawk is a place for a pickup. Usually an evening's worth of barbishing can be accomplished between the Hawk and the Wagon Wheel Cafe, if you don't mind. Don't miss the Count around Hallowen. JOHNNY'S, across the Kaw River bridge—The first stop in a true Mass. Street run, Johnny's is a sit-down bar for poolhouses, workers and rednecks. Occitement. "I Like Beer" is the jukebox favorite. casionally a Greek function finds its way to you, to the amazement of regulars who seem to have never seen so much ex-LONGBRANCH SALOON. 1009 Massachusetts St.-All has been quiet since December. The clientele is a recent resident. The clientele remains the same. Formerly the Voo Doo Hut, the Longbranch is carpeted but decor is run-of-the-mill. --and MARY RINTOUL Staff Reporters Bon appetit! LOUISIE'S WEST, 1307. W 7th St. - Happy hour here is from 3 to 3:30 p.m. The atmosphere is folky, included of courses are tennis, volleyball, disc golf and club shuffleboard, baseball and the usuals. THE LOUNGE, Ninth and Iowa streets—This is the bar at the Hillcrest Billiards, a popular place. A fair amount of students go there to drink and play on either quarter pool tables or those that cost 60 cents an hour. MOTHER'S, 2406 Iowa St. — This unique building, built in 1935 as a house, is one of the more attractive bars in Lawrence. A few isolated booths make it ideal for dates; the atmosphere is relaxed and laid-back. There's original artwork for wall decor, and two large windows provide for those wanting a few cold ones after a long day on their favorite Kansas skis slope. PURPLE pig, 610 W. 23rd St.-Female bartenders serve beer in this former Kawasaki motorcycle salesroom. Some customers, when interviewed, emphasized this was definitely the working man's place, since it looks like a man's face there are sandwiches and pecked turkey gizzards (40 cents). It's been open since December. Wooden floor slats, gungy sand walls and down home country music provide a more authentic atmosphere for the dheel cowboy. The quarter draws are gone, but there still is fresh popcorn and red beer. On Mondays, unpromoined QUANTRILL'S. 715 Massachusetts St.— STABLES, 1401 W. Seventh St.-Ol- din, and steeped in traditions of Bud- weiser, the Stables has a crowd that is young and semi-Greek, but it certainly can’t stereotype as such. However, it can be styled with crowds and crowded and boisterous and rowdy. VAN LUECK TAVERN NO. 6, 1830 W. Sixth St. - This pub just recently changed management. it's pretty much a redneck crow now, though some grad students hold "seminars" there weekly. High score on pinball for the week earns a free six-pack. WAGON WHEEL CAFE, 507 W. 14th. If you're a regular, you no longer go TGIFing on Friday's, but "to wheel and deal." Card play, an occasional Coors man with free beer and general celebration of the week being over make a Friday at the theater or the grocery store for a bathroom, the Wheel has had problems with customers who use people's yards. There now is a fenced-in courtyard, which keeps the natives from getting too restless. New menus tempting By JEWELL WILLHITE If you hate making decisions, don't get hungry in Lawrence. In the past two years 13 new restaurants have opened, bringing the total number of Lawrence restaurants to more than 50. While some of the new restaurants are dining in other locations, restaurants, others offer unique dining experiences in both food and atmosphere. OLD CARMENTER Hall Smokehouse, 101 Massachusetts St., is one of only two Lawrence restaurants featuring hickory smoked barbecue. It offers a complete menu of both sandwiches and dinners and another unique treat, frozen yogurt. If you want both atmosphere and barbecue, the Smoketown is for you. On one interior wall the original rough limestone tiled tables are located on three levels, the tuned tables are located on three levels, The Smokehouse is heated and airconditioned from shiny black exposed pipes near the ceiling. More than 100 old metal advertising signs decorate the walls. IT IS OWNED by Robert Schumur who also owns the Bull and Boar, the Massachusetts Street Delicatessen and the New Yorker. People fortunate enough to find the small unpretentious G's say the food is good and tastes good. To Mickey Galloway, owner of G's Barbecue, $30 W. 23rd St., good food means barbecue, hickory smoked the way his father did it back on a Mississippi plantation. G's Barbecue offers both sandwiches and dinners. For variety without meat, try St. Isean Kettle Cafe, 1347 Massachusetts St. St. Isean Kettle caters to vegetarians, especially the fish caters. For more information about under $1, the menu also includes vegetarian soups, salads, sandwiches and main dishes. Food is reasonably priced and the prices are reasonable. THE HARVEST, in the Marketplace at 8th and New Hampshire streets, has both sandwiches and full meals. The menu, posted outside the restaurant, shows reasonable prices. However, when ordering desserts at the sandwich, you won't get a meal. If you like Chinese food, try Cathy, located in Lawrence's newest shopping center, the Holiday Plaza at 25th and Iowa streets. Lunch costs $2.00 and includes soup, a choice of one of three entrees, fried rice and tea. The dinner menu is extensive and features 12 beef dishes, 12 poultry dishes, 7 pork dishes and 16 fish dishes. Prices range from $3.50 to $4.50. THERE IS also a vegetarian menu as well as dinners for two with five different foods for $7.50. Dinner for four features seven different foods for $15. If you want a sandwich and you're tired of hamburgers, Daqwudg's Sandwich Shop, 645 Massachusetts St., offers 300 com- mands, six hot plates and side orders including fried mushrooms. PRIVATE'S COVE, at 6th and Main streets, is a seafood place you'll want to miss. The batter fried fish is excessively hot and the round are round dals of fried mashed potatoes. The Malls Sandwich Shoppe and Dell at 23rd and Louisiana serves both hot and cold sandwiches with chips and pickle. They also sell assorted salads and desserts. Most customers order food to go, but there are several small tables. Restaurants in Lawrence are almost all located on four streets: Sixth, Iowa, 23rd and Massachusetts streets. No matter which area of town you are in, whether you want a sandwich or a meal, atmosphere or there's a restaurant to be discovered. M. B. WILSON AND R. H. MORGAN The winning combination . . . You and fashions from Open Thurs. 6:30 8:30 the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts --for when you want to relax and really enjoy your meal Level2 (Closed Saturdav) BACK A WINNER! H Refresh Yourself at One of Our Five Restaurant Facilities Team up with Another Winner The Kansas Union! THE DELI Hearty sandwiches made to order Level 3 THE CAFETERIA A complete menu featuring daily specials Level3 THE PRAIRIE ROOM Build your own lunch with our garden fresh vegetables and home-made soups. Level 3 (Closed Saturday) THE SOUP 'N SALAD BAR THE HAWK'S NEST Self-service for when you're in a hurry. Level 12 Browse at One of the Bookstores A bookstore and much more — Campus headquarters for the largest selection of official Jayhawk gifts and souvenirs. Level2 KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE OREAD BOOKSHOP Thousands of titles from fiction to philosophy, cooking to cooking Level 3 Weekdays 8:30 a.m.—5:00 p.m. Saturday, Apr. 23 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. See a Movie! THE STORY OF ADELE H. Fri. & Sat., Apr. 22 & 23 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $1 (students only) Woodruff Auditorium Level 5 V KANSAS UNION Not crime deal jails. U A count Lawr worst Wit of the were falls and a more diehard one, but died beer. and plays St.-Old, of Bud that is sibly can't it can be ded and 1830 W. changed redhead reckon core on score in six-pack. th 18th. anger go into the room. A coors bration ay at the to wait yards 1, which restless --same time," Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, said recently. Note: This is the first of three articles on crime in Lawrence. Subsequent articles will deal with the victims of crime and with jails. Violent crimes increase locally By CHUCK WILSON Staff Reporter A wave of violence swept across the country this spring, and usually peaceful Lawrence wasn't able to escape it. The worst month was February. Within a two-week period at the beginning of that month, two middle-aged women were recruited to conduct an experiment. On Feb. 7, two brothers were arrested in connection with the stabbing and strangling death of Margaret Maxey, 46. After Maxey was killed, the police arrested her legs and dunned them in a trash can. On Feb. 12, a neighbor found the body of Mary Cox, 43, in the kitchen of Cox's apartment. A 14-year-old boy was later detained in connection with Cox's murder. "It was a coincidence that the recent homicides in Lawrence happened at the In Indianapolis, Kurtis Kirtsie wired the muzzle of a 12-gauge shotgun to the neck of a mortgage company executive and held bin hostage, for 63 hours. YET NATIONWIDE, an uprunge of violence continued through the entire month. In the western Indiana town of Hollandburg four young men broke into a mobile home where a mother had been sleeping on television. After taking $3, the bandits ordered the boys and their mother to lie face down on the floor. Five they were systematically shot in the back. A 42-year-old Detroit man drove to Cincinnati and took eight persons hostage in a home for unwed mothers. He later surrendered to police. In New Rochelle, N.Y., a hulking 250-pound furniture mover and Nazi cultist, Frederick Cowan, went on a rampage killing four co-workers, a policeman and killing four co-workers, a policeman and Statistics have indicated that over the last year, violent crime has diminished in most major U.S. cities. But in that same period, the number of homicides has increased. There was a 12 per cent increase in 1978 and the figures for the first part of 1977 are expected to show a continual trend. wounding five other persons. He then killed himself, "people want something they can't afford or they want to avoid something they can't avoid," William Arnold, associate professor of psychology at Northwestern University, says a problem is to attack it violently. Why has violent crime increased so much? Personal disagreements and money were the cause. VIOLENCE SEEMS to be a solution for the moment, he said, and there is very little consideration about its long-term consequences. "Three-quarters of all violent crimes on with people you already know." Arroyo. Maj. Darrel Stephens of the Lawrence Police said most simple assaults, the crime that showed one of the largest increases locally, weren't reported to the police. Simple assault is the term police use to describe such occurrences as bar fights, in which an individual is struck. When a violent crime is committed to money, as in recent local liquor store robberies, the police are called. LAWRENCE GUNN, a nationally known sociologist, did a study in Columbia, Ga., in 1972 to find out how much money actually was taken in an armed robbery. He found that if all offenders divided equally the money they sole in 1972, each person would have made only 55 cents a day, or about $200 for the whole year. Even the most active robber, who according to Gunn's report accomplished at least six robberies, netted only about $2,000 a year. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY See VIOLENT CRIMES page nine The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Monday, April 25, 1977 Vol.87,No.132 Visual arts building to open in fall Space problems won't be completely solved when the visual arts department moves into its new building this summer, but it's still a challenge. The School of Fine Arts, said last week. Classes will begin in the new building next fall, a year earlier than anticipated. It will be crowded at first, he said, but the lack of space will ease as enrollment levels off and declines during the next five to 10 years. "In the long run, we'll be glad we didn't plan for expansion of our programs" Thompson said. "It would have been costly as enrollment continues to drop." The School of Fine Arts now admits about half of the art majors who apply to the University of Kansas, Thompson said, and about 10% of them will allow normals to enroll in art classes. THE NEW BUILDING won't add enough knowledge to allow more students enroll in the school. THE ALUMNI, he said, should provide more career guidance for students and he hoped that there could be a core of black alumni from the Kansas City, Lawrence and Topota areas who could meet monthly with students to discuss problems they faced at KU. Eventually, demand for an art education will follow a national trend and decline, he said. The visual arts building will have adequate space to meet the needs of all KU students, including nonmajors, in about 10 years, he said. The new visual arts building will increase the quality of art education at KU, but not the quantity of students being taught, Thompson said, because the space gained by its construction is needed to provide adequate work areas for the current classrooms. Work on the building began during fall 1975, and was scheduled to be used by the fire department. The new building will have about 98,000 square feet of usable space. He said there was nothing wrong with promoting black solidarity and that a continual effort should be made by the black students to support black students in this endeavor. Jackson said the program was a direct benefit for graduating seniors, because they established job contacts, exchanged ideas with the alumni and gained information about job opportunities and professional experiences. Good weather and good luck are the reasons the building is being completed. The visual arts department is now scattered throughout 13 buildings. It has three offices in the building, Thompson said, and the only time some faculty members see each other is at the library. Michael Shinn, co-chairman of the program, said the purpose of the program was to give students an insight into the professional world, to develop black models for the students to follow and to develop relationships between black alumni and students. Black alumni and students participated in career sessions that advised black students in allied health, architecture, athletics, business, communications, education, occupational health, medicine, music and the performing arts, nursing, psychology and social services. THE ENTIRE department won't be able to move into the new building this fall. Most Career day designed to help black students More than 50 black alumni of the University of Kansas returned this weekend to participate in the first annual Black Student Career Day. It was sponsored by the Black Alumni Committee of the Kansas University Alumni Association. Jun Dumas, co-chairman of the program, said the program was held to make black professionals more visible to black students. He added that he'll sell their skills and not just their degrees. James Anderson, associate professor of curriculum and instruction and political science at the University of Houston, said in his keynote speech that students, when entering the working world must treat everyday challenges as educational ones. DUMAS SAID the alumn tried to convince backroom agents that they could succeed in the job. It is important, he said, to encourage students to acquire valuable skills to better themselves and their opportunities in the working world. "The building was planned on the assumption that art programs don't remain static." Thompson said. "Space is the most important aspect of art education." mass blowing classes will be at Charnney farm, Thompson said, and aren't expected to meet. classes that will eventually move to the old Fowler Hall structure will remain in their present locations for at least another semester. STANLEY WILLIAMS, Wichita senior, said he thought the program was successful because it brought black alumni and students together to work toward providing important opportunities for formal and informal job contacts. The new building has been built around Fowler Hall, formerly the engineering shop. Remodeling of Fowler Hall will continue into the fall and the hall probably will be ready for the spring 1978 semester, Thompson said. The jewelry and silversmithing department will remain in Broadcasting Hall next fall, and industrial design classes will remain in Flint Hall next fall. THE VISUAL ARTS building is designed to provide maximum use of available space. About half of the inside walls are filled and may be shifted around for space changes. Jackson said that he was pleased with the student turnover for the first career day and that the black alumni committee would be invited to another program organized for next year. Existing space will be budgeted by clustering similar classroom activities in the same area of the building. This will avoid the duplication of equipment that is common now because the departments are scattered across campus. THE HIGH-CEILINGD shop areas in Fowler Hall will be used by ceramics and sculpture classes. Climbing cranes will enable students to move large, heavy objects, such as completed sculptures, from one area to another. Printmaking, film and photography classes are grouped around the photograph darkrooms to enable students to use common work areas. Special features in the visual arts building include a display gallery inside the main entrance, a projection room and a viewing room. Students and faculty members will be able to display their work all year in the The viewing room is a large, well-lit room where instructors can hang student's work for evaluation. It is equipped with side and movie projection equipment, and will seat students seated in the viewing rooms are luxuries that will add flexibility to the art program, Thompson said. gouery. Thompson said he would like to establish exchange displays with other area art schools to be shown in the gallery from time to time. MEMBERS of the art department began looking for a building to consolidate their programming soon after the music department was formed in 1957, Thompson said. The Kansas Legislature allocated money to plan a structure in late 1973, and $8.8 million was allocated for the project. The building receives little sunlight from the north, which is the best lighting for painting because it is diffused. Thompson said. Mistrooms in the building, if they had windows, would receive harsh western sunlight. he said. Windows in some areas of the building are small to maximize wall space that may be used for a work area and to conserve energy. Thompson said. SOME FACULTY members and students about the building's lack of windows. Thomason Skylights have been installed to allow room on the top floor to receive sunlight. Some of the cost-saving measures initiated included eliminating most of the remodeling of Fowler Hall, omitting ceilings in many of the classrooms and university hallways, instead of built floors in all but the galleries and entrance areas of the building. The first bids on the building exceeded the allocated funds, and the structure had to be built. The new visual arts building is located between Murphy and Lindhays labs, near the Museum of Contemporary Art. A man looks through a broken chain-link fence. Outside looking in Staff photo by JAY KOELZER While many students took advantage of Saturday's clearing skies to bank on biernets while watching the Retails, other nonpaparring spectators opted for the view from behind. Victory and defeat mean agony in marathon BY JOE BADCLIFFE Staff Reporter A Snuckers, an orange, a cheese cracker and a medal—that's what awaited the finishers of the Kansas Relays Marathon Saturday morning. The runners also received sore legs, blisters, shin splints and a numb feeling of satisfaction that comes after running 25 miles, 385 yards. Finishing about two hours later was another winner: 12-year-old Gabrielle Warrington from Kansas City, Mo. who runs marathons not because she is pushed by her parents but just for fun. "I wouldn't run for any other reason." The finishers included Bob Busby, a school teacher from Pleasant Hill, Mo., who was still recovering from the flu and couldn't run very hard, even though he toured the course in the winning time of 2:23:06.6. They had all assembled at 7 that morning in Memorial Stadium before a few hundred parents and friends and several dozen cameras. They stood around, applying Vaseline and Ben Gay, tucking in their bouncing up and down on the starting line. IN ADDITION to the two were about 225 other runners that included old men, young men and college women with transistor radios. The campanile rang, the gun sounded and the 250 starters were off; yelling a cavalry charge with a group of runners pleading, "Ston me, please! Don't let me do it." out of the stadium they ran, up campanelle hill, across Mt. Oread and south, for 13 miles of rolling hills to the halfway point at Vinland and back again. "WATER, GATORADE or ERG!" attended the adults at the nine mile check- point. The adults were very excited. "Nothing," yelled one runner. The 250 starters were off; yelling a cavalry charge with a couple of runners pleading, "Stop me, please! Don't let me do it . . ." "Scotch and water," called a third, as they ran up the stairs, carrying little paper cups from the workers without spilling the contents on their shirts. The runners passed in groups and alone. The runners passed in groups and alone, in team uniforms and T-shirts with "Anything." velled another. Kathy Smith, a junior at Kansas State and a member of the K-State women's track team didn't want anything to drink. She was quietly smiling as she waved radio she was lugging in her right hand. "Distance runners do it longer" printed on the back. At the 17-mule run, the runners were starting to become delirious. The paper cups they reached for were dropped more quickly than before and become glossy and their words were few. "THAT'S ONE way to keep from getting bored," said a worker who was staring in the mirror. Busby had ended his 15-mile running conversation with the eventual second place inhisher, Dennis Hinkamp from the University of Missouri. Bussy had a slight sad now, averaging $2.53 a mile and going 148 miles each week to add to the plaque he won two years ago. THE RUNners were nearing the 20-mile mark, where the real battle starts—between mind and body. The carbohydrates from all the spaghetti and ice cream the runners ate the night before had long since been used up. What fat there was didn't break down fast enough to be useful as fuel. And the marathoners ran on guts. If nothing else they were proving that their minds were still the masters of their bodies. The body bells back—with pain. And the course isn't much help. Some of the rolling hills never seem to back up row back rows and then they runnng. And then there's Indiana Street. BOSTON MIGHT have Heartbreak Hill, but kansas has LegendHill. It stands at the 25 mile mark, gradually growing steeper for several hundred yards until it reaches a peak at Jayhawk Blvd., a final obstacle for those who have already beaten the course. The only good thing about this field is that it rests of the race in downhill—aCross Jayhawk Blvd., around to the campanile, down into the stadium and . . . the field. The pain doesn't end with the finish of the race, but the mental struggle is over. The runners finished with a final lap around the track, waving to the sparse morning crowd in the stands as if to say, "Look," to no one to fix the damn thing." RUSS JEDICKA, Lawrence graduate student, lay sprawled on the grass outside the stadium after finishing his first marathon in 3 hours, 4 minutes. The first woman finisher was the musician, Katy Smith, who ran 1:30:14 to easily qualify for next year's Boston Marathon. "3.94, on four weeks of training," he moaned, shaking his head. Other finishers hobbled around, nibbling oranges and drinking watered-down lemonade. "I'm glad it's over," she said as she limped off the track in her stocking feet, "and I'm ready." "I like to listen to an AM radio when I run, but there aren't any good AM stations around here," Smith said. "So I had to borrow an FM radio from a friend." SHE SAT DOWN on the grass. "I am a pretty good race," she said, "but I could've done without that hill." "I'm not cut out for this stuff," he said with a laugh. "I really want to be bad until I am old." An alternate finish was set up outside the stadium after four hours, and Jedlicka was among those who were still around, exounding on their races. She said that she runs about 12 miles a day, on her own, but that 'sometimes my mother is in charge'. "I definitely need a beer." "I really died," he said. "I don't care. I finished. I did not care who beat me. I beat About four hours and 30 minutes the starting gun had sounded, little Gabrielle Warrington crossed the finish line, amidst aplause from astonished onlookers. A high school runner who had finished second in a relay than he had expected, didn't seem concerned. Gabrielle started to drink and looked up, "This is lemonade?" "I feel just fine," she said, sitting down as her mother handed her some lemonade. SHE WALKED away from the finish, systematically devouring an apple while As she finished the apple and started tearing into an orange, Gabrielle said that this was her third and last marathon for a while. "I run them just to see whether I can do it," she said. "You don't race against anyone." After finishing the orange, she looked to her mother for more food. "Can I have some "Maybe you can find someone with an apple—a banana?" George Carlin cancels concert George Carlin, comedian, Saturday cancelled a concert for last night in Hoch Mike Miler, SAU adviser, said last night that SUA received a call from Carlin's "They canceled several other concerts and ours because they diagnosed that Carlin had cancer." Miller said Z.Z. Top would be the last concert this semester. Z. Top, a country rock band, will perform May 7 at 8 p.m. in Allen Field House. --- Refunds to Carlin ticket holders will be given at the SUA office, Miller said. Out of town ticket holders can mail in their tickets for refunds, he said. 2 Monday, April 25, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Hussein, Carter to meet WASHINGTON - King Hussein of Jordan arrived here last night for his first face-to-face meeting with President Carter. He was greeted by Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance, and the pair moved quickly from the rainy alirp into a VIP lounge at Andrews Air Force Base. Hussein is the third Middle East leader to visit Washington since Carter took office. He follows outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. After a brief stay there, Vance accompanied Hussein to Blair House, the official residence for visiting heads of state. Lebanon battle continues BEHRUT, Lebanon - Syrian troops and tanks battled Palestinian guerrillas for the second straight day yesterday on the outskirts of Beirut's Sahra In Israel yesterday, a newspaper quoted Defense Minister Shimon Peres, has taken over the duties of prime minister, as saying Israel would intervene to stop the bombing of Jerusalem. Hostage free; man kills self PATTerson, La. — A prison escapeer shot and wounded a former girlfriend and her infant daughter, then held another young woman hostage for six hours in a house in New York City. Robert Brobmildfell, 27, was found shot once in the head after tear gas was fired into the house where he was hiding, police said. Police reported firing no shots. Moments before, Bornfield had reelled off another shot that earlier yesterday made her former girlfriend an offer to follow after an argument about money. The woman was listed in satisfactory condition at a nearby hospital. The child was taken to New Orleans for surgery. Car tax plans questioned NEW YORK—John Riceado, chairman of Chrysler Corp., said yesterday that President Carter's program to save energy with new taxes on auto was like a carbon tax. Both Thomas Murphy, chairman of General Motors Corp., and George Lewis, president of Rolls Royce USA, have said there would be a $500 tax on the vehicles. Taxes would amount to $10,000 to over $10,000. Ricardo said a law was already on the books requiring auto companies to attain a fleet average of 18 miles a gallon in next year's models and 27.5 miles a gallon by "That will accomplish the President's goals," he said. "I don't think we should impose a new tax until we see whether this program works." Sexual activity subject of letters She also told police that because of the letters, several males had come to her apartment and had asked that she engage in sexual activities with them. According to the police, the letters contained nude photos of the woman. The woman also told police that her husband was still missing. The letters once enclosed in the letters A University of Kansas student told KU Police Thursday that her ex-husband was being mailled letters that included graphic descriptions of sexual activities that the woman had supposedly engaged in. The woman said she husband had signed her letter to the letters. kU Police said they could find nothing in the letters that could be considered a violation of criminal law. Because the inmate was under investigation, it was therefore in the jurisdiction of the Lawrence Police Department, they advised the woman to talk to the Lawrence Police Department and to consult an attorney. The KU Police said the officer had the most likely known address was Stouffer Place, but he has since moved and left no forwarding address. Police said they had issued no warrant for his arrest. Student reports jewelry theft A University of Kansas student reported to Lawrence Police Friday that jewelry valued at $470 had been taken from her residence at 1646 Tennessee St. The student, Lisa Warren, Charleston, Mo., graduate student, reported that she was at Watkins Hospital when the theft occurred, between 2 and 4 p.m. Friday. Police said the glass door in the back of the apartment had been removed to gain entry. Among the items removed were six gold rings, other gold jewelry and an English engraved tablet. Police have no suspects. Interested In Outdoor Recreation Committee Chairperson positions available in: —Wilderness Discovery Mountaineering and Backpacking Canoe Club Orienteering —Recreation Fair Sign up for interviews in the SUA Office Interviews April 26 and 28 evenings Sponsored By SUA URBAN PLANNING AT HUNTER Action oriented. Hunter's program grapples with social and economic problems and explores the areas of housing, fran- The Department of Urban Affairs at Hunter College of the City university of Houston has two-year, 60-credit program (identity) degree in MASTER OF URBAN ENGINEERING Fieldwork opportunities abound—in city and suburban planning agencies, in neighborhood groups, in community development Requirements are flexible and an able, diverse, and experienced faculty is ready to add guidance and direction to student goals. Financial aid is available. Current costs are $750 a semester for City residents and $1,000 for non-City residents, plus activity fees. For more information and admission applications write: Director, Graduate Program in Urban Planning, Hunter College/ C.U.N.Y. 790 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10021 (212) 570-5549 Talking 'Big Macs' please exposition crowd What sounded like the Beach Boys in Allen Field House was actually an exhibit of Big Mac and Quarterpounder containers at the Engineering School Council's 57th annual exposition this weekend in Learned Hall. The quartet didn't waste any time war ming up, starting strong with a rendition of *Fun, Fun, Fun*. When the group finished, they danced and applauded, and it began "Surf Girl!" The quartet was built for the Electrical Engineering Department's display by Jeff Rosson, Neodesha junior, and Kevin Stein, Lake Quigura junior. The talking Big Macs and Quar- terpounders each contain about $70 of radio cable. ROSSON HELD A Big Mac container that transmitted the speech of Stapman, who was a prisoner in the Nazi concentration camp. battery and some transistors. They can double as FM radios. "We've actually taken the talking Big Mac into McDonald's restaurants and had him order food," Rosson said. "It usually takes a while, but sometimes everyone comes out, turns the back to see it." Rosson also demonstrated an electric flower that lit up when it was watered, a digital date and clock flower pot and a flowerpot in a canain with running water and colored lights. Rosson and Stephan won third place in the student displays for their talking and SECOND PLACE went to the American Institute of Chemical Engineers for demonstrations of how home insulation polyurethane foam is made. singing Big Macs in awards presented by the Engineering School Council. rme Mechanical Engineering Department took first place in the council competition and the best over-all display trophy awarded by Sigma Tau, an engineering The department had an exhibited base on the power, manufacturing and design aspects of the equipment. THE MECHANICAL Engineering Department also and a Telemetry and short communication training. designed by Perry Beeson, a former KU student. The feeder allows quadraplexes to feed themselves with little more than the movements of their heads. Chi Epialson, an engineering fraternity, displayed its 1975-1977 collection of concrete canoes for the annual concrete canoe race with K-State. It also demonstrated a concrete strength testing machine, which蕴含ed cylinders of concrete every half-hour. A POPULAR industrial display was the Boeing exhibit, which included a Hewlett-Packard "super spirigraph" that could either chart a person's biorhythm or give a colorful spirigraphic interpretation of his birth date. Alka-Seltzer PROUDLY PRESENTS KU GREEK WEEK EVENTS: Art Show LOCATION: Royals vs. Texas Row Party Alumni Appreciation Market Place Area Philanthropy Sports Events Philanthropy Sports Events Royals Stadium Sunset Drive In KU Ballroom TIMES & DATES: Greek Sing Jaybowl Veteran's Park April 25-30 10:00-8:30 April 26 7:30 April 27 8:30 p.m. Street Dance April 27 6:00 p.m. Lawrence High School Auditorium Philanthropy Sports Events Stewart Ave. April 27 4:30 p.m. April 28 4:30 p.m. Greek Games Holcom Park April 28 8:00 p.m. Holcom Park April 29 3:00-12:00 April 30 11:00 a.m.-1:00 April 30 1:30-4:00 ORIGINAL Alka-Seltzer SPEEDY HELP! with SPECIAL KURSTER ADDED. For SUPER STOMACH, HEART BURN, & INDICATION WITH HERACLES OR PUBY ACNE & PLAKES IN TABLETS IN AUTOFLASKS Alka-Seltzer SPIRIT RELIEF WITH SECOND EDITION JOINS FOR BACTERIAL STUNCH HEART REMEN OR AUTO INDUGZATION WITH HEADBARDS OR POODY CHEESE & PAINE 30 TABLETS IN 10 FOIL PACKS GAMES GAMES EVENTS EVENTS PRIZES PRIZES FUN FUN PARTY PARTY PLOP PLOP FIZZ FIZZ FAST FAST SUNDAY MUSIC MILEP $ \textcircled{c} $ 1977 Miles Laboratories, Inc., Elkhart, Indiana 46514 Frisb spun fo compete the first tournai As th that on taking champ The Miller Americ the field Robins Jabez It fe curacy catch. won m In tl whizzie distance throw defend scored if the receiv MEM Flatlair the Fly won m Anot said th The w distand distan the th of 158 New 1 Anot Ev O Monday, April 25. 1977 3 former KU plegics to than the braternity, concrete nance race ed a con- cise, which every half- YYPZTT was the Hewlett- hat could or give a on of his Frisbee tourney draws teams By JOHN McANULTY Staff Reporter Frisbees were tossed, flicked, kicked and spun for more than 10 hours Saturday as 75 competitors tried for the championship of the annual Heart of America Frisbees tournament. The tournament, sponsored by SUA, the Miller Brewing Co. and the Heart of America Frisbee Association, took place on Wednesday in a parking lot and in Robinson Gymnastium. As the day wore on, it became apparent that only the experts had any real chance of taking home the $100 prize for the over-all responsibility or a trophy in an individual event. MEMBERS OF two Frisbee clubs, the Flatland Frisbee Association of Wichita and the Flying Disc Society of Springfield, Mo., won most of the events. It featured seven events: distance, maximum time aloft, throw-run, jump. In the event called "guts," two teams whizzed a Frisbee at each other from a distance of 15 yards. The object was to hit the frisbee while defenders couldn't catch it. A point was scored each time a team was successful, but if the defenders caught a Frisbee, they The over-all winner was James Servin of the Wichita club, who took first place in distance with 286 feet. His semifinal distance was 315 feet. He also took first in distance with 186 feet. His second distance was 158 feet, 6 inches. Servin was he the New York state champion in 1969. Another Wichita club member, Max Case, said that Servin was the club's best thrower IN THE FREE style event, in which two persons threw the Frisbee back and forth doing tricks as they caught it, Servin showed his skillfulness. and that he thought Servin had the potential to be a national champion. One of his tricks was to hit a飞猿 Frisbee into the air about two feet above his head, let it land on his fingertips and spin it, then hit it up again and let it land, spinning. One of the best tricks of the free style event, according to one competitor, involved one person catching the Frisbee while doing a cartwheel. The Heartland Club won first place in the freebie event displaying various throws, IN THE OTHER events the winners were: Max Case, Wichita, for a time of 9.7 seconds in the maximum time slot event; Alan Henderson, Springfield, Mo, for seven throws out of 12 through a hoop with a 5-foot diameter in the accuracy event; and the Springfield team in which two persons are timed for throwing the Frisbee back and forth 30 times at a distance of 15 yards. The Springfield team also won in guts. The Heart of America Frisbee Association officiated at the tournament and its members competed in only the free style event. Bill Gordon, a member of the association, said they didn't compete when they were needed to judge the contest. GORDON SAID the tournament was unusual because it was the first one in which the competitors outnumbered the spectators. "We didn't get a lot of people from On Campus CITY OF NEW YORK TODAY: A SOCIAL WORK DAY is being held in the Kansas Union's Big Eight Room. COMMUNITY COLLEGE EARLY ENROLMENT began at 9 a.m. in the university room or the KU JOHNESFIELD BURTER, former head of medical education for the KU Medical Center now here and now in the University of Michigan, will hold two seminars, one at 3:30 p.m. and one at 7:30 p.m. in 124 Malot Hall. The public is invited to the 7:30 seminar. PAUL HORN of the University of Chicago will speak on "What is it if 'Noise'!" p. 304 in m. 322 TONIGHT: The KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. John Carlin, Speaker of the Kansas House, will be the guest speaker. There will be a GERMAN PLAY READING of "Dere gute Mensch von Sennan" by Bertlkert Brecht at 8 i n 2015 Wescoe. Events TOMORROW: COMMUNITY COLLEGE EARLY ENROLLMENT, beginning at 9 a.m., will continue in the Union's Forum Room. H. Wiley Hitchcock, professor of music and director for the Institute for Studies in American Music at the Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, will speak on CHRONICLES AT 5 p.m. in Woodford Auditorium. The AUAP EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE will meet from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Alive A of the Union Cafeteria. Correction It was incorrectly reported in Friday's Kansan that an art show in the Kansas Union was a faculty show; it is a student scholarship show. "Absolutely enchanting, the way Castaneda is enchanting." - Adam Smith An astonishing spiritual journey to a land where the people have learned to live with magic and have found a way to tune in to the entire spectrum of knowledge the world sends out Gifts of Unknown Things Lyall Watson AUTHOR OF SUPERNATURE $7.95 • Simon and Schuster --in Boulder has even offered classes and seminars on the sport. K. U. Chess Club Tournament 3 Round Swiss Tournament Open to students & faculty Trophy will be awarded to first place winner. Saturday, April 30 9 a.m.—8 p.m. Walnut Room, Union $1.00 entry fee University Daily Kansan KK Sign up in SUA office or at tournament from 9-9:30 a.m. For further info: SUA office 864-3477 Lawrence," he said, "And I think if people see what we are doing, there would be more Forty-five Lawrence residents participated. Enthusiasm for the sport is growing, Gordon said, and the University of Colorado Gordon said he hoped that Saturday's tournament was only the beginning for the sport in Lawrence. An annual tournament held at KU by the Heart-land club, he said. CHESTER PARK, NJ. 10 Frisbee frolic Barney Byard, Lawrence senior, did a Frisbee trick during the Heart of America Frisbee Tournament this weekend at KU while Jamie Serven, Wichita senior and overall tournament winner, looked on. 843-7333 FURS... GAS PATIO GRILLS CONGENIAL NEIGHBORS TENNIS COURT COOL BLUE POOL LIVING AT TRAILRIDGE TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS 2500 WEST SIXTH 843-7333 TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS 2500 WEST SIXTH Vista RESTAURANTS Vista RESTAURANTS Chef Salad Lettuce, Tomato, Cheese, Ham, Eggs, Crackers *MONDAY *TUESDAY *WEDNESDAY 139 Reg. 1.60 1527 West 6th, Lawrence 842 4311 Chef Salad Lettuce, Tortilla, Eggs, Crackers Store files to keep name A temporary order restraining the state from prosecuting a local business because of its name was upheld Friday in Douglas County District Court. However, James Paddock, district court judge, is to rule tomorrow on two legal questions raised at the hearing about the legality of a permanent injunction. The injunction was filed by Kim Kern m. Jane Globbach, owners of the Drug Store, 708 Mass. St., which sells pipes, cigarette cases and other drug paraphermalia. The owners were seeking to stop Mike Malone, county attorney, from prosecuting them for violation of a Kansas statute that prohibits the use of the word "drugstore" in the title of a business unless the business has a full-time registered pharmacist. MALONE HAD issued a warning to the owners on April 8 and given them 10 days to comply with the statute. The restraining order was issued April 15. The restraining order was issued to prevent Malone from filing charges until the legality of the injunction filed by the owners could be determined. under Kansas law the injunction should have been filed in Shawnee County, rather than in Montana. At Friday's hearing, Donald Hoffman, assistant attorney general, argued that VIOLATION OF the statute is an unclassified misdemeanor, which is a criminal offense punishable by a $25 to $50 fine or $100 to $100 for each infrequent use of these犯. Eric Kjorie, a Topea lawyer who represents the owners, has until Tuesday to prepare arguments on both questions raised in the case and then present the arguments to Paddock. Kjorlie has said that the statute was unconstitutional and wasn't meant to be applied to businesses that didn't dispense drugs. Kern said yesterday that he was unhappy with the outcome of Friday's hearing. However, he said the owners had no intention of dropping the suit. Malone said last week that he was unsure whether he would file charges against the owners if the restraining order wasn't upheld. "THIS IS GOING to drag out too long and is costing too much," he said. "We had no idea when we filed the petition that the bearings would take this long." Mass Street Deli 941 Massachusetts WeFeature Strawberry Yogurt Sundae served with fresh strawberries, whipped cream & nuts. Strawberry Yogurt Cones Frogurt Frogurt A Fantastic New Product for Lawrence gurt FROZEN YOGURT FIROGURU is the registeriser tademark of H. P. F. Hospital Inc Anything else is a substitute HARTFORD BALLET presents the Concerts for Young People, Inc. in cooperation with SUA in a one hour performance SUNDAY, MAY 1, 3 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE K. U. Student tickets in advance K.U. Student tickets in advance at SUA Box Office ... $2.00 Children ... 1.00 Adults ... 2.50 at the door Vincent POOL'S YOUR GAME? Improve your game of pool as well as in other games right here in our lobby. One of the important aspects of your college life is being able to take a break now and then to relax. To make it easy for you we have ping-pong tables, a pool table and games that you can check out such as monopoly, chess and checkers. With almost 500 residents, it's no problem finding an opponent! Take a break! Move to Naismith today! Relax Next Fall—Move to Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 4 Monday, April 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 Ford rushes gripes Mild-mannered Jerry Ford has turned cantankerous, and it's not very becoming. Now that he can view the world from the greens of a Palm Springs golf course or the lectern of a University of Michigan classroom, Ford has become a critic of the Carter administration. Special counsel Rudolph Giuliani talks with the Soviet Union and that the new President is about to toss more fuel on the country's smoother inflation. This isn't vintage Jerry Ford. His remarks about Carter, which come just three months after the transition of administrations, lack the touch of decency and taste that marked Ford's days in office. Worse, the criticism smacks of political hay-making. FORD SHOULDN'T be so hasty in forging that he handed Jimmy Carter a wobly Vladivostok agreement on which to try to build a long-lasting arms pact. He also shouldn't forget that it was Jerry Ford who lost the Presidential election largely because the nation's unemployment level crept steadily upward in the last months of the campaign while his administration cried inflation and covered from any action. The bald facts aside, it's unbecoming for an ex-president to second-guess his successor before his change-of-address has even cleared the Post Office. Saying that Jimmy Carter miscalculated and was over-optimistic about an arms agreement can only undermine the American position. If Carter is to form an alliance, he must be careful, he can't be worried about the shadow of his predecessor creeping up from behind. JERRY FORD, who was haunted by the memory of his predecessor for months, should know about the horrors of trying to make decisions while ghosts of days past burdened him. But Jerry FORD's memories are short in politics, and logic changes with a change in climate. It's not unusual to hear Jerry Ford complain about a Democratic president's inflationary policies. He did it all the time while he was in Congress. But Jerry Ford isn't in Congress now. He is or he is supposed to be—a distinguished American statesman. That's the picture he and his public relations men would like to paint, but off-the-cuff criticism of Carter won't make the picture much more attractive. ONE MUST wonder what Jerry Ford has to say about the new President's energy proposals. Probably not much, because all Ford could say about any energy plan would be "Gee, I wish I'd thought of that." Which doesn't look very good in print. Harry Truman was a critic of Republican presidents after he left office. But Truman gave Dwight Eisenhower time to familiarize himself with the Oval Office before popping into Washington, Harry Truman wasn't being taut as a potential presidential candidate. The same can be said for Lyndon Johnson, who showed remarkable self-restraint considering that Richard Nixon, who followed him in office, campaigned on the grounds that the party that was unable to stop the Vietnam War in four years shouldn't be prosecuted. The United States remembered, proceeded to keep the United States in Vietnam for four more years. EX-PRESIDENTS can a lot of shoes in both politics and society. Herbert Hoover, who was active for years after he left office, described weather he heedened, is a prince example. But one role an ex-president shouldn't be filling is that of second-guesser of new administrations. He won't do the country any good, and if he merely is plotting to improve his political function, he should be a bit embarrassed. JERRY FORD might be around in 1980, but he isn't doing anyone any good by hitting the campaign trail in 1977. Even if political considerations aren't prompting his remarks, the ex-president deserves to be chastised for poor judgment. Ford's criticism can be called sour grapes, or they can be called pure politics. Either way, they are uncharacteristic of a man who has no touch of class to the office he just left. Editorial editor's note: It was bound to happen. Sooner or later, the editor was destined to run out of notes related to the event last week ("Editor's Note" departs from the norm; the subject matter has nothing whiscreew to do with the operation of the event), however, deal with something that is just as close to his heart. McDonald's stands the corpse of a burger joint with a "For Sale" sign as its tombstone. It looks rather like the small, greasy operations one still finds in many U.S. restaurants concrete block walls and a grey gravel parking lot. It is used to be—Moore Burger. It is or- Burger joint only bad good food Up on Sixth Street, they are building a new McDonald's. Soon the color-coordinated bricks and plastic tables will be in place and Lawrence will be able to contribute more Big Macs to the billions already made as efficient and popular as all the other members of the chain. It will make money. Moore Burger represented the early 1950s, when a burger was a burger and there were still such things as diners and dog wagons. When you ordered a hamburger, the person behind you had to walk away from the raw meat out of a little refrigerator and cooked it. He A block or so east of the new when the June bees flew in swarms around the light bulbs by the order window or on a hot day, when women in chartreuse shorts and plastic sunglasses stopped by in their Chevys to buy fried mushrooms for their brood. Editor's Note Jim Rates used to be—a DeSoto to Mc-Donald's Granada. POOR MOORE Burger. The only thing it had going for it was good food. It had no class, not even the fake computerized menu. It was the way operations. All it was was a genuine piece of America. EATING AT Moore Burger was a journey back in time, especially on a summer night. The food, too, was a journey back into time. The innocent and naive quality that was manifested in the quote marks on the sign is much better than what was manifested in good food. Maybe it is just wishful thinking, but it doesn't seem that you can make a hamburger taste right if you're churning matter how much you talk about juiciness or special orders. anachronism. In the end, time caught up with it and it died. MOORE BURGER was an New hamburger joints (or, as they are now known, fast food franchise) die all the time in Lawrence. Texas Tom's died in record time and Griff's died a long, lingering death. But it is hard to feel the same sense of loss for these other deceased businesses. They, too, are part of America's culture. But Texas Tom's was a part of the super-fast-packaged-ultra-whamburg culture and Griff' was part of the mid-60s, early movement. Not only that, the food was nearly as good. Yes, it is hard to feel a sense of loss about Texas Tom's. In fact, there is almost a sense of fear thaturger, however, will be missed. Store's name causes headaches What's in a name? That's probably what Kim Kern and Jane Glotzbach are wondering. Kern and Glotzbach are the owners of the Drug Store, 706 Massachusetts St. Their business is in which Douglas County Atty. Mike Malone says the name "Drug Store" violates a state statute that forbids the use of the name "drugsorute", or "pharmacy" in a title unless the full-time registered pharmacist. WHAT'S SO bewildering about this case is that the Drug Store doesn't even sell drug products. Many items of merchandise are Malone has notified Kern and Glotzbach of the alleged violation and they have countered his move by filing a petition in Douglas County District Court for a restraining order and injunction against the state and the Kansas Board of Education. In the law, Violators of the law can be fixed $25-$50 for the first offense and $50-$100 for each subsequent offense. money from their non-narcotic items as well as from their prescription items. When a soda fountain calls itself a drugstore and doesn't even sell prescription drugs, it's messing candles, incense, cigarette papers, papers and other types of pipes. The business is what many would call a head shop. It's clear that the statute Malone is trying to enforce PENGUIN wasn't intended for businesses such as the Drug Store. Jay Bemis Editorial Writer The law that Malone is referring to—Kansas Statute 6536—waspassed in 1925. This law gives head shots we are any head shots in Kansas. ALTHOUGH ITS practically impossible to find the reason for a lawsuit, it has become the law was passed to protect registered pharmacists from soda fountains that sold aspirins and other medications. Registered pharmacists have to make Also forbidden under the 1925 law is the use of "apothecary" in a title. An apothecary is the person who makes an apothecary or a drugrust. with one of the registered pharmacist's forms of profit. is its forms of pront. Because the Drug Store is a head shop and not even close to be a soda fountain, it's hard to see why local pharmacists like Malone about the Drug Store. The name shouldn't hurt their businesses because the Drug Store doesn't sell anything like aspirin or Nyquil. be confusing to those who might think that it's a real drugstore. There probably have been many people going there to fill prescriptions only to find that they were not prescribed. The Drug Store has tried to avoid confusing such people by saying in its advertising that it does "not employ a registered pharmacist or sell prescription drugs." In their legal battle, Kern and Glotzbach could get technical by saying that the spelling of their name, "Drug Store", is different from the "drugstore" stature in the statute. Instead, the case probably will end in favor of the pharmacies in town that are opposing the Drug Store's name, and the business will have to change its title. BUT SURELY that wouldn't work. hurt the Drug Store's business since its customers aren't the "controlled substances" that "real drug stores contain." In fact, changing its name might be best for the business because the name can be misleading to its usual customers. Even though the prospective customer should know better, the name Drug Store implies that the business sells recreational drugs, while the drug store makes the use of recreational drugs more recreational for its customers. Changing its name shouldn't BETTER NAMES could be suggested—names like "Paraphenalia Memorabilia" or "Weed Needs." These suggestions might sound sickening to some. But there's little possibility that there are any Kansas statutes for bidding these titles. MACNEELY Carter is pussyfooting with new energy policy HEY, EVERYBODY! LOOK WHAT I FOUND AT THE THRIFT SHOP! Carter plans to enact legislation that would tax gas- to enact legislation that would curb the ever sprawling suburban areas? Carter forgets that, although gasoline and cars have become increasingly expensive, cities continue to sprawl even farther from their nuclei. Suburbia spreads, lawn after lawn, freeway after freeway, and suburb dwellers has no choice Most of Carter's proposals are directed at the common consumer and are related to their use in observation v-a-i-s vehicles. President Jimmy Carter's national energy policy, though well intended, will hit the wrong people below the belt. --- Although the American gasoline appetite is atrocious and gas prices are ridiculously low compared with those in other countries, Carter should keep in mind the American family's need for gas. Where are Carter's offers of large metropolitan areas, so massive public transportation systems can be implemented? Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer guzzling automobiles while providing "taxi credits" to those persons buying low gas-consumption cars. He also proposes to impose gas-pump charges of five cents a gallon each year. ANY DRASTIC impositions on the consumer's ability to buy equipment equally drastic proposals to alter liquid transportation in urban areas. Where are Carter's proposals but to use a car if he wishes to remain a participating member of society. CARTER COULD also use his imagination in other areas to reduce carbon consumption from person's gasoline consumption. He should try to enact laws limiting the manufacture of the gas-eating area. A few years back, during the 1973 oil crisis, rumor had it that a miraculous car, one that would be able to travel an amount of gasoline, had been designed. Where is that car now? If its existence was only a rumor, perhaps Carter should have been involved in the development of such a car and car owners in America. Perhaps Carter's plan is only a preliminary for what is yet to come. Still, it would have been encouraging to the common, nonobligation citizen to learn that carbon dioxide to limit energy waste would extend to the all-powerful industries. President Carter, by necessity, has opened a Pandora's box by trying to curb ordinary gasoline consumption. Now he needs to find a few clues to the problems that will result. U.S. culture kev to world harmony? It happens so often—the United States supplying military aid to foreign countries—that small details such as who got what, when, and how often get lost in the shuffle. This month, Zaire, under attack by Angola-based Katatenga rebels, is being sent a C-130 transport, radio quaintness and aircraft parts, a package containing $13 million, and all labeled "nonlethal" by the Carter administration. This month it's some god-forsaken country; next month it will be someplace else. It's the student of geography bananas. Idi Amin has offered some military help. Other biggies are supplying aid as well to one side or the other. Israel, China, Egypt, Cuba and the Soviet Union. Even Big Daddy SO WHAT else is new? An estimated $60,000 worth of Coca-Cola. SO WHAT else is new? CARTER ENTERED office with the reputation for being a liberal. His efforts to develop a law that would prohibit him as much in the eyes of many. soldier to fight on a Coke-ease stomach," one State Department official has said. (Nobody said the lokes were funny.) The deal is a private one between Coca-Cola and Zaire and involved no taxpayers' PETER J. LEE Anyway, when the C-130 takes off for Zaire, most of its cargo will be Coca-Cola. New energy proposals crop up frequently. For example, in February, Lockheed-California received a grant to technology to start commercial production of wind-powered electrical generating units. All in all, the federal loan guarantees for the project, and as few as 95 orders. Yet Carter could go much further in every area. The federal government should be pouring money into energy exploration in much the same way it has financed space research. WHAT IS lost in this little sale dollars, President Mobutu Sesek of Zaire just feels his troops need a little liquid refreshment, and the reports there indicate the quality of the drinking water isn't to good. Bill Sniffen Editorial Writer The sale has become something of a joke, as is to be expected. "You can't expect a is the possibility to insure permanent world peace. Instead of shipping only Coca-Cola, why doesn't the private sector get on the stick and ship everything whole American lifestyle? SIMILAR PROPOSALS have been announced by scientists and corporations nutrition-wise that a starlike planet that uranium will become scarce in a few years, plans only to support nuclear energy The possibilities are endless. What soldier in his right mind would fight if he knew he could snarf off a Tony's frozen pizza or a Swanson's pot pie? Who could resist a "Big Mac" who couldn't? What heated battle? What insensitive friend could snub the opportunity to receive a free road atas, perhaps pinpointing a land mine location, just for listening to aancer agent for an hour or two? The sight of loyalists and rebels together, glued to the tube, eating Pringles and chips, is enough to start the world's Americans have a reputation of being generous, warm-hearted people. So why not, PICTURE GOOD old Kate belting out "God Bless America," above trees and eagles, not to mention the undetermined number of pygmies who are at the tannage against the Kananganes forces. If the troops haven't had enough by then, the United States could drop the big one—a seven-strong heavyweight—John Denver, the captain and Tentile, Minnie Pearl, John Davidson, George Burns and, saving the best for America's own Kate Smith. THAT'S JUST for starters. Once Burger Kings started their restaurants in the United States could bring in the heavy artillery—reruns of "I Love Lucy," live broadcasts of "The Young and the Restless" or "A Million Dollars." peace-monger mouths watering. World salivation could be NCS's next "Big Event." during this season's spring cleaning, dig out those old copies of Better Homes and Gardens, U.S. News and World Report and Seventeen to the boys on the front? But then, perhaps the Coca-Cola people know more than they're saying. The method—sending America to Zaire and various other trouble-spots in the world—is surefire. THESE ostensibly innocuous items could be the most lethal of all. They include mass-circulation magazines, soap operas and Big Events, soldiers on both sides would either be too anemic or nondurable. It is, after all, The Real Thing. While most of the proposals included in Carter's plan are worthwhile, they are only a drop in the bucket. It seems that Carter, while trying to maintain his image as a stamina liberal and energy visionary, is taking the easy road. The sacrifices must be made, but most of the sacrifices are passed on only to the individual consumer. He announces programs of energy exploration, but plans to pour only into socially accepted areas of energy sources. AMONG CARTER'S other plans is a massive program of insulation installment. Better insulation is needed in most housing, but somewhere along the way contractors are going to foot the bill that corporate contractors should have picked up long ago. Industry, by far, consumes much more gasoline, natural gas and coal than home owners I Fro "Day Truffle with that films, pointi Chang CARTER SHOULD stop passafooting around. Since a national energy program is sorely needed, it should be introduced as a prehensive program, not as a com-paul until the crunch comes. Ho magr sister succ mean M Perhaps this is only Phase I and Phase II is yet to come. cellor const prog by la Cor of Ka Medi plete, prove parkki hospi The patient beds clinic and area direct tensi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN squa facili Published at the University of Kansas daily August 13, 2016 www.ku.edu/publications/education/booklist/July-and-June-just-except-Saturday-Sunday-and-Holiday-November-18-publications.html Subscriptions by mail are $9 am/month or $18 pm/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $9 am/person. Edu Jim Bates Business Manage Janice Clements Editorial Editor Stewart Braun University Daily Kansan Monday, April 25, 1977 5 od e end, time and it died. (int or, as n fast food the time in m's died in iff's died a d h. l tel the same these other they too, they it they tom's was a- packaged-and Girl's and did-68s, early evention. Not food want! e's business men aren't 'controlled that real feel a sense Tom's. In it a sense of or, however, ig its name the business ne can be its usual though the neer should name Drug the business drugs, while recreational recreational for its ES could be names like memorabilia" ions might some. the possibility many Kansas these titles. cy in America. 趴an is only a that is yet to I'd have been the common, energy waste all-powerful REDER office for being a to develop a sanif conformity to the landscape goid much area. The int should be intended to intake energy such the same named space possals crop up example, in eated-California commercial t commercial ind-powered ring units. All debt loan project, and ers. POSALS have by scientists warning will become years, plans nuclear energy Carter, while his image as and energy in the easy announces that he cut sacrifices are the individual announces energy exlans to pour into socially of energy OULD stop sound. Since a program is should be comprehensive stop-gap until only Phase I, yet to come. Director Truffaut's children survive his frail theme Reviewer By CHUCK SACK As "Small Change" makes abundantly clear, there is no more charming director in the world than Francius Truffaut. Unfortunately, closer scrutiny also reveals that this French filmmaker's art is in a static period. From "Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me" to "Day for Night" and "Story of Adele H." Truffaut has reworked his earlier themes into an interesting film that he has been more explicit in these films, but ultimately they are all disappointing and dramatically flat. "Small However, a director of Truffaut's magnitude can be counted on to be consistently interesting. If he fails to match the qualities of many of the qualities he mean that many of the qualities of his classic films are not apparent in his other work. AND MORE THAN any of his last three films, "Small Change" shows evidence of Truffault's magic. The story of a group of children striving to deal with the idoloches of The Cinema precariously on the windowsill of a ninth-floor apartment; a girl who refuses to obey her parents finds a method of thwarting their punishment, which turns the tables on them. The children are detailed in the story of a small boy who turns his self-imposed handicap to advantage. school, sex, money and adults is exactly suited to his talents. Like no other director, Truffaut understands the dual innocence and profanity of children. He truly believes that all children are in a state of grace, and that whatever the problems they are confronted with, they will be resilient enough to sur- Every scene in "Small Change" testifies to this belief: a 2-year-old child perches OF COURSE, without convincing actors any story can be ruined, and with children in the major roles, the risks are increased (Klein, 2013). Wild Child "amly demonstrated Truffaut's ability to draw brilliant performances from child actors." *Small Change* "should only come from adults." Traffaut's secret in handling kids seems to be less a matter of getting them to trust him than a question of his trusting them. It is also a question of how there is a freshness to their impersonations, Construction of the $55 million University of Kansas Memorial Hospital at the KU Medical Center is about 60 per cent complete, and funding has recently been approved for construction of a multilevel garage directly east of the new hospital. Med Center hospital nearly 60% finished According to Russell Miller, vice chancellor for Med Center administration, construction on the new hospital is underway and should be completed by late 1978. The Green Pepper Country Kitchen Pirates Cove The Green Pepp The hospital will become the center of all patient services, increasing the number of hospitals and medical centers; support laboratories, diagnostic and treatment areas and a new emergency area with high-speed elevators to provide direct access to surgery, X-ray and in-patient care. The six-story structure will add 840,000 feet to existing MED Center facility. Miller said that the proposed parking garage would not be built until the mid-1980s inside the Mild Carriage parking spaces needed at the Med Center was 2,753. Only 2,650 are now available. A study done by the University of Kansas and its partner planned in November 1976 indicated that The total projected demand for parking spaces after the opening of the new hospital is 3,661, meaning that at least 1,010 additional parking spots will be needed for employees and patients by the 1980-81 school year. the building are tunnels for underground access to the new hospital and the rest of the Med Center complex, and a new rooftop heliport for the landing of helicopters carrying emergency patients from other parts of the state. The new garage will contain space for about 725 cars. It is the first of a two-stage program designed to solve Med Center parking problems. Construction of the garage is scheduled to begin late this year, with occupancy beginning within a year. The garages estimated cost of $7,720,000 will be financed from $30,000 bonds, with parting users to pay the capital and the operating costs of the facility. Features being considered for inclusion in Magic, Oz collections win contest Winners of the 21st annual KU book collecting content were announced Friday at the Ravenwood Book Festival. The content was sponsored by Elizabeth Mission Hills and the Oread Bookstore. The graduate division winner was Bonita Yoder, Hesson, 2nd year law student, whose collection was on magic and allied arts. Don Medill. Toekea graduate student, placed second with his collection on German baroque literature. The undergraduate division winner was Jane McNeile, Topek freshman, for an Oz collection. In second place was Paul Reeves, a graduate, for a collection of World's A Fair books. First prize winners received $100 gift certificates and second prize winners received $50 certificates, redeemable at the Aread Bookstore in the Union. Country Kitchen Pirates Cove Green Pepper Country Kitchen Pirates Cove RESTAURANT FOOD BARGAIN RESTAURANT CLUB EXCLUSIVELY FOR STUDENTS Over $ ^{40} $ in 2 for 1 restaurant foods for only $ 3^{9 5} $ Buy 1 Get 1 FREE. No Restrictions Use as Many as You Wish in Any One Visit LIMITED NUMBER AVAILABLE 841-7620 Bar-B-Que Pizza Inn Sandy's Drive-in Taco Tico G's Bar-B-Que Pizza Inn CALL 9 A.M. TO 12 OR 5 P.M. TO 8 P.M. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS present and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Cosi Fan Tutte A Comic Opera in Two Acts Sandy's Drive-in Taco Tico G's Bar-B-Que Pizza Inn Sandy's Drive-In April 22, 23, 29, 30 moralizing is totally unnecessary, and the wording sinfully make it interminable. by W.A. Mozart University Theatre—Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 8:00 p.m. Yet as the mistakes begin to dim and and from the preocious Patrick to the abused Julien, they are all clean clones. K. U. Students admitted without charge with current Certificate of Registration This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. Somehow the fragile conceit of the storyline is maintained, and there are many wonderful moments when the children are compared to the adults. The only time that the fabric of the film is completely rent is at the end, when a teacher lectures to his class about the fate of one of their poorer classmates. This THE SCENE provides a measure of Truffaut's decline. Compared to the eloquent, accusing stare of the delinquent at the end of "The 400 Blows," the instructor's miscalculation has led the director miscalculation. It reduces the director's other achievements in the same film. Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts All the Tostados you can eat for $2.00 Opened 6-8 p.m. daily Expires May 30,1977 ELECTROLUX OFFERS SUMMER EMPLOYMENT TO COLLEGE STUDENTS For the 11th Consecutive Year, Electrolysis is offering summer, part-time or full-time employment to college students. The program includes $1,000, $750 and $500 Special Awards for selling a fixed volume of business. Student part-Time applicants will receive the sales volume of students in the summer program totaled over $2 million. Interested students may apply to any Electrolux Branch office or write : ELECTROLUX College Education Fund 2777 Summer Street Stamford CT 06905 "Small Change" becomes more and more a charming recollection. Truffault is vindicated on one point: it is the children who survive, even in memory. Show your secretary some appreciation TIME FOR WORK National Secretaries Week, April 24-30. Flowers and plants are for secretaries. Naturally. No applause necessary. If your secretary has ever gotten you out of a tight jane, no one is to thank her. And flowers and plants are thanks naturally. also places your charge, inventory. Don't let National Securities Week go by without taking firm executive action. Just step by step, or call Weed the rest. Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana 843-6111 SUN Enjoy This Summer at Jayhawker Towers By taking advantage of our SPECIAL SUMMER RATES. $380.00-June 6 (or earlier) to Aug. 16 with a 12 month lease. $197.50 a month for the summer only. WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING FOR A MORE ENJOYABLE LIFE. - FREE UTILITIES - HEATED SWIMMING POOL - ON CAMPUS LIVING - LAUNDRY FACILITIES - WALL TO WALL CARPETING - FURNISHED APARTMENTS Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 1603 W. 15th apartments Office Hours: 8:30-5:00 M-F 10:00-4:00 Sat. 6 Monday, April 25, 1977 University Daily Kansan Performers shine at 52nd Kansas Relays Wiley, sun thrill fans AUSTIN PEAY By ROB RAINS KU's Cliff Wiley (middle) outran Johnny Williams and Ed Preston to win the 100 meters. Sports Writer Relays Two pace KU women There were two reasons that the 7,820 fans attending the 52nd Kansas Ravens Saturday left Memorial Stadium happy—the sun and Cliff Wiley What came later was Wilev. After hiding behind the clouds for the first two days of the Relays, the sun broke through a little before noon on Saturday, when I was standing for what was to come later in the day. Wiley, a junior from Baltimore, broke out of the blocks smoothly in both the invitational 100- and 200-meter dashes and went on to victories in both. He was named the outstanding performer in the meet for his efforts. By ANDY RILEY Sports Writer IN THE 100, Wiley defeated a talented field, which included Ed Preston of the U.S. 400-meter relay team on the U.S. 400-meter relay team at last year's Olympic trials but had to bypass the Olympics because of an injury, had to cancel an event ago at the Arkansas State Invitational. Teri Andersen's rain-drenched win in the 5,000-meters and Sheila Calmese's sunbaked victory in the 100 pace of the KU against the 52nd Kansas Relays this weekend. Calmes, St. Louis sophomore, outran an strong field to win the invitational 100-65 game against Washington. Wiley got his revenge Saturday, Preston and Johnny Williams of Austin Peay, a former pro baseball player in the Kansas City and Cincinnati organizations, broke out of the blocks in the lead, but Wiley caught him through the race and went on for the win. CALMESE HELD off Felicia Dupach, a Denver junior high school student running for the Colorado Flyers, and Debbie Carter, a senior high school student 100-yard dash Friday afternoon. "I can't believe it," Lannes said, "good start and stayed with it. I IV showed up." Calmness, at 4-11 and 89 pounds, said that although she sometimes ran under the watch of her coach. Anderson, a KU graduate assistant coach running under the affiliation of Athletes in Action, established an American best in the 5,000. She ran it in 16:06.8 and finished eight seconds ahead of Iowa State University's Cook, who led Anderson until the final lap. "I usually just ask them to lower the tape," she said. "I told them to lower it today and they did. I was really nervous, but I wasn't going to lose." He was timed in 10.21 seconds, the fastest 100 meters in the Big Eight this season. Williams was second in 10.27. Preston, the first, both the 100 and 290, finished third in 10.3. CALMESE ALSO was the anchor on the KU 401 relay team, which finished second to Wichita State University despite bad hand-grounding. The team was bothered by a sore hamstring muscle. Nevertheless, the Jayhawks nearly won the event when Calmese, who took the baton from Jo McMillan, came within a half stride of catching the Wichita State sporter. AN HOUR and a half later, Wiley had his second win. Much like the 100, Wiley broke from the blocks smoothly in the 200, but trained Preston and Williams after 89 yards. Wiley made the turn, however, and then made the backschnitt to win palling away See WOMEN page seven The first three legs, run by Connie Lane, McMillan and Jennifer Howe left the wing. The second leg, running, is at KU also was entered in the mile relay, but it had to settle for fourth despite a skip. But Jones, who won the open 100 at the Texas Relays three weeks ago, elected to concentrate on the relays events at Kansas, anchoring the 440, 880 and mile units. Although Wiley defeated a classy field in both events, his victory would have been that much sweeter if Johnny Jones, the freshman sensation from Texas, had been WILEY'S WINS on Saturday helped to soften the disappointment he and the other members of KU's 880-yard relay team experienced Friday when Oklahoma freshman William Snoddy caught Wiley at the tape to give the Soopers the victory. The Longhorn finished second in 39.95 and with Wiley's furious anchor, wound up thigh. "I think we were ahead before the last exchange," Wiley said, "and I had to slow down." Oklahoma did win--barely. The Sooners were timed in 1,237,8 and KU was right behind them. Oklahoma also picked up its second Relays circuit triumph in the 440-yard relay. There, anchorman John Garrison's teammates gave him a five-yard lead over Jones at the exchange, and he was able to beat his rival, Chris Hanssas Relays record time of 39.82 seconds. In the mile, anchorman Jay Wagner didn't run because of a slightly pulled groin muscle he suffered in the open 400-meter race. The team cound to Dale Udo of Missouri in that race. KANSAS EFFORTS in both the 440 and mule relays were weakened by injuries. Anthony Coleman, who set a Relays record in the preliminaries of the 119-meter high jump, graduated a bamstring injury in the race and had both the hurdles and 440 to skip. Jones, denied victories in both the 440 and 880 relays because of Garrison and Snoody, finally got a victory in the meet's last event—the Chuck Cramer rule relay. He led by the 63-12 coasting through an anchor leg of 46.28 seconds. Their winning time was 3:08.6. Reardon's winning jump, a wind-aided 15-6, was a personal best. Scales won the pole vault with a jump of 16-6, a height that got him second place in the open division Saturday behind Olympic Earl Bell of Arkansas State, who cleared 17-5. KU aaw its best performances come in the individual events. In addition to Wiley's two victories, Jay Reardon captured the long list of individual university-college division of the pole vault. AS SATURDAY afternoon had belonged to Wiley, Saturday morning was all Al Oerter's. Octer, who was the first person ever to throw a discus 200 feet, didn't quite hit that mark Saturday but he did throw far enough to win the applause of hundreds of spectators lining the discus ring outside the Stadium. Olerter, competing on an exhibition basis, wrewed 1985-1. The official winner was Art McKay. For the third year in a row, Arkansas won both the distance medley and the four-mile relays. With Irish Olympian Niall Hearn, Razorbacks never were in much trouble. Oerter, who is on a comeback trail that he hopes will lead him to the 1980 Olympics in Moscow, said he was planning to come back to Kargas next year. THEY GOT A Labels record in the four mile of 16:19.4, with O'Shaughnessy blasting past Paul Craig of Texas on the last lap to finish his mile leg in 4:01.6. Other Relays records broken during the three-day meet were in the javelin, where Alabama's Bud Blythe, a native of Uniontown, Kan, threw 288-114 to break the record of Bill Fleoker of Kansas State, 266-5-12, that had held up since 1965. In the distance meedley, O'Shaughnessy again came from behind to give Arkansas In the 1.500-meter run, Garry Bjorkel of the Chicago Track Club shattered the year-old mark of Frank Shorter by running a 13.55.75. In the high jump, Paul Allard of the Chicago Track Club recorded the record of 74 1/2 shared by Bill Knoedel of Iowa and Burkary Schar of Kansas. Women win softball title MIKE STANCLIFT and Mike Morse of Kansas both got personal bests in the javelin, where they finished third and fifth. Mike Monsef threw three 28-9% and Morse 28-1%. Bruce Coldsmith finished seventh in the 5,000-meter, John Rosecob thrid in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, Rainbelt thrd in the high jump, Kevin Newell fifth in the open 100, Dave Blatcher fourth in the open 200, Jim Pedrobrace sixth in the shot-put and Martin Barker fifth in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles to round out KU's individual efforts. Bill Lindberg, a former KU athlete now running for the Chicago Track Club, took third in the Glenm Cunningham mile with a time of 4:06.3. One of KU softball coach Bob Stanclift's dreams came true yesterday. Stanfield had been worried that the weather could afterward worsen, and he began to worry in the early morning. The Jayhawks finally got some good weather to play in, and they responded by winning their fifth consecutive state championship. Playing in mudgy weather on sunny, wet roads easily edged the Fort Hays Kansas State Colleges. SNCLIAER OPENED the day without allowing any extra bathroom and the deck to be open. The National State Code. The weather was more to the pitchers' liking yesterday and Graves and Shelley (Nick) were on top. Gloria Graves picked up the wir Second baseman Beth Springgled helps the Jahyhaws in hitting with two hits in three trips to the plate. She drove in three of the five runs. The Jayhawks had an easy time in the championship game, bowing Benedictine. It was Sinclair's record six snout out and extended her record to 9.0. The win extended Graves' record to 8-3 and the team record to 17-4. DYC The Juyahaws have time to enjoy their championship. Their next game is scheduled for April 13 when they face South Carolina State at Holcom Sports Complex. GRAVES AND centerfielder June Kolebler each collected a triple in the game. Kolebler matched Springgate'sperfect 14th on the ground three at the plate and diving in three runs. 1986 Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENED Fallen steeplechaser is extra barrier for runners Wiley blisters field named top performer Just what an athlete has to do to be voted the meet's most outstanding performer at the Kansas Relays apparently can't be spelled out in exact words. or if it can, Arkansas State's Ed Preston must feel like most sportswriters are illiterate. The honor, which is determined by a vote of 82 to 71, has been bestowed upon KU's Cliff Willey this year. Wiley, a junior from Baltimore, Md., won the open invitational 100- and 200-meter dashes at the $25th edition of the Relays—the same two events Preston won last year when KU's Nolan Cromwell won the top award. By GARY VICE Sports Editor This year Wiley ran 10.21 in the 100 and 20.44 in the 200, as well as an anchoring KU's 440 and 880 yard relay teams. He took the outstanding performer honor with 21 votes. Ilya Olympic Niall O'Shaughnessy, who anchored Arkansas" won four mile race, and Kevin Hearn was the balloting with 14. Teri Anderson, who won the 5,000-meter run for competing for Athletes in Action, had four votes. Drake high jumper Paul Allard received one. "CLIFF DESERVES it this year," Preston said. "He was the hottest man today. But I thought I won it for sure last year, when I won two open events. They owe me." Preston was edged in the balloting last year by Cromwell, who won the Cliff Cushman 400-meter intermediate hurdles in 88.16 and the John Hammond the Jayhawks winning mile relay quartet. Following the pair's final head to head competition of the meet, Preston said, "C'mon Cliff. Let's go over and pick up those medals." WIL.EY, WHO missed last year's RELays while entangled in an NCAA eligibility hassle, said. "To be modest about it, I'd say I sort of had a good day. It's always nice to win. Seriously however, I think I had the best day out here." Yet Preston, who had won the open 220-yard and university in 1975 when Chanion Ehzuelen of Illinois won the open 240-yard and university, awarded wasn't the least amused with Wiley. They then ambled across the infield toward the awards stand and sat on top of the chain link fence to make one to another. WILEY PICKED up two gold medals and Petton picked up one silver and one bronze. "I really don't think he's that concerned that he didn't win." Wiley said. "He has next week and another meet same as I have, so they try over one meet even if you get jets." According to Wiley, the secret formula for his winning might just be sleep. He got a long night's rest Friday night, and took a short day's morning just before competing. Wiley, whose personal best in the 200 is 20.3, said he has the potential to run 20.0 or better this year. And to do so, he'll follow his running formula of laying back on the curves then slapping shuttles towards the finish line. Wiley will duel Preston again this weekend at the Drake Relays in Armes, Iowa. The field in the 100 also might include Auburn's Harvey Glance, Texas' Johnny Jones and Olympic champion Hasley Crawford. "I got up only about an hour before naming my bed. I felt good and lozen. I was really relaxed." And a little over an hour later, he completed a double win with a first in the 200. "I have a lot of confidence in my 200," Wiley said. "it's my strongest event. I can be one of the best 200 sprinters in the world." "MY PHILOSOPHY in the 208 is to run the curve smooth only enough to help you burst out of it and accelerate down the straightway." Wiley said. IN THE 100, Wiley was running fourth in the race with about 25 yards to go, but he turned it on and broke into the lead in the final 10 yards. "I think I run better in tougher com- petections," he said. "You always want to run against the enemy." It was the second time this season and the fifth time in the past two years that the Sachs team was playing. Sooners' mastery holds Oklahoma continued to dominate Kansas on the tennis courts as the Sonets defeated Oklahoma. KU managed two points throughout the morning, and Chet Collier was partially responsible for both. Collier, playing No 4 singles, defeated Mark Crozier, 1-6, 2-6, 2-6, to give KU its only win in the singles competition. In other singles action, KU's Bill Clark was defeated by John Stubb in 1. No. 1 singles. COLLIER THEN joined with Joe Russer him 3 doubles team to defeat their OU opponent. 6-4, 6-2. Clarke had defeated Staub in Kalamazoo City earlier this season, 7-4, 6-1. Mark Hosking playing No. 2, singles, showed signs of shaking his slump when he took his match with Brian Crozier to three sets before being defeated, 6-4, 7-6, 7-6. Coach Kirkland Gates was optimistic about Hosking's play. "MARK'S FINALLY out of his slump." Gates said. "He played well and I am hopeful he will be able to reach his peak for the Right飞." The Big Eight Tournament is scheduled for May 19-21 at Oklahoma City. season record is 15-11. The Jayhawk team Nebraska here tomorrow afternoon. Monday. April 25,1977 7 e en in the e's sun'the KUays this outran anal 100-ocking upuch, a running Carter, 100-yard the start athletes in ist in theeed eight diversity's the final "I got ave been weave that said the matter lower the lower it nervous, *r* on the second to ad hand-man, who muscle. *won* the win of ulf stride enter. University Daily Kansan de relay, espite a lie Lane, left the Kuhlman er n top of another dals and and one concerned He has I have. even if nula for he got a took a we com before loose.I e." fourth in , but he d in the se 200 is in 20.0 or allow his on the the finish s to run help you own the said of us got a hat every and he has already ain this Armes, include Johnny Hasley er com- want to " taub in 7-6, 7-6 when she to three 7, 6 timistic timistic By ANDY RILEY Sports Writer Very few spectators got to see one of the most outstanding women competitors at the Kansas Relays this weekend. Top woman athlete relatively unnoticed slump," I am peak for heduled One reason was that Kathy Devine of Emporia State University didn't even have to enter Memorial Stadium to compete. The sophomore from San Diego played in the stadium gates, winning the blue-paned goals, and placing second in the javelin. 1. The a here Devine was the only woman to win two individual events, and she came within a foot of winning three. "I would have liked to have won three," Devine said, "but sometimes it just doesn't work that way. It didn't work out for me this time." ALTHOUGH SHE went through the Relays unnoticed by fans, her competitors couldn't help notice her the opponent has not met Since the team hasn't tested in the shot or the discus, and she came to the RELAY as the defending champion and record holder in the shot. She also is the defending AIAW national shot-pup奖励. Although she didn't set any records this time, she won the shot with a 49.9% effort and the discus with a test of 183.4. Her second place throw in the javelin was 130.8. She was well below her personal bests in each event [34] in the shot, 152-9 in the discus and 140-10 in the javelin, and she wasn't happy with her performance. "I was disappointed with myself," she said. "I just got a little excited because this is a big meet, and they might have in- tueanced my performance. I would have liked to hit over 50 feet in the shot, but it just didn't go." DEVINE'S MAIN problem came Friday morning when the discus and javelin were run one after the other at different locations. She said that when she finished the discute outside the stadium she had to run over by Allen Field House for the involin. I had to take my last three discuss things all in a row so I would make it. "They were all waiting for me over there, and I know that I don't like to wait for anyone during an event. It was really frustrating. The probable should have not wrapped my hand." Devine said that she wasn't throwing as well as she did when she was a freshman, and that it was probably because she didn't train last fall. The shot-put is Devine's strongest event, but she has set goals for herself in all three events. "THIS YEAR I'd like to exceed what I did last year in the shot, "Devine said. "I'd like to get it up over 54 feet." "I need to improve myself a lot in the discus and javelin. In the discus I'd like to hit 155 or 160." After she had won the shot-plot Saturday morning, Devine hurried to Kansas City, Mo., to catch a plane for her boyfriend, where she drew the shot-50. "I cut it really close," she said. "I almost missed my plane." One plane she will be sure not miss is the one that will take her to Los Angeles in May when she will try to defend her AIW national title. Women... From page six blazed the final quarter mile in 54.98—her best time ever—to pull KU ahead of Wichita State and just behind third place New Mexico. IOWA STATE won the mile relay for the second straight year, finishing with a time of 3.47.5. The Cyclone fourseam came on the field first and the peloton the belays mark that they had set last year. Debbie Esser, who anchored the Cyclone's mile relays, also won the 100-meter hurdles, easily beating Missouri's Doris Piekliakn. Bunita Bassa of KU failed to qualify for the finals in the hurdles as she finished third in her heat, which included both Esser and Piekleniak. EMPORIA STATE University Kathy Demporia, an assistant professor understanding performances in the Infield. Devine won both the shot-put and theACC, and she was second to Iowa State's Khalil Wattley. Devine throw the shot 49-9% on her first attempt, and although she missed the Relays record that she established last year, she outdistanced second place Christy Tumberger of Kansas State by nearly five feet. Devine won the discus with a loss of 145 of five feet better than Lucy Neelman of Texas Women's University, and her second place throw in the laevin was 130-3. THERE WERE several outstanding performances in the women's events Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE | | ERA | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Milwaukee | 7 | 5 | 483 | - | - | - | | Baltimore | 8 | 3 | 459 | - | 1½ | - | | New York | 7 | 8 | 467 | - | 3 | - | | Newark | 8 | 1 | 417 | - | 5 | - | | Detroit | 7 | 10 | 438 | - | 2 | - | | Cleveland | 6 | 1 | 368 | - | 3 | - | WEEK WEEK Chicago 10 5 641 - Oakland 9 10 625 - Manhattan 18 6 600 - Minnesota 10 7 384 % Illinois 17 7 350 % Texas 7 10 418 % California 7 12 412 % Tennessee 7 12 412 % New York 107, Chicago 92 Colorado Springs 12, Denver 8 Minnesota 12, Texas 6 Florida 10, California 9 Milwaukee 10, California 9 Today's Games Boston (Tiant 1-1 and Stanley 1-1) at Toronto (Lemanc . and Garvin 3-0 New York (Gullet 12) at Baltimore (Grimsley 1-1) Oakland (Medich 1-0) at California (Ryan 2-2) Only James scheduled although only one Kansas Relays record was broken. SUA FILMS THE WOMEN (1939) Dir. George Cukor, with Joan Crawford, Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell plus KU's Michelle Brown was running with Kutter and Kundsen in the 1,500, and the Jets beat the Rams 36-27. "I'm REALLY pleased," Krudson said following the race. "I feel strong and smooth for this early in the season. I usually run from the lead and don't think about the people behind me, but Vetter was really pushing me today." Brown, who had never run under 4.00 in the event, did it Friday, staying with the team for another day. Debbie Vetter of Iowa State established a record in the 1,400-meter. She had a 4:04.4 km/h speed. Colorado State's Wendy Knudson, the premier college runner in the 800-meters, finished fourth in the 1,500, but in the 800, she led from the start to wint it for the second time. MEMBER OF THE WEDDING (1952) Dr. Fred Zimmerman, with J Marshall Ethel Waters, Bran and Monday, April 25, 7:30 p.m., 75c FORBIDDEN GAMES FORBIDDEN GAMES (1952) Dir. Rene Clement. Winner of the Venice Film Festival—Grand Prize. Classical Film Series. MIMORAL TALES(1974) Dir. Walterian Borowczyk with Paloma Picasso. Winner of the Gala de la Festa at the Festival. Festival/subtitles. Film Society. Rated X-1.D.'s checked. Thursday, April 28, 9:30 p.m.; 3:00 p.m. Keep watching Reardon. Scales IMMORAL TALES(1974) BUFFALO BILL AND Bv ROBRAINS TRUCK-STOP WOMEN SHORT EXPLOITATION FILMS Midnight Film Series, Friday, April 29 and Saturday, April 30, 12:00 midnight. $1 THE INDIANS (1976) Dir. Robert Altman, with Paul Dixon. Harvey Keitel. Keitel. Film Series, Friday, April 19 and Saturday, April 24 Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Snorts Writer If you see Jay Reason or Tad Scales walking across campus today, ask them what time it is. They'll be more than happy to tell you. Reardon and Scales are the owners of brand-new wristwatches today, awarded to them for their victories in last weekend's Kansas Relays. For Scales, the trip to the awards stand brought back pleasant memories. Four years ago, as a junior at Lawrence High, Scales won the high school pole vault. Scales won the university-college-junior college division of the pole vault Friday, clearing 16.4. Reardon came up with a windable ramp and the long jump on his third attempt Saturday. FOR REARDON, he was his first Kansas belays victory. But the freshman hopes that they can be even more successful. On Friday, Reardon had failed to qualify for the finals in both the triple jump and the long jump. Saturday, Reardon blocked those disappointments out of his mind and, performing Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENE TITAN Tad Scales celebrates his winning 16-6 pole vault SUA Films Chairperson Interviews Interviews for the 1977-78 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Wednesday, April 27. Please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time if you are interested in film programming. Positions Available: Popular Films Chairperson Summer Films Chairperson Classical Films Chairperson Independent/Experimental Films Chairperson Midnight Movies/Special Films Chairperson Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror Films Chairperson in nearly-perfect weather before a crowd which included his father and out-of-town wife. Public Relations Committee NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS The original thick crust pizza from New York This coupon expires a 30-day NEW YORKER 1021 MARSHUSKETT ST "I knew I was ready for a good jump," Reardon said. "It was just a question of getting good weather and putting it all together." Coors Pitchers 95°C With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 ON HIS FIRST attempt of the day, Reardon hit the magic 25-0 mark. That qualified him for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in June at the University of MISS STREET DELI Special CHEF BALAD A kind of cheesy spread of meat, your favorite used dressing and crackers £150c Reg. 8145 "I'd been wanting to get over 25 for quite a while." Reardon said. "And then I had With that out of the way, Reardon limning, he his third and last comprehensive attempt. . was going down the runway really fast," Reardon recalled, "and then I hit the board and just exploded. I knew it was going to be that far." I didn't know it was going to be that far. "IT'S HAMPERED my workouts for the It was an especially gratifying win for Scales, a Lawrence junior, because he hasn't been able to train a great deal of his hip flexors in the right leg, injured harness muscle in his right leg. SATURDAY, Scales finished second in the invitational pole vault, once again clearing 16-6. The winner, Earl Bell of Arkansas State, cleared 17-5. Scales cleared 16-6 on his first attempt at that height, but missed on all three attempts. recorded a 24-10 on his next jump, before his last two to three weeks." Scales said. "I was up Friday and it didn't hurt at all. It woke kind of like a miracle. "I was over it by a lot but I got too dug- garmed excited up there over the bar and I was ready to go," she said. "It gets me fired up to be in that kind of competition," Scales said, "I think I do better under pressure and when I'm in some tough competition." "I wanted it a lot. I debated in my mind whether I should skip the meet because of my illness." "I think it is a still mental barrier to some agree," he said. "I know it's clear and all I want is to say, 'You're on your way.'" Bv GARY BEDORE Scales, who cleared 17 feet for the first time during the indoor season when he went 17-14, also missed his three attempts at an indoor goal. It still limited it had him psyched somewhat. Kerschen saves KU; 'Hawks split twinbills Sports Writer A forgiven University of Kansas pitcher, Kevin Kerschen, provided some needed relief yesterday, as Kansas split a doubleheader with the University of Nebraska, winning the first game, 10-9, and losing the nightcap, 15-5. The Hawks also split a doubleheader with the Cornhuskers Saturday, winning 6-4, and the Brewers Sunday, losing 3-2. In the Kansas nine, Andy Gilmore angled to right foot. And Lee Tso saw it playoff goal. And KU gave a Kerschen, who had pitched only five innings since the Jayhawks spring trip to Texas, did something most Jayhawk pitcher fails to do this weekend—getting Nebraska hitters out. KU baseball coach Floyd Temple said Kerschen's five inning relief performance was KU's only strong pitching in the four game series. Kerschen held Nebraska to three singles in the last five innings, giving the Jayhwaks the opportunity to win the game in extra innings. Kerschen, 1-2, entered yesterday's first game in the fifth inned with the score, 9-9. Before his relief, pitchers Terry Sutur and Greg Thurman had given up a balk. Kerschen said the victory felt good after pitching so little lately. "I needed this one." Kerschen said. "I moved the ball around and kept their hitters off stride. Nebraska is a good team,队. After the dramatic finish in game one yesterday, Nebraska's hitting got untracked again. The Cornhuskers, 20-10, knocked out starter Clay Christensen, scoring three in the first half and Rick Bedy finished for the Jayhawks, but also were hit hard. Nebraska had 13 hits in the game and 51 in the联赛. KU's hitting highlights in game two included back-to-back home runs in the fifth inning. On Saturday, Rhodes, 2-2, was hit for seven runs on 12 hits in the open, as the Jayhawks lost 7-1. Nebraska leftfender Mann, 3-2, threw a five-litter at Kansas. In the second game, Nebraska got 10 hits off winner Dave Rusch, and Rusch had to pitch out of two bases-loaded jams in the first half to obtain his fifth win against two losses. one score was 3-2 in the bottom of the fiftt inning and Kansas unloaded some power battery. Ron MacDonald led off, hitting a home run to straight-away center field. One out later, Andy Gilmore blasted a shot over the right centerfield fence to make the score 5-4 in the second half and an error by Jeff King, NU second baseman, gave the Hawks their six-run. Perfect SYMBOLS OF LOVE Sunata Damsel Danita Golden Accent A Keepsake diamond ring reflects your love in its beauty and brilliance. The Keepsake Guarantee assures a perfect diamond of fine white color and precise cut. There is no finer diamond ring. Keepsake Sonata SANDRINE SANDRINE SANDRINE Danita Golden Accent How to Plan Your Engagement and Wedding FREE! 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But, according to December's Food Stamp roll, 1,241 are receiving them. Maurie Peters, welfare department employee, said recently that the lack of participation was as complex as the program itself. Peters handles food stamps for families not receiving any other type of public aid. One problem, he said, is the stigma attached to welfare offices. Some people have a very negative image of welfare, according to Peters. MANY PEOPLE suffer when they must ask for food stamps, Peters said, and he's seen men cry when they came into his office. One was 80 years old and starving but it tore him up to have to come to the welfare house. The elderly age group causes the program its biggest problems, Peters said, because many are hard to reach, and all are very embarrassed to accept welfare. Another problem is a lack of public knowledge about the program. Approximately one-third of food stamp recipients don't receive any other type of welfare, a fact that Peters said suggested the eligibility requirements for food stamps FEW PEOPLE are actually aware of the requirements, Peters said, and many don't come in simply because they think their income is too high. weren't as strict as those of other public assistance programs. Food stamp eligibility guidelines are determined by the Department of Agriculture, which oversees state welfare services. The requirements, based on income, are fairly uniform across the country, except in states like Alaska, where an average income is much higher than that in other states. Under the Food Stamp Program, the amount of stamps an eligible household pays for a meal on the cost of a low-priced, nutritionally adequate diet, as determined by the USDA's Agricultural Research Service. This amount is reported according to the size of the household. Weekend Sports Roundup Women golfers 2nd The University of Kansas women's golf team tied with the University of Nebraska for second place in the Big Eight golf meet last week in Norman, Okla. Oklahoma State won the meet with a total of 338, 15 strokes abashed of the Jayhawks and Cornhuskers. Oklahoma totaled 354, two strokes behind KU, followed by Iowa State, 358, and Missouri, 359. Kansas State and Colorado don't compete in golf. For KU, Beth Boozer shot an 85, good for fifth place in the league. Nancy Hains, 88, Channel Hudi, 90, Patty Morrison, 90, Parm Fornari, 92, Rachel Olsen, 98, finished the scoring for the 'Hawks. SEATLET (AP) — Lee Stanton homered and Craig Reynolds and Joe Bae rapped RBI singles in a three-run sixth inning that lifted the Seattle Mariners to a 4-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals yesterday and a split of their doubleheader. Royals split games Al Cowens slammed a three-run homer and Jim Colborn recorded his third triumph as the Royals unloaded 16 hits and breezed to a 16-1 rout in the opener. In the nightcap, Stanton's leadoff homer in the sixth hit the score 2-2. Baez hit a double off the ground. Rugby Club loses The KU Rugby Club lost twice this weekend, but yesterday's loss was a lot worse. Tom McCormick starred for the alumni with his open-field running when he passed In a low-score contest Saturday, the Jayhawks A team was beaten by the Kansas City Rugby Club, 4-3, and yesterday about 20 former KU rugby players returned and beat the varsity, 26-24, in the annual alumni game. McCormick scored the first two tries for the alumni, and he capped his day by scoring the winning try after the Jayhawks had pulled to within two points. Women hold banquet Rick Renfro scored the most spectacular try of the day when he ran downfield and scored after a drop-kick attempt by Bill Horton off the crossbar and back into play. Awards were presented last night to more athletes at the KU women's athletics honour. Marian Washington, director of women's athletics, and Tam Flarpu, sports information director, presented awards for outstanding achievement in each sport. Certificates, letters, pins and bars were given to underclassmen, indicating various levels of achievement. Graduating seniors on each team were given watches. The scheduled speaker for the banquet, Oliga Connolly (Olympic gold medalist in the discus) was ill and unable to attend. She was replaced by Debbie Sapenter, women's track coach at Northwestern University, Evanston. Ill. Sapenter was on the U.S. Pan American Team, U.S. National Track and Field team and was a silver medalist at the 1976 Olympics in the 1,800 and 400 meter relays. The KU Soccer Club closed out its regular Wichita Wheatlands by defeating the Wichita Wheatlands. Soccer Club wins Robert Alomare, who had never played goalkeeper, found himself in the nets and he did not stop. individual who work part time in the ad- vancement of the program also were recognized. The KU goals were scored by Mustapha Abderhamman, Haniul Iskh-boubakli and Rafiq Bawa. Mulin said that his team didn't play in high gear during the game. He said he was pleased with the performances of Dan Coon, who moved the ball well, and Ishak-Boushaki, who played a strong game. "The best part of the day, however, is that we didn't receive any further injuries," Maimoun said. Two Jayhawks missed the game because of injuries. Reza Raissainajad has an eye injury and Mansour Tahzeradeh has a sprained ankle. Both injuries were sustained in last week's Big Eight Championship tournament. NOW MATH TEACHERS ARE WANTED FOR OVERSEAS PROJECTS THE FOOD STAMP Act, amended in 1973, requires that these amounts be adjusted twice a year to reflect changes in the price of food. The person could receive up to $60 in coupons a month, a household of four could receive $169 in food stamps and a family would be eligible for $298 worth. 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. il. allow. $3000 term. stipend end 2 year's service. Must be citizen of U.S. Teaching degree not needed, but math degree or physics degree required. Contact us at: CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON APRIL 25, AND LIBERAL ARTS AN SCIENCES PLACEMENT ON APRIL 26, 27. However, these coupons aren't given away to anybody who is eligible. Peters requires a certain amount for an allotment of food stamps. Based on a household's size and income after certain allowable deductions, the requirement may be the amount of a household's net monthly income. ACCORDING TO Peters, the purchase requirement causes problems for many people who think the amount they would receive wouldn't be worth the trouble of buying. To many, the process of applying, ordering the stamps and waiting, sometimes for as long as two weeks, isn't worth the $10 they'd receive. Peters said. Another one of the program's complexities is the income standard, the amount of income on which the purchase requirement is based. Income covers a wide range of areas, including wages earned by employees, strike benefits, alimony, scholarships and dividends. However, as the number of household members goes up, the amount of coupons received increases greatly, even though the purchase requirement goes up only slightly. The purchase requirement can create problems for students who receive grants and scholarships, Peters said, because the scholarship money is counted as income. RECREATION SERVICES Wrestling Tournament Saturday, April 30 11:00 A.M. Robinson Gymnasium To enter must attend Wrestling Clinic Monday, April 25, 7:00 P.M. ROBINSON GYM Peters said the program's greatest concern now was with the elderly, specifically those on fixed incomes and in charge because so few were aware of the program. This problem has been partially remedied since the USDA has authorized Meals-on-Wheels and communal dining facilities for the elderly to accept food stamps. However, ALTHOUGH THE NUMBER OF food stamp recipients is relatively low, Peters said, there has been an increase in clients at the welfare agency. He emphasized that he attributed this increase to the department's Outreach program. Betsy Schenk, Outreach director, attempts to contact those who are in need of food stamps and other services, interviews and training sessions, he said. "They've been brought up to feel they are mooing off the government," Peters said. "We need them to be asked for additional help from government agencies. Distrust and fear of whites and of the government also account for their unrest within the office into the office, according to Peters." Peters said, this is of no benefit to groups not eligible for such meal programs, par- ticipants and other groups. PETERS SAID THAT very few Indians are on the food stamp rolls, yet many have been given a chance. Each household is allowed up to $1,500 in liquid assets, such as cash on hand, in the bank or in other savings institutions, and nonliquid assets, such as buildings, land and any personal property, considered by the welfare department to be in excess of what is absolutely necessary. Households of two or more persons (or 0), are limited to $3,000 in resources. The biggest problem with students is that many who receive loans or grants or scholarships appear to have a large income, Peters said, and thus aren't eligible. This cuts out a lot of people who really need food stamps, he said. The Food Stamp Program hasn't encountered the same problems with students. If they have a need for food stamps they usually find out about the program, Peters said, and they usually aren't as embarrassed as other people. PETERS SAID the Food Stamp program often stirred up controversy but it was likely to be changed soon. The legislation that enacted the program in 1964, is due to expire this year. After the expiration date it will be up to President Jimmy Carter to decide what, if any, changes should be made, according to Peters. ASSETS OUTSIDE of income, called resources, are also subject to limitations under the program, and may also create confusion, Peters said. AORTE—A GREEK CELEBRATION APRIL 24—MAY1 Auniversity of Kansas Art Show is being held Monday, April 25 through Saturday, April 30 at the Market Place Area on 8th and 9th Nanderson. The Art Show is being held as part of the festivities during KU Greek Week. Fraternities and sororites have it on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., and jewelry and much more. It will be open to the public from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. TUESDAY NIGHT — Steak-A-Bob Dinner for only '1.29! Tuesday Night Only MONDAY NIGHT — Ground Beef Dinner for only '1.191 Monday Night Only Dinners include choice of potato and toast. WEDNESDAY NIGHT — Top Sirloin Steak Dinner for only $2.19! Wednesday Night only SIZZLER SPECIALS but by the end of the school year it has been used up and the student is broke. Greek Week is being held in recognition and acknowledgment of the Greek system and events, competition and fundraising are among the many planned happenings Specials good from 5 p.m. until closing 1516 W. 23rd St. BANKE MEDICARD John Doe 1234567890 Telefon: +44 (0) 1234567890 Email: info@banke.medicard.com Lawrence, Kansas master charge THE INTERMARIA CLUB Friday & Saturday ACTION—PEACE CORPS/ VISTA SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE car Representatives will be at the following placement offices: Tues., April 26 LA&S Mon., April 25 LA&S 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center 10-6:00 CAROUSEL CHARGE carousel SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW TODAY. For Your Shopping Convenience Now Till the End of May Wed., April 27 Education NEW HOURS 10-8:30 Monday—Thursday C GRADUATION Now through May 31 HP Spring Added Value Days An exciting added value when you buy a Hewlett-Packard calculator now. Free reserve power packs. During Spring Added Value Days, Hewlett-Packard is adding a free reserve power pack—a $20 value—with the purchase of every HP-21, HP-22, HP-25, HP-25C and HP-27. It's the best way we know to remind you of the added value you always receive when you buy an HP calculator—like free application books, uncompromising quality, efficient RPN logic system, and exceptional service. Each HP instrument is designed to be the finest of its kind in the world. New Accessories Hewlett-Packard is also introducing two new acces sories to increase the value of the HP calculator you may already own: A DC Recharger/Adapter lets you operate and recharge your HP pocket calculator in cars, boats—wherever a 12-volt DC supply is available. A Games Pac for the HP-67 and HP-97 includes 19 programs designed primarily for fun but also useful in teaching principles of math, physics and logic. NEWLETT - PACKARD Vi of viol high, S Arno was du kansas union BOOKSTORE "We got me Come in and take advantage of Hewlett-Packard's Added Value Days today! got me MAN as well they fe money Acco ment : are of sex. e BRINC University Daily Kansan Monday, April 25, 1977 9 Indians et, many o groups ims, par- they are ers said. to duct to permanent es and of their un- fice, ac- isn't en-students. amps they n, Peters as em- ants is that prants or income, table. This need food w acces lator ER HOUSE program it was legislation is due to on date it Carter to should be udes 19 useful logic. Violent crimes of violent crime in Lawrence aren't very high. Stephens said, Arnold said that the increase in robberies was due to increased opportunity. got more liquor store robberies,' he said. 'MANY OF THE Robbers are trying to live as well as their neighbors, Arnold said, and we know that it is only way to get enough money is to steal it. --said. "They are shot because they are immedeing a criminal's escape." Six of the eight persons arrested lived outside of Douglas County, he said, and most came from the Kansas City area or Toneka. There were 10 recent armed robberies in Lawrence, and eight of those have been by gunmen. The average criminal Malone prosecutes doesn't think of himself as a criminal, he said—at most, a criminal might think that his conduct was criminal. "MOST POLICE officers are not shot because of what they represent," Malone Stephens said that what started out nonviolently could become violent after the election. Although the arrest rate is high for violent crimes such as armed robberies, the criminals involved in them are often released by the courts on technicalities. As violent crime increases, the chance a policeman will be shot, also increases. As crime increases, policemen have more work to do and more jobs develop. Stephens said that improvements were needed in the Lawrence police department to improve the security of the building. Arnold said every criminal had some reason he could state afterward for committing the crime, which often sounded like rationalizations to sociologists. when the police are sure a person has committed the crime but can't prove it, he Policemen become frustrated when someone is released on a job. They feel frustration 'T ITAKES a bell of a lot of taxpayers' 'money.' Richard Stanwix, police law chief. Law Enforcement Assistance Administration grant to develop a crime analysis department, he said, because the police department doesn't have the equipment to do long-term, detailed crime analyses now. The police department has applied for a KANSAN WANT ADS Appealations, goods, services and employment Acquisitions. Acquisition of new premises, new equipment, new machinery, new buildings. New premises and equipment New equipment New buildings. New premises and equipment New equipment New buildings. Tomorrow: Crime's victims. CLASSIFIED RATES Sixteen two-thirds four-five times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00 Each additional 01 02 03 04 05 AD DEADLINES to run: Monday Friday 5 p.m. Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m. Wednesday Friday 5 p.m. Thursday Saturday 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 online at 843-4558 the UDK business office at 843-4558. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ENTERTAINMENT Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special tours with 4-hour boat trip. $3.60 per other. Other trips with 4-hour boat trip. $2.90 per other. Scarborough Hawkeye Camp. Loop Route 12 miles north on hayward 10. Tabbington, Oklahoma 5444. (6) 9-12) 7. Tabbington, Oklahoma 5444. (6) 3-piece Rotan plant stand, with plants, normal- ity and stems. They last in Baskin- Bros. in the Carthamus, in the Mac- bain, in the Carthamus. 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to union, utilities paid, parking. 835-979. Reserve the HALL OF FAME for your party or meeting Over 560套 it available. No group booking required. Kitchen and宾宾馆 facilities Located in Warmington, NJ. Call 823-8644 for information. 5-13 Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, nets, p82-7576. tf FOR RENT Frontier Ridge—short term lease offers a studio with study. Hedged indoor pool + shag carpet + furnished dock + disposal + laundry facilities + furnished and unfurnished from $135. Cash 842-760-8925. 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privacy, possible rent reduction for labor. MB-5075 MB-5075 Make your plans now. Applications are run gently on the computer by foray to a complete and updated fast list by foray to a complete and updated full list of applications. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 618-325-040 or by 1609 at house 8:30-20:30 Monday, 10:10 Saturday, 9:30-10:30 Sunday. Gatineau Apartment- Call Back by phone,Summer, fall/winter. Enquiries on all Gatineau apartments.Call back on weekdays or on Monday through Saturday. Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid, on two apartments. $197.50 per month. Call 849-693 or come to 849-693 for more information. New 1-bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 842-769-5300. For summer or year-lease. Laundry-1.3-bed apartment or single room with kitchen 4- bathroom 4-26 2-96 ROSALEA HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 47508. The hotel has an office or company or com- pany for any of its guests. May stay MAY DAY - LABOR DAY Sublease for summer—furnished 2-bedroom apartment, air, airbag, carpet, pool, reason- ables. Available for $150 a month. Sublake Townhouse, three large buildings, two full baths, pool, tennis, bus service, laundry room. Sublease for summer session only. Small furnished house, good location. 841-7176 evening. Subleasing one-bedroom, Mark II apartment for summer. One block north of Union Hall. 4-26 Summer suite-two bedroom hotel apart- ment with balcony, no deposit neq- partment beauty -841-7813 Sublease-Furnished studio apartment Mid May Room, 2-bedroom apartment, North Ave. A Midwoodfront, next to pool, bermit court, balcony. COMFORTABLE sublet apartment available. Reduced summer rates: Two-bedroom, A (C) 3 m to Union modern kitchen, sunny balcony, eat-in kitchen, parking, quiet neighbors. 4-8 chicure, laundry Reduced walks. Rate to camp. Refrigerator- rated and oven food dip. Diskwasher. 4-26 4-26 3-bedroom, 1½ bath towneh for nublasee Will discount lease $500 ma. Call 841-5097 - 602 Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Sandwich Shop 846 Illinois 843-7685 Plush, one of a kind 4-bedroom, 3 story townhouse. Available in midday. May. Call 802-454-508. Most submit squeezes 3-bedroom, 2-bath house with half of may Free Rent挺 411-8128 Sublease for summer - 2 bedroom townhouse at Trailridge that will easily accommodate 3 people. ac bus on route, ferried in patio, individual ce- nic room. 4 people may be required, largely reduced rate. Phone 81-992-0228. 4-28 Studio apartment to sublease mid May through August in the Greenwich Village, post p.O. Box 841-7571-6 4-28 Cooperative household has rooms for rent at $300/month, with utilities: 842-909-month or Linda 854-204-month. 4-28 Wish to sublease inter 2-bedroom apartment, air- conditioning and entertainment. Call 841-2698. 4-26 APARTMENT Nearly furnished, one-bedroom apartment for rent on top of high street. Very nice house with large kitchen and large house. Want graduate student to share great house with female student at $180 a month. Req. 2 yrs of exp. Wants 2 people for $250 plus 2 9% utilities. Prefer female, no children. Includes Indiana. No. R-4: 2-62 except Monday. Available May 4; thru the summer. 2-bedroom units at 12th and 13th floors, Apartment No. 1. Stop call at 212-695-7200. Sublease for summer, 4-5 bedroom house, close to campus, call 843-5104 4-27 Sublease - Trallridge Townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, court, pool, central air, carpenters, landscaping, interior design. FOR SALE One bedroom apartment to applain for summer. Near campus and downtown. call 412-796-5000. Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of this. Makes sense to learn. As a guide, study an orientation. 3. For Exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at ForTown! Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELL AUDIO ELECTRIC, 843-900-3690, W 6th. We are the only Full Line Franchiseed Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speaker kits, and audio Atmos Systems. Fifth Avenue, Rhode Island. Credit Capacity Tapes recorders final out to $23 from $19. Set of four new 125mm, 15cm radial rubber only for telescopes. The aperture is 40mm. Boston's stucco, 929 Square Inch, Open tilt 30° 4:25 and 36° 47'. Final cut on C. B. Radio's and Antenna's. Some studio work included in the program. Rock Bay Store 929.225 Music Hall. HI 830-375-6444. RADIATAL THE CLEARANCE. 145 x 13. 155 x 135. PEET. MOUNTING and liaison available. Hsp METEORIC MODEL. 67 Olds, Delmonton 88, alr. power, good condition, very reliable and $50 or best offer. Call 842-398-1580. 72 VW 411 wagon, automatic radio, new WVR radiator, very good condition 84 ABS, high-tech wheels 4-26 Wedding and graduation gift ideas. Unique selection of jewelry and basket items at Begonia Records (over 200), in good to excellent condition. Soundtracks, Santa Claus, Santana, CNY Zappo, and pool ball games. Music, music, music. Bed chairs, bed batches, tables, labs, boards, books. Must be in good condition. Warranty 10-18 months. Keep trying. Records 4-26 1972 Fla. 124 sports搭票, 65,500 good time tickets 1980 Fla. 124 sports搭票, 65,500 good time tickets Nefson or leave name and number 4-26 2. Electronica Tournament $15 each. Sango, GMC, Rockwell Ground Speakers $9 each. Rockwell, Rolling Rockall Speaker Worn $79. Call 434-843-6600. 1966 Pcl. Valiant 3-speed manual, 6-cyl. depend- ence transportation, M142-7228. Fee 5 a.m. on Saturday to Monday. Excellent. 1973 Honda 250 Motor, worth more than $425. John Adams-2677 4-26 TV-BC2 287 black and white realc, real wood handles. Pine floor. 911-7422. TV-BC3 287 black and white realc, real wood handles. Pine floor. 911-7422. 4-26 64 Ford Van. fair condition, needs some work, worn out $125 or best offer. 64-614-6 4-128 1974 Kawasaki 750-H2T-Heat production cycle condition room condition 440-10m³ inlet 408-2kL Call 443-1698 For sale, Arlery flute in excellent condition, price negotiable, call Steve at 814-5600. 4-26 Parochia 614 (1970) 2$200; Callen (913): 233-707 or 4-27 Parochia 613 (233-707 after 4:00) Brand new 35 mm Pentax KM camera with full warranty. $150.84-434.54. 4-27 741 125. Sumkul Must sell—will best offer. Call 841-120-190 4-28 Elevated elevated waterbed in beautiful wood frame frame. 824-8280 at 6:30 p.m. 4-27 824-8280 Flipper P1L-12D II-Bell drive 10 P1L-12D II-Bell drive 10 Excluded condition 841-2846) 4-25 Excluded condition 841-2846) HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Biggest sale ever at RAY AUDIO. KLM-32 sale starts at $199, and the 4K-7K sale at A-K S5-800 with $169 each for $25 each. The 8K-15K sale at RAY AUDIO is the best in RAY AUDIO to buy it at $399. The Little Street Store With The Big Sales and 4-9-99 Goods • Vintage Clothing 1970 WV Station wagon, overloaded, new tires, must sell. sell asking $500, $823, 4-28 or $760, $823, 4-28 ● Furniture ● Antiques For Sale. 1980, VW Bug onto St. A. nite car. Ask $650, 842-4150 4-28 FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIAL! Until April 1st. Purchase an LX-3000e Weighing Appliance at ADP or Dale's Automotive. Call (800) 557-5424. excellent, mount self, askking $950, 825-4150, 4-28 For Sale ... 1371, conv. Super $250, 825-4150, 4-28 RAY AUDIO has the full line of Advent and Allison loudspeakers, on drummed speakers and on Advert speakers. We now top that off with our biggest set of 12 E. B. II off masts. The Little River Rises set of 12 E. B. II off masts. BALLOON RIDERS - Fly the skies over Laverne and Palm Springs. In the pilot, Balloon 8137 - 4-526 on Airbus Bali-4. MUST SELL; Tell offress offset print with collateral only one year; $1000 will finance. 842-8458 of any other name or address. 86 Rambler 4-door, PS, PB, fairly good condition, needs battery $200, 843-2645-15 for 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. 1971 Pontiac Catalina, 62 600 miles, everything in condition, 864-830 (afternoon and evening) 1971 Karman GHla Comp. very nice condition through. Rid with black interior and sport boot cover. Great pair of short blue shockers, many other parts recently replaced. It is a great gift for anyone. M.W.F. P.O. Box 262-1880, Kansas City, KS 66105. $1,500. 730B Mass. 841-7O7O Must sell all of leaving KU: WB-wop-70 quantity (qty) 50,000 miles $1095 off. offer: 80% $499 MUST SELL. Speed wheel, portable sterile and radio, tuner, radio jacket, books, records, etc. For sale at www.mustsell.com. Panaema turbable, must meet only two weeks of warranty and original packaging requirements 4-29 - Imported Clothing 1971 Vega GT. 4-1 speed, 62,000 rpm. $800 - 842 0310 evening, ask for Vicille. 4-29 Aven upon territory in Lawrence. Kevil if soon brought to Kefalos, would become world famous. Kefalos still had great wealth. HELP WANTED TEACHING ASSISTANT. Chinese and Japanese (1-each) for summer season (June 13 to August 5). These interested should apply to R. L. Spur. Summer Season, 21W Research, May 1, 1977. 4-25 SUMMER WORK PROGRAM make $2,772.00/hr $ 2,772^{00} / \mathrm{summer} $ Career oriented work outside the Midwest KANSN NED two people to prepare subscriptions for mailing next fall. VERY heavy work, approx. $2 hours per day Mon., through Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Thurs. 4:46 a.m. to 16:54 a.m. In 150 schools. 4-26 Only interviews—Mon., April 25 12:00, 3:00 or 6:00 Oread Room Kansas Union PLEASE BE PROMPT. *"Students," 15 telephone receptacles for new *Lawrence Portrait Club*. No experience required. Good salary, and benefits. A.M. and P.M. Call: 9:12 and 5:48. 4:26-4:26 841-7620 *Local Late Deliverys: must know area well, be familiar with route, call pay 4-19, dial 3-46, pm one. Eldridge Optical 1. $A = \begin{bmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix}, B = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}$ 2. $C = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}, D = \begin{bmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix}$ 3. $E = \begin{bmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix}, F = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}$ 4. $G = \begin{bmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix}, H = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}$ The above matrixes are not invertible, so they cannot be used in these computations. The inverse of each matrix will be the column vector of its transpose. DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 212 Main Street Wattsworth. Well established restaurant and club summer and fall. Grateful employees. 641-206-3887 "Summer Employment" information and evening meetings are held every Monday. You may be necessary. The salary, placement working conditions, and benefits are subject to change. DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS AND ASSISTANT OF KANSAS. Assistant Director of PERFORMANCE OF KANSAS. Administration of financial aid, related matters. Probable responsibility for departmental budget and financial aid. Full-time, year-round appointment. Required: bachelor's degree, administrative, writing, and communication skills. Preference given to relevant areas. Salary range expected to be $14000 to $17000. Position may extend to be $18000 to $21000. May 10. Submit resume to Dean Martin B. Dickey Lawrence, Kansas 60015. AnEqual Opportunity Employer. Women of all races are encouraged to apply. 456 SUMMER JOBS. MAKE $850. SET THIS NUMBER. USE NO DEPOSIT. MONTHLY RELOCATE. GIVE 427-6230 FOR INTER- NET REMOVAL. Now taking applications for summer help. Apply in person, Dayglow 644; Mast 841-5653. 4-27 Teachal approach. Approx 10 hours per week, 60 min. Teach children in the language of the country helped but not required. Mk-285-495 for教研 I am interested in hiring food service superviseurs, both part time and full time; Must have superviving experience in food service. Great pay and benefits. Req's Bachelor's Degree in Schumann, 719 Mascus, Lawrence, Kanada; 4-29 Undergraduate, teaching assistants in chemistry or biology supervise and engage in Chemistry 844, 198, 624-625, or 636-627. STIPEND Normally $600 per week, or as specified by your qualification. WELCOME and depth of knowledge in chemistry as indicated by your degree, and by teaching ability as indicated by experience. Interested students should contact Dr. J. K. Lee 224 Morton before May 15, 1972. The Team will affirmative action employer and employment applications from women and members of minority groups. 4-27 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. Royal Presidency levels pay for work in various areas of the city, and for further information on one of these levels, contact the HR department. LOST AND FOUND Lost whilst and key ring with 4 keys, east of Robinson. Reward, 843-265. 4-25 Unique selection of rings and bracelets. At Bengal, 803 Mass at the Cathedral 4-26 Load small black and white John felt wearing white fleece shirt C48 8223-8 after 5 p.m. 4-26 Found 4 keys on sidewalk behind Green Hall Call 813-1980 Found—man's leather waistband belonging to Salem Biltow. Can be picked up in the Dean's office. $100. London. Call a of Carrier car keys at 12th and Fowlingall. Call 843-0248 after 5 p.m. 4-20 Elizabeth J. Bowers call 842-3081 to claim your coin purse. 4-26 lead, Leather lighter gas and power lighter Leather lighter gas and power lighter Tuesday, April 19. Will gift box offer monetary sale. May 20. Lost-set of keys, with black strip (strap and key) attached. Howard,eward. 914-826-3700 4-258 Found... Grouped steeply cat near the SDP-Cornin dome area. Its friendly and has a leather collar. FOUND- ring with four keys Friday in front of Strong. Call 641-8049 4-27 Found - Texas Instrument J Calculator in Jawadkar Towers and Summerhill Office 4-27 Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishens, cookens, clothing, televisions. Open daily 12- 843-3977. NOTICE Phone: 841.7525 Downtown Pier1 imports associate store ARMADIVELLE BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 941-7964 M.5 10.5 S. 304 W. 841-7946 M-5 10-5:30 (Thurs. 8:00) 9th and Iowa Don't miss the coffee and tea sale at the Stinky Cheese Shoppe. April, 20 to April, 27 - Feosball Graduate: plan rear for cap and gown photos Graduate: plan rear for cap and gown photos Two 87" x 142" Balding - 84.00, #82-6789 You're invited to KJHK's Second Annual Open House, Friday, April 29th, from noon to 5 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS "A different kind of bar sturing seclusion and quiet." Air condition your feet! Flags, $1.75, Bengals, 803 Mass, in the Cahab. 4-36 BE AWARE: APRIL 30 KANSAS UNION 4-26 PERSONAL PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. Open Barrier Unit Management Gauley Counseling Call: 842-7500, 812-6 p.m. for referral. For sorabilizing calls, call 842-7500. REWARD - $40 for info leading to acquisition of pizza, junk food apartment, $165 or used car. Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of destructive drug addiction. For help or info, 822-0130 www.abstinence.com The Lounge Why would 90 feefs bounce on a transpennine for the first time? **House? House? House?** NO, THE FEDERAL AIRLINES PA FEMINISM ADDING their third annual fundraiser to the lawsuit against All Air Field to bound the lawsuits Boys & Girls Club in Pennsylvania. The Rev. T. Miller referred to in previous Unit- Life Life Church is the Adm. Todd 4-26 REWARD-$4 for into being to rental of furnished - 6 for one bedroom apartment for rent. FRESHMEN CLASS MEMBERS pre-finals TOGIF at Stravagansium 7 May, 6 & 20-30. A great meal for friends and family! Dar Curtions—is a wise quack! What is WKM of Ta-Hette? TantalizesALAMES. Truncate the dribbles. You've been a good sport LA, but don't allow yourself to be too selfish. Not all of them. The Survey Sender. 4-25 "THE UNIVERSAL LIFE CHOICE INC. only determines what is right for him or her to do, not what is wrong for ULC today. For your official ULC orientation and training, disassure瞻iled envelope to ULC "P O BOSS." Will the person who found my档案 and filed to contact my please call 842-6513. I moved 4-27 - Bud on Tap Wendy~Happy~20th Party hearty 'vir鸟's the world! Keep telling those kids. Never forget the girls. No, they're not. Restaurants Open daily 11 a.m.1 l.a. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.2 l. 1 m. 1527 W. 6th SERVICES OFFERED YOU MIGHT NEED A CHANGE Mennonite Volunteer Service has opened new hot for full time Christian social activities. See us in the Union Building, Volunteer Service, Newington, KS 67114 4-25 Vista English Teacher, NU Graduate School Speaking and Writing in English Improvement to Professionals at Oxford University English for Beginners 192 - 195 Intermediate Elementary English 192 - 193 Intermediate English 192 - 194 Second language English $49 an hour. Phone 824-2520 second language英语 $49 an hour. Phone 824-2520 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE - Pool "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 19th & K 843.9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8-B Sun. Imported Auto Parts HEADQUARTERS for JAMES CAMP Math tutoring - competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105 can help you through courses 117, 141, 163, 184, 192, 600, 588. Regulars require course 117. Requires rate: C4-828-7611. tt Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. STEREO BROXEN • Receiver, amplifier, turn- table, tape decks • Preventive Maintenance and clean and dusted equipment Modification • Reasonable rates • 90-day runs • Jersey Electronics, 723 Max. 841-2533. www.jerseyelectronics.com TYPING tips/editor. IBM Pixell, sales. Quality work. work. Dissertations, dissertations welcome. Call from 842-325-7190. *TYPING* Lyron 843-8756 or 842-6058. 75c a page. **12** THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Ubber's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are in Massachusetts or phone 843-288-7561. Thank you. Experienced typist—term papers, papers, mite. Mike 842-501-3655. Mrs. Wright. Spoken英语 co- partment 842-501-3655. Mrs. Wright. No hands—just good lying at lower than averaged. He's shot at the very center of the shortest shots of deadlines. Harvey or Snyder? Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for weeks 804-1531 days, 842-989 evening and weekend. Will you make your paper with TLC. Term papers and three themed calls? Call us at 864-831-0119, phone number is 864-831-0119. Wide experience law paper, thesis, dissertations. Qualify to apply in New York. Wield. Wendel 842-0724. P-10 Peggy's damned good typing now offers copying and binding. Convenient one stop shop 842-723-0566 It presently comprises as a professional manu- facturer and supplier of the most advanced connecting typewriter, machine, symbol printer and telephone equipment. Roommate need for summer. Large 3-bedroom 1841-3099 Mass - 862 plus 1.5 ushn 841-3099 Female roommate needed for summer $70 monthly plus 1.2 bathrooms + 2-bedroom apartment (Brantley, KY) 844-653-9211 Experimented typist-term papers, thews, etc. Reusable numbers. Call Rails: 842-7263. WANTED Exquiredierung typiell iMjE selective, articles, theres, dissertations, near campus, bau-842-4990 http://www.ias.edu/bauer/ 1. 3-伙业屋, furnished 2-bedroom apartment 2. 4-bedroom house for summer and/or next fall. 3. 3- bedroom house for summer and/or next fall. 4. Two girls in large bedroom in 'fairdale townhouse for next year. Non-smoking, studiosite 5. Female counsellor wanted to share townhouse for summer $89.50 per month plus 11% tuition $83.50 Roommates needed for next year. Call for details. One or two responsible people to share spacious room. Respect privacy. Bring space, furniture, fireplace, plants, garden, furnishings, pr icipants. Prepare to cook and entertain. Pre- parate good food and comforts of own home at reasonable cost. Drug by order. Rent a roommate. Furnished two-bedroom from campus. Respond. Two bedrooms from campus. Rescue 28-34. Two roommates to share position two bedroom duplex with nicely furnished kitchen, bedroom, dental air, dishwasher, and fenced yard for trained dog. 4-643-2718 16+ pkt 9.0 miles e-mail: 4-643- 2718 4-29 VISIONS has the eyeglasses you want 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 SCM. portable electric typewriter. Pica Type. Call 813-5796. 4-29 Home of The Chalk Hawk NAISMITH HALL YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 10.5 Mon.-Sat. Till on Thursday Penguin - Pool - Snooker - HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Ping Pong ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcress Bowl Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted 10 Monday, April 25, 1977 University Daily Kansan Arts & Leisure MARLENE The Hartford Ballet's Superman antics in "Leggieros" Ballet a twist on tradition Rv SHERI BALDWIN By SHERI BALDWIN Entertainment Editor American ballet companies are becoming a new breed—on purpose. No longer do audiences sit through epochs of strictly choreal renditions, often hard to stand. The Hartford Ballet Company of Hartford, Conn., is a relatively small company that has utilized the new approach to dance as a means to acquire an unduplicable style. The company performed in the Kansas City, Mo., Music Hall this weekday, leading an audience like a tempest in applause who was no longer polite, but impulsive. THE COMPANY'S quality and spirit are both genuine. The best of techniques from classical, romantic and contemporary styles are combined in a manner that makes the most of the company's youth. With puckish humor acting as a fulcrum for her characters, she embodies of tenure and strength, a sparkling orbit of surprises was made possible. In "leggieros," a dance to be performed when the Hartford Balltie comes to Lawrence May I, a series of swift variations based on the slow dance used to Beethoven's "D Variations." The enticing begins subly as two females, perched in graceful lifesalt atop partners, wade to each other as each exits. Before the dance is over, there is a ballet NONE OF THE works that the company will perform in Lawrence was choreographed by artistic director Michael Uthoff. All but "legieros" in Kansas City were Uthoff works, the highlight being on the stage drama done on the Tom Dooley folk legend with original and traditional bluegrass music. version of the "Fox," a jugger sliding across the floor to catch a ball, a ball dance man derail who runs out of music and a dance that intentionally pairs two males It is a shame that the magic of Ubofh's dance won't be seen here. At times it is a bit blurry, but its music — "boo" that has both Egyptian and Indian tones. Other times it is "childlike" as in Brahma Variations, where elfin-like sounds are used only as if they were classical ballet steps. But the one-hour program that is coming to Lawrence is part of Concerts for Young People and will be a concert designed for children as well as adults. It's not that Uhloff works are too difficult for children, but they tend to allow to variety in a one-hour program. In addition to "Leggieros," "La Maliñche," a modern dance by Jose Limon, and "Little Improvisations," a classical duet by Sergio Benedetto, will be performed here. The performance should certainly be no less for the lack of Uthoff's works, for the Hartford Ballet will probably only live best -- adding the Hartford style to an assortment of spirited entertainment. KJHK FM91 HeaveN seNT MUSICAL MEORIES CONTEST MUSICAL MEMORIES CONTEST KJHK WILL GIVE AWAY A BOTTLE OF HEAVEN SENT FRAGRANCE DAILY UNTIL APRIL 28, AND EACH WINNER WILL BE ENGIBLE FOR A $75 BASKET OF HEAVEN SENT PRODUCTS. LISTEN TO KJHK FM91 FOR ALL DETAILS. PARTIALLY FUNDED THRU KU STUDENT SEWAT Do you put off tackling your term paper until the last minute? Then you haven't discovered... YOUR ERRONEOUS ZONES Book a large exhibition for taking advantage of your award opportunities Never have I read a book that has such a wondrous story in so many ways. Robert L. 1 SINCE 2017 DR. WAYNE W OYER Dry Dyer has blended humor, powerful in sight into human affairs and oligarchy straight forward approach to personal mastery. "Cosi fan Tutte" is the Cinderella of Mozart operas. One could assert that the operas "dioneneo" or "La Clemenza di Tito" have a better claim to that role. But their architec formals prevent their com- By HENRY L. SNYDER Only since World War II has "Cosi fan Tutte" finally achieved such distinction. The Metropolitan Opera did not produce it until its 28th year. And it didn't really Blend of talent, craft inspires Mozart opera Guest Reviewer WE ARE INDEBTED THEN TO George Lawner, the opera's musical director, for his service to the art of Mozart with the University Theatre production of "Cosi fan tute," his fourth production of a Mozart opera in his tenure at the University. $695 -DB. St Paul Mint To succeed, Mozart must be performed with style, finesse and subtlety. Lawner knows the style and does an excellent job in the performance of the operas he and singers. The pacing of the performance, so vital to the success of this opera, was admirable. In this respect, the design of the settings, the rapidity with which they were rendered, and the direction by Tom Rea were a great asset become a regular part of the Mets' repre- nence until the seventh decade of its history. On Stage FUNK & WAGNALLS FRANCES GINSBERG, Dallas senior, as Floridlighi was clearly the star. She not only possesses a beautiful voice but she knows how to express it and calls for considerable technical virtuosity. It is a great credit to her that she manages the part so well, even providing an able performance. The opera, a lighthearted 18th-century look at marriage and courtship, moves on two planes. It is a highly stylized, artificial comedy. At the same time the emotions it gives voice to are very real and profound. Voice between the two was nicely achieved. In the first half of "Cotf fan Tatue," there was a feeling that she was holding back too much and at times she wasn't properly audible. This was corrected in the second As Guglielmo, William Gilinsky, Olivette, Mo., graduate student, was also well-endowed vocally and sang pleasingly. Carl Packard, Oceaniside, Calif., graduated the trust appreciation for style next to Gilinsberg and acted his part handsomely. act and her "Per piede" was the vocal highlight of the performance. The least satisfactory was Thomas Harper, Oklahoma City, Okla., graduate student, as Ferrando. His handling of "Unura amaraora" was sadly deficient, crudely sung and poorly phrased, a serious loss as it compounded Mozart's most elegant compositions. Harper wasn't helped by the direction. If there was a fault, it was that the comic aspects acted by the two suitors were too broad, averting at times on slapstick. Clearly it be absurd but at the same time done with finesse and sophistication. The great glory of the opera is reflected in the superb ensemble numbers. The skill with which Lawner blended the voices and the orchestra made the performance an instant sensation. The production was a credit to the University Theatre and all School of Fine Arts departments. Lawrence residents are fortunate to have the opportunity to see such a spirited production and are encouraged to so skilled a musician asLawner in charge. Henry L. Snyder is a professor of history and dean of research administration. Cleveland Orchestra plays the Beethoven The last concert in this season's Concert Series features the Cleveland Orchestra, which will play an all Beethoven program at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch Auditorium. Directed by Lorin Mazel, the orchestra will play Beetles' Symphony 8. No 8 in F major, Symphony No. 5 in C minor and the overture, to "Fidelio." Tickets for the performance are $4, $5 and $6, available at the University Theatre box office. Tickets for KU students with current registrations are $1. Super Cuts for Guys and Gals Good on Mon., Tues., Wed. only $4.50 with coupon Blane's Salon 842-1144 Corolla Sport Coupe SR-5 *4276.76 Delivered* I've got your Next Car Len Edmonds Lawrence Toyota - 842-21 Corolla Liftback SR-5 $4416.25 Delivered Selling Limited DT PORSCHE 5217. 00 Delivered Corolla 2-Door Sean Custom *3466.95 Delivered Buy One TEXAS BURRITO Get One FREE with this coupon The Texas Burrito is a soft flat tortilla shell filled with Taco meat,lettuce,cheddar choose, tomatoes,and your choice of sauce,covered with chili. One offer per customer with this TACO TICO coupon Offer ends May 1, 1977 2340 Iowa This Week's Highlights Concerts CONCERT BAND, 8 p.m. Tuesday, University Theatre. THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA with Lorin Maaseel conducting an all Beethoven program. Concert Series, 8 p.m. Wed. through Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Music Hall, Kansas City, Mo. Thursday, Music Hall, Kansas City, Mo. Recitals KATHY PRICE, violin, Student Recital Series, 8 tonight, Swainton Recital Hall ALBERT PEOPLES, tuba, Student Recital Series, 4g.m Tuesday, Swainton Lectures "MESHIE," movie sponsored by the department of anthropology, a p.m. today. "THE SACRED CIRCLES," Ralph T. Coe, director of the Nelson Gallery, Kansas City, Mo., who organized the exhibit; 8 tonight. Woodford Auditorium. H. WILEY HITCHCOCK, professor of human sociology for the Institute for Studies in American Culture at College of the City University of New York. Humanities Lecture Series; 8.p.m. tuesday. ARTHUR COSGROVE, historian University College of Dublin, Irish Sym eses podium Public Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Wed. nesday, Kansas University Room. "HISTORY OF THE NEGRO: OUR COUNTRY TOO." African Studies Film Series. 7 p.m. Thursday, Strong Hall Auditorium. KEVEN DANAHER, toklorist, University College of Dublin, Irish Symposium Public Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Union's Forum Room. Films MEMBER OF THE WEDDING-Based on a play by Carson and McCuller, this film features a commanding performance by the lead actress as she navigates to catch part of her brother's romance. THE WOMEN — An all-star cast of women—Jon Cawdrill, Rosalind Russell and Paulette Goddard—who turn out to be the men—whan their male counterparts in the film. IMMORAL TALES - Grand prize winner of the London Film Festival, this is a most adventurous film about sexuality through the centuries. Exhibits WANTED: ALL GRADS WITH FLUENT FRENCH FOR NEW PEACE CORPS PROJECTS THE MARKETPLACE GALLERY—artwork from KU sororites and fraternities as part of Greek Week, through Saturday. In addition, both maquette and monumental sculpture. 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, lift; $3000 term; stipend 2 yrs. service. Visit our website to view RECRUTERS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMARCH MARCH 2, AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMARCH MARCH 1. --will have a Nurse Practitioner speaking on DEATH. April 26 at 7:00 p.m. J. Watson's Disco: 8 to 12:15 Michelob Pitchers $1.50 8 to 10 p.m. Hillcrest Shopping Center 841-BEER TONIGHT --will have a Nurse Practitioner speaking on DEATH. April 26 at 7:00 p.m. Summer Employment Royal Prestige needs students to supplement summer work force $250^{00} per week For further info., come to: Student Union-Oread Room Tuesday, April 26, 12:00 or 2:00 Cn Pre-Nursing Club A doctor is holding a bottle of medicine and attacking an elderly man with a stick. A woman is running away from the attacker. Speak Smolan Democ finance the Ser Kar justfyiy approp bill International Room Kansas Union 'The because of pro compre trouble Carli reachee standin crease per cen Howe Regent their e "If w pressu pressu school "I finance then R Carl propri stitutio Gov.R veto o The goverr THE UNIVERSITY DAILY A boy sleeps in a bed covered with messy stuff. A window shows a smiley face. KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Vol. 87, No. 133 Union's budget sent to Dykes Tuesday, April 26, 1977 See story page five Carlin says compromise needed in school finance By DEENA KERBOW Staff Renorter Speaker of the House John Carlin, D-Smolan, told a group of KU Young Democrats last night that if the school finance bill didn't reach a compromise in the Senate-House conference committee, the Kansas Legislature would have trouble passing passage of Board of Regents appropriations bills and the civil service bill. "They better come to some compromise because if nothing comes out, we have a lot of problems," he said. "If there's no room for us, that's the lot of trouble passing everyone else." Carlin said that if the school finance bill reached no final action this session, the team would need to change its strategy. appropriations bill and approve the rest of the bill; this is referred to as a line-item "He can't put in anything we didn't give him," Carlin said. Carlin said the governor could really hurt the University of Kansas if he overexposed his students. crease in operating costs, thus allowing a 5 per cent increase in teachers' salaries. However, he said civil service and regements appropriations bills had allowed their use to be included in the law. CARLIN SAID, though, that he didn't for many line-m-item vetoes in higher editions. "I WOULD LIKE to resolve school finance quickly, and that can go quickly." Carlin also said the KU Medical Center's separate bill for family practice units in small Kansas communities would be funded by a conference committee tomorrow morning. He said, "We set some different princepillars than the governor, but the total amount of money we spend is more." P Speaker John Carlin "Being from Salma," he said, "I will make every effort to get that bill passed." Carlin said that he expected appropriations bills for the Regents institutions to pass easily but that he thought the Senate would use his line-term veto on the bills. "if we back off now, there will be a lot of pressure," he said. "I think that kind of pressure is, in the end, to go resolve school finance. The Kansas Constitution provides that the governor may veto individual items in an RESPONDING TO questions after the meeting about State Rep. Mike Gloyer, D-Lawrence, and his involvement with marijuana, Carlin said, "I'm sure Mike "I have a lot of respect for Mike. He's a good job representing his constituents." laurence a lessson—yu need to be a little lameur a lessson—yu need to be a little Carlin said that over all, he was pleased with the progress of the legislature's first session, even though many had called it a do-noting legislature. However, Carlin didn't display such pleasure about Bennett. "1 THINK THE papers and polls generally agree that the governor is not ready to take action." "My reaction to that is that it is not necessarily bad," he said. "You don't have to come up with a lot of jazzy headlines to make it feel like you have and have had a successful session." He said he looked at the legislature's work as part of a two-year session, not as one-year sessions. Much good work has been added in the first year of this session, he said. Legislators to revise liquor tax bill today Legislators tomorrow will introduce a new liquor tax in an effort to replace one they passed in last-minute action of the first quarter. They also distributed many wine distillers, out of the state. The original bill would have required manufacturers or distributors of each brand label of alcoholic beverage sold in the state registered with the state for $500 a label. STEVE MILLSTEIN, aide to State Rep. Patrick Hurley, D-Leaventown and House majority leader, said last night that complaints from local consumers, retailers, wholesalers and out-of-state breweries and distilleries have been raised by legislators to revise the liquor tax bill. Legislators had estimated that the original bill would generate $800,000 annually to be used for community alcoholism and intoxication programs. However, distributors had said that many wine companies that manufactured from 15 to 30 brand labels wouldn't be able to afford to post in Kansas if that bill became law. State Rep. John Carlin, D-Smolan and speaker of the House, said last night, "There will be a bill introduced Wednesday that will make a change. There is no question that we'll have to back off from the $500 brand label tax." —To charge for each size bottle of liquor, rather than for each brand label. This would require $200 for distilled liquor bottle sizes and $100 for wine bottle sizes. Millstein said that if the Senate were to concur with any of these variations, it probably would be with this one. MILLSTEEK SAID that Carlin, Hurley State Sen. Jim Parrish, D-Topeka, and Arden Emsley, revisor of statutes, had met with the governor to argue that would allow the state to make its $80,000 but also would encourage wine distributors to continue posting in Kansas. The four versions are as follows: -TO COMBINE THE first two versions, adding a 15 cent increase to the gallonage to tax on distilled liquors plus $100 charge for the wine bottles and sizes and a $4 charge for wine bottle sizes. —To replace brand label charges with a 25% discount in the gallon tax on distillate spirits. —To add a gallonage tax of 1.5 cents to ceral malt beer (3.2 milk). Millstein said that each penny of this gallonage tax would be the state about one-half of a million dollars. BERT MARSHALL Milstein said a decision would be made today about which version would be released. Staff Photo by ELI REICHMAN Outspoken Dean John Dean, conspirator in the Watergate cover-up and former counsel to President Richard Nixon, spoke on his White House experiences yesterday in Washburn University's White Concert Hall. Dean, who succeeded John Ehrlichman as Nixon's personal counsel, said his office became an important center for carrying messages, some of which he didn't want to hear, such as "People arrested in Democratic Headquarters want money to remain silent." Dean admits to wrongdoing, but says he never lied. Student code to encompass amendment By LINDA STEWART Staff Reporter The subcommittee reviewed the amendment after Mike Davis, University general counsel, asked the Senate to try to bring the code more in line with the amendment. The Buckley Amendment concerning the privacy rights of parents and students probably will be adopted into the Student Code with a few exceptions, a subcommittee of the Student Senate Rights, Privileges and Abilities Committee decided last night. The Student Code and the amendment conflict in several areas, including Regigie Robinson, committee chairman, saw the accessibility of a student's records WHETHER PARENTS of students who aren't financially independent should be allowed access to the student's records was debated by the subcommittee. Another member, however, said he thought parents who were supporting a student should be allowed to see the student's records. THE PRESENT STUDENT Code of Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct states that only parents of students who are under 18 years old must be dependent students or over 18 aren't included. The Buckley Amendment states, however, that parents of dependent children are permitted. The present University policy has been in compliance with the Student Code and dependent student's records haven't been released to parents. Although one subcommittee member said that he thought dependent student's records should be released to parents requesting them the subcommittee will present a recommendation in favor of not releasing records to the full committee Wednesday night. ANOTHER AREA of the amendment debated by the committee was that of directory information. The amendment allows for information to be released over the computer. The Student Code allows certain information to be released only in person or by mail. The information that the code states can't be released over the phone are students' passwords. One member said that directory information already doesn't comply with the code because it releases phone numbers over the phone. The subcommittee decided to adopt the amendment regulations for directory assistance information, with the exception of giving out students' names. So even See STUDENT page two Anxiety harries victims of crime Note: This is the second of three articles on crime in Lawrence. It deals with the victims of crime. By CHUCK WILSON By CHUCK WILSON Staff Reporter Dou Bowyan, Larned junior, became a 1975 statistic when he was attacked and robbed the second week of March. He became the victim of a violent crime. Bowman, a deliveryman for Hole-in-the-Wall Delicatessen and Sandwich Shop. #46 Illinois St., was attacked by two men as he returned to his truck after delivering an order in the Jayhawk Towers. "I WAS AFRAID they might kill me—afraid I might catch a knife in the ribs." Bowman said. The two men kicked and beat Bowman to the ground and then dragged him back to his feet. After taking the $7 he was able to run and start to start running and not to look back. BECAUSE THE MEN attacked from behind and because he lost his glasses, Bowman said, he had only a vague impression of what looked like the men haven't been caught. Bowman said there was no doubt in his mind that the two men were trying to intimidate him. He wasn't able to eat for a day or so afterward because of a sore law. From time to time afterward, he said, he thought he recognized his assaults in bars and other places around town. Several days after a violent incident the victim initially feels vulnerable, has trouble eating and sleeping and is preoccupied with the crime. This symptom of recognition is one of three phases through which the victim of a violent crime goes, according to Kathy Sweeney, a spokeswoman for County Rape Victim Support Service. incident is over and that he no longer has to fear it. Finally, the victim feels renewed anxiety about the incident; he thinks he recognizes his assailant in crowds. This phase ordinarily doesn't last long. THE VICTIM THEN realizes that the Not all victims will go through the full three phases. Hoggard said. Hoggard, who deals primarily with rape victims, said that one of the largest problems was that victims often didn't recall their attacker's facial features. 1 Staff drawing by DAVID MILLER Rape victims can call the KU Information Center, 864-3506, or Headquarters Inc., 1602 Massachusetts St., 814-2343, to know the name and phone number of one of 10 rape counselors who are ready to help. THE SUPPORT SERVICE, which has been in Lawrence since 1972, tries to help rape victims and answer their questions. Heard said. Often, they think they don't know what the man looks like but they do, she said. Hoggard said that even though the service advised victims to go to the police, they weren't forced to do so. "Sometimes, if the victim agrees, we do make anonymous reports to the police," she said. ONCE A VIOLET crime is reported to Police the police it becomes a crime against the state, Mike Malone, Douglas County has been convicted that he becomes merely a witness for the state. "There is no formal restitution program in this state other than what the county attorney may initiate," Malone said. "I believe a victim can be ruined financially by a particular crime. It's a matter in which the victim is the real loser." The county attorney can request that before plea bargaining be considered restitution must be made to the victim, but no Kansas laws exist concerning If there has been any monetary loss, there is no sure way of recovering it, be said. IF THE VICTIM of a crime is injured, he must pay his own medical bills. The only help he is likely to receive is from his insurance company. Malone said a victim could sue his attacker if the person was caught, but even that action had its drawbacks. "You can sue the person, the person is probably judgment proof—the has no money-so it doesn't do any good," he said. Tomorrow: area jails. TOPEKA-John Dean, Watergate conspirator, said yesterday in Topeka that his only political ambition was to be in a government that took the questions rather, than answer them. Staff Reporter John Dean remembers his role in Watergate Bv DEENA KERBOW Dean, who now writes for Rolling Stone magazine, told an audience in Washburn University's White Concert Hall that because of his experience as presidential candidate, the police politicians wouldn't be able to pull the wool over his eyes in his new reporting job. told of his initiation six years ago into White House politics for the media, when he was one of three presidential office one night, placed a stack of budget books in front of him and said, "You and I are going to be discussing politics with the college newspaper editors come in." Dean said Nixon looked surprised when the young editors entered. Nixon told the students that even young people like themselves and John Dean had a say in the government. He then told Dean to explain the budget to the students. The memo was Nixon's way of indirectly Dean said, "I had never seen a budget before this morning, and I just managed to repeat in my own words what he had already said." Dean said those early days in the White House helped him change his way of thinking to a point that allowed him to aid the Waterate cover-up. Dean said his first assignment as the president's counsel came in the form of a "red tag, eyes only," confidential memorandum. He soon learned that "red tag" meant a priority item, but never maintained that "eyes only" officially made "The only crime I know that I ever involved myself in was a conspiracy to obstruct justice—to cover up what happened," he said. "Perhaps it was the type of thinking I developed very early in going to the White House that got me into it." telling Dean that then Vice President Spiro Agnew had been labeled by a magazine, he said, and that Nixon wanted retribution, through the Internal Revenue Services. Dean said he was uneasy about taking such action at the time and even thought it might be illegal. He discussed the situation with a White House confident, who told Dean, "If you don't do it, the President will find somebody who will do it." Dean said, "At that point, I crossed an ethical line." Dean said he later witnessed many incidents that he questioned, "like mugging squads, bugging squads and teams of prostitutes that I didn't think were ethical for various reasons, although Liddy assured me that prostitutes were the finest in the country. "I told myself, 'Well, I like my job, and, John, you really didn't do the dirty work.' I was not happy. Dean said that after the break-in, his office became an important place for carrying messages, some of which he would have preferred not to have heard—"People arrested in Democratic Headquarters want money to remain silent." "I had been at the edge of the real inner circle for a long time," he said, "and suddenly was becoming one of those in the inner circle." Dean said he became impressed with his position and authority. "I found my soaring in power, and I got blinded by my ambition," he said. "I stopped looking at the implications. I just keptlooking up and looking in." However, during all the times of feeling important and carrying confidential messages, Dean said, he never lied, he never did. He was one part of his duanity he could retain. "I made it known in the White House that I would tell the truth about it," he said. And that was a rather unpleasant experience, which makes to be the switch, the whistle blower." See WATERGATE page three 2 Tuesday, April 26, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Carter unsure of peace WASHINGTON—President Carter said that it would be a mistake to be too optimistic about Middle East peace prospects as he greeted Klaus Husein of Jordan after the U.S. withdrawal from the war. CARLTON, the middle Third East leader to come here, said Jordan was ready to slay his full part in the quest for a just and lasting settlement. "If we fail this year, it will be very difficult to marshal an effort next year." Carter低调Husein at the start of their first session in the Oval Office. FRI prosecution to proceed WASHINGTON--Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell said yesterday he was standing by his decision to prosecute an FBI man for alleged illegal mail-opening and whispered. The reporters he has given no thought to the possibility of dropping the charges against former FBI supervisor John Kearney, despite FBI Director Michael Scalise's demand that he be dropped. "What's at stake is the rule of law," Bell said. "If you break the law, ordinarily you suffer the consequences." you skimp this! Bell made the remarks at an impropunct news conference after he met for 90 miles to kelvey and 10 FBI agents from as many cities. Zaire declares key victory KINSHASAH, Zaire - The Zaire government asserted yesterday that it had recaptured the eastern Kattangin kattangins in Shiba province and that the UAE tried to extinguish an Angolan blast. rebels were retrieved. Diplomatic officials couldn't confirm that Mushatshaha had been retaken. When reporters visited Shaba Sunday the government's front lines were along the Labu River, 20 miles east of the town and 50 miles west of the copper mining center of Keluzi. The reporters were told by army officers that several days were needed to retake Mushaltaa because rebelting rebels had planted mines along the dirt road parallel to the Benguela railroad that runs through Mushaltaa and on to the Angolan coast. The军官告诉了 the town of 20,000 had been deserter and by the rebels. More strikers to face court KANSAS CITY—The Kansas City school district took further legal action against striking unison teachers by bringing 126 more contempt motions, as well as accusations of assault. Three cases to 144 the number of strikers under prosecution on contempt of court charges for pickering in violation of a temporary restraining order issued by the Court of Appeal have been submitted. The county's special strike prosecution, Joseph E. Steverson Jr., said he hadn't yet determined what fine he would recommend against the striking union, the Kansas State Police. U.S. diplomat visits Cuba for talks on maritime limits WASHINGTON (AP) - Asst. Secretary of State Terease A. Todman has made an unannounced trip to Cuba for bilateral talks on maritime questions. He is the first U.S. diplomat to visit the island in more than 16 years. The U.S. Department officials said yesterday. The talks are a continuation of an initial round of negotiations that took place in New York in 2013. The two countries have declared 200-mile maritime jurisdictions and a principal goal of the negotiations is to set a maritime border near the south Florida coast and northern Cuba. The meeting in New York was the first publicly announced face-to-face contact between representatives of the two countries since relations were broken during the waning days of the Eisenhower administration. Subsequent to the New York talks, it was disclosed that the two countries had held a series of secret meetings in late 1974 and in 1975 to improve relations. Todman, who is the State Department's top Latin American affairs official, reportedly left for Cuba over the weekend accompanied by several aides. Buskens low-heel sandals Salute Latigo brown leather with a crepe sole 14$95 Episode rope thong sandal. Natural and brown. 14$95 Santa Rosa The hurrache look in Latigo brown leather 15$95 Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CARD McCoy shoes 813 Massachusetts WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter proposed legislation yesterday to put a ceiling of nine per cent a year on hospital fee increases that he said would save the government, health insurance companies and the billion in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. HARIT GALLETTE The legislation sent to Congress yesterday provides a number of exceptions that could mean the present runaway inflation in hospital costs would be held to about 10 per cent nationally in the first year if Congress adopts the administration's proposal. After that, increases would be restricted further to bring the fees hospitals charge their patients more in line with the national rate of inflation. Carter seeks hospital fee ceiling Limiting increases in hospital charges to nine per cent won't affect many people directly, but consumers should benefit eventually as the measure slows the rate of tax increases and the rise in health insurance premiums. Bad weather blocks effort to cap North Sea oil spill 1495 THE PROGRAM is expected to yield total income of more than $3 billion in fiscal 1980. New hospitals, federal hospitals and those hospitals that operate on a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) basis will be exempt from the proposed ceiling. HMO hospitals provide continuing preventive health care and treatment to member consumers who pay fixed fees for all services. STAVANGER, NORWALK (AP)—A total calm followed by gale-force winds and 20-foot waves yesterday blocked efforts to cap the three-day-old spill of oil from the Bravo rig in the North Sea and to contain the spreading slick. The offshore oil well operated by the Phillips Petroleum Co. of Bartlesville, OKa., continued to spew natural gas and oil into the Gulf of Mexico, feeding a slick already 20 miles long and more than twice the anticipated six per cent rise in over-all consumer prices this year. three miles wide in Norway's Ekofisk oil field. The morning calm created a dangerous concentration of explosive gas so the Bravo dropped it. Inflation in the health care industry has been about 15 per cent, and hospitals account for 40 per cent of the $148-billion health care spending in the United States. That 15 per cent rate of increase is rise in over-all consumer prices this year. THE ADMINISTRATION proposal is designed to ease the inflationary spiral, but it won't bring hospital-charge increase. The proposed exceptions to the Buckley Amendment will be presented to the full committee Wednesday night and will be on by the full Senate May 4. though a caller may have information on the student, he can't request the student's name if he doesn't know it. The subcommittee decided to allow that the other information be released unless a student actually requested it that be confidential. In the evening, gale-force winds developed and plans were canceled by Phillips and Norwegian authorities to surround the slick with booms and begin collecting the oil into tankers with special skimming equipment. Robinson said Katy Hoggard, director of the KU information center, had asked the Senate to make the changes before June so she could then them in next year's Student Hardbook. THE SUBCOMMITTEE said that all information would be made available in a place besides the phone, such as in the Office of Admissions and Records. From page one He said she also asked the Senate to write the code so that it could be more easily understood. Student Code . . . NOW MATH TEACHERS ARE WANTED FOR OVERSEAS PROJECTS 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/deni. care. dent. care. 48 days pdt. vac. small. comfort. lv. allow. ; 3000 term. stipend end 2 years serv. Must be certified at U.S. S. Teacher Training Program. Interviews for INTERVIEW. RECRUITERS on CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON APRIL 25, AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMENT ON APRIL 26. 27. Ford RENT-A-CAR ADMIRAL AQUILA LEASING FALS WORLDST LARGEST LANDSCAPE LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM 2340 Alabama PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 knit shirt sale!! Mister Guy announces its largest knit shirt sale ever!! . . more than 700 of these spring knit shirts. reg. 15.00 to 16.50 — now $11.90 open thursday night till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. π So De Waterga He said Nixon do when the reports "He sa all task political said he v report in Sa Dean informa- doing, a opponent selves s control The f side of t because could ij A DIN front of downwa mower. The length A foo keep a blade. For the Productive developp power-di- standard power n The pbeing de The o utilities water r from 50 rising been g request Mem nity w conti front "Unt someth Heaor higher areas, water it to be p effect custom Ut The charit Club. TI fo] This Boys." TKEs. Manha miles, last yo SL University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 26, 197 3 Watergate... From page one So Dean told the prosecutors about Watergate. He said it all started with a memorandum Nixon dictated to Baldeman in 1971, when the president was studying task force reports for his re-election campaign. "He saw that conspicuously absent from allask force reports was anything on digital intelligence," Dean said, "and he said that it hadn't been intelligent intelligence report in 1972 than ever before." Dean explained political intelligence as information on what Nixon opponents were doing, and as information about Nixon opponents who would compromise themselves and allow Nixon to embarrass or control them. Dean said that in spring 1972, Bob Haldeman gave specific instructions to Gordon Liddy to investigate George McGowen "It was basic insecurity by Mr. Nixon," he said, "and he thought it would make him." He said the last time they tried unsuccessfully to break into McGovern's headquarters was the first time they tried successfully to break into Democratic "Laddy and his friends tried several times to break into McGovern's headquarters," Dean said, "but someone was always there working late." The Democratic Headquarters were broken into, Dean said, because the deputy director of the re-election committee said, "Gordon, we need something to deal with the national problem we have going on," Mr. Trump said. He added his contribution to the Republican party). Dean said they returned for the second break-in because they had put a bug in the computer. The second bug in Democratic Headquarters—the one in Spencer Oliver's office—was a target of opportunity, Dean said. "This is what they were looking for when, they broke in," Dean said. He said Liddy told him, "I had another phone in my bag, and I saw another telephone, a cellphone." "They were in there fishing," Dean said. Safer mowers apt to cost more For the past four years, the Consumer Products Safety Commission has been developing a set of safety standards for power-driven lawn mowers. If the proposed standards are approved, the price of power mowers could skrocket. The proposed standards, which are still being developed, include: A DISCHARGE CHURT attached to the front of the mower to direct all discharge downward if a grass bag isn't attached to a mower. A foot guard in the rear of the mower to keep an operator's foot away from the blade. The fuel exhaust situated on the opposite side of the mower from the discharge chute because sparks from the fuel exhaust could ignite the grass-collection bag. "Until the commission really publishes something," she said, "I don't know Kathy Melcher, Community Services coordinator for the Safety Commission in Kansas City, Mo., said recently that they were now notbinding and incomplete. whether it's worth your while to pursue the information." MELCHER SAID THE proposals would be published in the Federal Register within the next several weeks, after which there would be a 60-day comment period. Once the comments are ready, the paper will then be ready for publication in the Federal Register as binding regulations. Manufacturers who didn't comply with the standards after a certain period—one year or more—would be subject to prosecution. "THE INTENT OF the regulations is fine," Dae Peavler, salesman at the Ed Marling Store, $25 Massachusetts St., said. "But I think we're going to legislate the price of the mowers up considerably, and not going to be much sicker because of this." Two area merchants expressed doubts about the proposed regulations. Kevin Harper, salesman at Deems Farm Inventor, Inc., 110th E. 23rd St., agreed. Harper said that mowers at Deems already included several safety features, including a foot shield and a model that stoops when the driver puts off the seat. THE LAWNBOY AND Toro mowers sold at Ed Marlain all have rear footguards, and side discharge chars. Grass bags are now made of a polypropylene material or nylon, which doesn't pierce easily. Peavier said. The safety commission's standards, which were modified over earlier proposals to cut down on cost, might include a technical regulation requiring the mower's engine to stop automatically when the operator takes his hand off the handle. "There isn't a whole lot you can do to make a push nower safer," he said. Harper and Peaver both said carelessness was the biggest cause of power that emerged. The proposed standards will affect both push and riding power mowers. After the proposals are published in the Federal Register, anyone can send comments to the Office of Transportation Commission, Office of the Secretary, 1111 St. N., W. Washington, D.C., 20270. A one-year-old survey on Watson Library indicates that Watson's physical organization may be a large cause of university伤寒 among University of Kansas student. The survey was conducted by David Campbell, assistant professor of psychology, and Ted Shlechter, teaching assistant in educational psychology and education environment affected us. Linus Orth, Bushton junior, also worked on the study. Mortar Board names initiates The society recognizes excellence in scholastic and extracurricular activities. Janiece Harran, Mason City, Iowa; junior; Linda Haynes, Warnerburg; junior; Kim Herren, Junior junior; James Hobbs, LaTeX professor; junior; Kim Herren, Prairie Village junior; Steve Leben, El Dorado junior; Kathy Mahoney, Overland senior; Christine Miller, Peoria, Ill. senior The organization was formerly a women's honorary society, but to comply with Title IX regulations, the organization began to initiate men last year. Mortar Board, a senior honor society, announced its new members for the 1977/78 year. The 19 new members of Mortar Board are: Sharon Anderson, Marion junior; James Cobb, Holton senior; Howard Collinson, Lawrence junior; Carolyn Costley, Stillwater, Okla., junior; Ann Gottberg, Salina minor Library's layout affects usage New initiates who were elected as officers for next year are Doug Hundley, vice-president, Wellington junior; John Mueller, secretary, Winfield junior; Laura Pinkston, historian, Overland Park senior; Deb Strehle, editor, Kirkville, Mo., mo.; James Williams, treasurer, Salina junior; Ann Warner, president, Hutchinson senior. Utility rates to be debated The Lawrence City Commission faces a lengthy agenda at tonight's meeting. Heading the agenda are requests for higher natural gas and water rates for rural areas. In addition, the second reading of a water and sewer rate increase is expected to be passed. The increases would go into effect on May 20 billing for utility customers. The commission is to be asked by the city utilities director for permission to raise the water rates charged to rural water districts from 52 cents to 60 cents for 1,000 gallons. A reduction cost for treated water has been given as the reason for the increase request. The event, called "Bounce for Boys," is a charity drive to benefit the Lawrence Boys' Members of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will bounce on a trampoline for 72 continuous hours today through Friday in front of Allen Field House. This is the third annual "Bounce for Boys." For the last two benefit bounces, the TKEs dribbed a basketball from Manhattan to Lawrence, a distance of 90 miles, raising $800 two years ago and $1,200 last year. TKE hopping for Boys Club This year their goal is to raise $1,000. Donations can be made at the bounce site or mailed to the Tau Kappa Epsilon house, 2431 W. 76th St., Chicago, IL 60610. "Bounce for Boys" is being coordinated by Mike Pierce and Steve Knail, Topika攀 SUA FILMS JR. Rene Clement, Winner of the Venice Film Festival—Grand Prize. Classical Film Series. Wednesday, April 23, 7-10pm. X5n FORBIDDEN GAMES (1952) IMMORAL TALES (1974) Dir. Walterian Borowczyk with Paloma Picasso. Winner of the Grand Prize at the London Film Festival. Festival/subtitles. Film Rated X-1-D/5 checked. April 18, 2017 @ 9:30 p.m. $1 The city commission gave first reading two weeks ago to a request to raise water and sewer rates. The sewer rate increases are to pay for increased operating costs at the new secondary treatment plant and the water rate increases are to begin payment on bonds for the new Clinton Reservoir water treatment plant. Dir. Robert Altman, with Paul Newman, Burt Lancaster, Harvey Keillet, Popular Film Series. April 30; 3:30, 7:00, 9:30, p.m. (3) BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS (1976) $4.50 A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 23rd St., Near McDonald's. Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily TRUCK-STOP WOMEN plus SHORT EXPLOITATION FILMS Midnight Film Series. Friday, April 29 & Saturday, April 30, 12:00 midnight, $1 Mr. Steak AMERICAS STEAK EXPERT Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Interested In Outdoor Recreation Committee Chairperson positions available in: —Wilderness Discovery —Mountaineering and Backpacking Canoe Club Orienteering —Recreation Fair Sign up for interviews in the SUA Office Interviews April 26 and 28 evenings. Sponsored By SUA - Laundry Facilities - Centennial Park - Complete Maintenance Service Convenience 9s Hillcrest Shopping Center • KU Bus Service Trailridge Apartments Trailbridge Apartments 843-7333 According to the study, infrequent users of the library greatly outnumber frequent and very frequent users (52, 17 and 31 per cent, respectively). 2500 W. Sixdk CAMBELT SAID HE and his partners weren't trying to push Washen to change, but were collecting data from objective sources for research. Campbell said, "A successful library is one that attracts people to stop there between classes. If the library attracted the students, there wouldn't be room for them now." CAMBELL SAID HE intended to continue to study the library's environment during and after the remodeling to deter how the changes affect the library's INKR. Campbell said, however, that he hoped he survey might be used when Watson was present. He said the project would Campbell and Shleicher also are involved in a study on how well students at KU understand the arrangement of materials and facilities in Watson Library compared with Kansas State University students who use their campus library (Farrell). From interviews, diary records kept by students of their trips to the library and direct observation of library use, Campbell and Shiehler concluded that designers can benefit from the presence of central facilities close to the main entrance as well as in close proximity to each other. THE STUDY INDICATED that when students changed activities in the library, for example, when they went from the study to the lobby, they had to change floors 65 per cent of the time. Campbell said he thought satisfaction would be greater if it were more convenient. Shechler said the results, which are expected within two weeks, should indicate how effective signs, pamphlets and library materials in helping students to use the library. For example, he said, during remodeling important departments of the library, such as public libraries, must be kept in order. Many of the ideas presented in the study, Ranz said, were already assumed to be true by the library administration, and some of them will be used in remodeling. James Ranz, dean of libraries, said yesterday that the biggest problem with such a move was that most library departments were large enough that it was impossible to have everything close to everything else. ANOTHER PROBLEM indicated by the study is that students dislike the crowding found in this building as much as they dislike its physical design. first floor, while other departments, such as the administration offices, will be moved to less valuable spots in the building. Administration offices are now near the front door and the circulation desk is on the second floor. MASS. STREET DELI INC. 041 MASSACHUSETTS WeFeature Strawberry Yogurt Sundae served with fresh strawberries, whipped cream & nuts. Strawberry Yogurt Cones Frogurt Frogurt gurt A Fantastic New Product for Lawrence FROZEN YOGURT FROGURT is the registered trademark of H.P. Hood Inc. Anything else is a substitute Interviews for SUA Fine Arts Committees '77-'78 This year SUA FINE ARTS has presented Louis Falcon Dance Company, Duck's Breath Mystery Theatre, SUA Picture Lending Library, John Tallleur Poster, Paul Lim's Homerica, Seminar on Drama Criticism, Joffrey II Ballet, Strong Lobby Conerts, Dames At Sea, Peter Handke's Calling For Help, USA Photo Contest, Student Print and Drawing Sale, and the ongoing Poet's and Writer'S Series and Kansas Union Gallery, as well as Accent the Arts. If you have suggestions for programs or would like to help, let us know! INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: Union Gallery Chairperson Poet's and Writer's Series Chairperson Picture Lending Library Chairperson Committee members to work with programs in all areas of the arts Wednesday, April 27, 7:30-9:00 p.m. Sign at the SUA Office. THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS ZETOD ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SATURDAY NIGHT MAY 7 - 8:00 p.m. An Entertainment Conspiracy Production An SUA Special Event 4 Tuesday, April 26, 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 Profit drives KUAC The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) leads a charmed life. It directs a large sports program at a major state university, using state facilities and the services of state employees. Yet the KUAC is not allowed to accept or no one except its board members. Led by this corporation, KU's athletic department has become a business venture, not a recreational outlet. In recent years, the KUAC's efforts have been a financial success story. An operating deficit of $250,000 has disappeared, Allen Field House has undergone an attractive face lift and the athletic program is firmly in the black. BUT THE FIGHT to stage a successful sports program while keeping the books balanced has been so intense that the KUAC often has crossed the line into the area of shady practices. One of the KUAC's most irritating and questionable habits has been closing its athletic board meetings whenever touchy issues promise to crop up. TO FALL UNDER Kansas' open meetings law, an agency must meet two requirements: It must be dispersing public funds and it must be a public agency. Schneider and an assistant said the KUAC failed to qualify on both counts. Curt Schneider, Kansas attorney general, told the Kansan last week that, in his opinion, the Kansan had on solid legal ground issued leases (as he said) on solid ethical ground is another question. The KUAC, Schneider explained, is a private corporation. It disperses no state money because its income is derived from ticket money and donations. Thus, it is neither a public agency nor a group handling public funds. Yet the KUAC is directed by athletic director Clyde Walker, whose salary is paid by the state of Kansas. It also oversees the matches, three of whom are paid by the state. THE TEAMS THE KUAC supports play their games in facilities built by the state of Kansas—often shutting out other, more "public" activities in the process. Most importantly, the KUAC operates a sports program for students attending a state university. Those students pay for tickets in year and in year out, and they should get openness, not just balanced books, in return. In part, the KUAC has provided that openness. Its meetings are, for the most part, open to the public. The KUAC is free to meet at unannounced times or to close its meetings to the press whenever it wants to deal in secrecy. THE KUAC REGULARLY has shut its doors to meet in "executive session" and discuss "sensitive" personnel matters and its budget. The result can be—and has been—a remarkable lack of concern for the student body or anyone else that doesn't shovel large donations into the KUAC furnace each year. Case in point: Earlier this school year, the KUAC quietly begin considering moving the KU-Missouri football game to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Arrowhead would be either KU's or Missouri's stadium, so the move would have been financially attractive. BUT FOR STUDENTS and Lawrence ticket holders, it would have been the sorrist kind of shortchanging. In addition to paying high season ticket prices, students would have been forced to drive to Kansas City and pay to park a car to watch a game they should have been able to walk down the street to see. Worse, some students who don't own cars might miss the game entirely. Loyal Lawrence ticketholders would have been in the same shoes. Someone who flees his job at noon to get to Memorial Stadium in Kansas City, could be able to drive to Kansas City by kickoff time. BUT NONE OF these arguments would have been aired hadn't a brave student member of the KUAC board made the plan public. The student knew what the reaction would be. More importantly, she knew that, regardless of the reaction, students and fans had a right to know what was being pondered in those field house offices. The struggle to mesh college athletics' two worlds—competitive and the financial—into an attractive and worthwhile package always has been a bitter one. College athletics, the last bastion of purity in the sports world, have drifted and closer to their money-corrupted sisters in the professional ranks. THE KUAC HAS had a hand in this trend. But the KUAC must someday awaken to the fact that it is not a corporation, in spite of what the law says. The KUAC has been given the duty of running an intercollegiate sports program at the largest school in Kansas. Ultimately, the sports program exists for students—not for alumni benefactors, not for wealthy fans, not for the KUAC board. And students have a right to know what is happening to the sports program that exists for their benefit. 1 yet. When they adjourn for the 1977 session, it's possible that they will have sold the state down the river. THERE ARE several possible reasons the appropriations bills were put off, some political and others legal. It does doubt that the legislature was ready to act on the bills. Also, important decisions on several conference committee bills have yet to be made. In a recent increase in the state tax on liquor, Conference committee bills are those that have been passed by both the House and Senate but which were not yet agreed to by both bodies. It remains unclear why the legislature's leaders decided to have a recess without having passed appropriations bill. The legislators abandoned a mountain of bills that make up 1978 fiscal year. Bills for a new medium security prison, school finance and a state minimum wage law are all awaiting final approval. BY POSTPONING consideration of appropriations bills until this week, legislative leaders might be using a tactic that would put Gov. Bennett in a most unusual position. One possible reason for the legislature's inaction might be its reluctance to send bills to Gov. Robert Bennett for a bill to reopen the government get. The governor has made it clear that he won't allow the state to spend more money than it has, a philosophy that the legislature, especially the newly elected House, refuses to accept. If the legislature doesn't pass the state's appropriations bills quickly enough, it might adhere to the governor's chance to respond to a possible veto by the governor. Therefore, either the governor would be forced to sign a bill that includes the entire bill would die. Knowing that the governor To prevent spoiling, rap the-rod, spoil-the-child philosophy. Party politics slow bill funding The Kansas state legislature reconvenes tomorrow without having spent any money at all The new generation of teachers knows that studies of violence in the classroom indicate that the best way to turn a behavior problem into a bigger one is to help him up a bit. They know violence in the classroom begets violence outside it. The Court ruled five-to-four that corporal punishment in U.S. public schools isn't a violation of a student's constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment. Good old Gertrude grertude is probably smiling down from Heaven now, applauding the governor of the U.S. Supreme Court. would be extremely reluctant not to sign a major appropriations bill containing AND SISTER Gertrude, a former teacher at St. John's elementary school in Orange, taught us any other way. She would be quick out that any one of her kindergarten students caught without galoshes on a snowy day, found smuggling candy from the cafeteria, did wolf speedily learn the wisdom of avoiding such heinous behavior; any student slapped around with a wooden paddle, tried to solidify his or possibly for the matter—or slugged across the face is fast to learn how it smarts to be knocked around. It needs to be right here; bestows have a certain educational value. It didn't for me, however. I never really knew what it was I did that incurred the good Sister's wrath. The case studied originated in Miami, where two 14-year-old students brought suit against a teacher who had spanned them in 1970 with a two-foot wooden chair. The court ruled the corporal punishment wasn't an interruption of the educational process, in effect giving the goahead to school administrators and teachers who feel that the students' lives miserable will do the students some good. I still wonder what I did to deserve her smashing left cross. I remember running home about noon, and looking up in my catechism to find out whether "Foreign-Eye-Substance" was an offense God gave to Jesus. He started thinking it must have been something else. Maybe I winked at her; understandable, Brent Anderson Editorial Writer MY KINDERGARTEN class was walking quietly down to the cafeteria. Good old Gertrude, she must have been 110 years old when he met me playing with my eyeball. I had something in it. She walked back to me to help, we took me in the tearful eye, then promptly belated me in the face. She next kid in line, who fell back into the kid behind him, and so on. The domino theory proved. Bill Sniffen Editorial Writer To the students of such fanatics, may I extend a warning: much political mileage from the issue as they can, no doubt. The Senate and the governor will have to be satisfied in knowing that, at least this time, they must take an ominous trend towards deficit spending by the Kansas legislature. Don't sneeze in your teacher's face. considering the boulder in my eye. Perhaps I coughed in her face. IN OTHER words, the recent Court ruling probably won't have that much effect on increasing student slappings and spanking ones one could consider a blessing for today's students. Of course, there always will be those who believe a good, swift kick in the posterior is the best way to control an unruly child. That's probably the reason they die. To them diehards, the laws of a breed, may I extend Sister Gertrude's posthumous support. MAYBE I sneezed. And now, the Supreme Court tells me Sister Gertrude was acting properly. Perhaps they, too, were schooled in the spare- authorization for funds for several state programs, the legislature might be able to include expenditures that it knows the governor vehemently opposes. The conflict between the governor and the legislature erupted when the legislature tries to override the governor's veto of a bill that would increase the state tax exemption from $600 to $750. **THAT TACTIC, which is in direct conflict with the spirit of our state's check and balance governmental system, reeks of failure. We have come to be representative of the 1977 legislative session.** Although it would be politically expedient for the governor to approve the increase, he has demonstrated the legislature most likely will try to override the veto Thur- tuesday, and that the House, controlled by the Democrats, will override the veto, the Senate probably will override the exemption will remain at $800. The Democrats will get as that such an increase would put the state on the road to financial insolvency. The governor has held firm against the personal increase, even though he knows it would be the popular thing to do. REFUSING TO worry about the state's financial situation. HEW slip hurts doctors HEAD 'ER ON INTO WASHINGTON, BILLY BOB I THINK WE SOLVED THE FUEL CRISIS! A PRESS spokesman at HEW explained defensively that Secretary Joseph Califano didn't intend to embarrass anyone, and didn't release the figures voluntarily. It appears that the figures were Freedom of Information Act became effective on March 12. A number of reporters had asked for the figures on Medicare payments to doctors. Califano therefore had no questions about the hungry reporters the figures for release on March 14. So it went, on down the incriminating list. The named doctors suffered immediate abuse. J. C. Prutt, St. Petersburg, Fla., sent the American Medical Association a sample of victims denounced him by a "medical parasite" and a "disruptive to the medical profession" who should make amends to "the those poor souls that you have robbed." Other doctors complained that the parents were also used data set them up as targets for usurpation and burglars. syndrome Garbage In, Garbage Out. A corrected list is now being prepared, and will be released as soon as it is ready. AS IT swiftly transpired, HEW's facts and figures were wrong. The errors weren't tew and small. The errors were numerous and massive. This was wholesale error -error on a grand scale -error to be copied by all of our artists, those identified with earnings of $250,000 or more, HEW had its facts wrong as to 14. That is an error rate of .875. A shortstop who muffen seven I say effectively labeled as distinguished from actually labeled, for the doctors have no legal recourse against them. If Medicare spokesmen acted with reckless disregard for the facts, which they did, this is tough stuffy; sorry 'bout that. The government has a kind of sovereign immunity in these matters. The computers' errors divine, human they were also divine. The release, to be sure, didn't use such verbs as "raked in" and "tipped off", but these were used in the data suggested I inevitably the data suggested that physicians and surgeons were profiling off a great, humanitarian program. This is not an interpretation. One cartoonist imagined two surgeons operating on a Medicare patient, "go on, Joe," said one, "down to the $5,000 layer." Besides, said the HEW spokesman, the error wasn't exactly human error. This was "computer error." The input was wrong. This is diagnosed in computer practice as the GIOG WASHINGTON - A month or so ago, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), released some patients with approximately 400 American physicians had ridden in more than $100,000 from Medicare payments in 1975, and 16 of the doctors had ripped off the insurances for upwards of $250,000. IN MORE THEN 100 cases, the HEW disclosures dealt not with individual physicians, but with groups and clinics. Starring Dr. Ransom S. Larson of New York doctor as No. 1, with earnings of $412,757; the figure was for a group of physicians. The same result actually was a group of four internal medicine specialists. A doctor in Rhode Island reportedly raked in $807,436 this year, including a member of a hospital. His The whole business is regrettable. The individual doctors are hurt. Their professions are broken again; nothing we unwitting conduits of error. HEW's reputation for credibility is damaged. Who will believe the next set of doctors to be wrong? It is sorry, but make no mistake about this; it will happen again. grounders out of eight couldn't stay long even in the bush leagues The American Medical Association managed to question 208 of the 407 identified physicians. It turned out that James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. personal Medicare earning: amounted to $625 only Gays' unhappiness self-imposed To the editor: Gay used to be a word meaning "happy." When the homosexual community adopted gay marriage, it was changed. It's now a label for some of the unhappiest people in the world and pull make them unhappy. many homosexuals argue, of course, that guilt is caused by an arbitrary standard of behavior which their surrounding culture. They say that they needn't regard an arbitrary moral standards, and that in fact being homosexual is no worse than being left-handed. It may be true that our society has many arbitrary moral standards, but our society draws its stance against homosexuality from an absolute moral standard—that everyone is equal. But the Bible not only says that homosexuality is wrong, it also realizes that like anyone else, homosexuals have a conscience that to some degree will tell them when they are doing something that others feel guilty. Their own consciences and thoughts make them feel guilty. The fears and doubts that homosexuals have within themselves, unless their consciences have already har- the torch be removed from the hand of the Statue of Liberty as a symbolic measure in the spirit of the nation's energy-saving consciousness. What's more, I would like to have her right arm, the one that now carries the torch, removed at the shoulder as a symbolic message concerning our role joining in the nation's energy-saving consciousness into joining it. ludicrous. We haven't been able to participate for 38 years, yet we don't know how long they have still grown tremendously. Does anyone seriously believe there is any danger of the Post milling? Or others being discontinued? these people have of public employees. Granted, being public employees we do have common interests. But so do businessmen, businessmen, and every other group. Our self-interests are no more imminent to you than yours are to us. Why the paranoia? I think one should look askance at any argument, especially one so close to me that it is hard to deep people full participation in the democratic process. Also, to compare civil servants to Chicago's public service department, a keeper keeps federal employees independent are the Civil Service Readers Respond Bob Rollins 140 Pawnee TO ZAIRE U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANT NON-LETTAI RUSH dened, are perhaps the least of their bad experiences. Once someone becomes aware of the homosexual subculture, he learns that the homosexual community is notoriously brittle and unstable. This isn't to say that homosexuals should be rejected. On the contrary, they need compassion more than most people. As a Christian, I haven't rejected anyone who life is now homosexuals, even though I dismay with their actions. And I can't sanction a society prejudiced or unfair toward any person, even if they have homosexuals. Heterosexuals can even be unfair if they shun homosexuality, but turn around and consider adultery normal. Homosexuals aren't the only people in the world who are unhappy, but they're the only ones convinced by other others that they're gay. Doug Lamborn Lawrence senior De-torch Liberty To the editor: I would like to suggest that Moreover, I think her crown should be unbolted and taken off to show that everyone, big and small, as President Carter said, must make sacrifices. And he should have rescueted to ressemble Miss Lillian, and a "spoonful of medicine" should be put in her remaining hand to remind us that even though we don't like it when it happens, we measure, Mother Government knows what's good for us. Of course, the symbolic Miss Liberty won't survive this climate. If she was a bad influence and that we will be much warmer in the wise and material bosom of during the long winter ahead. Jeff Mohr Lawrence junior Reasoning unsound To the editor: As a federal employee covered by the Act 17, you like to offer a job that is in line with his editorial. His reasoning contains several errors. The contention that 8.2 million civil servants must be protected to protect their jobs is Yes, Virginia . . . To the editor: laws, not the Hatch Act. The Civil Service Laws prevent politics from being considered in hiring, firing, and promoting. As a result the personnel of most federal agencies tend to be varied politically. The illusion is that Democrats hold—that we're all Democrats waiting to go out and march for Carter—is ridiculous. I just wanted to let you know that I was hitchhiking outside of town, and they picked up by Jim Morrison. He's alive, you know. He said the girl was somewhere north of town. Just thought you might be interested. Paul Ceruzzi Lawrence Graduate student THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN St K The St decided enforce campus Mike Ti said yes A Pacemaker award winner Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358 Althot has hain election don't st mittee's He sa sibiliteit Published at the University of Kansas daily August 17, 2014. Subscription by mail $5 a semester or $14 June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday. Subscription by mail $5 a semester or $14 June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail $5 a semester or $14 June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday. 66044. Subscriptions by mail $5 a semester or $14 June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $5 a semester. Mail to KU School of Public Affairs, 333 W. Third Avenue, New York, NY 10024. "The are the should with the TARA and beer to enfor Senate Managing Editor Greg Hack Campus Editor Stewart Brannan Editor Jim Bates Campus Editor *Litton Gwinn* Tarabá concern formuları the com- change "I TH groups" force th A Karat the next proved Memorize the wee The b which he anticipate SUA R recreates program SuA try travel pref defraq pr U1 The 1 "PG Every Sal Olea Deni" Polic much floor. Business Manager Janice Clements Pol KU I fire at evenin The 1 units fr arrived cleaned reporter A from the bt. The bt. The or will nowing e, they be an defict Kansas Tuesday, April 26, 1977 CHICAGO MILITARY n, Garn- it is now will be ready, the news wil be the the along in or runs who labeled with a hugging public being to have t do so e n e t h o s are no an yourns iania? I akance at by one so to dem n in the released as actually have no against them were addressed with the facts, s tough that. The kind of these our sons were also 5 Rollins Pawnee ... you know outside of him and gotorrison. He said nowhere might you student Student Senate wants KU election control The Student Senate Elections Committee decided this week that it wants the power to enforce rules and regulations for any campus group involved in Senate elections, Mike Taraboulis, a committee member, said yesterday. University Daily Kansan "The committee agreed that the elections are the Senate's responsibility and that it should enforce all regulations connected with them," he said. TARABOULOS SAID that in the past it had been vague about who had the authority to enforce regulations that pertained to the Senate elections. Although the Senate Election Committee has handled complaints concerning the elections, the Senate Rules and Regulations don't state that this is one of the commissioned matters. Tarabuós said. He said he wanted to make the responsibilities formal. Taraboulis said the rules and regulations concerning the elections would still be formulated by the campus groups and that these would have the power to change them, just enforce them. "I THINK IT WILL be a monkey off these groups' backs to have our committee answer." Also to be proposed is an amendment that would limit campaign spending by an individual candidate or a coalition of candidates for a Senate post to either $35 or three cents for each constituent, whichever is greater. he said. The committee will request the power in the hands of an amendment to the Senate Rules and Laws. The £5 is based on three cents for each constituent in the average-size schools, schools and colleges. THE CURRENT SPENDING limit is seven cents for each constituent, both for Senate candidates and candidates for student body president or vice president. The constituency commitment a spendio of 4800 for presidential and vice presidential candidates. The committee also decided to delete from the Senate Code a clause that states that groups shouldn't promote a carnival atmosphere in their campaigns. Taraboules had the clause *was vague because it did not state specifically what was required.* The recommendations will be reviewed at a meeting tomorrow of the Senate Rights Committee. Union budget to receive proposal of $2.4 million A Kansas Union budget of $2.4 million for the next fiscal year unanimously was approved by the University of Kansas Administration Corporation Board over the weekend. The board budgeted $25,000 for SUA, which has lost $26,801.88 so far this fiscal year. The allocation is expected to cover an anticipated loss for next year. SUA has lost money in the forums, indoor recreation, fine arts and Free University programs. The board recommended that SUA try to increase its profits from the SUA travel program by 5 to 10 per cent to defray losses incurred in other areas. The Union has a budget philosophy that Police suspect arson KU Police suspect arson in a trash chute in Eldsworth Residence Hall Saturday evening. Police said there was little damage but much smoke from the fire on the seventh floor. The building was partly evacuated, and units from the Lawrence Fire Department arrived soon after the fire was reported and not out the clue. No injuries were reported. all departments within it should be at least self-supporting if not bringing in a profit. Excluded from this philosophy are SUA and custodial departments, which maintain and custodial departments. George Segal & Jane Fonda At the meeting, Frank Burge, Union director, also reviewed plans for the satellite union, to be completed in 1979. The construction was under way by late summer. Problems in meeting the budget are anticipated to occur if the federal minimum wage law being considered is passed and a minimum wage greater than $2.50 an hour is established. The Union anticipates an 4% per cent increase in operating costs for next "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE' The board also reviewed a reco- mence to find ways of increasing non- essential pay, including fall, each full-time student will pay $2.50 of his activity费 as a user's fee; the car Burge said rebates for this period probably wouldn't exceed five per cent. Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:00 Finally, the board again read a committee report that recommended reviewing the budget for future periods. The budget is to be submitted for final approval by the Chancellor by May 1. Glenda Jackson, Sandy Dennis, Geraldine Page Granada 910-762-4300 Granada, CALIFORNIA "NASTY HABITS" 10 Academy Award Nominations Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" "BLACK SUNDAY" PG Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. at 2:30 "ROCKY" Eve 7/16 & 9/45 PC Sat-Sun. Hill 2:00 Hillcrest *Starring* YLVESTER STALLONE Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. 1:145 LOVELY LOVELEY. A RARITY. A POETIC THAT'S REALLY FUNNY" EANLYN FUNNY" Varsity TENNESSEE ... Tahoe College of Law Hillcrest "SMALL PC CHANGE" Eve, 7.20, 9.35 Sat. Sun 1:00 Hillcrest 'BREAKER BREAKER' CHANGE —Plus PG "SPECIAL DELIVERY" --vs. Sunset Mint in Tulsa, AZ. West on highway 84 Make $550 in 8 weeks Work for A.U.R.H. as a Summer Intern this summer. Applications at your Residence Hall desks and at the AURH office, 210 McCollum. Must have lived in Residence Hall before and be to halls for the 1977/78 school year. Application deadline May 2nd. AURH An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer URBAN PLANNING AT HUNTER Plus free room & board Fieldwork opportunities abound - in city and suburban planning agencies, in neighborhood groups, in community development Action oriented, Hunter's program grapples with social and economic problems and explores the areas of housing, fran- The unparment of Urban Affairs at Hunter College of the City university, 1300 E. 42nd St., year 50, credit program (learning MASTER OF URBAN PLANING) Extensive financial aid is available. Current costs are $750 a semester for City residents and $1,000 for non-City residents, plus For more information and admission applications write: Requirements are flexible and an able, diverse, and experienced faculty is ready to add guidance and direction to student goals. Director, Graduate Program in Urban Planning, COSTA DEL RIO On Campus Events Director, Graduate Program in Urban Planning Hunter College/ C.U.N.Y. 790 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10021 (212) 507-5594 TODAY: The AAPU EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE will meet at 11:30 in Alceve of the Kansas Union Cafeteria. The senior class will present a $1,000 check for the beginning of a KU Athletics Hall of Fame at 2 p.m. in the east lobby of Allen Field House. TONIGHT: Women in Communications, Inc. will sponsor a speech by HARRY JONES, KANSAS CITY STAR REPORTER and participant in the Investigative Reporters and Editors Arizona Project, at 7 in 205 Flint. The Film Group will present its own screening of the film *Bellmair*. BELLA AKIMADULINA, Russian poet, will read and discuss her poetry at 7:30 in the Union's Pine Room. The Humanities Lecture Series will sponsor H.WILEY HITCHOCK, professor of music and director of the Institute for Studies in American Music at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, at 11 in Auditorium. The KU CONCENTRATE BAND will play at 8 in the University Theatre. TOMORROW: CHARLES ELDREDGE, art museum director, will speak at the Faculty Forum on the new Spencer Museum at noon in the United Ministries Center. John F. Murphy, associate dean of law, will speak on INTERNATIONAL HISTORY and GLOBAL SOCIETY, and Timothy Krug, Hall's University Courtroom. THE German CLUB will show the film, Die Kugel, at 3:30 p.m. in 4002 Wescoe. Warren Legler will speak on "COLD MACHINES BECOME INTELLIGENT?" at the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Statutory Lectures in Medieval History, will speak on "VILLAGE AND TOWN IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND" at 7 p.m. in the Union's Room Room. In last Friday's Kansas bar survey, the Insight Lounge, 2205 Haskell Ave., was reported to "have a tendency to get rough on weekdays." According to Corp. Mike Reeves of the Law Enforcement Center, there have been no more police calls at the bar; there are fewer complaints, Reeves said, there have been fewer problems there than in previous years. Correction The Mount Oread Bicycle Club will sponsor a ride at 7.30 a.m. May I retract my bike? Riders will bicycle from South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets, in Lawrence, to the park. Bikers to retrace historic raid The 100-mile round trip is open to anyone older than 16. The entry fee is $1.50 at the SA office through April 27, and $2 at South Park the day of the ride. Refreshments and maps are included in the entry fee. G.Watson's HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 841-BEER Ladies Night Disco—8-12:15 On our 7' T.V. "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" 10:30 --vs. SUN TRAVE KANSAS CITY ROYALS CALIFORNIA ANGELS Monday night, May 9th $7 cost includes-round trip trans., reserved seat ticket, beer and pop provided deadline April 29th. Sign up at the SUA office. Interviews for the 1977-78 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Wednesday, April 27. Please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time if you are interested in film programming. Chairperson Interviews SUA Films Summer Films Chairperson Positions Available: Popular Films Chairperson Classical Films Chairperson Independent/Experimental Films Chairperson Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror Films Chairperson Midnight Movies/Special Films Chairperson Public Relations Committee Summer Employment Royal Prestige needs students to supplement summer work force $250^{00} per week For further info., come to: Student Union—Oread Room Tuesday, April 26, 12:00 or 2:00 CLIP OUT THIS COUPON 2 $200 00 CLIP OUT THIS COUPON 2 1/4 Chicken Dinners for $200 With Coupon Offer good thru May 1, 1977 at Pirate's Cove Pirate's Cove 6th and Maine 3 Round Swiss Tournament Open to students & faculty Trophy will be awarded to first place winner. K. U. Chess Club Tournament Saturday, April 30 9 a.m.—8 p.m. Walnut Room, Union $1.00 entry fee KU Sign up in SUA office or at tournament from 9-9:30 a.m. For further info: SUA office 864-3477 f Pre-Nursing Club O will have a Nurse Practitioner speaking on DEATH. April 26 at 7:00 p.m. International Room Kansas Union 6 Tuesday, April 26, 1977 University Daily Kansan Jinx beware: Clarke's hot By ANDY RILEV Sports Writer Bill Clarke has been waiting patiently. And he's been winning a lot while waiting. But for the time being, he's still waiting and wondering whether there could be any truth to all that stuff about jinxes, spells and boxes. What he wants is a tennis title—specifically, he wants the edible title of the Big Eight championship. He has failed to win in three tries, but finished second last time. "I've won some bigger tournaments in the past, but I've gone into the Big Eight as the first." "My goal is to win the Big Eight," Clarke said, "but it's my jjms tournament. I've won two in one." CLAREK SAID it would be different in the Big Eight tournament, which is next month in Oklahoma City, because the Jayhawks had a good season. "They haven't had it in recent years," Despite his problems in past Big Eight tournaments, Clacka is a later-far from being considered one of the great players. Clarke, a 22-year-old senior from Lewes, became the No.1 single player in the league last season. sophomore, and he still is the top player now in his final season. He has been a consistent winner as the No. 1 player and team leader. Last year, he posted a 24-5 record in his singles matches, and he to a slow start this spring, having incurred a cut. DESPITE the slow start, Clarke's game appears to be back in top shape--his record is down. Clarke said he started hot last spring and cooled off late in the season. "My game is moving up," he said. "I started poorly. I lost four matches at the beginning of the year, but now my game is better than last year's, and maybe even better than last year." "I hope to reverse that this year and play in towards the end of the season," he said. "If I can keep up with his opponents should suffer. At 6-4 and 200 pounds, Clarke is a powerful player with a strong arm." HIS STYLE of play was good enough to earn him two Kansas high school state tennis championships while playing for Shawnee Mission South. He also has been invited to Forest Hills and has competed in NCAA championships. Clarke made it to the NCAA meet two years ago with doubles partner Tim KU athletes, coaches to be honored in hall Outstanding past and present University of Kansas athletics and coaches are about to continue their journey. That is the plan announced by Clyde Walker, athletic director, who has envisioned such a hall since taking his post in 1973. Phase One of the project-honoring individuals—is now under way. Phase Two—honoring team achievements—is still in the discussion stage. Walker said that completion of the project probably would take at least two years but that parts of the ball would be opened during the interim period. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Milwaukee W 7 L 601 Pet. GB Baltimore W 7 L 589 GB Riverfront W 8 L 360 GB Toronto W 8 L 471 GB Detroit W 8 L 472 3/4 Detroit W 8 L 327 3/4 Carrollton W 10 L 388 3/4 West Chicago 10 5 643 — Oakland 10 6 623 — Wichita 10 6 623 — Minnesota 10 7 588 % Minnesota 10 7 588 % California 7 7 458 % California 7 7 458 % Tampa 7 12 385 % Toronto 4-5, Boston 34 New York 9, Baltimore 6 Oakland at California, n Only games scheduled CAMDEN Toronto (Harlem) 1-4 (Gardenia) 0-2 Clapham (Harlem) 0-4 (Gardenia) 0-2 Glencore (Harlem) 0-4 (Gardenia) 0-2 New York (Halton) 10 at Baltimore (May 13) Oakland (Halton) 8 at Oakland (May 13) Oakland (Halton) 8 at Oakland (May 13) | | F | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | St. Louis | W 9 | L 6 | .401 | - | | Montreal | 9 | L 6 | .380 | - | | Pittsburgh | 7 | L 6 | .358 | - | | Pittsburgh | 7 | L 6 | .328 | 1 | | New York | 6 | L 8 | .429 | 1 | | Philadelphia | 6 | L 8 | .417 | 2 | | Philadelphia | West | | | | | Los Angeles | 12 | 2 | .500 | - | | San Antonio | 8 | 2 | .500 | - | | San Francisco | 7 | 10 | .500 | 4 | | San Diego | 8 | 10 | .444 | 4 | | Houston | 6 | 9 | .500 | 4 | | Seattle | 9 | 10 | .444 | 4 | **Yesterday's Games** Sl. Louis at Chicago 9, Illinois 8 Louis at Detroit 9, Illinois 8 Garden games Tuesday **Today's Games** Philadelphia (Christmas) 11 at Philadelphia (Candice 1) Cincinnati (Alabama 11 at Alabama (Nikko 2) Los Angeles (San Diego 11 at San Diego (Shar坪 2) Los Angeles (San Diego 11 at San Diego (Shar坪 2) THE SENIOR class will present a check for $1,000, designated for aiding the establishment of the Hall of Fame, to Walker at 2 p.m. today in the east lobby of Allen Field House, which is where the hall will be located. Walker said the purpose of the ball was twofold. "We want to honor the many outstanding athletic personalities for their contribution to our sport," Jayhawk Newsletter. "Similarly, we want to recognize the many team achievements that have brought national and, in some international recognition to the University." "WE ALSO want to develop a display that our many UC faithful, as we offer others, will use in their classes." Walker said criteria for membership for both individuals and teams were now under consideration, and he expected that the team would be established within a month. Valentine makes unofficial visit Darnell Valentine finally chose to come to KU but he didn't come to play basketball. Valentine, a 6-1 guard from Wichita Heights High School, made an unofficial visit to KU on the weekend to see his older brother, Kevin, a sophomore student, and to watch the Kansas Relays. He did happen to watch the Relays competition with KU basketball coach Ted Walsh. The sat in in Division II by Welker, who was also above Memorial Stadium. But Valentine had little to say to newsmen who asked where he intended to sign a national letter of invitation. "I'm GOING to take my time," Valentine told them. "I'm going to listen. It might be two weeks, it might be two months—it matters. I'm not going to rush for anyone." Valentine, who led his high school team to an undefeated season and the Kansas 5-1 title last year, has made official visits to Washington and Ohio, where that he was considering a visit to Michigan. Although Valentine hasn't ruled out signing with KU or several other schools, he has eliminated one school from his list of possibilities. Heidkat Clarke said that a win over a University of Southern California doubles team was one of the most gratifying for him because it burt Sullen Cal's chances as a "I just don't care for K-State." he said. Of course Clarke would like to return to the NCAA tournament, which will be May 14. The NCAA tournament process has become more exclusive. The number of entrants has been cut in half to 64. Bids for the national meet will be sent out May 18, the day before the conference "THEY'VE MADE it a lot harder to get selected for NC'S," Clarke said. "But the way I see it, I've still got an awfully good impression of it. I'm pretty confident I'll be invited." But for now, Clarke has numerous opponents to face, and undoubtedly several victories to chalk up in the coming month as he tries to win the national title. A Bie Irigh title. That's the one he wants. Netters face NU ★ ★ ★ TENNIS The KU men's tennis team will play its final home match of the season when the Jayhawks meet the Nebraska Cornshuskers at 2 this afternoon on the Allen Field House Senior Bill Clarke, who is in the run-off for the Big Eight No. 1, singles title, will be playing his last home match. Clarke's record this season is 20-6. KU has a 15-11 mark and is the favorite in today's match. KU defeated the team on Sunday. Senior Bill Clarke is as mean to his opponents as he is to the ball Child photo by MARIAMME MAIROIM Emporia State will test pitchers By JASON NUSS Sports Writer The Kansas Jayhawk pitching staff will be tested again this afternoon when the Jayhawks host Emporia Kansas State College in a doubleheader at Quigley Field. The games, which are the last bone conceptions of the season, will start at 1:30 p.m. KU pitcheres are ineffective this weekend in a four-game series with Nebraska. The Cornhuskers collected 51 hits off eight KU pitcheres and defeated the Jayhawks two out of the four games. KU is 19-16-1 for the year. Emperor State is an explosive team, and boasts a team batting average above .300. The Hornets swept a doubleheader from KU last Tuesday. VESTERDAY, EMPIORIA State took another doubleheader from Kansas State. The Hornets' record is now 32-5, and their last defeat was three weeks ago at the Kansas Tournament when the Jayhawks beat Empioria State in the semifinals, 7-2. "Emporia State is one of the best small college teams around." KU coach Floyd Temple said recently. "They can hit the ball and are a well-coached team." Temple has selected Terry Sutcliffe and Clay Christians to start against Emporia State. Both pitchers started in Sunday's doubleheader against Nebraska. SUTCLIFFE (4-2), pitched three innings and allowed three earned runs and nine hits. Christensen (3-5) was charged with five runs and gave up six hits in 8-23 innings. Lee Ice continues to pace the Jayhawks offensively, ice leads the team in hits with 44 (4 short of a single season KU record) and average with a 364 mark. Amy Gilmore, Ron MacDonald and Carl Heinrich also are hitting above 300. Gilmore leads the teams in RBIs with 25. MacDonald has scored 27 runs, tops on the team, and Heinrich leads in doubles with eight. KU IS NOW 5-3 in Big Eight Eastern fidence, and momentum before we go up to Missouri." After the Missouri series, KU will travel Manhattan for doubleheader with KU (1-0). "Our pitchers must gain some con- The Green Pepper Country Kitchen Pirates Cowe The Green Pepper Country Kitchen Pirates Cove Green Pepper Country Kitchen Pirates Cove Pitcher Dave Rusch said the Emporia State doubleheader was a key series for the team. Division play. The 'Hawks are in second place two games behind Missouri. KU will travel to Columbia this weekend for a four-game set. TAU TKE Buy 1 Get 1 FREE. No Restrictions Use as Many as You Wish in Any One Visit LIMITED NUMBER AVAILABLE APRIL 26-29 ALLEN FIELD HOUSE CALL 9 A.M. TO 12 OR 5 P.M. TO 8 P.M. 841-7620 Bar-B-Que Pizza Inn Sandy's Drive-in Taco Tico G's Bar-B-Que Pizza In TAU KAPPA EPSILON "Bounce for Boys" 77-hour marathon trampoline bounce to benefit LAWRENCE BOYS CLUB Sandy's Drive-in Taco Tico G's Bar-B-Que Pizza Inn Sandy's Drive-In RESTAURANT FOOD BARGAIN Over $ ^{s}40 $ in 2 for 1 restaurant foods for only $ 3^{95} $ RESTAURANT CLUB EXCLUSIVELY FOR STUDENTS interested in a career as a PHOTOGRAPHER? IF SO, WE ARE INTERESTED IN YOU! We need photographers with a sound understanding of the fundamentals of general photography. We'll train you completely for our custom portraiture of sorority and fraternity members on college campuses. All equipment and supplies are furnished. Extensive travel is required. Only mature, responsible individuals capable of producing above average results need apply. IF SO, WE ARE INTERESTED IN YOU! Interviews are going on now for several positions opening this May. For more information contact the PhotoJournalism Dept, Placement Office on campus, or write directly to us: a AMERICAN COMPOSITE CORPORATION P.O. Box 19672 Kansas City, Mo. 64141 (816) 531-2702 Sen on rec --- Accommod adve are offered sex, color. BRING AL 15 words fewer Each add word . AD DEA to run: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday ERRORS The U than 1 ances materi. --- Canoe student mile, 4-6 available Sparrow on hgwa 456-8371 3-piece Rly $43, n Mass. in 1 FOUND Found charge days. simply at 884- UDK BU 111 Flint Reserve 1 or meedit too large Kitchen the new Vermont. 1 and 2 Upton, u. Aparine Frontier Frontier Studies, with aust. farmhouse farmhouse dove po- perated Reduce range 841-2657 For apartments or 842 Subleave summer apartment Subleave Traillite AC on the largely I Tuesday, April 26, 1977 SenEx policy on attendance reconsidered 7 The attendance policy for student members of SenEx probably won't include a specific number of absences allowed before a member is replaced, Reggie Robinson, chairman of the Student Senate Rights, and Jennifer Negosiis-Neisponsibility Committee, said yesterday. The SenEx attendance policy is being reconsidered this week by the committee after the originally proposed policy was approved by the Senate for further consideration. THE ORIGINAL POLICY would have allowed six absences from executive Robinson, who was asked by the committee to draft the second attendance policy proposal, said it wouldn't propose a change to the program because some senators, said six was too strict. Instead of a set number of absences allowed before a member is removed, there might be a set number of absences allowed before the member is reviewed by StudEx. committee meetings before a member was replaced. doesn't, he said, and StudEx would have the power to review and remove SenEx members who missed more than the allotted number of absences. StudEx would review members because it meets during the summer and the Senate Last summer some student SenEx members didn't attend the meetings "THE GRADUATE STUDENT senator attended the meetings but the two other members attended irregularly," he said. "This was unfortunate because SenEx is the most important University body senators can be appointed to." Robinson's proposed attendance policy University Daily Kansan The rights committee also will draft a bill allowing student SenEx members who weren't re-elected to the Senate to remain as ex-officio members of the Senate. They would still have full voting privileges on SenEx. up to will be presented to the committee tomorrow night and should be acted on by the committee. A controversy arose in February at the last Senate meeting presided over by Steve Owens, ex-student body vice president, on whether student members of SenEx and the University Council who weren't resected to the Senate should be members of the Senate until May when their SenEx and University Council membership ended. Bill Blessing, Kansas City, Kan., seni- on Don Green, Abelle sophomore, and Jim Willis, Salina junior, were three senators who weren't reelected to the Senate but whose terms on the University Council and SenEx didn't end until May. OWENES SAID SENATORS couldn't retain their Seat sensors, but he was overweight. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dallary Kannan are offered to all students without barriers to education. BUILDING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILLH BALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES to run Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 4 p.m. Wednesday 3 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. one two three four five time times time times 15 words or Each additional word $ . 00 $ 2.25 $ . 20 $ 7.30 $ 3.00 01 02 03 04 05 06 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 email to the UDR business office at 843-5858. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 804-4358 ENTERTAINMENT 3-piece Ralan plant stand, with planters, normal height. In the Cascade, 4-26 Mass in the Cashbox. Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special trips include two 4-hour boats $30 per person. Other trips include a 4-hour boat trip $60 per person. Shore excursions include Hawk Camp Loop Route (2 miles north on highway 10) 30 Tableau, Oltownah 74464, (4 miles south on highway 10) 30 Tableau, Oltownah 74464. FOR RENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 600 guests are invited to arrive at a舞会, floor dance, Kiltleen and bar facilities located. Located in the new location of the HALL of FAME 624-8604 for information. 5-13 Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, nets, p&s 875-767 tf t and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 835-9597 Make your plants live. Applications are now giving fast for both the tour and pampering experience. For more information, call (212) 536-3900. Frontier Redirect -above term lease available. Redirect from Frontier to a private study. With study. Indoor pool room -chapel carpet pool -diagonal -paint -country zoning -furnished furnished and unfurnished to $125. Call 860-735-4900. Gatehouse apartments - Cell Broker new, Summer 2015. 89th Street North, 36th Avenue, all Gatehouse apartments Call 894-762-1410 Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid, on camera. Included are 1970s car, 1975 kitchen, 1980 bath and come to me at 63-693 or come to me at 63-693. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now hosting for fall, call 718-562-3400. Book online 8:00 to 5:30 Monday-Friday, 10:44 Saturday New 1 bedroom apartment being built for fall on campus, great location by the stadium. Call #213-604-7500. ROSAELA HOTEL, Harbor, Kansas 67558. The hotel is located in the heart of Downtown Kansas City. **Book now** or **com- prise** a 10% discount. **DAY AWAY MAY-LIARAY DAY** **5 days per week** Sublease for, summer-furnished 2-bedroom apartments; dvlag carpet, pool, reason rentals. COMFORTABLE sublet apartment available *R*-reduced summer rates: Two-bedroom, A/C 5 to 10 min, modern kitchen, sunny balcony, carpeted laundry, quiet, neighbors 4-8 ft. 3-bedroom, 1/2 bath towhouse for sublease. Will discount lease $500. Call M81-5697. 5697 reduced rates. Walk to campus. Refrigerator. eat, oven, food. Dip dish. Wickerboard. 81-2607 81-2608 Subleaving one-bedroom, Mark II apartment for summer. One block north of north Call 866-570-4321. For summer or year- Lease-house 1-3 bedroom single room with kitchen, kitchens 842-9971 4-26 842-9971 4-26 Sublease for summer - 2 bedroom townhouse at Traithridge that will readily accommodate 3 people. AC, on bus route, fenced in patio, individual car entrance. Rentals reduced by large rate. Phone 841-922-04. 4-28 Flush, one of a kind 4-bedroom; 3 story townhouse. Available mid- May Call 842-6030- 5-5 Must make suctioned 3-bedroom, 2-bath town house, available at half of May free. Gourmet, 4-182, 7-277 Studio audition to mulebase Mid May through August. Complete with 3D lighting & sound. B41-831-711. 4-28 Competitive household has rooms for rent at rentals, up to $150 a month and utilities, 842-309 or Linda 864-294. 4-28 Wish to inquire with 2-bedroom apartment, air- conditioned, in the same building. Call 814-2954. APARTMENT? Nicely furnished, one-bedroom apartment for rent in East Village, very nice villa. Welcome to Excellent House. Welcome to Graduate student student to share great house with female student $12 a month per person. Master's degree required. For people for $250 plus 2-3 usable. Prerefer female, to apply only to Indiana, No. 24. B-4, except Monday. Availible May 4. The number 3 bedrooms 2-bathrooms at 12th and 13th floors. Apartment No 1. Stop call at 908-658-7788. Sublease for summer, 4-5 bedroom house, close to campus, call 843-5044 4-27 Sublease - Trailroad Trucker 3 bedroom 2; central air condition, carport 4 service, call 841-7244. One bedroom furnished apartment to inhabit summer- near campus and downtown. 4-27-27 4-27-28 Sublease for summer one bedroom apartment, formatted, A/C, pool. available May 15, 1910s, $80 per month. For summer, site studio equipment, good location, all utilities paid $100, 841-6836 after 5. Call (841) 226-2818. Summer sublease. Trailrider three bedroom suite with outdoor patio, 825 sqft, $295/month. 914-765-2054 after 5 p.m. Sublime Park Z2 25 bedrooms, full kitchen, bedroom, two bathrooms to room to rename 8292, call 411-512-3780 FOR SALE Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELL AUSTRALIA ELECTRIC 835-9000, 9000 W. 6th. Western Civilization Nosis—Note on Sale! Make sure one is out! 1. As study guide, 2. For Classification, 3. For Exam preparation, 4. New Analysis of Civilization — available now at ATT Coffee Store 1976 Friarbird Flexible, every available option, intermediate condition, light blow with honey – 128 – 150 We are the only Full Line Franchised Crowd dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Alabama. We must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, microphones at Audio Systems, 9th Street, Rhode Island Lawrence teachers must all 1274 mobile home, 64x12ft bedroom, full baths, fortressed yard, building materials and equipment, amenities and washer and dryer. Attached and fenced area. Available 8-4pm, on Tuesdays. Pinterest 2323, lloyds 2122, 1132 4-29 72 VW 411 wagon, automatic radio, new Yest- erday carriage, very good condition. B4-26 4-26 Wedding and graduation gift ideas. Creative design of jewelry and basket items at Beijeng 4-26 Records (over 200) in good to excellent condition. Diana, soundtracks. Truncktas, Santina. CSN ZYAR, and more in the library. Meet with us at music for birth, chats, tables, bricks boards, clocks, paintings, photos. 841-319-6. Keep saying. Leave messages 4-26 1972 Finl. 124 sport scops, 65,000 good trees, air conditioner, full-size dishwasher, hairdryer, have name and number, 4-26 1966 Pv. Valentl 3-paper manual, 6-yr. Cap-del- partment transportation, 842-7228. See G. in am. and G. in suprafiguration. 2. Electro-Voice speakers $25 each, Mango XT 3. EPS Speakers $19 each, Bose 40W High- ground Gold Pipe Wired $78 Call 81-643-3500 Excellent, 1973 Honda 250 Motorcycle, worth more than $425. John 463-2877 4-26 TV—ICAI 27 A and white and black Console, real wood desk, 22" TV, Bluetooth, FM radio, FM-CANette car audio, 741-226 4-726 Deluxe elevated watershed in beautiful wood frame with handmade, burgundy, brass plinth, with 12-foot-high, curved roof. $475 $279 Parchaei 914 (170) $2,200. Call: (913) 233-707-4 427 Parchaei 913-233-707 at 6:00 Brand new 35 mm. Pentex KM camera with full warranty. $150,843-4548 4-27 64 Ford Van, fair condition, needs some work, 62 Ford Van, $125 or best offer, 84-6416 4-27 1974 Kawasaki 750-H2T -Paste production cycle made in condition, condition 1400 miles, cycle 380 miles. For Sale—Alloy price vegetable, call Steve at 841-5600 4-26 IVAN'S 66 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" For Salt—Artley flare in excellent condition. 428 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat 8-8 Sun. 74 125 Sundaki Must sell will best offer Call 841-1210 4-28 Biggest sale ever at RAY AUDIO, KLH. 32 Sale price $49.99 for a 10-year lease, A-R-5 Sells $105 each or $125 each. A-R-8 Sells $160 each or $185 each. A-R-10 Sells $200 each or $230 each. A-R-12 Sells $250 each or $300 each. RAY AUDIO 2 in one box. The Little Booklet has The Big Sales and HI- dge Quality Products. 1970 WW Stat management, overhauled, new tires, 1976 WW Stat management, overhauled, new tires, maint sell, ask about $85. 843-415-4-28 www.wwstat.com 843. 9891 For Sale -1711 VW coupe Super Beetle 4 mph, bright yellow, low miles, muffs 842-415-6089 For Sale: 1600' VUW Bug auto St. A nice car, Asking $500, 842-410-0 MUST SELL: **Electronic offer presents with celebrate** one-time one-year $1900 fee (will finance) #46-3218 and $1900 fee (will finance) #46-3219 RAY AUDIO has the full line of Advent and Advent Specials from $40. Last week we had a labe on Advent upgrades from $40. We have now had a labe on Advent upgrades come in and be presently unruptured. 15 E. Bmh off main. The Little Stereo Swarsh. 25 E. Bmh off main. The Little Stereo Swarsh. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIAL! Use Until April 15, 2014. Applicable to an ATC-17C Prev APC and D10P APC or D10P Prev APC. BALLOON RIDES - Fly the skies over Lawrence a bluffiness at airblower blower by a cren- tate. 1971 Pontiac Catalina, 62,000 miles, everything in perfect condition, 840-6559 (affternas), 6-209 *Auction* 1971 Karmann Glaa Class, very nice condition through 30 years with sport interior apart from a double dinail lateral door, shockocks, many other parts recently replaced. TWO MOVE. M2W F. 262-0898, Kawaii Glaa 2500. Fone 2500. 68 Rammer 4-door, PS, PB, fairly good, condition, needs batteries; $200, $145-$265 after 5 p.m. MUST SELL. 3-speed bicycle portable stereo and music system. 2-in-1 speaker unit. Items. Riding 811-4538. 4-27 Panasonic turbillable, must sell only two weeks cronically and original packaging ejectors 641-0193 Must sell because of leaving KU. WV-bug-709, execution ecu, 0 to 50,000 miles, $70 or $80 per mile. 1972 Vega GT, Aptos, £600 meal, $600, B42- 0760 avenue aid for Vicky, V4-29 Gibon ES353, Rinkenbacker 12 string. Sonn Seepelt w/ s74. Loutsen, Loutsen X 16. X 16 string. Sonn Seepelt w/ s74. Loutsen X 16. X 16 Beautiful acoustic guitar with pickup. only 46 purchase. call Mike B128-2298 or 512-284-3287 Must sell. 70 Kenneri; 54,000 miles; 35 kwhy; 26 km, excellent; condition new, clutch baby. *1800-2499* MUST SKILL. 1721 Valiant mobile home. 12" X 8". Call 643-59428 after 6:48. on weekdays 4-8, 9-19 Antique Moroccan Carpet, desert province, best offer, 842-1855 4-29 HELP WANTED Avon open territory in Lawrences. Even if you have been waiting, you'll probably soon be able to purchase a world famous Avon book on the shelf. **Local Late Deliveries**, must know area well; be familiar with delivery routes; give daily call, Pay 2-11, 2-8 p.m. on weekdays. *"Student," 15 telephone recognitions for new *"Lawrence Portrait Club." No experience required Good salary, and bonuses. A.M. and P. and call. Call 9-12, 9-4, and 8-0. 4-26 841-762 "Summer Employment" afterfeat and evening show. DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS AND ASSISTANT TO THE DEAN SCHOOL OF LAW UNIVERSITY. Dedicated to the promotion of financial aid, related matters. Possible responsibility includes providing full-time, year-round appointment. Required bachelor's degree, and experience in full-time, year-round position. Required bachelor's degree, and experience in full-time, year-round position. Preferred experience in relevant areas. Position offered to $1,400 per month expected to be $1,600 to $1,700. Position offered to $2,500 per month expected to be $3,000 to $3,500. May 18 Submit request to Dean Martin B. Dickinson, Jr., School of Law at University of Georgia. Email Opportunity. Affirmative Action Employer Qualified and Needed. Waitress Well established restaurant and club summer and fall. Fairly excellent extenuated. 841-386-588 TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN Drive-In Clinic for most imported cars 500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444 YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 15 East 4th, 841-6256 I am interested in hiring food service superviseurs, both part time and full time. We have many superviseurs. Great pay and benefits. Send application. Sending application. Schunnum, 719 Main, Lawrence, KS 4-29 Undergraduate teaching assistants in chemistry, biology, and geography taught during 1977 and 1982. Appreciation and supervision of Chemistry 118, 164-825, or 636-627. STEDPEN Normally $600 per week. QUALIFICATIONS WALLED and depth of knowledge in chemistry as indicated by job description and by teaching ability as indicated by experience. INTERNET ACCOMMODATIONS INTEGRATED Interested students should contact Dr. J. K. Lee 224 Mallott before May 15, 1977 The University of Michigan offers an affirmative action employer and encourages inclusion from women and members of all groups. 4-27 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. Royal Precinct teaching work, including 40 hours per week; for further information contact the Education Department. Now taking applications for summer help. Apply in person; Dawgous, 644 Mar. 611-645-327, 4-27 NEWER JOI, SOLN 18466, MASS. NY, NEW TUMMER STATE AVE., 32ND ST. WATERMARK, N.Y. RELOCATES TO: 447-922-7500 FOR INTER- NET USE. Hostess, fine area restaurant and shift, preface over 21, patio event, evening arrivals. Oasis 631 854-726-0098. **STUDENTS--Summer, employment. Plebrickon Inc. is now taking applications from students who want to work as safety guards in the greater RCA area. You qualify with a Transportation Safety degree (traffic violations excluded), have transportation experience, and are 4-8 p.m., 10:02, 10:30, or 10:60 p.m., 10:02, 10:30, or 10:60 p.m., 10:02, 10:30, or 10:60 p.m., 10:02, 10:30, or 10:60 p.m., 10:02, 10:30, or 10:60 p.m., 10:02, 10:30, or 10:60 p.m., The Department of Music Performance seeks a piano teacher performance position in New York City, NY. 75% Visiting Assistant; Professor, $5,000-$6,000 year, master degree prep; graduate and graduate plus departmental positions. 25% paid and resume to Kenneth Smith, Charles Murray Hall, University of Kansas, 66405长沙; Murray Hall University of Kansas, 66405长沙; equal opportunity affirmative action employer. Qualified men and women of all races are urged. LOST AND FOUND Unique selection of tins and bracelets At BENGA, 2003 Mass at the Cathedral 4-26 Lost-small black and white toen cat wearing white flea claw. Call 622-3522 after 5:45. p. 426 with white coat. Can #162 arrive at 9 p.m. Found a set of Chrysler car keys at 1200 and a set of BMW car keys at 1300. Found a set of Chrysler car keys at 12th and 12th Louisiana. Call 842-0548 at 5 p.m. Elizabeth J. Bowers call 842-5081 to claim your join price 4-26 Least Leather cigarette case and power lighters. Tuesday. April 16 Will glimpse other contender's details. Wednesday. April 17 Lest-set of keys with black uint strip and military tag; attached. Beware, center armament. FOUND- key ring with four keys Friday in front of Strong. Call 614-6394 4-27 Found - Texas Instrument J Calculator in Brown Tower and Subway Station 4-27 680 to call it Lost, whoever found my notebook in Weston- will give reward. Melissa 814-2771 4-25 Found... $25 in a small red and purple hard card has the word "PENNY" on it. The front of the card... 62-8900 Again, ask of four keys, leather strap says, "Lot Keys, desperately needed. Call 811-423-6700." Lost: Gold motorcycle helmet with dark stripes, about 4 weeks ago by Wereira R. Z (801) 267-9350 NOTICE RABATE-Learn the ancient secrets of this masterful conditioning and team effort Defense Systems. This course is designed to help you understand the Pier1 imports 8th & Mass. Downtown Honda Cycles Harley-Davidson Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. and 10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday Virginia 1811 W. 6th 843-3333 Air condition your feet! Flags: $1.75, Bengal, 800 Miles in the Cadabu. 4-26 Graduate's plan now for cover and photo books. Two 5x7 books, each $249; 3x10 books, each $429. 82-279. Don't miss the coffee and tea at the Sting Sloppy Ice. Wed, April 20 to Wed, April 26. BE AWARE: APRIL 30 KANSAS UNION 4-26 You're invited to KJHF's Second Annual Open House Friday, April 29th from 8 p.m. to 5 p.m. EAT TACOS and every college credit, not in Law- eries, but exotic Mice. Too for Info on summer language program in Guadalajara. Office: Spanish Department or Foreign Office. 5-2 MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Atchee at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Crier. Acie is available from 8 a.m. to 5 a.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 9 a.m. PERSONAL Gw Counseling Service, Call 812-7505, 8:10 p.m. federal personnel. For solicitations, call 812-7505. Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of dementia. For help or advice, 812-743-5016 or 812-743-5018. 812-743-5019 Why would $8 food benefits on a transplant for the Home Health Agency? Home Health Agency - NO THE MEN MUST PAY TENSION - building their third annual PA FIELDHOUSE how-to program in All-Palouse Field House to law enforcement at the Lawsuits Bureau. **REWARD** $100 for info leading to acquisition of property, assignment, $165 or more (1977-82 or 83) for service. REWARD $25 for info leading to rental of furnished a efficiency or air bed apartment for rent. No charge for use. The Rev 7. Miller referred to in previous Uni- life Life Church活士 is the Rev Told Rita Tulipman. "THE UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH, INC. only accepts donations to organizations determined what the RIGHT for him or her is. Donations to ULC TLC today. For your official ULC ordination and membership, please send a standard envelope to ULC P - Box 1029, Dearborn, MI 48623." FRESHMEN CLASS MEMBERS pre-funks TGIF at Shrimpinners May 6 February 20-30. A great way to spend the weekend! Will the person who found my picture and tried to contact my phone 832-1051, I moved. 4-29 (1) SIG EP SENIORS SAY BYE!!! 4-27 Free day, 15. July Labor Day; medium size spaced sheet of 20x40cm square photos; magnification magnification 1.35x-3.5x; pH 8-9; ISO 100; LDR 1.35x-3.5x; mP=1.0 Dear Peper, I knew you could do it. I'm proud of you Love, Huggybear 4-26 Do you know what H.F. stands for? You could find Cilie 811-5429 or 811-7487 and see that it means "Holden." SERVICES OFFERED math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors help you through courses 000, 602, 102, 165, 111, 16, 147, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 500, 558, 627, Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. Experienced-qualified to teach English Literature, comparison and English as second language. Bachelors in English or foreign language. THE DRUGSTORE 706 MASS. ST. PARAPHERNALIA AIRFRAME WATERBEDS AVAILABLE AT THE FIELDS STORE 712 MASS ST. 943-7100 HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CARG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Will you please join us with TLC. Two pages and herself, Nancy Carlen at KA84-321 3531. Please include your name and email address. Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, books, manuscripts. Mail resume to: 841-503-6155, M. Wright. I also thank good Tipping, Fredy 428-494- 657, and the staff at McCormick's restaurant. I would like to extend welcome to McCormick's distillations welcome. THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us handle all of its $8,150 Massachusetts and phone 842-386-7895. Thank you. Wide expertise in paper laws, illustrations, Qualify with experience. Reasonable. Please e-mail My Words 862-784. Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for great tasting wines: 812-1514, 812-9898; evening classes: TYPING Peggy's damned good typing now offers copying and binding. Convenient one stop shop $82. No handle is good typing at lower than averages and no handle is good typing at higher than averages. History of deadlines. Harvey 5/20/13. Experienced, typist; term paper, themes, etc. Reasonsable rates. Call: Mahlah, 842-7283. "A different kind of bar seating including and quiet You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s $103 less than the youth fare you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is to be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. 9th and Iowa The Lounge Icelandic Experienced team IBM selective, articles, theories, discussions, near campus, call 821-4900 **ff** $^{\textcircled{a}}$aturing seclusion and quiet - Foosball Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday Expertized technical typist will type disassemble, maintain, form papers, use Reasoning as a tool. Job location: San Francisco, CA. WANTED Pam Daily 10 a.m. - Midnight Except ... Two girls to share large bedrooms in Talladega bedroom for first year. Non-smoking, studio apartment. SUA Maupintour travel service Formal rooms accommodate for summer $700 plus 3. 8. 12 utility rooms, furnished 2-bedroom apartments Roommates need for next year. Call for details after 4. Kieren or Laurie. 841-608-04 4-28 Kansas Union 843-1211 Female teenagers wanted to share townehouse for summer. $85.30 per month plus 1% utilities. **$1,925** Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Two roommates to share two bedrooms with a neatly furnished living room and kitchen, a separate dining area, air-dishwasher, and tened yard for trained dog. Bedroom 15 + 46 plus 2 + 12 utilities. Card #: 832-718. Female romantically wanted in shared apartment next fall non-smoker, shaded顾影, call girl Looking for Christian girls (summertime and fall holidays) to call. Call 842-6020, 105-3424 or Call Inquiries 842-6020. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841-7946 M-S 10:5:30 (Thurs. 8:00) Roommate needed, for summer, two bedroom convenience line. $525 per week. 814-6767 Female to share two bedrooms furnished apartment for fat and spring apartments. Cali Shafra contribute to the home in (1419 Main), Mass. baths, fireplaces, piano, garden, fertilizer, pruning, landscaping, landscaping. prepare good food and comfort of own home at reasonable cost. Drop by or call 825-7287. 4-28 Wanted resume for summer months. Furnished, two blocks from campus. Remainnable home with large kitchen, laundry Nursing学生 needs reinforce to share information that fall and gait, new KU Med Center students. NAISMITH HALL - Pool - Bud on Tap Home of The Chalk Hawk Pool HILLCREST BILLIARDS XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong Pin-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER - Air Hockey - Feos-Ball Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted X 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a week One No Under 18 Admitted Tuesday, April 26, 1977 University Daily Kansan OPEN 7 AM-MIDNIGHT O FALLEY'S 2525 IOWA—NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S SEVEN DAYS Prices Effective Tuesday thru Sunday, April 26-May 1 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES 99c b. Swift Premium Wieners...1b. **79°** Swift Premium Bologna...1b. **79°** Swift Premium Longfellows...1b. **99°** Swift Premium All Beef Bologna...1b. **79°** U.S.D.A. Choice Grade Arm Cut Swiss Steak ... Swift Premium Sizzlean ... $1¹⁹ Ohse Luncheon Meats ... 5. Varieties ... 79ᵃ Andy Griffith Sausage ... lb. $1¹⁹ Taste-O-Sea Perch Fillets ... lb. $1³⁹ All Brands & Sizes Cigarettes $3.99 Ctn. Smoking may be hazardous to your health. Cotter's Hotter Charcoal 10 pound Bag 89¢ Heinz Bar-B-Que Sauce 16 oz. 59¢ Reynolds Wrap Aluminum Foil 12" X 25' 3 Pkgs. $1 Del Monte Ketchup 32 oz. Bottle 69¢ Falley's Cottage Cheese 24 oz. Ctn. 79¢ Peach-Apple-Dutch Apple Johnston Pies 26 oz. 69¢ Folger's Coffee 1 pound $2.99 With purchase of 4 Light Bulbs. Folger's Coffee $299 1 pound With purchase of 4 Light Bulbs. Welch Grape Jelly ... 20 oz. Jar $69¢ Thank You Puddings ... 17 oz. 3 for $1 Hunts Apricots ... 15 oz. 3 for $1 Hunts Pears ... 15 oz. 3 for $1 Hunts Peaches ... 15 oz. 3 for $1 Super Scoop Ice Milk ... 1/2 gallon 69° FALLEY'S OWN Chocolate Chip Cookies ... Dozen 54° FALLEY'S OWN Apple Crunch Coffee Cake ... each 84° Sunshine Cheez-Its Crackers ... 10 oz. 59° Scotties Facial Tissue ... 200 ct. box $1 Tide Detergent Giant size 99c 49 oz. Limit one with '10.00 purchase Tide Detergent Giant size 99c 49 oz. Limit one with '10.00 purchase Delta Bathroom Tissue 4 roll 69c Pkg. Coors Beer 6 pack $139 12 oz. Cans California Red Ripe Strawberries 59c lb. Delta Bathroom Tissue 4 roll Pkg. 69c Gold Medal Flour. 5 pound Bag 69c C & H Pure Cane Sugar. 5 pound Bag 99c CHICKEN-OF-THE-SEA Chunk Light Tuna 6½ oz. 59c Armour Treet 12 oz. 89c Peter Pan Peanut Butter 18 oz. 99c Quinlan Pretzels 8 oz. Pkg. 59c Shasta Drinks 64 oz. 69c Bon Ami Powdered Cleanser 14 oz. 4 for $1 California Red Ripe Strawberries 59c lb. 59℃ Fresh Tender Asparagus... lb. 69° Large California Naval Oranges 10 for $100 New Crop Yellow Onions... 3 lbs. $100 Red Radishes or Green Onions... 3 bunches 49° Texas Ruby Red Grapefruit... 10 for $100 California Sunkist Lemons... 10 for 99° ASSORTED 4'' Potted Blooming Plants... $249 Country Time Lemonade Mix... 33 oz. $189 Golden Corn Purina Dog Chow 50 pound $899 Bag 4 17 oz. Cans $1 Purina Dog Chow 50 pound Bag $899 Green Giant Golden Corn 4 17 oz. Cans $1 Green Giant Whole Green Beans 3 16 oz. Cans $1 Van Camp Pork & Beans 4 16 oz. Cans $1 Green Giant Whole Green Beans 3 16 oz. $1 Cans Green Giant Whole Green Beans 3 16 oz. $1 Cans Van Camp Pork & Beans Van Camp Pork & Beans 4 16 oz. $1 Cans 4 16 oz. Cans $1 FALLEY'S KIX CEREAL 9 oz. 59c Reg. 69c Limit one with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S HEINZ '37 SAUCE 79c Reg. 10 oz. $1.09 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S BUC-WHEATS CEREAL 79c Reg. 15 oz. 99c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 FALLEY'S' KEEBLER ELFWICH COOKIES 14 oz. 69¢ Reg. 89c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S OTTS SALAD DRESSING 89¢ Reg. 16 oz. $1.09 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON ( ) FALLEY'S RENUSIT SOLID AIR FRESHENER 6 oz. 3 for $1 Reg. 3 for $1.59 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON RICH'S FROZEN COFFEE RICH 49c Reg. 32 oz. 69c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S JOHNSTON FROZEN PIE SHELLS Pkg. of 3 $1 Reg. Two Pkgs. 3 for $1.63 Limit 3 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S JERGEN'S LOTION 10 oz. 99¢ Reg. $1.65 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S KRAFT PARKAY SOFT MARGARINE 16 oz. 49¢ Reg. Maxi Cup 75c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S BUTTERNUT INSTANT TEA 2 oz. 89¢ Reg. Jar $1.19 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEYS KRAFT PARKAY SOFT MARGARINE 16 oz. 49c Reg. Maxi Cup 75c Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON FALLEY'S BUTTERNUT INSTANT TEA 2 oz. 89c Reg. Jar $1.19 Limit 1 with coupon Good thru May 1 COUPON THE UNIVERSITY DAILY BEAUTIFUL! KANSAN Vol. 87, No.134 Glover talks about himself The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, April 27, 1977 See story page five Commissioners okay hikes in Lawrence utility rates By JANE PIPER Staff Reporter Commissioner Barkley Clark set the tone of last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting with the statement, "This is really the night to increase rates, isn't it?" The raise in the water and sewer rates, about an 11 per cent increase for the average homeowner, will take effect on the May 20 water billing. On that note, the commission approved increases in water, sewer and rural water district rates and sent a request for gas rate changes to an engineering company for further study. BUFORD WATSON, city manager, said the increase was the first of several to be made five years to begin payment on bonds in the Reservoir Water Treatment Plant. The additional funds also will help pay for the rising costs at the new secondary treatment plant. The last increase in the city's water rates was in 1969. Chris Bell, spokesman for Lawrence Citizen's Voice, asked commissioners to design a structure that would encourage conservation of residents' residents deal with the increases. He said the new ordinance partly remedied what he called the historical problem of residential owners having to pay more than their fair rent in still, tall, big useriers received discounts. The commission unanimously approved the rate increase. Commissioner Jack Rose said, "We're too far down the line to think about change it (the structure) this year," but said the action factor could be considered next year. A request by Kansas Public Service company for higher gas rates was referred to Black and Veatch, a consulting firm from Kansas City, Mo., for a rate study. Kansas Public Service and the city of Lawrence will share the cost of the study. If gas rate increases are recommended, the city can improve them before they can go into effect. OLN PETEFISH, attorney for Kansas Public Service, said the possible increases probably wouldn't go into effect before October of this year. funds and inflation costs as causes of the increase request. He said that Black and Veatch had previously determined $300,000 as a fair rate of return for Kansas Public Service, during the year of Oct. 1978 to 1977, because of the unforeseen cost of the actual project. Petition cited rising labor costs, health and liability insurance prices, retirement The city commission expressed its concern about the effects the gas price raises would have on low income families. Clark asked Kansas Public Service to look into the idea of a program to educate the public on conservation methods. See UTILITIES page five Subcommittee studies renewal of Feedback and LINDA STEWART Staff Reporters Bv JOHN WHITESIDES A subcommittee designed to investigate the renewal of Feedback, a program for student evaluation of faculty, was appointed by Senate Student Academic Affairs Committee. The subcommittee was charged with finding the possible cost of the program, researching similar systems at other institutions, and determining procedures for renewing the program. An F&A subcommittee had met last week to draw up the proposed changes in the budget process. The topics included an earlier election date, which wasn't approved by the full committee, because the earlier date would cut out too much camaraderie and allowed the tickets to the full Senate for approval May 4. Also last night, the Senate Finance and Auditing (F&A) Committee ended its final meeting of the semester by approving a budget for next year. The budget process take place earlier next year. THE FEASIBILITY of the Feedback program was discussed by John Olson, former chairman of the Academic Affairs committee, who had researched the possibility of renewing the program last year. Olson said the original Feedback program was begun in the late 1960s and was funded by the Student Senate for about $30,000 a year. The program was designed, he said, to provide students with a standard measure of their potential instructors. He See FEEDBACK page 10 Court Services aids prisoners By CHUCK WILSON Staff Reporter Note: This is the last of three articles on crime in Lawrence. It deals with the Douglas County Jail. Most county jails lack an organization that can help prisoners with their problems, but Douglas County is an exception. Douglas County Court Services offers a variety of services to prisoners in county jail and supervises the county's misdemeanor probation program. And the Douglas County jail itself is in contrast with the run-down, uncomfortable cails found in other areas. Besides counseling, Court Services makes daily rounds of the jail and helps provide a library and commissary service on Fridays. The program assists prisoners working on their Graduation Equivalency Diploma, comparable to a high school diploma. COURT SERVICES helps prisoners find counseling for alcohol and drug problems and tries to counsel prisoners' families. Court Services began in 1974 as a proam to help adults, but was expanded in January 1977 to include juveniles. Judy Osburn is the director of Court Services, which employes five persons besides the director. Court Services also helps organize restitution programs and helps prisoners set up budgets, Osburn said. Court Services is the only such program in Kansas. "OTHER COUNTIES have pieces of things we have but nothing exactly like this." Osburn said. She said she didn't think any other program in Kansas had the amount of cooperation from law enforcement officials and county and city commissioners as the Douglas County program. Such support is necessary for an effective program, she said. Douglas Murphy, Douglas County undersheriff, said prisoners had said the Douglas County Jail was more comfortable than most other jails in the country. They have praised the food and living conditions at the jail, he said. The Douglas County Jail is a modern facility housed in the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center at 11th and Ninth Avenues. THE JAIL is a maze of electrically locked doors guarded by closed circuit television equipment. There are four individual jail cells used to hold maximum security, problem prisoners. Prisoners are allowed out of their cells only for recreation. They are no longer allowed to do any odd jobs to help in the operation of the jail. This is because the type of prisoners in the jail has changed. There are also one 6-bunk women's cell, four 6-bunk men's cells, one 8-bank male juvenile cell and one 6-bank female juvenile cell. "USUALLY, THE people we detain now are ones picked up on violent crimes," Murphy said. As they always have, prisoners still get three meals a day. For breakfast, prisoners are fed cold or hot cereal; for lunch, a meal dish such as beans and crumbs or chill, and for supper, sandwiches. The food is prepared in a kitchen in the building of the building and is brought up to the prisoners on a cart. Each prisoner is served 100 calories of flour or sugar. ALL PRISONER'S dress in identical gray coveralls and tennis shoes. Only underwear can be brought from outside. During the day prisoners are let out of their cells into a room where they can watch television or read books. Murphy said. Once a week they are taken from their cells to a recreation room where they can play basketball or table tennis. The amount of time they get to exercise depends on the number of prisoners, Johnson said. There also is a library of paperback books bearing titles such as "Passions of the Mind," "Rabbit, Rabbit," "Indian Tales" and "200." Murphy said that visitors were allowed once a week, but that only members of the immediate family could visit prisoners. Relatives can bring only money and underwear to the prisoners. Everything in the building mail, including mail, is thoroughly searched for contraband. Murphy said. THE BOOKS come from the Lawrence Public Library, Murphy said, and a prisoner can borrow up to five a week. The jail's temperature is kept at 70 degrees most of the time. Money can be used to buy such things as cigarettes, which are bought each Monday, Wednesday and Friday at local stores, Hardbound books usually aren't permitted because they could be used as weapons, he said. W A Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Bounce for cash Mike Riede, Little Rock, Ark., junior, took his turn yesterday during the first day of the Tau Kappa Epsilon Boys Club benefit marathon trampoline bounce. The trampolimists will continue to bounce in front of Allen Field House until Friday noon—a total of 77 hours. They hope to raise $1,000. Legislators back,ponder KU funding Staff Reporter The Kansas Legislature reconvened this morning to tackle a large workload it had left when the houses called an early first adjournment three weeks ago. Although most legislators weren't available for comment yesterday because the telephone switchboard system in the state capitol wasn't working, action is underway that will three days on several appropriations bills that will affect the University of Kansas. The main appropriations bill, which would provide funds for salaries, retirement benefits, utilities funding and other operating expenses for all Kansas students, was remained in conference committee until the final day of the first legislative session. STATE SEN. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, said yesterday, "There wasn't any com- mission." Winter referred to a *house-proposed* cut in faculty salary increases from 7 to 6 per cent, and a cut from 8 to 7 per cent in a increased increase in other operating expenses. Winter said the conference committee had prepared the bill by noon—adjournment day so that final legislative vote could be sent to Gov. Robert Pence. However, he said, "Then it was the decision of the Speaker of the House (John Carlin, D-Smolan) to not consider conference committee reports." CARLINSAID Monday that it would have been difficult to take action on appropriations bills before the conference call and compromise on a public school finance bill. He said the higher education appropriations bills would allow a 6 per cent increase in student numbers, whereas a Senate-House conference committee couldn't compromise on a version of the public school finance bill, existing law requires that a 6 per cent increase in teachers' salaries. Carlin said the differing salary increases could cause a lot of pressure in the level. BUT, HE SAID, if quick action were taken on the school finance bill, appropriations would be reduced. To provide University funding, the appropriations bill must pass during the three days of the legislature's clean-up session this week. Another appropriations bill that must be passed is a capital improvements bill that would provide $7.3 million for additions to Malott Hall and Robinson Gymnasium. The businesses are expected to announce their recommendations on the bills in today's sessions. The University's supplemental appropriations bill, which would provide $800 million in expected utility costs this fiscal year, remained in conference committee THE SUPPLEMENTAL appropriations would provide between $726,000 and $642,000. An Associated Press story yesterday also reported that a joint ways and means subcommittee neared agreement late yesterday on how much money should be spent on energy projects at the Regents institutions and the Med Center. But Rep. Phil Martin, D-Larned and chairman of the committee, pushed for a change in the law to prohibit Most subcommittee members appeared to agree that the full funding of $363,400 to insulate all college buildings except residence halls and student unions built and maintained from other funds was necessary and wise now. Vegetarian diets vary by philosophies, preferences By STEVE PARSONS Staff Reporter For whatever the reason—health, morals or money—the vegetarian way of life has attracted interest. Local grocery stores, restaurants and the University of Kansas have begun to recognize vegetarians' needs and are trying to meet their demands. Chuck Magerl, a member of the Community Mercantile, one of Lawrence's main suppliers of vegetarian foods, said recently some vegetarians are limited types or amounts of meat, some cut all meat from their diets and others even abstained from dairy and egg products. FARLY POPULAR now, he said, is the raw vegetable diet in which no cooking is done so no skin is removed. Among those who call themselves vegetarians one can find a variety of diets and degrees of vegetarianism. "Then you get to the absolute lunatic," he said, "the extreme in which a guy cuts down food consumption to the point of practically living on white light." vegetarian kitchens of Watkins Hall. Kitchen one uses many dairy products and kitchen five occasionally cooks chicken or fish. Watkins, unlike most organized living groups on campus, has several small kitchens that serve about seven women in each serving everyone in one large kitchen and dining hall. Two steaming cups on the stove were carefully watched by Mary Anne Orazem, Manhattan sophomore, who explained that the pan with sliced green peppers, celery and onions would yield cream of onion soup when added to milk sauce in the other pan. Kitchen one and, less strictly, kitchen five are the NOTHING IN kitchen one betrayed its peculiarity other than a copy of "The Vegetarian Epicure" piled with other items on a catch-all table and opened to a manicot containing no meat, but lots of cheese. Other kitchen members who joined Grazem for the manicot and onion soup were Elaine Syrion, Lyons sophomore; Cindy Treater, Buhler sophomore; and Kelly Lyne, Abellene freshman. THEY EXPRESSD different reasons for being vegetarians but cited a common tiredness of the lack of energy. "Just because you don't use meat, you don't go out of your way," Orazm said. "I just started liking these vegetables I didn't like before. I've made jembu beans in a variety of ways." She pointed out several recipes for lentils in one record recipe books piled on the window丝. The list of recipes was quite extensive. The kitchen members said that they are many Chinese, Indian and Russian dishes but very few American dishes because these usually required meat "OTHER COUNTRIES are forced to be vegetarian because they can't compete with the United States on food." Another advantage of eating vegetarian, they said, was that it was cheaper. They said that six meals for seven people on a meat diet had cost them $40-$50 a week, but only about $30 for a vegetarian diet. "Nationwide, it's kind of a fad." Lyne said. "There are vegetarians for the wrong reasons." "WHEREH ITS A fad or not," responded master, "I thai it a good fad. There a lot of talk about it." Vegetarians not only object to preservatives in meat and other food products, but also to other Magerl said highly carcinogenic chemicals such as nitrates and nitro amines were added to meat. Magerl, who became a vegetarian two years ago when it was "very hip and fashionable," said he had remained one largely because of the wastefulness of his diet. He said he bought pounds of grain to make one pound of beef, he said. HE SAID some people objected to eating dairy products because male calves were killed when born Cows have to give birth to calves before they giv milk, he said. Many vegetarians are introduced to the eating style through voga. The members of kitchen told of some problems they had run into because of their vegetarianism. Sally McGee, a clerk at Norwegian Woods Natural Food and Specialty Shop, decided to try walnuts. The staff asked, Treater said, "I couldn't kill an animal I'm a real pacifist. If you've ever been to western Kansas in feedouts where all the cows are crowded together, you know that even dumb animals need to be treated that way." SHE SAID SHE didn't expect to remain a vegetarian, but liked it so much that she'd stayed with it for seven years. She said she had no philosophical reasons for her vegetarianism; it just wasn't right. They said six of the seven of them who ate meat while they were home over spring break became TREASTER SAID it was hard for her parents to understand her vegetarianism. They thought it was too much. Treasurer she wished people wouldn't get apprehensive when a vegetarian was coming to eat with them because there were more things to eat that they shouldn't worry. Restaurants can be harder to get along with, said, but some are offering special vegetarian dishes. but, some are offering special vegetarian dishes. Diana Wong, Hong Kong freshman who has been a waitress at Royal Peking Restaurant, 711 W.23rd St. the past three years, said the restaurant had two dishes without meat and planned to get new menus in July that would have many more vegetarian dishes. CATHAY, A NEW restaurant at the Holiday Plaza, 250 and Iowa streets, has a Chinese vegetarian menu. The Sister Kettle Cafe, 1347 Massachusetts St., is a cooperatively owned restaurant that serves only fresh ingredients. The largest supplier of food for Sister Kettle and kitchen one in Watkins Hall is the Community Mercantile. See DIETS page eight See DIETS page eight 2 University Daily Kansan News Digest Carter. Hussein end talks WASHINGTON—President Jimmy Carter concluded talks with Jordan's King Hussein yesterday and said it would be better not to have a Geneva conference on the Middle East "unless we see some strong possibilities for substantial achievements." Hussein, for his part, told reporters that a Geneva conference "would be a disaster without prior planning and without realistic appraisal of all the difficulties associated with it." Carter said the question of Palestinian representation at negotiations had to be worked out. The key issue in this appraisal, which one key U.S. official characterized as a sense of realism, appears to be the Palestinians. Familu budaet needs rise WASHINGTON - An urban family of four requires $16,236 a year for a moderate standard of living and, for the first time, needs more than $10,000 to maintain an income. The same family living at a level allowing some luxuries needs $23,759 a year, the department said in its annual analysis of hypothetical family budgets. The costs were calculated for fall 1978. Compared to a year earlier, the income requirements rose 4.7 per cent, or $241, for the austere budget to $10,641; 6 per cent, or $736, for the moderate budget, and 6.5 per cent, or $1,259, for the higher budget over the previous year. Carter opposes co-ops bill WASHINGTON—The Carter administration parted company with the consumer groups yesterday and opposed legislation designed to encourage development of The legislation would establish a new federal agency to make an annual $250 million in low-interest loans to nonprofit consumer-owned co-ops. Supporters say the loan program would encourage the growth of food and service cooperatives. Other groups say the coops lower prices to consumers, while industry Consumer groups say the co-ops lower prices to consumers while industry groups say they provide unfair competition to businesses trying to make a profit. Official says Ethiopia 'dizzy' FRANKFURT, West Germany — A U.S. embassy official was among the 320 Americans expelled from Ethiopia described the situation there yesterday as "the asterisk." Michael J. Gould, an embassy press attachee, spoke for a group of eight adults and five children who arrived aboard a West German commercial airline from Germany. The Americans were ordered to leave when Ethiopia's left-leaning military government gave the United States an ultimatum to shut down within four days. Gould said he learned of the expulsion Saturday from a friend who heard of the order on an Addis Ababa radio broadcast. "We think we eventually will go back." Could said, "but the situation is very unsettled both politically and militarily. Fund to ease Zaire's debts WASHINGTON (AP)—The government of Zaire yesterday received financial help totaling $65 million from the International Monetary Fund. There have been questions about how Zaire would pay for the costly war it is conducting against insurgents in copper-rich Shaba Province. The fund said the money would be used to offset a decline in earnings from copper production and to assist the country in meeting balance of payment deficits which totaled $513 million in 1975 and $157 million in 1976. Although there appeared to be nothing to prevent President Mobutu Sese Seko from diverting at least part of the funds for war purposes, the IMF said it had attached conditions to the loans. It said the Zairean government had agreed to an economic program to cut back its balance of payments deficits and also to reduce the current rate of inflation "by making possible an upwain in economic growth and a sufficient supply of imported goods." The IMF statement said that Zaire's earnings from its copper production had been reduced because of a sharp decline in world copper prices last year. --in recent rulings that they may be ready to confine the power of federal judges to the states. AURH WASHINGTON (AP) - School officials in Dayton, Ohio, forced by a federal court to bus 18,000 students to achieve racial desegregation,"should be free at this point in their attempt to make a fine school district the Supreme Court was told yesterday. Dayton attorney David Greer, Daytor attorney for the city's Board of Education, told the justices that the lower court's decision was overturned. The order was not put into effect last fall. Plus free room & board Make $550 in 8 weeks Court hears argument in Ohio busing case Work for A.U.R.H. as a Summer Intern this summer. Applications at your Residence Hall desk and at the AUHR office, 210 Main. Must have lived in Residence Hall before and be returned to halls for the 1977/8 school year. Application deadline May 2nd. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer The Supreme Court ruling, expected before the court term ends in June, could have a far-reaching effect on the nation's school systems. THE COURTS' plan to make all 68 public schools in Dayton reflect roughly the same racial composition of the school district as a whole can't be justified as a remedy for traces of segregation found after a 1972 suit was filed. Greer said. A majority of the justices have indicated In recent months the Court has set aside sweeping busing orders for Austin and Indianapolis schools, sending both cases to the district's instructions to find more limited remedies. IN A CURRINGING opinion in the Austin case, Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., said that remedies must fit the amount of discrimination and indicated that the court required charging racial discrimination to prove discriminatory intent by school officials. That requirement differed dramatically from the court's reasoning in a 1973 decision involving a Denver school. The court majorly ruled then that federal judges should avoid making solutions when they found intentional racial discrimination in part of a school system. Dayton school officials were sued in 1972. James Paddock, district court judge, announced at the end of Gardner's hearing that he would have to study the prosecution's brief on the case before Judge Mike Malone. Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, said he would have the brief ready today. Defense and prosecution attorneys argued all day yesterday about information provided by a state as evidence in the Feb. 7 arrest of Gardner, 18, after the murder of Margaret No decision was reached yesterday in Douglas County District Court on defense motions for the suppression of James's confession and several items of evidence. Judge postpones decision on murder trial motions Gardner and his brother, Joseph Jr., 22, were arrested the same day a Maxey's body was found near the Santa Fe railroad tracks in East Lawrence. James Rumsey, Gardner's lawyer, said yesterday that Gardner was questioned in violation of his constitutional rights and that his confession should be suppressed. Rumsey also said that several items of evidence that the prosecution alleged were used in the murder of Maxey should be suppressed. Ted Crady, Lawrence police detective, testified that a blood-spotted coal had been taken from Gardner before his rights were read to him. The elder Gardner will be arraigned in district court Monday on a charge of first-degree assault. In a hearing Friday, Rumsey is expected to introduce evidence on a motion to move Gardner's trial out of Lawrence. The trial has been set for June 8. --dispersing the volatile gas escaping from the 10,000-foot deep well. Both men have been held in Douglas County Jail without bond since their arrest. Weather halts efforts to cap well STAVANAGER, Norway (AP)—A choking concentration of gas yesterday forced an American-led team to suspend efforts to cap a blown-out well that has sent millions of gallons of oil gushing into the North Sea in the past four days. The six-man team, led by two blow-out specialists from Texas, was evacuated from a platform in Norway's Ekofisk field after a fire meant the winds were no longer Weather forecasts for today indicated it might be possible to resume efforts to cap the loss of wind. A reddish scar of crude petroleum fed by oil slicing out of the well at about 44,000 gallons an hour continued to spread into the seas. Impaired visibility made precise measurements impossible, but the slick covered an estimated 80,000 acres. KU Commission on the Status of Women Self-Awareness Workshop Saturday, April 30 Kansas Union 12-5 p.m. 12:00 Opening—Big 8 Room ♀ trol 1:30 "Death and Dying"—Big 8 Room "How to Beat the 'System'—Birth Control Alternatives"—Jayhawk Room 3:00 Break—Regionalists Room 3:15 "How to Talk with your Doctor"—Jayhawk Room 4:30 "Rape Prevention: No Pat Answer"—Big 8 Room Bigh 8 Room EVERYONE IS WELCOME Partially funded by Student Activity Fee 15% off SALE (This week only) POTION PARLOR 15% off SALE (This week only) fine gifts and paraphernalia for connoisseurs collectibles, imported and recycled clothing 15% off ALL Paraphernalia 15% off BOKONON .841-3600. Largest Selection In Kansas 12 EAST 8TH ST. 15% off SALE Is week only) POTION PARLOR 15% off SA (This we DAYTON'S SCHOOL population of about 45,000 is 18 per cent black. The district by a group of black parents and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The suit charged they had inadvertently tried to separate white and black students. court's desegregation order calls for each school to reflect that black-per cent is at least 50%. The court's decision will be reached by only eight justices. Justice Thurgood Marshall has disqualified himself because of past ties to the NAACP. 'Mary Hartman' to end LOS ANGELES (AP)-Goodbye waxy yellow buildup. Goodbye Fernwood fission. Lor, Tornella and Charlie. And Mary "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman." "We didn't want that to be 'Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman's fate.' Television's most outrageous soap opera will be canceled this summer after two years because its creators said they wanted to go out while it was still a hit. "Throughout television's history hit shows have been allowed to run to the point where they fizzle out," creator-producer Norman Lear of Tandem Productions said at a news conference yesterday. With Lear at her side, she said, "Louise didn't quit." Lear said, "If the press and the public wish to believe that Louse quit, that's beyond our control." STAR LOUEE Lasser denied she had quit the show, although she admitted that the schedule of five shows a week was strenuous. Industry sources had speculated in recent weeks that Miss Lasser would quit the series because of exhaustion. LEAR ALSO denied he was ending the show because of sauging ratings. Approximately 70 more episodes of the syndicated series will be aired before it stops production on June 14. "it's hard work," she said. "It's been a constant sprint. The strain has been great on all of us, but we've never seen people stretch themselves so." Starting July 4 Tandem will offer "Fernwood Tonight," which may do for late-night talk shows what "Mary Hartman" did for soap opera. Next fall the company will begin production of "Fernwood U.S.A.", a comedy anthology that will continue to feature the characters from "Mary Hartman." J.Watson's Q.Watson's Tonight Free Disco for Everyone Peanut Gallery, "EL CONDOR" 8 p.m. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 841-BEER --- MASS. STREET DELI inc. 041 MASSACHUSETTS WeFeature Strawberry Yogurt Sundae served with fresh strawberries, whipped cream & nuts. Strawberry Yogurt Cones Frogurt gurt FROZEN YOGURT A Fantastic New Product for Lawrence FROGURT is the registered trademark of H. P. Hood Inc Anything else is a substitute We do it for you. Bernard! We do it for you, Bernard! Unless you're working on a B.A. in housecleaning, you know doing housework is a drag. You stay with us, we do the cleaning for you... weekly. You'll have more time for social activities and the other fun things in life. This is just one of the reasons why you'll like it here. So... make the right move. Come to where the luna is easy Relax Next Fall—Move to Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 27, 1977 3 for each pack per mnt. cached by thurgood f because 1 offer do for Mary begin A.," a continue "Mary --- t URT institute ! BUILDING LIST OnCampus Events TODAY: Charles Eldredge, art museum instructor, will speak at noon on the new SPENCER MUSEUM at the Faculty Forum in the United Ministries Center. John Murphy, associate dean of the School of Law, will speak on "INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR U.S. POLICY" at 12:30 p.m. in the university courtroom in Green Hall. The German Club will show the film, "DIE KUNST DIE NICHT": A Story about Vera Garder, darezaballar will at 3:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. TONIGHT: Women In Communications, Inc., will sponsor a speech by Harry Jones, Kansas City Star reporter and participant in the INVESTIGATIVE REPORTERS AND EDITORS ARIZONA PROJECT at 7 in 258 Flint Hall. Warren Legler will speak on "COOLD MACHINES BECOME INTELLIGENT?" at the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering meeting at 7 in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. ARTHUR ODGROVE, statutory lecturer in medieval history at the University of Oxford, will speak on "Solar Photovoltaics in Ireland" at 7 in the Union's Forum Room. The PHI CHI THEMA business fraternity will hold its meeting at 8 at 2111 Harvard Road. An apartment C. TOMORROW: THE KANSAS FARM ELECTRIFICATION COUNCIL conference will be all day in the Union's Forum Room. KENNETH WHITE, professor of French and Italian, will present "The Monster's Face Changes: Drama of Social Realism" at 3:30 p.m. and will present "Social Realism in Russian Art" at 2:30 p. Spooner Hall Auditorium. UNIVERSITY SENATE will meet at 3:30 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium. Aleksandr Petrov, research associate at the Yugoslav Literary Institute, will speak on "THE OSPIR MANDEL STAM" at 3:30 p.m. In lieu of lecture, a panel discussion on IDEA AND IMAGE: SYMBOLISM IN RUSSIAN ART, at 4:30 p. in 4012 Wesley. Francie Rabinovitz, professor of public administration and urban and regional planning at the University of Southern California, will speak on "PUBLIC INTERFACE FOR SOCIAL REALISM" at 4:30 p.m. In lieu of lecture, a panel discussion on TROMBONE RECITAL at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. AAUP will elect officers for next year by mail vote The slate of candidates for next year's officers of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) was yesterday's AAUP executive board meeting. According to Robert Friauf, AAUP president and professor of physics and astronomy, ballots for election of new officers will be mailed today, with a return deadline of May 13. Those elected will begin serving then. AUP members will elect a new vice president, treasurer, secretary and two new chief officers. Candidates for the positions are: A trend toward national recognition of small businesses as an important part of total U.S. business activity has developed into a University of Kassas class, Bernie Mullin, assistant instructor in business and in journalism, said recently. Vice-president—Richard Cole, professor of philosophy, and Ambrose Saricks, vice president. Treasurer—Ellen Johnson, librarian; Secretary, Felix Moos, professor of anthro- logy and anthropology. Students in a small business management class at KU are helping some local businesses solve their problems through the Small Business Institute (SBI) program of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). Students advise local businesses "People have realized that there is a lot of money and productively involved in the job," Ms. Eckert said. KEEN BONAR, spokesman for the SBA office in Kansas City, said that the SBI program that KU participated in provides assistance programs available to small businesses. "The Small Business Institute is a particularly exciting program because students can receive practical experience in real business problems." Bonar said. The SBA also guarantees business loans made by community banks, and has programs in which active and retired borrowers can be able to advise small businesses, Borger, sur. In 1976, SH programs in the United States advised 8,000 businesses, Bonar said, and 385 universities participated in the institute program. MULLIN SAID businesses that wanted the assistance of the SBI program at KU usually were assigned the class by the SBA Management Assistance office in Kansas City. The School of Business receives $250 for each SCI case the students deal with, Mullin said. This money funds some research and purchases of books for the business library. After the original contact is made, Bonar and Mullin visit the business to determine its needs and explain the capabilities of the student projects. Some businesses also contact the KU program direct, Bicho Smith, professor of Later, the business and the students agree on a contract regarding student access to the library. PART OF the function of the SBI program is to protect the federally guaranteed loans, Mullin said, though SBUI cases weren't financial problems that weren't having financial problems. Chris Abbueh, Chanute senior, said that his group was helping a local business determine whether it was making any money. "We're examining what the business is doing with its available resources," he said. Accounting and marketing problems are the subject interests for his group, Abbael said. Spring Tune-ups continue . . . Bicycle includes adjustment of cones, bottom bracket, headset, brakes, derailleurs, and truing of wheels. 9.50 plus parts. Bicycle Good luck to the M. Oread Cycling Team in this week's Jayhawk Bambore! GRA sPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS "The original thick crust pizza from New York" This coupon expires 6/30/17 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. BIG PITCHER NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST Coors Pitchers 95¢ With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per coupon per day Expires 4-30-77 Coors Pitchers 95c With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 MISS. STREET DELI THE MASSACHUSETTS Special CHEF BALAD 4 kinds of cheese, 8 kinds of meat, your favorite salad dressing and crackers £150 ea. Mg. $11.65 Get There with famolare Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street FRIAS LARIS L Steve Ashar, Lawrence senior, said his group was helping a local restaurant deal with the coronavirus. THE GROUP also is working with the restaurant's advertising coupons to see if most of its customers are KU students or from the Lawrence community, he said. Some management and price change suggestions from students have made business easier at GS Barbeque, Carol Howay, spokesman for the restaurant, said. "The students have really helped us out quite a bit," she said. Charles Saunders, professor of business, said that everything the students did in their projects grew out of the needs of the particular business. MULLIN SAID that of the 15 businesses the class is working with, four weren't SBI cases. In these cases, the student projects the local business suggests, problems that the local business suggests. students' gaining good practical experience outweighed any confusion that might result from some students working SBI cases and others working hypothetical problems. He said the students studied the business to determine the specific problems that existed. Advertising and accounting are management problems the students deal with. Mullin said that the objective of the Kenn Ragland, spokesman for the University State Bank, said a group of students was working to find a good location for a new branch office. Ragland said the bank posed the problem and provided some background information to the students. The students then make recommendations as if the problem were real. "WE AREN'T going to be opening new facility soon but we will feel free to use any ideas that might be developed during the project at some future date." Ragland said. A REAL Students are assigned to businesses in teams, each team having from three to six students. Mullin said the SBI program enhanced the reputation of the School of Business because of the practical training students received. The program also is valuable because it provides actual assistance to the local business community, he said. Mulshi said students generally were given their choice of businesses, although the instructor might balance the skills of the students with the needs of a particular business. From the Little Stereo Store STEREO SALE We thought we would offer Buy One, Get One Free. But we decided to sell even lower than that. And it's really top line stuff. RECEIVERS List Sale Kenwood KR,6140A 60x2 600.0 300.0 Sansui 771 32w2 430.0 275.0 Sansui 681 25w2 350.0 225.0 Sansui 331 12w2 200.0 160.0 Sansui 221 9w2 180.0 160.0 Sherwood S7110 17w2 250.0 190.0 RA 15" Heavy Duty 250.00 ea. 100.00 ea. EV 13 80.00 ea. 25.00 ea. Sherwood I 129.00 ea. 50.00 ea. Rectilinear XII 160.00 ea. 125.00 ea. KLH 32 50.00 ea. 25.00 ea. Scott S-15 135.00 ea. 50.00 ea. Jensen No. 15 (5 way) 460.00 ea. 200.00 ea. SPEAKERS The Little Stereo Store with the Big Sales 13 E.8th St. 842-2047 CAR STEREO - VERY SPECIAL DEALS RAY AUDIO Good Smokes Start your turn this day on in a fun way with new seaside by the sea. Believe or not, even powers of light can alter prints, whatever suits your mood. Cop it with a sunny show hat or a face coverwear that And, cover your feet in style with sutter thongs by Young Carousel Sun $14 25 hours weekly Visits $6 Thongs $4 High Tide' NEW WEAR 23rd & Lousiana Malls Shopping Center 10—830 Mon.,Thurs. 10—6:00 Fri. & Sat. carousel 4 Wednesday, April 27, 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 Hospital limit a dud Following fast on the heels of President Jimmy Carter's belt-tightening energy message to Congress is another bombshell—a request that Congress limit the profits of most of the nation's hospitals to nine per cent and to combat ever-increasing hospital costs. The measure, if passed, will impose a nine per cent ceiling on hospital costs, effective Oct. 31. It's a good idea. Hospital costs have risen 1,000 per cent since 1950, and are now rising at a rate of 15 per cent a year. For most Americans, the ceiling could provide welcome relief from the already exorbitant rates charged by hospitals for daily services. Public reaction to Carter's proposal should be favorable, and is thus well-timed in the wake of expected negative responses to higher gasoline prices. CORPORATE AND medical associate reactions have been swift. As expected, Blue Cross-Blue Shield, the nation's major healthcare insurer, has endorsed the plan. The American Hospital Association, however, has expressed its administration's efforts "scare tactics." V. Dell Nyland, president of the Kansas City Area Hospital Association, stated the fundamental argument against the proposal Tuesday: "Carter's objective of containing costs will have the obvious effect of reducing hospital staff; we have the same demand as present for hospital services . . you have to reduce the number of services." NYLAND AND the AHA have a point; hospital services cost money and hospitals need a profit to survive. Increasing demand for these services requires increased investment in capital and labor. Perhaps the AHA should take a look at what Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore is doing. After being placed under state price ceilings, Johns Hopkins brought in a number of cost-efficiency experts in an attempt to reduce costs. Suggestions by the experts were implemented, including putting some nurses on a 10-hour day, four-day work week, and disposable items in food service areas and a reworking of laundry procedures. The net result was an annual saving of $1.2 million a year. And, much to the hospital administrator's credit, John Hopkins is now one of the merger's proposed nine per cent a year profit. THAT BIT OF news is encouraging. But just as it would behove the AHA to take a look at John Hopkins' record, it wouldn't do any harm for Carter and his aides to inspect it. The John Hopkins cost-reduction program took three years to succeed. months. And that is virtually impossible. To further complicate matters, hastily implemented cost-reduction methods would probably start with the firing of lower-level personnel. Salary cuts could be inevitable and pay raises could be stopped. The same public Carter hopes to help would then suffer the consequences of the ill-staffed and ill-equipped public hospitals that would result. That might be the most bitter pill Carter, in his first year as President, will have to swallow. In this case, the hastily conceived hospital-cost-ceiling bombshell is a dud. Cohorts that I I've always been a Jimmy Carter fan. I was one of the brave few that picked his bandwagon to win by at least 100 electoral votes on Election Day. And although I consider myself an independent voter, others tend to think of me as a liberal who hates Republicans. But a recent Carter action has resulted in my joining the Republican side of an issue. I've been a recent recommendation of cutting funds for the Hillsdale Darn project. Many of the dams that Carter has recommended for cutting are wasteful. Carter fan hurt by funding cut These are the ones that are nothing but big recreational projects that are proposed to be done in the millions of federal dollars have been spent on them. Many Lawrence officials probably are relieved that the Clinton project is finally going to avoid the recent Carter actions. BUT THE White House explanation for recommending cuts on the Hilldale project clearly shows that someone in the Carter administration and the dam's projected purposes of providing a water supply for surrounding communities. That White House explanation had only this to say about Hillsdale's projected water supply: "Cost of the water storage is for projected future growth, which is doubtful rather than established need." Someone from the White House needs to visit Spring Hill, Kan., where an "established landscape hill" slide project clearly exists. Letters SPRING HILL is a small Having read the letters (April 13) from David Ravodich and Rob Green concerning the poor quality of the Kansan's "Focus on Western Europe" (April 7), I shall clarify some issues. Focus page worthwhile The Kansan's "Focus" despite some of the shortcomings outlined by the above gentlemen, was, in my opinion, particularly Andy Warren's article on Finland. As a series that tends to express opinions as briefly and clearly as possible and at the same time, that tends to be as informative to the engage person as it can, "Focus" on the whole achieves its goal. To the editor: Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be provided their academic standing and homecom; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address. Who can expect a full political narrative on the "rights" and "wrongs" of the first situation as we move through history? However, as one who has a member of my family in the British Army, currently trying to keep the peace in Northern Ireland, and also as one who has helped assist victims of bombings in London, where terrorists in London, I can certainly say there is a "right" and "wrong" Ireland. The only thing Paul Jefferson did wrong was try to define them by his own language, speaking to Irish people of several creeds and political factions, one begins to realize that the "right" and "wrong" can be easily separated into two groups - power-hungry zealots who will stop at nothing to gain their objective, and those who want to live harmonious, peaceful lives without suffering for their religious or political differences with their neighbors. "I'm afraid I did take issue with Diane Wolkow's "Economics, politics shake Europe." Here I have to agree with what some extent, in that social and political context between the United States and European countries have always existed, and what appears OK for the United States does not necessarily apply in Europe. Differences in cultural heritage and economic history show the same political atmosphere in Europe as one finds here with a summary of the rather complex political, economic and social issues existing and being decided on now in Europe. I don't think by any means that the Kansan editorial writers "should confine themselves to campus issues" as suggested by questioner Sue O'Brien, the series is an admirable attempt to give us a fragment of information about what is happening in the rest of the world—something which few local newspapers can claim. On balance, I must say that the Kansan's "Focus on Western Europe" was a good attempt to provide the reader Aylesbury, England graduate student Lack of oil doubted To the editor: In 1972, Thomas Medders Jr., president of the Independent Petroleum Association of North Carolina, committee that the Geological Survey now estimated 450 billion barrels of oil and 2,100 trillion cubic feet of natural gas to be recoverable from U.S. soil. This would have been enough for 100 years at the 1972 usage rate. At that same time we had 400-600 years of coal supplies from S. u.S. oil. Although petroleum was abundant from that time, coal has not. President Carter speaks with a forked tongue as his CIA officer, who works in the world, not U.S., reserve estimates. The recent selling of 383,000 tons of oil to the Russian Federation is abundance somewhere. 1 wonder where all that oil was this winter. Remember the distraught eastern Americans on television? community hidden in the outskirts of the ever-increasing suburban area of Johnson County. a suburban area that is characterized by concentrated steadily toward the south and the Spring Hill area. Jerry Storrer Berry Storer Tonganoxie Some may laugh at Spring THE DEATH OF MARY MAY MORRIS Jay Bemis Editorial Writer Hill's population of 2,000, but they'll be the last to laugh when they know that the city's population has doubled from the mere 1,000 it had a few years ago. The major source of water for residents of Spring Hill comes from the city lake—but that source has gone almost dry. LANG IS AN older-looking man not merely because of his age, but because of several city of Spring Hill will have only two or three day's water supply left. The water superintendent of Spring Hill is Bill Lang. His job for the project has been acquired and it would take at least six or seven years to complete. Lang says that the lake's standpipe, through which the water is pumped, is now about 18 inches below the surface of the lake. Once the water level gets below the standpipe, the Other communities designed to benefit from the Hillsdale are having similar-but some different problems. Many of these communities also are increasing in population because of new housing. YOUNG HAS raised many eyebrows with his candor about the situation, afraid to put the blame where it is due, in no uncertain terms. ABOUT ALL that Spring Hill can do is pray for heavy rains. It has passed an emergency ordinance under which anyone who uses more than 1,000 gallons of water a month is subject to substantially higher water bills. That voice, it should be noted, has often been the source of embassurance to the Carter army. It is a testament to completion of its first 100 days. His most recent gaffe was the denunciation of Great Britain as Two, maybe three years of work could have been finished by now if planners hadn't tried to make appropriations games that are played in Congress. Many such barriers seemed to be out of the way about a year ago. But now, with a backing back much-needed water. This ordinance might enhance more conservation of water, but it will be of little importance to the city lake continues to drop. Carter's reinstating the Hillsdale project now would do little to help the current population of Apple HP between 38 per cent of the land needed BUT $10.6 million of the $25 million projected cost has been funneled toward the dam already. And the reason the dam isn't near completion and saving communities now is due to a series of kinks in the rubber hose known as bureaucracy. James Pearson, Robert Dole and Larry Winn may be Republicans, but they're fighting to get the Hillsdale one "iberal" who's behind them all the way. MENELP ERCONNECTAARDADJVLARE. 087172694000 TRANSMITTEN DIET Now, U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young is being watched and listened to more closely than ever in his role of voice of the free world at the United Nations. Young's style wreaking havoc The headlines read: YOUNG LEARNING THE HARD WAY, SOLID GROOVING IN BRITAIN RACISM AND EVERY YOUng CALLS SOUTH AFRICA "ILLEGITATE." Mother of Mercy, will this be Our man at the United Nations is probably wondering where he went wrong. Things had no doubt been a lot more peaceful for the former before he left the pulpit. Mother of Mercy, will this be the end of Andrew Young? 'racist. Young said that that country had perpetuated the injustices against nonwhites in South Africa by its noninference and timidity in dealing with Prime Minister sticks to point out the misdeeds of some of the nations in the world community, including the United States. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, now in the Senate, and Young A. S. Prabhakar Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer John Vorster and his white minority government. He later apologized for his bumness, but left untouched the fact that he insisted this statement. If Britain has exercised its pervasive as a colonial power, however, diminished over the years,) the situation in South Africa was far worse and disorientated to its low point today. RECENTLY, THE POST of Lyon ambassador has been filled unnecessarily two men who dismembered a woman and made plentiful use of verbal have both been accused of speaking out of turn, and saying the wrong things. Their candor adds to the reality of the situation and makes it more easily understood by the public, but wreaks havoc on the refined art of diplomacy. TO THOSE USED to the secret and far-flung deliberations of Henry Kissinger, Young's openness and free-wheeling style in foreign dealings must come as a shock. Young's acceptance of the "open administration" emphasized by President Carter takes away the mystique of foreign policy that was once dealt with as a subject discussed only between career presidents but neither the war nor the know-how to handle it. Political observers are laying odds on Young's imminent demise at the United Nations, that he will "misspeak" himself once too often and be asked politely to resign. Hardly, President Jimmy Carter and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance have—if not embraced—backed up Young in his oppression as he tells it he is not how we all wish it could be. THE CRITICISM of Young's conducting "foreign affairs in a goldfish bowl" and having a weekly foreign policy statement has run the gamut, but shows no signs of improving on conduct of conducting world politics. In commenting on Young's recent statements describing Cuban troops in Angola as stabilizers in that war-torn country, Carter has said that he agrees with the U.N. ambassador. Although surely neither like the idea of communists in Africa, it doesn't permit them to ignore that reality, or its seemingly palliative effect. The appointment of Vice-President Mondale to begin formulating an American policy toward Africa, seen at first as a restraint on Ambassador serves as a reinforcement. YOUNG'S TREATMENT of Africa as an independent factionalized entity is a far cry from Kissinger's more secretive haunt monde brand of diplomacy, using the continuum for a bargaining ground between capitalists and communists. The freshness of Andrew Young's approach to age-old problems continues to stumble many. It mirrors the attitude of their openness, as they pick up and do things their way. CONGRESS SMALL CARS INDEED! BUSINESS Energy plan superficial © 1972 NYT Special Features Our natural tendency to personalize public issues tends to obscure the larger purpose. The talk in Washington last week was mostly about Carter—would his popularity make senators sententors into line? Would his leadership succeed in marshaling public support for his legislative measures? WASHINGTON—The big question involved in the formulation of an energy policy is not the survival of Jimmy Carter. It is the survival of our country. Carter's fortunes don't really matter—or at least they ought not to matter. If a national energy policy is approached in terms of a "Carter policy" or a "state policy," it will lose in the resulting partisanship. Wars are too serious to be left to generals, so an energy policy is too vital to entrust to presidents. If this critical problem is to be solved, the statesmanship seldom seen around our town, and it will demand a maturity not yet CARTER, IN my own view, is plainly right in his general perception. In terms of our demonstrated by our freewheeling people. James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc energy requirements, we are indeed on a collision course with the enemy. It is no novel perception. Spanish utilities and the petroleum companies have been sounding Catanian warnings for 10 years. It is an oversimplification to say that the world is swiftly running out of oil. Enough oil could be recovered from western shale, or from deep offshore wells, or from other processes, to last for centuries; that we are running out of oil at a pace that can be absorbed without worldwide economic upheaval and without grave risk of environmental catastrophe. BUT IF Carter is clearly right in his general perception, he is woefully wrong in his specific The program is a mishmash, compounded of wise concern on the one hand and political palver on the other. Conservation is essential—of course less essent—but our conservation Carter is talking about can't be achieved cheaply. twice or three times that figure. it is misleading to suggest that these things can be done without adverse environmental impact. Carter is guilting the people with "the easy and extravagant 'way of life' and 'standard of living' can be maintained. proposals. At bottom, he is proposing to use the taxing power in order to tinker, tinker with the marketplace. He proposes a plan of tax credits and tax rebates that would produce an administrative nightmare. The power of government ought to be used, it seems to me, incisively and boldly, in a few realistic determents against waste inefficiency in the use of fuel. And we need realistic incentives for the rapid development of energy sources. If Congress will provide this much, the free marketplace can do the rest. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during weekdays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas days. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas days. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas days. A year in Douglas County and $10 a semester or $2 a semester a year in Douglas County and $10 a semester or $2 a semester paid through the student activity fee. Editor Business Manager Wednesday, April 27. 1977 5 as been I take at years to if the $f2 has been de dam the reason the action and is due is rubber crackery. years of finished had to that are such as out of the But now, back on bert Dole may be they're Hillsdale and this is behind th that he N am surely of com doesn't ere that amingly f Vice- begin in policy first as assassator inforce- ENT OF fac- far cry more brand of bringing the ingyn- ists and Andrew age-old startle attitude of in their steam y. it figure, quest that without impact. with apple with cass and date, and can germment is to me, in a few realistic aste and of fuel. recessives element of these deutsche can Glover comments on self, politics, Kansas By JOE RADCLIFFE Staff Reporter State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, sat in his office Monday on the second floor of the building when a cold hamburger and occasionally stirred a Strydoam cup of vegetable soup. His office once was in a secluded wing on the first floor of the capitol. As a sign of political status, it has been moved to the second floor—one floor closer to the highest ranking offices near the House chamber on the third floor. The events that led to Glover's second floor office began in 1698 when he was 22 and running for the office of state representative from Lawrence. VIETNAM was staring him in the face. Glover said in an interview last December, and state representatives couldn't be drafted. "It looks as if I was just dudging him," he said, "but I lost the election anyway." Glover went to his draft board the day after the 1970 election and announced that he would be a Republican. "The sooner I went, the sooner I could get back and run again," he said. Within several months, Glover was in the army. He hopped around to different bases in and around the United States. Then he returned to Lawrence to run for state representative in a new district that had been created by the 18-year-old vote. Glover was elected on the 25th. Glover was elected at the age of 25. HE DESCRIBES himself in his early days as "one of those typical naive liberals, thinking that I could walk in with a great speech and change the world." Although Glover's political life was looking up, his personal life was deteriorating. When he returned home from college, he said, his family was falling apart. His parents were getting a divorce. His mother was told that she had a terminal illness. Then Glover married, and a year later the couple divorced. "I GUESS I came back from the service *I* needed a family to come home to," he said. "But I don't know where to go." His mother died about a year ago, on his father's birthday. "I got married out of need, which I guess is not a very good basis for a marriage." Before the 1974 campaign, Glover met his second wife, Bonnie, and his life began to get more stable. They married soon after his reelection. Now Glover is a law student at Washburn University and his wife is expecting their first child. WITH MORE than four years in the legislature behind him, Glover contemplated this year's session, which is expected to be turbulent 90 days for the representative. Glover's problems began with a Kansas City Star story by Ray Morgan about Glover's use of marjuana and a dealer who made $25,000 a year. What followed was criticism by the legislature, a formal apology by Glover on the floor of the House, subpoenas and a closed-court inquisition. Glover's bill for decriminalization of manjura juvenile has been narrowly passed by the Senate. GLOVER INTERRUPTED his lunch to talk about the marijuana bill, politics. Kansas and his present, past and future life. Pink the star article hurt the marijuana bill? A. I think it did, simply because I had to take a real low profile over in the Senate in order to keep the Senate thinking about the marijuana bill and not about me. And I was ready for that. But the Senate has been able to if I wasn't worried about the peripheral issue of Mike Glow. But this was also the first time the Senate had seen a marijuana bill. The House has had it three times, and passed it on the third time. I had to believe another reason—inexperienced senators. Q. THEY WEREEN ready to rush into anything new? A. Well, they never had any opportunity to really talk about it. SUA FILMS DIR, Rene Clement. Winner of the Venice Film Festival—Grand Prize. Classical Film Series. Wednesday, December 13. FORBIDDEN GAMES (1952) A. No, I don't think so. The thing about the article that I think was bad, was the cavalier attitude it projected of me, making it seem like a self-serving bill and making it seem as if I didn't care whether they passed it or not—I was going to live my own life, free of the encumbrances of the law. I don't think Ray Morgan tried to portray that man out that way, i.e., don't think Ray Morgan tried to abasage me or the bill. 2. And the article didn't help much. Q. SO YOU think he was pretty responsible? Dir. Walterian Borowczyk with Paloma Picasso. Winner of the Grand Prize at the London Film Society, short films. Submit files. Society, Rated X—10 % checked. Thursday, April 28, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. $1 IMMORAL TALES (1974) Q. What was the major reason for talking with him? Wednesday, April 27, 7:30 p.m., 750 Dir. Robert Altman, with Paul Newman, Burt Lancaster, Harvey Ketel, Popular Film Series, April 3, 30: 3, 70: 0, p.m. $1. m. p. $1. BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS (1976) A. Favor to Morgan. He came to me quick, after the bill had passed, and said he wanted to do a favorable story on me and marijuana, showing a constructive young guy, hard-working, dedicated. It was all legit. I think if you go back and read the article from an objective point of view, he would have been right, but right guy. He said I'm a respected liberal, hard-working, dapper—all the adjectives were good. A. Yeah, I think he was. Sure, there were a few discrepancies in the article. They ended up being in the same paragraph that mentioned the $25,000-a-year dealer. But those were fairly minor discrepancies, and they were important, in that they were in that paragraph that the attorney general was interested in. TRUCK-STOP WOMEN plus SHORT EXPLOITATION FILMS A lot of people have come up to me and said, "Ray Morgan is a schmuck, and you should never have done that." But I've been along with Ray Morgan really well. A. I think a politician has an obligation to be A. truthful. That doesn't mean you have to tell as much of the story as I have told. I could've been just as truthful with Ray Burr. So I don't need the $2,000 dealer. So I guess the question really is: Do you tell the whole truth all the time to everybody? I think you have to be careful. You have to use some discretion. Q. YOU SEEM TO talk as openly with reporters as you would with your best friend. Do you think a politician should be like that or that a problem with you? Midnight Film Series. Friday, April 29 & Saturday, April 30, 12:00 midnight, $1 A. I just should have been a little more thoughtful on that particular article. But, in general, I don't think I'm guilty of not using enough discretion. A. Well, not really. Most of the people in my district knew about my personal use of computers. Q. The fact that you're pretty open— you open—has that hurt you politically. Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union University Daily Kansan I last election, I think it's kind of going to wash out. It's either going to washing out, or I think there's going to be a positive effect. The majority of the people in the district are going to forgive us, and I think most of them chance to get the bill passed because I've State Rep. Mike Glover been making a legitimate effort for a couple of years. The other group that doesn't support the issue—half of them—feel that I was taken advantage of and support me for my honesty. And the other part of the group George Segal & Jane Fonda Robert Shaw — Bruce Cern "The ultimate act of terrorism" Utilities ... *Starring* SYLVESTER STALLONE Eve, 7:20 & 9:35 Sat. Sun, 1:45 Hillcrest "ROCKY" Hillcrest "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" 10 Academy Award Nominations Hillcrest "BLACK SUNDAY" PG Every Eve! 3a/10 & 3:25 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:00 Claude Dennis, Sandy Dennis, Jacqueline Bauer Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. at 2:30 "ANNIE HALL" "NASTY HABITS" From page one A nervous romance Eve. 7.30 & 9.40 Saf. Sun. 2.30 PG WOODY & DIANE ALLEN KEATON A NEW COMEDY Varsity 701428 ... Stephens 617-3655 IN ANOTHER water rate rise, the city commission approved an eight-event increase per 1,000 gallons in the water rates charged to rural water districts. The increase, to take effect on next month's bills, raises the cost of 1,000 gallons Granada NATIONAL SCHOOL OF MARTIAL ARTS STARTS THURSDAY "THE BAD NEWS BEARS" —Plus— THE SHOOTIST See GLOVER page eight Gene Vogt, city utilities director, cited rising production costs for treated water as a factor in the decline. PG Box opens 8:15 Showtime 8:20 The application, made to Republic Group Insurance Company of Dallas, was termed by Watson as for "a timely kind of insurance." In other business, the commission agreed to submit an application for up to $1 million coverage in public official liability insurance for certain city employees. THE ANNUAL premium of $2,500 would cover liability suits above $3,500. Sunset Mortgage in South Africa near Nigelville The insurance would cover suits involving alleged discrimination and alleged denial of civil rights by the city commission, the mayor, the city manager, the assistant city manager and appointed department heads and officials. The city commission also accepted a low bid with the interest rate of 4.97 per cent for $8.4 million in general obligation bonds for Nunoo Inn Reservoir Water Treatment Plant. THE CONTINENTAL Bank, Chicago, will buy the bonds, approved by voters in the March 8 primary election. The bond series, the largest the city has ever issued, consists of 1,800 bonds worth $5,000 each. All will be paid for by 1997. AORTE—A GREEK CELEBRATION APRIL 24-MAY1 Greek Week is being held in recognition and acknowledgment of the Greek system and events, competition and fund raising are among the many planned happenings! Auniversity of Kansas Art Show is being held Monday, April 25 through Saturday, April 30 at the Market Place Area on 8th and 14th Hampshire. The Art Show is being held as part of the festivities during KU Greek Week. Fraternities and sororites have been invited to participate in art projects and jewelry and much more. It will be open to the public from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sign up at the SUA office. CONFERENCE ON AFRICA RHODESIA (ZIMBABWE) ETHIOPIA SPEAKERS: ZIMBABWE AFRICAN NATIONAL UNION ETHIOPIAN STUDENT UNION SUN TRAVEL KANSAS CITY ROYALS vs. SPONSORRED BY (K,J,I) AFRICAN CLUB & I,S,A. AT K,U. Time: 7:30 pm WED/APR11/27 /77 Place: KANSAS UNION [BIG 8] CALIFORNIA ANGEL Monday night, May 9th $7 cost includes—round trip trans., reserved seat ticket, beer and pop provided deadline April 29th. Birkenstock. A SUA TRAVE Feet in the sand make footprints PRIMARILY LEATHER Hours 9:30:5:30 Mon.-Sat. 812 MASSACHUSETTS 12:00:8:30 Thurs. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Feet in Birkenstock footwear do the very same thing. The Birkenstock footbed is heat and pressure sensitive, to mold to your foot, and become your footprint So walking in Birkensock is a lot like walking footwear in the sand, with one very convenient feature. You can walk in Birkenstock all year long Let your feet make a place for themselves. Let's a place. SC DRITCHES CORNER When you need to look your best, whether it's parties or interviews, see us at Britches. All sales final-No alterations BankAmericard - Master Charge-B.C. Charge-Cash Contemporary Clothing for men and women 843 Mass. St. 6 Wednesday, April 27, 1977 University Daily Kansan Tennis team rips NU, 8-1 The KU's men's tennis team made their last home appearance of the season an impressive one as they defeated Nebraska 8-1 yesterday afternoon. KU swept the singles and won two of the doubles, to pick up their 16th win against 11 defeats. It was KU's second win over NU this season. Bill Clarke picked up his 21st win of the season when he defeated Phil Wogan, 6-1, 6-1 in. 1. singles competition. Mark Hosking picked up his third straight win, 6-4, 6-1. Greg Buller, Chet Collier, Lonnie Taylor and Joe Royerall picked up wins in their games. IN NO. 1 DOUBLES, Clarke and Hosking defeated defender Schmalti and Sidabob 6-4, 6-4. Buller and Taylor were defeated at the No. 2 position, and Ruysser and Collier at No. 3, picked up KU's last point of the day, winning 6-1, 4-6, 7-5. KU had no time to sit back and think about the win, however. They left this morning for Ames, Iowa, where they will meet Iowa State this afternoon. And they will compete in the Drake Relays Tournament tomorrow and Friday. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Milwaukee W 8 L Prot. GB Baltimore 9 6 Baltimore 370 Boston 8 10 Boston 472 Toronto 8 9 Ohio 354 Bronx 8 11 672 354 Detroit 6 11 553 354 Detroit 6 11 368 354 MILWAUKEE Chicago W 10 L 6 Pet. GB Kansas City W 12 M 625 1/2 Kansas City W 8 M 125 1/2 Oklahoma 10 7 388 1 Oklahoma 10 7 348 1 California 7 8 440 1 California 8 12 440 1 Seattle 11 8 112 **Veterans' Reserves** Chicago 10, Detroit 8, Indianapolis 5, Seattle 7, Portland 6, Miami 4, wet grounds Boston 3, Milwaukee 2, New York 2, Kansas City 6, Texas 4, Washington 3, night TODAY TRUMPS Seattle (Above 0.2) at Minnesota (Thermodyne 1.1) 0 n.m. 10 n.m. Santa (Atlantic) 0-2 at Minnesota (Thorndale) 1-1. Chicago (Buffalo) 0-2 at Detroit 1-2. 12-30 in Chicago. Harrison (Minnesota) 0-2 at Detroit 1-2. 12-30 in Chicago. Toronto (Hamilton) 1-1 at Cleveland (Garland) 0-3. 10-30 in New York (Patterns) 0-1 at Baltimore (MacMaster) 1-0. Texas (Bryant) 1-2 at Kansas City (Leonard) 1-0. 7-20 in Oakland (Ukulele) 1-2 at California (Hartlett) 1-1. 5-20 NATIONAL LEAGUE W 8 L 6 Pet. GB Pittsburgh 8 8 37 St. Louis 9 623 Seattle 6 633 Montreal 7 638 14 Tampa 6 628 14 Philadelphia 6 628 14 Philadelphia 6 628 14 | West Coast Teams | 12 | 7 | 3 | 800 | --| | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :---| | Los Angeles | 12 | 7 | 3 | 800 | --| | San Francisco | 7 | 7 | 4 | 500 | 4/5 | | Alaska | 12 | 7 | 4 | 500 | 4/5 | | San Diego | 8 | 10 | 444 | 3/6 | | | Houston | 8 | 10 | 49 | 444 | 3/6 | | Cardinal | 8 | 10 | 49 | 444 | 3/6 | Chicago A. S. Looks 1 Pittsburgh A. Lindelliapla 0 Boston A. S. Looks 1 Montreal at New York, ppd, rain Los Angeles at San Diego, pn Louisville at Danville, pn Jayhawks Junior thirdbaseman Lee Ice is batting.368 Staff photo URBAN PLANNING AT HUNTER The Department of Urban Affairs at Hunter College of the City University of New York offers a two-year, 60-credit program (including work) in urban planning. Air oriented. Hunter's program grapples with social and economic problems and explores the areas of housing, tran- situation, transportation, education, and recreation. Fieldwork opportunities abound—in city and suburban planning agencies, in neighborhood groups, in community development organizations. Requirements are flexible and an able, diverse, and experienced faculty to read and advise students. Extensive financial aid is available to students $750 for City residents and $1,000 for non-City residents, plus a semester for City residents and $300 for non-City residents. For more information and admission applications write: Director, Graduate Program in Urban Planning. Director, Graduate Program Hunter College/C.U.N.Y. Bloomington Avenue New York, New York 10021 (212) 750-5594 Etienne Signer Etienne Rigner® F6 A The Season of Casual Elegance See the new collection of shoes, sandals and coordinated leather apparel . . . for the perfectionist—the woman who cares. Lee Ice's bat is ablaze, but his glove is frozen Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen By JASON NUSS The notorious label found on scouting reports, "good glove, can't hit," doesn't apply to Lee Ice. In fact, the opposite may be true for KU's third baseman. Sports Writer Ice, a junior from Lawrence, leads the Jayhawks in hits with 39 and has a .368 batting average, second on the team. But he also led the Jayhawks—twice as many as any other Jayhawk. Part of the reason for his errors can be blamed on playing a different position this season. Ice had played shortstop all his life before being switched to third by KU coach Floyd Temple to make room for juci transfer Jeff Watson. "THE BALLS I have trouble with are the ones I thought would cause me problems," ice said. "The buns and the slow rollers, those are the ones that hurt me." Ice says the defensive switch has improved his hitting. Last year as KU's regular shortstop, ice but 27 and led the Jagwahens in at-bats, in which he scored 13 goals. "I didn't know whether the switch would bother my hitting or not," she said. "Then I said wouldn't I wouldn't have the defensive pressure on me to take it like a knife I could concentrate more on my hitting." ICE PLAYED baseball his freshman year at Johnson County Community College where he hit .356. He decided to transfer to KU after only one year of junior college ball. He said the caliber of baseball at the junior college level wasn't what he wanted. honorable mention All-Big Eight for his performance his first year at KU. Last summer, Ice, along with current KU players Ron MacDonald and Carl Heinrich, played baseball in Ft. Dodge, Iowa. Ice hit 397 and learned a valuable打假 lesson. Sports --or at tournament "AF F. Dodge," Ice said, "I learned to go with the pitch, hit the outside pitches to left hand." ICE PUT the lesson to practice this session. He go off to a goal start and his team makes the game worse. The left-handed hitter incorporated the idea of punching the ball to left field into his back. "I just try to hit the ball hard," ice said. "I don't worry about where the ball goes. If you hit the ball hard, it just comes down to the ball if the ball falls for a base hit or is caught. --or at tournament K.U. Chess Club Tournament 3 Round Swiss Tournament Open to students & faculty Trophy will be awarded to first place winner. Saturday, April 30 9 a.m.—8 p.m. Walnut Room, Union $1.00 entry fee "I'd like to get drafted," he said. "Everybody at the college level would like me the chance. I would definitely take the challenge from same along, just to see if I could make it." ICE COMES from a family rich in baseball tradition. His father, AL, has coached the Lawrence American Legion baseball team for 24 years. During that span, five Ices have graduated from the Lawrence program. Ice's play has attracted the attention of several scouts in the area. He said he would like the chance to play professional baseball. Sign up in SUA office Baseball isn't the only sport excels in. He lettered in basketball and artiues fishing. CAI "Fishing is my sport to relax," he said. "I get a day off, I grab my pole, get some fresh ice and watch the birds." from 9-9:30 a.m. "Everybody in the family, brothers, cousins and uncles all played the game." He told me one year we had eight Ices involved in the game, counting players, coaches and batbats. For further info: SUA office 864-3477 --- --- TOYOTA GEARED UP FOR GREAT MILEAGE. A New Toyota Century for 1977. The Answer is Toyota's towering promise of driving quality and performance with a dependable management system in the EPA award. The American Motor Company's new 36 city model highway, 36 mile mag highway, 36 city vehicle make will be parking on your driving license and your car in good condition and equipped. 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Changes in Altitudes. Marijuana McIntosh Billy Davis Jr. I Hope We Get to Love In Time GRT MUSIC TAPES abc Records GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 2525 Iowa Street Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, April 27. 1977 7 attention of did he would professional he said, would like ely take the to see if I ry rich in Al, has man Legion surtain that l from the brothers, the game," ar we had n, counting excels in, "sys fishing, "he said, y pole, get o fishing," R Sinclair makes transition well from Tulsa sandlots to 'Hawks By PATSLATTERY Sports Writer There's a lot of difference between playing softball on a Tulsa, Oka, sandlot and on the KU team. And Shelley Sinclair is well aware of that. She currently leads KU pitchers with a 9-0 record and a .390 ERA. "I couldn't believe it when I first cam- ber," Sinilar said. "Everybody was so competicile. I never seen anybody so big, so deep game. I didn't think I "make the team." When she first came to KU, however, she had a tough time getting to play. Sinclair not only made the team, she is now one of its stars. HER HIGH school didn't have a softball team until her senior year, and most of her experience came from sandlot and local league games. After graduating from high school, she had planned to go to Oklahoma University and came to KU almost by accident. "We were playing in a tournament in McPherson, and I saw Dr. (Sharon) Drydale there," Sinclair said. "She watched me play and offered me a scholarship. I took it without even seeing the campus. Now I'm glad I did." Drysdale is the former head coach and currently is an assistant professor in the physical education department. Last year, as a freshman at KU, most of Sinclair's playing time came in the outfield. The Jayhawks had an abundance of good pitchers that year, and she had a tough time cracking the starting line up. SINCLAIR SAID she attributed her success this year to experience gained playing summer ball. The coach of a Hutchinson team called Purple Power she played for the Jayhawks in the state tournament last year and signed her up for the summer. "I was one of two pitchers on the team, and I got in a lot of playing time." Sinchlair said. "We weren't in a league of kind but spent a lot of time on the跑。 Purple Power played in tournaments from Kansas to New Mexico. The team played as many as four games a day. "Pitching two games a day can be really tiring," she said, "but I was glad to be getting the experience. It helped give me the confidence that I needed." SINCLAIR'S confidence has increased as KU's season has progressed. Her statistics show it. Six of her nine wins have been shut out. She has given up just three earned runs and 22 hits in 60-1 3 innings. She has struck out 53. She also has been effective at the plate, batting. 251. She has 10 hits in 39 at-bats and scored nine runs. Control has been an occasional problem for Sinclair. She has walked 14 and committed three errors. KU coach Bob Stanclift said he thought the control problems would clear up in time. "SHELLEY IS young and has a lot of potential," he said, "If anything, she's going to get better." Sinclair, a business major, would some like to have her own business, but her husband wanted it. Last year was the first for a professional women's fast pitch softball league in the United States and, she said, professionally was still up in the air. ras Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Sinclair leads KU's pitching staff with 9-0 mark "I haven't really looked into it yet. I know they only play for three months out of the year, so I have to quit any job I do." He said. "I'll probably end up long the legue is going to be around." If the pro league folds, Sinclair said, she would try to find a team to play for somewhere. "It's hard to give up something you've loved doing for 10 years." Golf squad plays today Today's opening round of the Drake Invitational in Des Moines, Iowa, will provide the KU men's golf team with its last competition for nearly a month. The Drake meet, which lasts through Friday, is the only meet remaining for the Jayhawks until the Big Eight championship season. 18-21 at Alvamar Hills in Lawrence. survey of the sexual mystique IMMORAL TALES are a BUT ACTUALLY ABOUT SOME- THING - THE MYSTERY, POETRY AND HYPOCRISY OF MARKAND LOVE* A Designated from bachelor's and senior institutions. Invited to the work of the female nurse and invited by all theocratic possibilities when pre- eminent role is offered. IMMORAL TALES starring Paloma Picasso "RICH, LITERATE, ELEGANT AND SUBTLE. An outrageous EDARYE DANIELLE SARIBIC Thurs., April 28 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. $^1$ — Woodruff Auditorium Raked 8 - D or carried at the door With STUDENTS! CABLE T.V. & HBO If you're leaving for the summer don't forget to make an appointment to have your service disconnected and your decoder removed. Call Now for a convenient disconnect date. Avoid unnecessary charges. SUNFLOWER CABLEVISION 7th & NEW HAMPSHIRE 841-2100 University Daily Kansan Scott Wright's fan club had plenty to cheer about yesterday in KU's doubleheader sweep over the Emporia State Hornets. Sweep ends home season By JASON NUSS Snorts Writer Wright, who is greeted by chants of "Wu. Wu" (his nickname), each trip to the plate, bloomed a single in the bottom of the eighth inning and moved into the first game of the doubleheader. "It's my fraternity brothers who yell my nickname everytime I come up to the plate." Wright explained. "It makes me relax a little bit when they yell because I know they are up there watching. It's just a little added incentive." **WRIGHT'S BLOOP** single scored Carl Heinrich from third to give KU the 3-victory. Heinrich led the inning off with a single and advanced to second on Vince McCarthy. Heinrich went to third on a wild pitch to score on Wright's game-winning hit. KU bombed three Emporia pitches in the nightcap to defeat the Hornet, 13-5. The two victories completed KU's home season with a 12-5 record. KU took an early lead in the game, scoring two runs in the first inning. But Emporia State countered with two runs in the ninth, and the remained tied until Wright had his single. Stan Messner, 3-1, picked up the win in relief. Messner repaired Terry Sutcliffe in the eighth inning after Sutcliffe walked the leadoff hit. Sutcliffe allowed only four hits and retired nine consecutive batters before the leadoff walk in the eighth. KU EXPLODED in the second game, scoring 13 runs on 14 hits. The Jayhawks scored a run in the first inning, five in the second inning, reach with seven runs in the sixth inning. Bird nails win over Rangers KANSAS CITY (AP) - John Mayberry lashed a two-run home and Al Cowens tripled his pair of runs in support of Doug Bird's gritty relief pitching as the Kansas City Royals whipped the Texas Rangers 6-3 last night. Bird, 1-0, entered the game in the fourth inning after Ken Henderer slammed a base hit off starter Andy Hassler's knee to load the bases with none out. One out later, Juan Benjamue borne bone Texas third run with a ground ball, but the Orioles beat the Rangers. With the Rangers clinging to a 3-2-lead, boser Gaylord Perry, l,3-surrendered a leadfist single to Tom Poquette in the sixth and Mayberry hunted to put the Royals on top. BACKGAMMON Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union Carl Heinrich and Andy Gilmore homered and Lee Ice collected three hits in the night. Gilmore's home run drove in three runs, giving him 28 RBIs for the year and a share of the KU single-season record. He tied Dick Fanning's 1962 total. "I was having a bad day, until that home run, "Gilmore said. "I was way ahead of everything, so I just told myself to wait and he gave me a fast ball over the plate." RICK BOGDAN, who relieved Clay Christians in the fourth inning, was credited with win. Bogdan, a sophomore walk-on, is now 3-0. KU coach Floyd Temple was pleased with the doubleheader sweep for more than one reason. "Emporia State is a good club ball." Temple said. "They could play in the Big Eight but couldn't make a living in it." Emporia State pitched pitching staff, but they are a good team." But Temple was even more pleased with what the sweep could mean to the Jayhawks' morale as they travel to Columbia this weekend for a key Big Eight game. The Tiger's lead the 'Hawks by two games in the Eastern Division. "I think this will give us momentum," Temple said. "A loss would have really hurt us psychologically. Momentum is really important going into a big series." Concerts for Young People, Inc. in cooperation with SUA presents the in a one hour performance HARTFORD BALLET One performance only SUNDAY, MAY 1, 3 to 4 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE KUF Student Tickets in advance at SUA Box Office ... $2.00 Children ... 1.00 Adults ... 2.50 K. U. Student tickets in advance at the door --- AORTE! A Greek Celebration in Song "GREEK SING" LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 8:00 Thursday, April 28 Tickets available at door or Delta Chi fraternity, 843-6244 $1.50 1:30 SEVEN THINGS NOT TO DO THIS SUMMER. Summer can be fun if you know a few common things to avoid doing. 2. Do not, under any circumstances, try to pick up a cow. 1. Do not swim at any beach where they have loudspeakers playing the soundtrack from "Jaws." 3. Do not answer any want an aim for a summer job that sounds too good to be true —unless you enjoy selling steak knives 4. Do not tell your parents that, after graduation, you have decided on an exciting career in hotel management. 5. Do not accept a date from anyone wearing a green leisure suit and roller skates. 6. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to feed your pet gerbil a boa constrictor. Tom See Schlitz Campus Rep 843-3058 7. Do not forget the one word for beer As your Dean of Beer, I can think of nothing more important to you to remember So have fun, have Sohibz and I will see you next fall SCHLAT BARRIE DUNN JUST ONE WORD FOR BEER. SCHLERR AND YOU KNOW IT. Siglinda Steinfuller Dean of Beer ©1972, JOS SCHLITZ (BREWING CO., MILWAUkee, WI) 8 Wednesday, April 27, 1977 University Daily Kansan Glover . From page five doesn't like the issue, and doesn't like a representative to make statements like Q. YOU SAID ABOUT four months ago that you didn't think the marijuana bill would even get past the House . . . Q. Well, you said that the new Democratic legislators would be too scared to vote against their constituency right away, and you didn't really think it would go through. Were you surprised that it got as far as it did? A. No—after we got into the session, I began thinking that it would have a little better chance, especially when it got out of the office and had to make an amendment that cut down the liberalized aspect of the bill. I thought we had a really good chance because we picked up some more people and made a real vocal support. Once it got out of the House, I thought we were in good shape. A. There's a lot of work to do, but I think there's a good chance of it. Q. What do your fellow legislators think of you? Q. NEXT YEAR? A. I think it's good, positive, friendly. Q. They're not generally embarrassed by you. A. I don't think so. I think a lot of the members thought I had really been taken advantage of. I think a lot of them felt like the Republican farmer who came down to the mike and said, "The only mistake Mike made was that he was honest." Q. WHAT IS your attitude toward the legislators. Do you feel they won't open an opportunity? A. I get frustrated like anyone else that I'm not having enough influence. But when it's all said and done, I think I have as much influence as anyone else. D. Do you still consider yourself a liberal in a relatively conservative state? A. I think Kansas is a pretty reasonable state, in terms of our laws as they relate to people. I think Kansas is made up basically of conservative people who have a lot of compassion, for each other and their fellow man. I think it is a state made up of people who are more concerned about the individual than the job (the legislators) have done a pretty crucial job of appropriating money for the needy. The legislature takes a pretty responsible job in what's necessary and what's needed. Q. HOW DO YOU picture Kansas now? A. I think Kansas is a lot more progressive than people want to give it credit for. I don't like certain laws in the --state. I think the liquor and marijuana laws are crazy. I think there are a lot of small things that need addressing; the criminal system, the juvenile justice system, etc. But Kansas is a lot more progressive than most states. I know states in the Union that haven't ratified the direct election of senators. Some states haven't ratified the income tax amendment—it's still law, but they've gotten around to ratifying it, and they're not on the list of those things, the first state to ratify a lot of these things, besides being one of the first states to ratify the equal rights amendment. We've got one of the best states in the Union when it comes to consumer protection legislation. I think we have all the areas where Kansas is considerably in the front of the Union, and I don't think we lag back in most of the other areas. I HAVE A good feeling about the state, a good feeling about the people in the state. I don't like this recent baloney down in Wichita with Vern Miller and the porn films. I don't like that any more than anyone else does, but you're going to have problems like that whether you're in Oklahoma or Dallas, the deep South, Baltimore or Arizona, or a peculiar to Kansas at all. I think the state basically has got pretty fair-minded, considerate and conscientious people in it, and are represented by the same. Q. So you think Vern Miller is going overboard with the porno raids? A I THINK so. I think there's a certain limit to what is good taste, but who am I to admit to that, say that's not tasty or that is tasty and just say it's good for the Vern Miller is right in now Wichita to do what he's doing, for the simple reason that I thought the Supreme Court—the United States Supreme Court—language in that statute that we're using—was going a bit too far in deciding what's 16-foot boards taken from site About 200 15-foot boards worth about $600 were taken from the new computer center construction site at Sunnyside Avenue and Illinois Street sometime last weekend Bill Lyden, construction superintendent, said yesterday that the gates to the construction site were secured Friday after morning, and placed Monday morning, a west gate was open. F police said the gates were secured by wire and the main gate was padlocked. acceptable community standards and what isn't. I think Vern's going overboard. I think that's what the people want down there. But I think the people are missing the point—that pornoism and all these issues of morality shouldn't be enforced through the criminal justice system. It's easy to go out and bust people with dirty films, but it's a different matter than busting people who are dealing in violence yourself. You're not going to get shot walking into the theater, so that's a lot easier and it gets you a lot more headlines and a lot more public acceptance. Q. COULD YOU explain how you first decided to get into politics? A. Well . people feel that they have certain skills that they can apply. Well, that's what I felt I had in terms of politics. So I just picked out an office and ran for it. When you were first elected, over four years you could picture yourself then and how do you think? A. I think any time you come up here and get as much experience as I've gotten, we've going to pick up a working machine, and I'm going to until you get that working knowledge, to go be more frustrated. So I would say, at least for my first term, I was a pretty frustrated young man. I had a lot of ideas, a lot of things that I thought needed to be learned, but it went too slow. I still think the government use some streamlining. But I don't think the A. I think it has, I think it's become a lot more receptive. There's a lot fewer people who have been around here for 10 to 15 years and are back in the upper third in terms of seniority. Q. You're almost an old man. Mary Broderson, 841 Maine St., was injured Monday night when the bicycle she was riding collided with a car at the intersection of Ninth and Marietown. Night bike ride ends in collision state's nearly as far behind me in what I'm thinking about as I thought years ago. She was taken to Loyola Medical Hospital where she was treated for infection. Pollice said Broderson was heading east on Ninth when her bicycle collided with a car driven by Robert Eisenhauer, Lawrence junior. Eisenhauer was headed west on Ninth, preparing to turn left onto Mississippi. Police said both Eisenhauer and Broderson had green light signals when they intersect. Broderson's bicycle had no headlights or any other reflectors, they said. Eisenhauer told police he didn't see Broderson until the impact. A. I'm almost getting over the hill, right. I'm going to be 38 in July. I will corrupted as can. Q. When you were first elected, what were your goals? A. About the same as they are now. I've got a certain commitment to higher education, to KU, and to the teachers and public education. Certainly some concern about the drug laws, unemployment, the juvenile justice system itself, acting, people are treated, property taxes and how they are regressive toward the old. Q. HAVE YOU reached some of the goals? A. Some of them have been tentatively reached. I think the juvenile justice system requires a lot of patience and a big issue, and pretty much undecided. We did take the sales tax off prescription drugs, which helps the older folks, and we didn't do that for the children, so we'll help them and also help the families. Q. What are your plans now? Do you plan on being in the state legislature all your life? A. I wouldn't mind being a legislator for three or four more terms. I think that would be fine, as far as I'm concerned. B. What the? Q. What then? A. What then? Well, I may just want to retire back into public practice as a lawyer. I am ambitious; I wouldn't mind moving up in the ranks of the leadership of the institution. Diets ... From page one MAGEREL SAID that one-fourth to one-half of the Mercanile's customers were their customers. The University of Kansas is starting to accommodate vegetarians to a larger Ingle said that other stores in the Lawrence area were starting to carry veins. She said that the University of Colorado was the best school for vegetarian enters. Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services for the university residence halls, said, "We should be doing more than we are doing because residents are demanding it more. I was amazed to see what other schools were doing for vegetarians." "WE'RE NOT doing a lot, but we're working on recipes so we'll be able to do more by next week. Especially in some of the recipes, we want Hussering Hall is demanding it, the most." The athletic training tables don't have any vegetarian accommodations but this could change if there is a demand, Paul Sinclair, table manager, said. "THERE'S NO doubt that we could accommodate any type of menu that would be requested," he said. "There's plenty of meat that could be used instead of meat. We have a protein supplement that's highly nutritious. It's a powder that is just stirred into milk." Mageri said that one problem that magna is dealing with by vegetarians was a lack of vitamin B12. Livability Is ... Central Air Conditioning Front Door Parking Walk-In Closets Outside Storage Sheds All Electric Kitchens TRAILRIDGE CLIP OUT THIS COUPON 2 1/4 Chicken Dinners for $200 With Coupon Apartments 2 0 00 POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES, which are joint student and faculty committees that consider questions concerning KU: $200 With Coupon 2500 West Sixth PARKING AND TRAFFIC BOARD UNIVERSITY JUDICIARY HEARING BOARD HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD $2 "Are You the Type?" 6th and Maine 843-7333 Libraries Offer good thru May 1, 1977 Pirate's Cove Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union Applications must be returned by Fri., April 29, 1977. **Courses** - Financial Aid - Home Relations - Foreign Students - Calendar Garden Fraternities and Sororites Rent A-Plant For Your Special Occasions *Plant Rental* *Plant Maintenance* *Decorating Services* *Friendly Free Advice* Just ask for Judy Green or Anna Hines 6 East 9th • 843-1166 Half block east of Mass. St. STORE HOURS: *12 to 5:30 on Monday *9:30 to 5:30 on Tuesday through Thursday *Open until 8:30 p.m. on Thursdays Plant Lovers, You Just Don't Know What You're Missing!! ANYTHING GROWS A new plant store, offering so much more! PETER MORRISON knit shirt sale!! Mister Guy announces its largest knit shirt sale ever!! .. more than 700 of these spring knit shirts. reg. 15.00 to 16.50 — now $11.90 open thursday night till 8:30 MISTER GUY Kl lan 920 mass. The s only peel of Kami capacit 635, has KU. During service struc tion theses, student After use inc "Because new co manage recently differerer ALSO campus mental admin: After Kran student project! Howeve with th gaining "The faculty materia "We not as a games KRAI the con some Student pay a f through There charge from 50 "THE compon time ne John product time a For a the outj hour. Wednesday, April 27.1977 University Daily Kansan 9 h to oneers were s in the to carry starting to a larger services said, "We are doing it more. Iools were Colorado in eaters. but we're able to do me of the lashinger n't have but this ind, Paul said. would ac- would be plenty of of meat. its highly t stirred at might a lack of KU's new computer has larger load, faster output The stereotyped computer freak isn't the only person benefiting from the University of Kansas' new Honeywell 6860 computer. The computer, which has two memory and speed of KU's old Honeywell 630, makes life easier for many people at KU. During fiscal 1977, the old honeywell serviced 460 projects in research and instruction, including class projects, masters' courses, summer programs and special student research projects. ALSO USING the computer were various campus organizations, state and governmental organizations, the library and KU's administration. After the new computer was installed, its use increased by more than 15 per cent. "because of the greater capacity in the new computer," Ray Kramer, business executive, Computation Center, said recently. "we're starting to see people do different things." Kramer said many undergraduate students used the computer for research projects with no thesis or dissertation goal. However, a student who just wants to play with the computer might have trouble gaining access to it. We see this as an educational tool and not as a system intended for people to play with it. KRAMER SAID that most students using the computer gained access to it through some department in the University. Students enrolled in computer courses don't pay a fee; graduate students are cleared through their faculty sponsor. "The project is actually in the name of the faculty sponsor and the student is the institute's administrator." He said all projects were charged to departments. The cost depends upon the ba "THEY'RE BILLED ONLY for the components used, based on the amount of There are approximately 40 separate charge units, he said, and the charges vary from one unit to another. John Sykes, assistant director for production services, reported an amount of $60 million that varied For a computer science student, he said, That computer is back usually in less than an hour. "On the old system, a ⌊ of those little systems taking 10 to 15 hours to get out of the system⌋ were Sykes said the new computer system was chosen because it was better than the old computer for the instruction and research purposes. Sykes also noted that Honeywell could use the same mode of programming for both the batch and time-sharing methods used by various companies. THE HONEYWELL 60/60 was chosen over four other computers after a six-year study. Sykes said the computer probably uses relatively obsolete in five or six years. "But that's just for our purposes," he said. "After that we can probably sell it somewhere else where such a large capacity isn't needed." A team of five students from the University of Kansas School of Law won the International Moot Court Competition last weekend in San Francisco. 5 law students win competition The students who participated in the competition were David Davenport, Shawne Mission third year law student; David Jeans, Independence, Mo., second year law student; Katherine Clubb Kaufmann, Lakeville, Minn., first year law student; Jonathan Clarke, first year law student; and James Prentice, Turon, Kan., first year law student. Jeans placed first and Davenport third in individual oralist competition. KU placed second in the written arguments competition. This year, the KU group competed against 100 American law schools and 300 other universities. The competition was based on a hypothetical problem dealing with nuclear proliferation. The teams were divided into national and foreign divisions. After winning national division honors, the KU team defeated the foreign division winner, the University of Toronto, Canada in the final competition. Throughout history, childbirth has stirred fear and uncertainty in the minds of many women, who relied on old wives' tales and misconceptions to themselves, themselves for their children's births. By JANET WARD Staff Reporter But today, as a result of the work of many doctors and other concerned people, organizations have formed that have as a goal educating a woman's mind, body and feelings so that labor and delivery can be a time of trust, joy and predictability. Classes deal with childbirth fears With this goal in mind, seven women and their husbands gathered last Thursday night at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd St., for the first of six two-to-three children. Prepared Childbirth, Inc., of Lawrence, to live to seven couples attend each session. BEFORE THE SIX weeks are over, the couples will have learned exercises to prepare the woman's body for labor and delivery, become acquainted with one another, explore the experiences, doubts, fears, hopes and dreams about their pregnancies. Prepared Childbirth, a nonprofit organization begun three years ago in Lawrence, is one of many in the United States begin after results of the work of a nurse. Fernald Lamaze was brought to the country by returning travelers in the 1980s. The travelers were impressed with the success of the breathing techniques developed by Lamaize, which were designed to relax the body and take the woman's mind of pain, Sandy Dolezal, an instructor for the childbirth sessions, said Saturday. Using the Lamaza method and other techniques, knowledge, relaxation and exercises are taught to break the cycle of fear, tension and pain, Cindy Murray, an nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said Murray taught the class Thursday. The number of groups was small until the mid to late '60s, she said, but have increased drastically in recent years. *HAPPY PURPOSE IS TO make it a joyful, healthy experience for the Mother in need.* The program is open to both married couples and single women and costs $20 a couple or $10 a person. Most women who enroll are pregnant for the first time, Murray said, and have learned about the classes through friends from information sources. The women complete the course during the last eight weeks of pregnancy. Kathrin Kittler of Tonganoxie said she was pregnant with her first child and wanted the baby to be born in New Zealand. she says to know what you're getting into," she said. "If you are the birth, and be awaken when it happens." ALTHOUGH THIS is her second pregnancy, Sue Andrews, Tonganoxie, decided to enroll because she hadn't been prepared for the first. "I want to relax," she said, "and you can't teach it at the last minute." The people who teach the methods became involved on their own, Dolezal said. Although four of the five instructors who teach in Lawrence are nurses, it isn't necessary to have medical background since no medical advice is given, she said. All instructors, however, have been trained at workshops conducted by the International Childbirth Education Center of the umbilical organization of childbirth groups. BOTH DOLEZAL AND Murray emphasized that a prepared birth wasn't necessarily a painless birth because the work of labor was demanding. Murray likened the exercises to the training of an athlete. They also prepared childbirth wasn't necessarily unmedicated. The right medication, Murray said, may boost the effectiveness of a woman's skills. "It isn't an endurance contest," she said. An important part of the prepared childbirth experience is the role played by the husband as "coach." Husbands participate fully and learn every technique that their wives learn. By preparing and working together, they become a part of the obstetrical team, Murray said. The coach helps the woman with her breathing and in any other way that he can, because she is better at it. SINGLE PERSONS MAY choose whoever they want to serve as their coach, Dolezal said. But there is sometimes a problem obtaining permission for them to enter the delivery room. Husbands are allowed in, she said. "He knows what to expect," she said, "and can be alert to signs that perhaps she is. It hoped that through these lessons, a woman can enjoy her pregnancy more and look forward to the changes in her life that the baby will bring, Murray said. "Calm, easy-going, relaxed people have a much easier time," she said. 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St. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS ROTEL LAWRENCE'S DISCOUNT COMPLETE AUDIO STORE BIGGEST PROJECT EVER 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 ROTEL STEREO RECEIVER MODEL RX-402 "This receiver was rated best buy by the leading consumer testing organization 25 wide x 10 cm chamber min. HMS, 25 wide x 10 cm chamber min. HMS from 21 cm chamber min. HMS BEST RECEIVER BUY* 199 $ ^{95} $ REGULARLY 299.95 AUDIOTRONICS DISCOUNT SPECIAL: C-90 CAPITOL CASSETTES 6 for 7$^{95}$ PIONEER 1/2 PRICE VERITAS HEADPHONES --- SX-535 SX-636 GROVEMASTER Metropolitan first record car products ONLY 800 ALM46-100 100 $ ^{00} $ OFF Great stereo at a great price. ROTEL® ROTEL SEMI- AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE MODEL RP-2500 ONLY With Empire cartridge. REGULARLY 229.95 LAWRENCE'S DISCOUNT CAR STEREO CENTER! CAR STEREOS FROM 29°S TO 400°C COMPLETE REGULARLY 229.95 14995 BIC D electronics B1C D BIC VENTURE IN STORE PROMOTION B1C D BIC VENTURE BIC BIC WANTED A FANTASTIC SPEAKERS FANTASTIC PRICES PIONEER YAMAHA PERFEX DUAL CREATIVE PANASONIC ROTEL AUDIO REFLEX B.I.C. CRAIG B.E.S. SONY 10 Wednesday, April 27, 1977 University Daily Kansan Feedback From page one said the quality and scope of the program declined over the years until it ended in 1974. The administration funded the final years of the program for about $5,000 a year. There are three main problems with the original Feedback, according to Olson. THE BIGGEST problem, he said, was that the original Feedback was totally statistical and had no readable paragraphs. Students were asked to rate instructors in several areas on a 1-5 scale. The instructor average in each area was then printed. Olsen said that system made Feedback too dry and boring to read, and that a possible alternative would be having students complete comment sheets on each instructor at the end of the semester. For more comments, students can enter comments into one paragraph for printing. He said the second greatest problem was a lack of faculty participation. The final issue of Feedback evaluated only 10 per cent of the faculty. IT WOULD BE difficult to make faculty participation in Feedback mandatory, Olson said, because "the faculty would be in an uproar." Another solution to the lack of faculty participation would be to create a better Feedback, Olson said, because many faculty members didn't like the original program, but said they would be glad to participate in a good program. HE SAID A third solution would be something comparable to an independent system at Harvard, in which a number of students from each class completed a survey about their courses and instructors while in a neutral setting, Olson said. The survey staff then put together an editorial paragraph on each instructor. . . OLSON SAID the third problem with the original Feedback was its unreliability. He said students would be more interested in a new program if they could believe it and have a correlation between an instructor's list of feedback and a student learner from that instructor. Any new system might take as long as a year and a half to start going if begun right now, be said, but should at least be studied now. IN OTHER ACTION, the committee passed two resolutions. The first, which will be conveyed to Rin Calgand, vice chancellor of the University, support committee of a one-hour University resources class for credit. The class would explain the library system and various counseling organizations available to students. The third function and philosophy of the University. The second resolution is a committee recommendation that students be voting members of faculty promotion and tenure committees at all levels of the University. The committee also approved changes in Article 7 of the Senate Rules and Regulations concerning the functions of the Finance and Auditing Committee. THE FAA SUBCOMMITTEE proposed that the resources subcommittee, formed with the purpose of assessing the Senate's role in the event be deleted from the Rules and Regulations. Tim McCarthy, committee chairman, said that in the past the resources subcommittee wasn't used at all and that the staff could care of all assessment of income. The auditing subcommittee will still be used, but McCarthy said he hoped some sort of auditing program could be set up to make the guidelines for auditing more clear. The proposed auditing program will also be presented to the Senate May 4. OLIVER SPENCER Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL Athletic Hall of Fame opening Chancellor Archie Dykes looks over a portion of the 69 sports paintings that are the beginning of the Kansas University Sports Hall of Fame. The paintings are by Ted Watts, called "the fastest rising sports artist" by the NCAA. The paintings are on display in the College Field House and in the north and south corridors, where the Hall of Fame is situated. Recognition of individual athletes is the Hall's immediate goal, but honoring team achievements is being discussed. Criteria for individuals and teams are being drawn up. The 1972 Senior Class donated $1,000 yesterday for the start of the Hall of Fame. Also, the Williams Educational Fund is selling a KU mugue etched in marble; also done by Watts. The etchings show famous KU scenes and athletes and are being sold for $250 each. All money from the sales will go to the Hall of Fame, according to Clyde Walker, athletic director. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS present Cosi Fan Tutte A Comic Opera in Two Acts April 22,23,29,30 W.A.Mozart 8:00 p.m. University Theatre—Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 K. U. Students admitted without charge with current Certificate of Registration This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. A NEW ARRIVAL OSAGA AT Master Charge BankAmericard McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes Downtown Lawrence McCall's P.I. Yourself in our Shires ENROLL NOW ENROLL NOW Be a Montessori Teacher Attend Program at the Lawrence Public Library, Tues., May 3, 7:30 p.m. For Preschool Teachers & Parents of Young Children A Slide Show and Demonstrations Presented By Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool & The Montessori Plus Teacher Preparation Center This program and demonstration for teachers and parents will also count as orientation for the 1977 summer school Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, May 30—July 22. You need not be a college graduate to take this course and receive a certificate. You may do the required nine months internship in teaching (half days) during the 1977/78 school year in Tupelo State, where evidence as you might work part-time or go to school part-time. Four interned selects from Sunshine Acres will receive scholarship stipends toward their tuition and practice expenses. Undergraduate and graduate credits available. Also now enrolled children for summer and fall programs at Sunshine Acres Montessori School, 1414 Maple Lane, (842-2223) Volunteers are for being friends .. 12345 + Volunteers are for caring Volunteers are for making a cloudy day bright ... 100 Volunteers give of themselves ... ❤️ ...And we THANK YOU!! NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK APRIL 24th thru 30th University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 27, 1977 11 --- KANSAN WANT ADS 》 CE CAMPBELL Pool Mon course and during the time. Four cases. Uni- te Acres g drawn up. s.e. Also, the so done by soold for $250 side Walker, Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, color or national origin. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES ERRORS one two three four five times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 Each additional $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $3.75 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. 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 Pilot Hall 864-4358 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ants can be placed in person or taken to the UBK business office 814-358-6556 ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe boat trips on the Illinois River. Special tour for ages 12 and up, four-hour trip, $3.60 per person. Other trips include Wine cellar or phone for free brewing sessions. Ship to Chicago. On highway 70, Tabuquenni, O坛菏湖 (938) 704-539-6131, Tabuquenni, O坛菏湖 (938) 704-539-6131. SELF-AWARENESS: A series of workshops will be held at 12:00 noon in Room 600, 899-999 in sponsored by the Community Aid Fund. IS THERE LIFE AFTER DIRTH? An open-ended question, April 19th, 2017 at 8:00 a.m. at Castorba University Hospital in Toronto. ENTERTAINMENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME for your party or meeting. Over 600 amq it available. No group limits. Room is large. Kitchen and bar (facilities located in the basement) are also available. Vermont. Call 842-8664 for information. S-12 FOR RENT 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Union, utilizes parking, 843-957-0. Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, nets, beds 843-7567. CARPET CLEANING STAEMEX Rent the Pro Saltwater Rental Locations Call 2-40 3-877-653-1000 2-40 3-877-653-1000 Gatchee House apartments - Call Becky now. Sumner, Kim, and Sharon are here. Contracts on all Gatchee house apartments. Call 842-761-5900. Make your plans now. Applications are now available for the 1977-78 school year. Spaces are going fast. Stop by for a tour and complete details. Naimshi Hall, 1800 Naimshi Drive, 5-10 Further Ridges>short term leaves available. Please call the landscaping office with study. Hated indoor pool *oag carpet* for deck pool *papel* for deck pool *diagonal* patio *hungry facilities* for pool area *undressed and unfinished from $158. Calm if $444. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now living for fall, call 843-4963 or stop by 163. Hours are Monday to Friday, 8:30 to 2:30, Monday to Saturday, 11:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. New. 1 bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus, great location by the stadium. Call 822-3456. ROKALANAS HOTEL, Harvey, Kansas 67508. The Hotel offers a wide range of services and catered service on vacation. PREVIOUS DAY MAY LAST-DAY JANUARY Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid on, surface rent. 1095 sq. ft. $179.50 per sq. ft. $435-999 per month to 1605 or 2005. Subluxe for summer--furnished 2-bedroom quartcentre air con, carpet carpet, raftons, beds with mattresses. Siblane for summer-2 bedrooms townhouse at Traffordidge that will easily accommodate 3 people. On bus route, feeder in patio, individual car park. Fees apply. Cars larger are allowed reduced rate. Car钥匙 811-902-824. 4-28 Phish, one of a kind 4-bedroom, 3 story townhouse. Available in Midland Call May 642-805-5-458 Must sublet spacious 2-bedroom, 2-bath town- house, located on May of Free flr. gobble, 841-182 4-27 Studio apartment to sublease mid May Through August. Completely furnished in Meadowbrook. Cooperative household has rooms for rent atm-fall. Rent average $25 a month plus food insurance. Monthly rate is $180. Available May 4, the summer 2-bedroom apartment. $150 per night for 12th and 13rd floor. Apartment No. 1. Stops at 8 a.m., 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. Sublease for summer, one bedroom apartment, 71751, AC pool, available May 10, $86.95, $84.95 Sublime-Trattleville Townhouse, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, tennis court, pool, central air, carport and office. has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS Sublease for summer, 4-5 bedroom house, close to campus, call 831-5843 4-27 One bedroom furnished apartment to abut for summer. Campus and downtown, call: 4-37 916-525-1100 For summer, nice studio space, good location, all utilities paid, $100/month. 841-2635 after 5 years. Summer subbase, Traitledge three bedroom agreement, unfenced, on blix line; $225/mo; $170/mo. Sohaite: Bassin 25 two bedroom, full kitchen, Bassin 30 three bedroom, full kitchen, $225 mos. Call 841-512-7000 at 7:00 pm. 3-2 Room A: 841-512-7000 Room B: 841-512-7000 2 bedroom apartment, $140 per month plus electricity, 842-8221 5-2 Sublease for the summer, 1-bedroom apartment, furnished, call 841-5843 before 9am 5-3 SUBLEASE- 2, bedroom apartment in fourplex building, with flat conversion, off-door parking cell 841-6229 after rejection. Sublease for summer at 1024 Bedroom furnished studio apartment; call 841-7188-1298 on p.3.5 m.-p. 3.5 h. Sublease. Townhouse, three large bedrooms, two full bath rooms, pool, patio, tennis, bus service, etc. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale! Make sure to have all of the materials—1-3. Guidance study 2. For Client orientation, 3. For Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at 9:00 for Cierra Store. We are the only Full Line Franchise Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crowm components, speaker, microphone, at Audio Systems, 9th floor, Rhode Island. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BEL ALU, BEL ELECTRIC, 843-900-3000, W. 6th. 1976 Firebird formula, every available option, immaculate condition, light blow with honey and lime. Lawrence teacher must, sell 1974 home mobile, decorations, carpets, rooms, windows, garage doors, cabinets and shelves. Air appliances and洗衣 and dryer. Anchored and fenced. 8-6 p.m. Friday, 3:25 pm. Friday, 3:23 pm. lize 123 Brand new 35 mm. Pentax KM camera with lens, full warranty. $150.843-1554 4-27 Porsche 914 (1970) $2,200. Call: (913) 233-7307 or 913-233-7307 4-27 64 Ford Van, fair condition, needs some work, must $125, or best offer, 841-646-4176 Deluxe dress watered in beautiful wood frame with headboard, bargain price, will fit most homes. 1974 Kawasaki H20-7F2-Hard production cycle carbon condition condition, 1400 miles, $565. Call 812-355-6500. 74 125 Suzuki Must sell—will take best offer 842-121-120 4-28 1970 VW Station wagon, overhailed, new tires, 1970 VW Station wagon, overhailed, new tires. 860-8520-4385, 860-8520-4385 Biggest sale ever at **RAY AUDIO**, KLH-25. $179-$249 for $369 ($252-$275) at **RAY S-5** kicks $100 each (£215 each) at **RAY AUDIO-12**. For the rest of the year at **RAY AUDIO-12 E 8th**. The Little Book. With The Big Sales and High Quality Products. For Sale -1791 TVW conv. Super Belle, 4 up, bright yellow lily, miles must, milkset 842-4150 482-4150 For Sal... 1963 VU Bug into St. A nice car. For Sale... 842-850, 142-150 4-28 MUST SELL: **tableau** office press, with calibrated one-tablet tabletop; $1900 or will finance; 82-318-5456 or 82-318-5457. RAY AUDIO has the full line of Advent and Allianz loudspeakers on demonstration monitors. We are in front of all of our advertisers. We now top that off with our biggest offer, 12 Eighth 12.5 ht (off mass), The Little Store Store 12.5 ht. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIAL! Until April 16, 2013. We are Avail and Dana Power are Available on 16/14. We are Avail and Dana Power are Available on 16/14. BALLOON BIDS? - Fly the skies with Lawrences, Ross, and Tommy to obtain a balloon balloon! For the balloon hallway, on Halloween 14-31- 25, 87-187, or by calling (800) 726-3780. 1971 Pontis, Catalina, 62,600 miles; everything in condition. 644-858 (aftermeet) and eye- sight tests. MUST SELL. 5-speed bicycle, portable stereo and radio, tennis rackets books, records, other musical instruments. 1971 Karmann GH4 Coupe, very nice condition through Tandem radial tires, new brake shocks, many other joints recently replaced. 4-6 Speed. M I W F. M J F-2N1889. Kaman City. $1,500. 88 Rammer, 4-door, PS, PB fairly good condition, needs battery; $200, 413-265-245. 5 p.m. (Thursday). Panasonic turntable, must sell only two weeks of warranty, and original packaging enclosed. Most sell because of leaving KU: WW-hug-70g. 488-8610 or 50,500 miles (619-299 861-8610) 861-8610 172 Vega GT, 4-speed, 63,000 miles, $80, 842, 0310 eights, for ask for Vickie. 4-29 Gilam ES353, Hiddenhacker 12, string. Sunn seepter w 17, Lundberg, Lunder X' 16, x04 seepter w 18, Sylvester, Sylvester X' 16, x04 Pier1 imports associate store Most sell, 70 Remain 54,000 miles, 25 hwy, 26 highway, elevator, new clutch, brakes toilet, elevator, new clutch, brakes 1971 Friedblad-stereo cassette, AC, map wheels, military calli: Kenlit at 843-6256. 4-29 If you're looking for a stereo electronic, come and see my Panasonic AM-FM-BT stack (twelve channel), or your Sony X-Fi 15 months old and worth two fifty, but for a lower price and see, Call 844-3723. 5-3 MUST SELL 1721 Valiant mobile home, *12*, X*8* CA, call KA 6482-4628, on again, on cellphone (3) IRISH SHIFT PUS-ALK, regular, pedigree, down from Cata Gul Krenza, Kremla. 8-weeks. from Cata Gul Krenza, Kremla. 8-weeks. REEL-to-REEL. Concure Mark III, 3 heads, soc. BCM, sensor filter, must $72, calls RCALL to RCU. Records (over 20N) in good to excellent condition. Recorded from all directions, way shows, Soundtrack Santa, CINMA, ZEPPA, and much more. Also each bed, ice ver., door, closet, windows, and mirror are included. Most move up and will sell cheaply. Call us at (804) 517-6690. Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen Antique Moroccan Carpet, desert desert, best offer 842-1955 4-29 Martin N 20-2 classical guitar, excellent condition, at see 1343 Tennessee #3 after 5-20. 5-3 Beautiful acoustic guitar with pick-up, only $60. please call, Mike 842-3581 or 824-2584. 1980 Vollum 1445, good condition, $1,000. Leaving 1890 Muller suit, all: 861-1467, 861-1440, 5-3 1972 2-hour Greenshade, 20,000 mL expired, clean, good quality message for Jami for use in the kitchen. MOBILE HOME, 1927. Excellent condition, 12 X 8 X 8 in width. $600.00. MOBILE HOME, 1927. Excellent condition, 12 X 8 X 8 in width. $600.00. MOBILE HOME, 1927. Excellent condition, 12 X 8 X 8 in width. $600.00. 1975 Volkswagen Rabbit, compact car, 4 speed. Miniature instrumented for appointment 1288-9157 Miniature instrumented for appointment 1288-9157 Moving out of the country, must sell Homer 1970. 8200 mg after bath. Hilda. HIdra. 8200 mg. & Sandwich Shop HELP WANTED The Little Stores Store has low prices year in and year out. But in one year we a run price for our store, which is $120 per month. We don't offer low in sale deals, speakers and car stereo. We're not the only stores with LITTLE STORES STORE WITH THE BIG SALES BY OWNER - Runch style, shake roof on a beautiful carpet. A custom-made wooden fireplace, gas hob, drapes, wood burning fireplace, gas hob, living room dining room large bedrooms, walk-in closet, kitchen with gas oven 6,000 books, old maps, records, 20° off with this at. Sat. Sim-53M, Booth No. 4 4-29 If you're looking for a stereo electronic component Avon open territory in Lawsuits. Even if you win, a strong plaintiff can afford profitable fees and famous Avon lawyers. The most famous lawyers are famous Avon lawyers. Merceried 20 SL 1901 convertible 78,000 miles bought, moved with saddle interior. $68,000 -45% Waitress. Well established restaurant and club member. Summer and fall. Guests exclusive! 411-868-7088 **'Bunny Employment': Afternoon and evening work. Morning, early afternoon and evening necessary. The salary pliant working time is limited to 24 hours a day. I am interested in hiring food service superviseurs, both part time and full time. Must have supervie- ring experience in food service. Great pay and career opportunities. Send resume to: Schumm, 719 Maus, Lawrence, Kansas 4-29 Now taking applications for summer help. Apply in person, Dawgson, 644 Mass. 841-5823. 4-27 Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe Underdegree students助赎雇ships in chemistry, pharmacy and health sciences, agriculture and grazing in Chemistry, 184-624, 625-626, or 628-627. STIPEND. Normally $600 per week for each of the four-week期班. QUALIFICATIONS. Breath depth and depth of knowledge in chemistry as indicated by examination. Knowledge and by teaching ability as indicated by experimentation. Students should contact Dr. Lev. Lee 224 Malatier before May. Contact Dr. Lev. Lev. Lee 224 Malatier before May. affirmative action employer and encourages applications from women and members of minority groups. **STUDENTS--Summer, employment. Pinkertons Inc. is now hiring applications from students and professionals in the greater KC area to qualify you as a guardian in the greatest Phone: 841-7525 You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That’s $103 less than the youth fare you’d pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. Downtown The Department of Music Performance seeks a piano teacher/performing arts instructor. May 15, 2018. Visiting at Prost. Professor, $5,000-$6,000 year, master's degree in music education and graduate and graduate plus departmental experience. Tig speed and resume to Kenneth Smith, Charleston University Hall. University of Kansas, 66045; Murphy Hall University of Kansas, 66045; allows equal opportunity/affirmative action employer to apply to men and women of all races are required to apply. From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. 843-7685 SUA Maupintour travel service "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 10th & Mass IVAN'S 66 SERVICE 843.9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat 8.8 Sun Eidgenster Optical PSYCHIATRIC AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICE SERVICES APPLIWS new being deployed to help workers work with their workers. Agile to director of nursing. Toskun Workforce 813-266-9500. An equal opportunity employer. Hunters, five area restaurant and club, prefer over 811-306-5958, evenings.住宿费Over 811-306-5958 811-306-5958 Rewarding position open for a graduate or post- graduate in the Information Technology and its nationally known products for the Internet. Req's Bach's deg or equiv in Fraternities and Sororities on your own班, and a Master's deg or equiv in Computer, Info., FO, Box 54, Millsboro, Illinis LOST AND FOUND Last Lease Invitation and power lifters from Westchester, NY to work on Friday, April 19th will qualify for offer compensation. For details, visit: www.westchester.com/leasing Least-set of keys with black vinyl strip and keychain attached. Fitted rubber. Contact 814-397-9900. Found-Twice Instrument J Calculator in be- cause it can fit between Tower and Summerfield. 480m to claim (1) FOUND- key ring with four keys Friday in front of Strong Call 841-6490 4-27 Lost- whoever found my notebook in Weecon- will give reward. Mellon 814-3771 4-27 Last~Gold motorcycle helmet with dark strap last~Gold motorcycle helmet with black strap call ww2-57275 Lost-Ladies incase cing near tenella courts, reward if found. 912-820-7300 at 6 p.m. Found—president summers, Louisiana街 4th street of campan in April 15, 842-8211. Found—Men's 2-speed bike, identity: B1-8045. 5-2 NOTICE Kansas Union 843-1211 Lactic-protectant sinusitis, mirrored lesions, in the maxillary teeth. Jo. Width at 14th and Mons on a 4-29 Je. Width at 14th and Mons on a 4-29 Sewn Shaw, 629 Macs. Used furniture, clothes. Electronic checklists. Open daily 12-5. B2-307-7780 KARATE Learn the art of martial arts with a focus on conditioning, flexibility and self-defense. Specialized conditioning and learn self-defense. Presented by members of the International Karate Association. Gracefulate plan now for coat and gown photos Graduateate plan now for coat and gown photos Two 8x10 photo sizes Bilderformatur 8x10, 322/729 5-10 $16 You're invited to KRH's Second Annual Open Hour. Friday, April 29th, from noon to 6 p.m. EAT TACOS and earn college credit, not in Law- rence, but excite Chinese, Cheek, too. For info on summer language programs in Guadalajara, Spanish Department or Foreign Office. 5-2 Low law浊焊 To Europe from $259 Israel from $369 Europe Inc Ltd (822)-607-2764 4-258 Europe Inc Ltd (822)-607-2764 4-258 MISCELLANEOUS Moving out of the country, garage sale 13/19 Vermont. April 30, 16 to 5 p.m. 4-29 PERSONAL Gay Counseling Service. Call 642-7203, 6-12 p.m. For referralizing calls, call 642-7203. Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of deceptive drug addiction. For help or info, 842-810-8100. Wyld would 90 foothouse hosts on a tampanite floor in his home. House or office? House. House. House. House. House. House. NO THE MEN OF LAKUPA PAPHINION, holding their third annual FARMHOUSE BOOKSHOW— FRESHMEN CLASS MEMBERS pre-frames TGIF at Siempiragna Juni, May F © 2019 - 30 Ago. A week before the event. THE UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH, INC. only has a small selection of special items you may ask determine what is RIGHT for him or her. For your official ULC certification, visit our website at ULC.Today DISTINCTIVE EYEWARRI Restaurants Vista Fri. & Sat. 'til 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th HEADQUARTERS for SIG EP SENIORS SAY BYE!!! 4-27 JAMES CANG Free dog 10 year Lab-Box medium size also free dog 12 month Lab-Box medium size also free dog 14 month Lab-Box medium size also smaller veterinary specialist specialization veterinary specialist specialization Imported Auto Parts Will the person who found my purse and tried to contact me had 443-6519. I moved. 27 Do you know what IFF. SF attests for You could win card Cail 811-842 or 811-874, and we if it. Foreign Auto Parts Dear Pepper, I knew you could do it. I'm proud of you, Love, Huggy bear. 4-26 Myke and Jaya: There once was a couple from Lincoln who learned how to handle a phone call. They were all on the same way, and now all of the friends are angry that in the hall ever imparted to them drks. SERVICES OFFERED Have you ever been lumped on an oversee- chart if flight or had the flight管制 I would be happy to assist? Math tutoring--experienced, expertized tutors can help you through courses 600, 925, 102, 105, 116, 119, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 500, 535, 687. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7612. **if** Experienced-qualified to teach English Literature, comparison and English as second language. Send resumes to: Education Department, St. Louis University. I do damned good lying. Peggy, 842-1476 11 843-8080 I presently embody as a professional interpreter, for personally required work in the following: self-service telephone systems (e.g., dialing expert telephone systems), word-based telephone systems, and call-center telephony. THEISS BINDING COPYING. The House in Uber's Quick Copier Center is headquarters for the company and of copying in Lawsuits. Let us help you at 825 Massachusetts or phone 413-2098. Thank you. Experienced triplet-term squares, mice, in vitro experiments and spiking anticoagulation. Post-training (K504), Mrs. Witty Tolson editor, IBM PCA, Pearls. Quality work. Provides custom software, presentations, welcome calls. 812-927-7237. Will type your paper with TLC. Term papers and articles will be available at 843-4510, 843-1170, weekends and evenings. TYPING Layer 843-8766 or 842-6638. Tsc a file, tf Your junior deserves the best. Call Prekg for good typing, 940-1534 days, 820-8988 weekdays. Wid: experience law journal, flesh, dissertations. Hours: 20 hours per week. Patience: May Wed. 8:27-9:24. Pts. 1-5 Experimented SynpL term, pearm, threse, ether, Reasonable rates, Cell. Mailr. ARG, 7823. ff. Poggy's damned good typing now offers copying Convergent one step service: 842-4476 Experienced typed IBM selective, articles, themes, dissections, near campus, call 842-409-8999 ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m. HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing • Furniture • Antiques • Imported Clothing 732-8 Mass. 841-7070 The Lounge A different kind of bar - Foosball Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." 9th and Iowa Open Daily 10 a.m. - Midnight Except Sunday - Pinball - Foosball 9th and Iowa Experimented technical typist will type dissenter- tion on 10-inch paper, etc. Remarkable. 824-4532 ** WANTED No handsuit just laid up aloner than ever-over- moved. Most of the shortest of deadlines Harvey or Stevenson made is to keep your handsuit. Permanently remodel needled for room $70 monthly plus 1.8 unitities, furnished 2-5单元 apartment with en-suite bathrooms. Two girls to share a large bedroom in Trafidae and two boys to share a small bedroom. Studio writable. Battery 814-61-9000. Roommates need for next year, Call for details after 4. Karen or Laurie, 811-648-690 4-28 SCM portable cable typewriter. Pica Type. Call 831-5796 4-29 Wanted resume for summer months. Fur- rent residence at college campus. Respond Call. Sieve 842-5059. One or two responsible people to share spaces comfortably in the garden, garden, furnishing, privacy. Prefer persons (male or female) who age 45 and up. Contact: drop-off code. Drop by: 821-787-788-29 - Bud on Tap Novice Nursing needs remitance to share apart- ment care. Visit www.ku医 Med Com- put B77-3628. Roommate needed, for summer, two bedroom convient bedroom. 385 w/o. 814-6767 Two roommates to share space two bedroom and two bathrooms. Living room and kitchen. Fixtures include color television, air conditioner, dishwasher, and fenced yard for trained dog. Address: 843-2718. Phone: 843-2718. Call 256-829-4553. Looking for Christian guilders (summer and/or fall) to live in Guelph, Ontario; 1321 Street 140, Guelph, Ontario; 652-809-4523, guelph.ca require. 845-209-4523 Firmly to support two bedrooms furnished apartments for fat and spring semicenters. Call Shire 212-576-8841. Female enrollee wanted for summer, located behind union, no pets, call 864-6734. 4:29 Female residents wanted to share apartment room with non-smoker, students preferred 4-28 841-1771 - Pool ELEGANT LIVING 2 inmates required for new facility; must be responsible, very responsible, many extinct, call 865-3212. The Chalk Hawk One male roommate for June and July, own pay half rent and utilities, call Mak at 714-268-0531. Reward: $25 for the rental of a 2 bedroom apartment for approximately $100; starting June 1. and Honda Cycles Taking trip to Europe immediately after firing for three weeks. Looking for traveling companion. Home - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong Harley-Davidson HILLCREST BILLIARDS NAISMITH MALL oizons 1811 W. 6th 843-3333 - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball PLETE SELECTION OF BEER Open 7 Days a Week No One Order is Admitted KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU 12 Wednesday, April 27,1977 University Daily Kansan Greeks alter party-only custom By JAN DECKER Staff Reporter Mention Greek Week and meet University of Kansas student think of beer parties, Although Greek representatives agree that these functions are part of the activities, they also say that Greek Week 1977, which began Sunday, has another side. That other side emphasizes talent, culture and philanthropy within the Greek system, Jo Laffert Larson, Great Bend sophomore and Greek Week chairman, said yesterday. "We are stereotyped as partyers," Larson said, "and we'd like to make people aware that there is more to the Greek community and to Greek life than that." SEVERAL PROJECTS planned for Greek Week, such as the Greek Week Art Show, are designed to raise that awareness, Larson said. The purpose of the art show is to display talent within the Greek system. Linda Bassett, a sculptor, created a large scale Artwork by Greeks is being displayed from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. today through Student reports weekend theft Television and stereo equipment valued at $1,135 was taken from a KU student's residence at 906 Emery Road sometime last Thursday and Monday afternoon. Lawrence police said the student's front door had been pried open, possibly with a screw driver. A sliding patio door was found inside the apartment. The displacement apparently was removed from it. Among the items taken were a portable television, an AM-FM, eight-track stereo phonograph, two speakers and 115 record albums. Police said they had a suspect. "We decided to hold the show downtown so that we could display the art to the community as well as to the campus," McKie said. THE FIRST FOR the KU Greek system, the art show display includes textile designs, paintings, photography, glassware, jewelry, pottery, cartooning and wood- Sunday at the Marketplace, Eighth and New Hamshire streets. Another Greek Week activity, the Greek Sing, displays vocal talents in a show at 8 p.m. Thursday at Lawrence High School. Tickets are $1.50. The program is a choral contest among nine fraternity-sorority groups. Each group will sing two songs from their choir, recorded and original, according to Bruce Douglas, chairman of the Greek Sing. Representatives from two fraternities will compete for individual awards. DOUGLAS SAID the Greek Sing also has promoted friendship among different Greek houses and has made the community and University more aware of Greek life. "The people in the choral groups were picked from a lottery." Douglas said. "That threw a lot of people together who'd never gotten together before." Proceeds from the ticket sales will be used to pay for Greek Week expenses. Any extra money will be donated to the Kansas University Special Olympics for the Mentaly Retarded. The Special Olympics will benefit directly from another Greek Week activity—the Games. THE SUPERSTARS is a series of events in which athletes from Greek houses compete in various events for contributions solicited from the Lawrence community and the Greek houses. All contributions will be donated to the Special Olympics. Several KU administrators and one athletic coach have volunteered to run a race. sisterkettlecafe superstars competition. Ted Owens, KU basketball coach; Kala Steward, dean of women; and Robert Turvey, assistant to the dean of men; are among those entered. THIS IS THE first time a philanthropy for the Special Olympics has been held by KU Greeks, Rick Chambers, cochairman of the superstars, said. Vegetarian Delights 14th & Mass. Collectively owned & operated Breakfast & lunch, 9:00-2:00 Dinner, 5:30-9:00 Coffee House Fri. & Sat. with live entertainment Bring this coupon in for 10% off any weekday. Chambers said it was likely that the superstars competition would become a permanent part of Greek Week because it involved in something fun for a good cause. 9 pm-Midnight Superstars competition begins at 4:30 today with a bowling tournament in the Kansan Union Jaybowel. Free throw, tennis, and baseball will begin at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow competitions will be at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at Veterans Park, 19th and Louisiana Street. Competition concludes with foot races, the obstacle course race and the handball tournament. On Saturday at Holcom Sports Complex. He estimated the competition would raise between $500 and $1,000 for the Special Prize. Louis Rukesey, host of public television's "Wall Street Week," will be the speaker for the nimb J. A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture in p.m. May 3 in Woodruff Auditorium. He served 11 years as a political and foreign correspondent for the Baltimore Times. Following the example of his tauke, a well-known financial reporter and author, Rukesay has had a distinguished career as an economics broadcaster, lecturer, columnist and author since his graduation from Princeton University in 1964. Rukesey has been the host of "Wall Street Week" since it began in 1970. The show's formula came from Rukesey's knack for turning complicated economic theories into talk that Rukesey said made "the eyes pop open and their nostrils fark." He was nominated for the Emmy and Peabody Awards in 1970 for that work, and for a Peabody in 1972 for his daily radio commentary "Rukesver's World." His book, "How to Make Money in Wall Street," has won several literary awards. Economist to be Vickers speaker won two Overseas Press Club awards for his coverage of development in Southeast He later joined ABC News as a senior correspondent and commentator. He worked in Paris and London, then returned to New York where he was a first national economics commentator. SUA Films Chairperson Interviews The J. A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture was established in 1970 in the foundation of the Petrobras Museum. Interviews for the 1977-78 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Wednesday, April 27. Please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time if you are interested in film programming. Company, Inc., of Wichita. Vickers was a cholesterol student at KIU from 1914 to 1918. Positions Available: Former lecturers in the series have included Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan, Adm. Eloz Zumwalt, former chief of naval operations, and George Bush, director of the CIA. Interest from the $100,000 endowment fund has been used to bring prominent citizens to KU to debate or discuss subjects "vital to maintaining a free political and social environment." Summer Films Chairperson The lecture will be free. Classical Films Chairperson Popular Films Chairperson Independent/Experimental Films Chairperson Honor thy secretary with flowers Midnight Movies/Special Films Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror Films Chairperson Chairperson Public Relations Committee Why not say thanks with an appreciation bouquet or a flowering plant? It's National Secretaries week. Time to thank your secretary. win a ation or a g plant? National Secretaries Week, April 24-30. Flowers and plants are for secretaries. Naturally. Make an arrangement with: Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana 843-6111 Advertise in the Kansan. Call.864-4358. LORIN MAAZEL conducting THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA one of the World's Finest University of Kansas Concert Series Wednesday, April 27 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Student tickets $1.00 with K.U.I.D. Avoid the rush at the door by picking up in advance at Murphy Hall Box Office 4 for vic Charg Univers Univers a hot-al during paign. The c Student Houfe Council Counsel Hasenb# The fo sophom Hamitt Hamitte The of the bail ruling. THE stateme Febru plan a tended The violatir prohibi mosph S SUN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WARM Vol.87, No.135 Supplement on Clinton See pages six to nine The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 28, 1977 4 charged for election violations Charges have been filed with the University Judiciary against four University of Kansas students who inflated a hot-air balloon in front of强 Hall during February's student election campaign. The charges were filed this week by the Student Senate Election Committee against Greg Schneack, Topek freshman; Bill Rudolph, freshman; Clint Clubb suffers, Iowa freshman; and Moll Hasenback, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, freshman. The four students were running for sophomore class officers as members of the four, only Bill Hamilton was elected. The charges accused the students of violating a Student Senate regulation that prohibits the creation of "a carnival atmosphere" in the elections. Kevin Flynn, Electron Committee chairman, said recently that the committee was taking the case to the University Judiciary to force the students to pay the THE STUDENTS had submitted a written statement to the Election Committee in February, informing the committee of their desire to participate. The committee pended to create interest in the elections. HE SAID HE thought the ruling was unfair because it was made after the campaign started. He also had questioned the Senate Rules and enforced the ruling against candidates for class officers. He contended that the Senate Rules and Regulations applied only to those districts. The committee prohibited the inflation of the balloon, but the students ignored the rule. The students were fined $15 by the committee and were given until March 24 to pay the fine or appeal the decision to the judge or adjudicary. The students refused to do either. One of the charged students, Greg Schnacke, had said in February that the students defied the Election Committee's original ruling banning the campaign to create the committee and to help the committee meet its goal of 5,000 voters in the election. Regulations state that the students will have 14 days from the day of notification to respond to the charges. If the students take responsibility, probably will have to be continued next fall. UNDER UNIVERSITY Senate Rules, the undergoes to the litigation be- conducted in private. He plans to contact some Senate members for advice and investigate the litigation process before he decides a course of action, he said. If he found that the hearings would be time-consuming, he said, he will wait until the fall. Schnack said yesterday that he hadn't received official notification of the charges yet and wouldn't make any decisions on how to proceed until he did. [Mirror reflection of a man in a suit standing with arms crossed in front of a mirror. The background is a plain wall with a window.] [Image contains a black and white photograph of a man standing in front of a mirror. He is wearing a suit and has his arms crossed. His expression is serious.] Lorin Maazel relaxed before last night's performance of the Cleveland Orchestra in Hoch Auditorium Orchestra's potential not fulfilled at concert By TIM PURCELI Reviewer The last concert in this year's University Concert Series brought the Cleveland Orchestra to campus last night. The reputation of this orchestra equals its accomplishments in becoming an American vanguard for the debut of new So what does the Cleveland Orchestra bea Lawrence, Kan. All a-lboventhou beach? There's certainly nothing wrong with Beethoven, and to have his music played by a professional orchestra doesn't happen every day here. But it's standard repertoire. Every performer in a professional orchestra is expected to know his major works and to perform them with a minimum of rehearsal time. WHEN a professional orchestra, such as Cleveland's reliably brings new musical works to the public's attention, an all-Beast program snacks of confections. Performance But because of the reputation of the orchestra and the conductor, the performance was warmly received by an artist who The conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra, Lori Minazel, 46, is an American native who started his conducting career more than 30 years ago as a child prodigy. There was enough flamboyance in Maezel's conduct to keep an audience happy and attentive. His stage personality isn't overpowering, but it can be showy. THE ORCHESTRA responds not as a slave to Mauzeel's baton but as an extension of Mauzeel. The ensemble is so confident, so so powerful, that it seems as if Mazelle gave the orchestra an嵌 seemed as if Mazelle gave the orchestra an But there was a balance between Maazel's personality and the orchestra. They responded with him rather than to him. The string phrasing was clear, plastic. But because of the acoustics in Hoch Auditorium, the sound isn't always crisp. The orchestra acquired a muted, opaque The volume that the Cleveland horns could produce was amazing. They set near 70,000 a minute. See ORCHESTRA page three Added funds for utilities pass House A supplemental appropriations bill giving the University of Kansas $364,020 for this year's utility cost increases passed the Kansas House yesterday afternoon. The bill, which also would allot the KU Medical Center 1112,234 for utility increases, passed 122 to 0 with almost no discussion. The Senate is expected to vote on the measure either today or Friday, because these are the only remaining scheduled work days. State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, said last night that the Senate probably would accept the conference committee's recommendation of $364,020 just as the House had. Utility cost increases for this year were much more than KU planers expected, and the University asked for more money. The Senate-passed version of the bill would have given KU $276,000, but the House increased the amount to $364,020. The bill was sent to a joint conference committee, consisting of three members of each house. According to Vogel, the committee decided on the higher amount. The main appropriations bill for KU, which would allot about $4.4 million for the University's research and science, and miscellaneous expenses for new staff still in a conference committee. The bill has passed both houses, but in different verbiage. One of the bills is trying to hammer out a compromise. A capital improvements bill giving KU $17.3 million for additions to Halton Hall and Robinson Gymnasium is still in the House Committee; it already passes the Senate. A bill to set up increased family practice programs at the Med Center passed both houses in different versions before first president, and also is still in a conference committee. The bill would establish four affiliated family practice centers in Kansas towns in counties of less than 200,000 population. It was intended to alleviate the shortage of doctors in rural areas of Kansas. If it tumeled, the problem of Kansas medical students serving their residencies in big city hospitals in other states, then staying there to practice. Planning commission says By STEVE STINGLEY Staff Reporter The Lawrence-Duccity County joint planning commission voted last night to Apartment no, tower yes deny "use permitted upon review" for a 120-unit apartment building for elderly people and to approve the construction of a 180-foot civil defense radio tower on the proposed SenEx attendance policy formed StudEx would have the power to review and remove student members of SenEx during the summer if the attendance policy approved last night by the Student Senate's Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee meets Senate approval. The committee also approved an amendment allowing members of SenEx whose Senate terms expire before their term expires, as ex-officio members of the Senate. REGGIE ROBINSON, committee chairman, said that the justification for allowing them to remain as ex-officio members of the board comments on formation from the Senate. The approved attendance policy for SenEx doesn't state a specific number of absences allowed before a member is removed. Instead, it requests StudEx to periodically review the attendance records of the members. The Elections Committee chairman Kevin Flynn, presented proposed changes in the Senate's Rules and Regulations during elections to the Rights Committee. THE CHANGES include reducing campaigning allowances and increasing the fines for violations of the regulations to a maximum of $100. It requires a two-thirds vote by StudEx to remove a member, and the member must be one-half. Flynn said that by reducing campaign money allowances more people would The committee approved the Elections Committee recommendations. The committee also approved accepting the Buckley amendment with the exceptions formulated by its subcommittee last Monday night. The Student Senate Sports Committee also met last night and drafted a bill that would end funding of the women's international athletics program after this year. THE MAIN EXCEPTION is that the senate code wouldn't allow directory access. though a caller might have other information such as someone's address. The Buckley amendment allows the release of names, The Buckley Amendment, with the proposed exceptions, will be incorporated into the Student Code if the Senate approves it May 4. The full Senate had previously passed a similar resolution. The resolution was passed as a warming to the University that had been the model for the administration's responsibility to fund the Kent State administrator prepares for KU position program, and the Senate would no longer do it after this year. THE SPORTS COMMITTEE bill, if passed by the Senate, would officially end funding for the program after this year. The program will be held in the program's $44.40 in a block allocation. Last year the Senate funded the program $4,500 after the women's intercollegiate Two months remain before David Ambler arrives at the University of Kansas as vice chancellor for student affairs. But the transition has been a bureaucratic administration town, already has begun. The women decided it was better to completely cut one program's funding than to keep the others. The final decision on the allocation will come at a full Senate meeting April 4. By LEON UNRUH Staff Reporte Anderson said yesterday that, at Ambler's suggestion, four committees had been established to study the student affairs department and discussions on how it might be changed. The committee also defeated a proposed recommendation to the full Senate to give $4,500 to the women's field hockey program this year. Staff Reporter Ambler will begin work at KU July 1, replacing Donald Alderson, acting vice chancellor. Ambler is currently a student services at Kent State University. The student affairs division encompasses 12 offences, including the deans of men, women and foreign students. AMBLER ASKED that studies be made on staff development, student information and research and on the goals and objectives of the division. The staff development committee is subdivided into two committees, one on staff training and the other on personnel policies and procedures. Alderson, who will return to his position as dean of men upon Amber's arrival, said yesterday that he hadn't met yet. He didn't know when their recommendations would be prepared. The committees, comprising 19 persons, range in size from three to six persons and See DAVID AMBLER page two site near the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center. Both planning commission recommendations will go before the city commission May 15 for final action. All items decided by the planning commission must be reviewed by the city commission, which has final decision making authority. BOTH PROPOSED PROJECTS were extended until night before the deadline for completion video. The proposed apartment building for the elderly would be built on the south side of Eighth street between Tennessee and Kentucky streets. Lewis Kitchen, a developer from Kansas City, Mo., requested the permit to build on that site. He altered the building's layout so residents were raised by residents of the neighborhood surrounding the proposed site. Those residents, most from the Old West Lawrence Neighborhood Association, presented arguments last night against the structure, saying that it would be too tall and too "massive" for the neighborhood. ARTHUR TOWNSEW, 923 Maine St., pointed out that the area of the proposed site was designated as "historical" under the National Historical Preservation Act and that the apartment building would have trouble meeting standards established by that designation. The building would have to be approved by Housing and Urban Development, he said. If the developers were to receive federal funds as they proposed. Ralph Oschner, consultant to Kitchen, said that the building would meet HUD THEIR CHIEF COMPLIANTS against the construction of the apartment building on the Eighth Street location were that it would change the character of the neighborhood to be a place of residence, would "overwhelm" the existing structures and aesthetics of the neighborhood. Also arguing about the proposed building were Barbara Waggoner, president of the Woodboro Association; Langson Trigg, instructor of architecture and urban development; and Marcus Goodman, vice president of Old West Lawrence Neighbors. ALMIR Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Riding as many as 400 miles a week and 130 miles a day, David Coulard, Lawrence sophomore, hopes to gain a spot on the U.S. Olympic team that competes every year. "I think it's hard to do," he said. 2 Thursday, April 28, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services Vietnam herbicide to burn WASHINGTON — The Air Force announcement yesterday it has at last found a way to get rid of a herbicide used in the controversial Vietnam war defoliation raids The state of Mississippi, where part of the 2.3 million gallons of the herbicide known as "Orange" is stored, will presumably be glad to see the unwanted stock- pires kit (also for the colored identification stripes painted around its containers, "Orange") was the best known of several decolalation chemical sprayed or dropped systems. Since an April 1970 ban, officials said, the Air Force has been trying to find an accountable way to rid itself of the herbicide. Three shot in Soweto riot OHANNESBURG, South Africa - Three black boys suffered gunshot injuries yesterday during demonstrations by students against government-inposed policing. even increases the number of black demonstrators set a beer hall on fire, lofted a bread delivery truck and a soft drink truck and injured a policeman in a rock-throwing incident of fire warming shots into the air and used gas to dispense crowds that numbered in the thousands and roamed the segregated town 10 miles south of the community. west or northwestbound. Police confirmed that three youths were taken to a hospital suffering gunshot wounds and an apology spokesman declined comment on their condition. Slauinas, drug theft studied GRANDVIEW, Mo.—The execution-style slaying of two women and a man in a Kansas City suburban apartment might have been part of a narcotics robbery, police said yesterday. The three bodies were found bound and gagged and with their threats slain in the living room of the apartment. Tuesday 12:30, Monday 10:59, Wednesday 12:47, and remained hospitalized yesterday. Kenneth Riddell, a spokesman for the Kansas City Metro Squid, said evidence pointed to a narcotics robber because small packets of what were drugs were found scattered near the front door of the apartment, a small city of what appeared to be marijuana also was found. Laboratory tests were benthic conducted on the substances. Film banned by K-State gets KU showing tonight A film that was temporarily banned last week at Kansas State University will be shown at 7:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium. Mike Miller, SAU adviser, and yesterday no problems were foreseen for tonight* shown. "Immoral Tales," banned at KState because it was judged as offensive, explores sexuality through the centuries. tuck Eden, program adviser for the K-State student union, said the Kaleidoscope Committee, in charge of international films in conjunction with the English department, had scheduled and then banned the film at K-State. Eden said the committee, one of two responsible for films shown in the 1974 French film would be sexually explicit and offensive and that it wouldn't fit in with other scheduled films. But after press coverage and a reconsideration by the committee, the ban was lifted. "Several members of the English department felt the university should be an open forum for discussion, and agreed to run it," she said in a message to "some people." Eden said of Leen said that the film, which drew a crowd of 625, was mild to most people, and that no problems had arisen from the showing. Katherine Giele, SUA adviser, said the film was scheduled at KU because the film committee thought it was appropriate. Films shown by SUA are booked more than six months in advance. Steve Schmidt, KU SUA film program director, said he had seen the film elsewhere. "I think it is very well done and "I don't need him he said. "We don't think it controversial." Schmidt, Giele and Miller weren't aware of the KSU incident, they said. Miller said, "It hasn't been discussed here." Staff Reporter BvRICK THAEMERT The athletic romance and glided spectacle of the Olympic games is still three years away. But for some, the not-so-morous side of the games is happening now. Bicvclist pedals toward 1980 Olvmpic berth That side is training, and David Conrad, Lawrence sophomore, knows it all too well. Since 1979, Conrad has been training as a teacher for nearly 40 days in classes a week and as much as 130 miles a day. Corrad, the winner of two state championships and many national titles in the last two seasons, will be able to gain position and ratings that may give him a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. "You can't do it over night," Conrad said. "I just want to see how far I can go." UNTIL NOW, he has gone far. Conrad is one of only two riders in Kansas who have a 1 rating (the best from the United States Cycling Federation. Now he's working on getting top ratings at the international level by competing in a series of International Development Races. He's also played in the Arkansas, Conrad said he was leading the pack and probably would have won if cramps from a strained hamstring hadn't slowed him down. In the 112-mile race he finished the final finish in international competition. 60. Conrad asked he tried to maintain regular clothing and eating habits, although he occasionally enjoyed his mother's cooking. At 6 feet, Conrad tries to stay at about 145 pounds. Another part of Conrad's training is keeping a daily log book of almost everything about his cycling, including where, when and how long he rides, the wind direction, the bike he rides and his vital signs before and after training. The log also includes his meals, his sleeping hours and his daily activities. "A LOT of cyclists try to like health foods, but I don't," he said, "because good meats and salads give me more energy to burn." Conrad said the log book helped him to evaluate his progress and problems in both settings. Because a cyclist uses nearly every muscle in the body, training in a gym can be very effective. "IN A LONG RIDE, you really notice the dividends of lifting weights," he said, "but I'm not a be-ma-r. I'm probably the smallest and thinnest man down there most of the However, the endurance needed to win races, especially in the Olympics, comes from the endurance required for a long-distance run. David Ambler . . . From page one are made up of University administrators, he said. CLARK COAN, dean of foreign students, was chosen to lead the personnel policies and procedures committee, and Alderson leads the staff training program committee. The mission committee, which is directed by Kala Stroup, dew of women, will define the purpose of the division and its relationship with the other divisions at KU. In a visit to KU March 30, Ambler said that he wanted to organize a survey program similar to one at Kent State. The computerized program would have lists of students categorized according to common interests. Names could be drawn at random from the lists to sample student opinion on any topic. A committee with a potentially large workload is the three-member student information and research committee, led by Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records. "We're working with the student and we want to know about who we're developing services for; who you are, what you want and where you're going." Alderson said. Conard has训练 usually consisted of riding between 40 and 130 miles a day at about 20 miles per hour. His ride lengths depend on how much school work he has. "Of course, those wants have to be linked with our resources." Although the riders aren't "difficult," he said, it is difficult finding people to ride with them. IT HELPIS his training, be said, to ride with someone of his caliber to keep him on his knees. His friends in the Oread Bike Club often join forces to give him competition. When he races, however, there aren't any friends to contend with. Only the performance of his own body and mind are important, he said. "You have to search for things to think about when you're riding that long," Conrad said. His last 120-mile race took him almost five hours. Although Centred had said the will to stick it out, his social life sometimes suffers from overeating. "You look into car seats to see whether there's a good-looking girl in the front seat," he said, or you should be sitting on the back seat for the head all day long." He said he also watched birds. CONRAD SAID a positive, alert mental state was important because "by the time it comes down to the last 90 miles, it's just a matter of who wants it and who wants to get away." "A lot of people accuse me of being one-track minded, and say that's all I think about," he said, "but I can't help it when it's the major theme in a day. "Iprobably don't have as much of a social life as other guys, but on the other hand I don't sit in my corner and study all the time when I'm not riding. My night time hours are pretty strict, but a lot of us bike guys get together sometimes and have a good time." DESPITE ANY disadvantages that his riding career might turn, Conrad said. He has only been in a couple of races. In fact, he said, he enjoys the sport enough to occasionally bike with friends. "It it doesn't bother me that I'm known for cycling. I probably ride for who knows." "But," he said, "when I go out and ride fun, you people always say. "You're riding for fun." 714 Mass. WINDFALL No Cover The Brewery Fri., Apr. 29 9-12 SUA MIDNIGHT MOVIES Double - clutchin... gear - jammin mamaas who take it off. he jackin' by day. a lot of heavy truckin' by night! TRUCK STOP WOMEN CLAUDIA JENNINGS + LESLIE DREESLER + DENNIS FIMPLE JENNIFER BURTON + DGENE DREW + PAUL CARR Fri., April 29 & Sat., April 30 12:00 Midnight $1 Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union Ford RENT-A-CAR LEASING 2340 Alabama FALS WORLD'S LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 Ford RENT-A-CAR LEASING 2340 Alabama FALS WORLD'S LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931 THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS MAY 7 ALLEN FIELD HOUSE An Amusement Conspiracy Production TICKETS AT KIEF'S, SUA An SUA Special Event FALS FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING 北川羌族自治县 ZZTOP (and we're doing something about it) Wrangler thinks Americans should get what they pay for WORLD S LARGEST LEASING SYSTEM Ford Ford Wrangler makes it possible for you to afford the way you want to look. Waist tie midriff blouse is tailored of machine washable polyester and cotton check. Red, green, blue, Sizes 30-38. Natural waist flare leg "Rainbow" stitched pant has front and back rounded patch pockets. Prewashed 100% cotton denim. Sizes 3/4-18. Wrangler Sportswear LITWIN'S Free Parking in Rear 831 Mass. O1 despite curtain ALTE section movem dynami seemed ALTI is unqi taneity progra the tree whip u Over to over known last nij first me seem r This pensate produce by Ma familia A St truly show t But Clevel wrong comet orches master charge the entire mileage Free Parking in Rear Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358 Thursday, April 28, 1977 3 be sport friends and ride are riding No over or it) s it b it d o r t f i r i f f d o l f o t t o n t o n ear charge working Orchestra S. 4-4358 From nage one despite the high ceiling and the velvet curtains, which absorb sound. University Dally Kansan The bases, timpani and trumbones were assertive in the Symphony No. 5 in C minor and they provided a reliable ballast for the orchestra. ALTHOUGH MUCH of the pizzicato section in this symphony's scherzo movement was lost to the rafters, the first movement to the first movement seemed almost brutal. Over the years perhaps there a tendency to overdo expression markings in well-known works. Exaggeration was the result last night. The dynamic contrasts in the first movement of the fifth symphony didn't seem refined, controlled. A Strauss, Bartok or Stravinsky piece to would have allowed the players to show their improvisation. This may have been an attempt to compensate for the sound that is usually produced in Hoeh. It also may be an attempt to accentuate vocality, particularly familiar Beethoven symphony movement. ALTHOUGH THE orchestra's discipline is unquestioned, a freshness and spontaneity was missing because of the program. The audience had only a nibble of the treats the Cleveland Orchestra is able to whip up. But the enthusiastic applause showed the Cleveland Orchestra that you just can't go wrong with Beethoven. Standing ovations from the crowd, the orchestra received an immediate one. THE ORGANIZATION OF ARAB STUDENTS presents: For the first time Kelmat Sharaf A Love Story Film PLACE: Dyche Hall Aud. TIME: 7:30 p.m. DATE: April 30, 1977 AIRPORT Events On Campus TODAY: There will be a KANSAS FARM ELECTRIFICATION COUNCIL CONFERENCE all day in the Kansas Union. JOHN BOWLIT, specialist on Russian art, will speak at 2:30 p.m. in Spooner Hall Auditorium on "Socialist Realism in Russian Art" and will in 4:012 Wescohe Hall on "Between Idea and Image: Symbolism in Russian Art." KENNETH WHITE, professor of French and English, will discuss in the Library on "The Poetry of Algonquin." In the Library, ALEKSANDER PETROV, research associate at the Yugoslav Literary Institute, will speak on "The Poetry of Osip Mandel 'stam' at 3:30 p.m. in 2128 Wescohe Hall." 5. **TONIGHT:** The department of German will host the GERMAN HONORS BANQUET at 6:30 in the Union's Kansas Room. The film, "HISTORY OF THE NEGRO: OUR COUNTRY TOO," a presentation of the African Studies Film Series, will be shown at 7 in Strong Hall Auditorium. KEVEN DANAHER, folklorist from the University College of Dublin, will give an Irish Symposium public lecture at 7:30 in the Union's Forum Room. The KU SAILIN, GOUCH will meet to elect officers at 7:30 in the Union's Forum Room. FRANCINE RABIN, city official at 7:30 in the University of Southern California will speak on "Public Cities and Intergovernmental Finance" at 7:30 in the Union's Big 8 Room. JON ROBICHAUD, Chesterfield, Mo., senior, will give a trombone recital at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW: RICHARD SPEAR, associate professor of Oriental languages and literatures, will lead a discussion on contemporary critiques of analytic culture at an Entropy meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Meadowdink Room. Cartographer Joe Wiedel of the University of Maryland will lecture on "Maps for the Blind" at 3:30 p.m. in Allen Wescoe. Naval ROTC will have a SPRING REVIEW at 5:30 p.m. in front of Allen Field House. YOU CAN STILL TRAVEL & STUDY IN EUROPE GEARED TOWARD INDIVIDUAL NEEDS COLLEGE CREDITS OFFERED FOR INDIVIDUAL STUDY AND TRAVEL THIS SUMMER TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS AVAILABLE FOR FOREIGN STUDY PROGRAMS THIS FALL TUITION AND ROUND TRIP AIR TRANSPORTATION EAST COAST $350.00 MID WEST $365.00 WEST COAST $455.00 CALL TOLL FREE: 800-223-1722 NEW YORK 212-986-7624 EROTIC FANTASTIC SATIRIC Distinguished from hard core core sensors. Invalides is the week of march; in Valais is the week of the female mute and unaccompanied by all the credit possibility women pre- viously had. RICH, LITERATE, ELEGANT AND SHORT. No warnings. AND SUTILLE an uncontroversial IMMORAL TALES is NOT ONLY AN EYEWEL BURT THING...THE MYSTERY, POETRY AND HYPOTHORY OF MANKIND MAKING LOVE. IMMORALTALES starring Paloma Picasso Thurs., April 28 7:30 & 30 p.m. *1 — Woodruff Auditorium HP Spring Added Value Days Now through May 31 An exciting added value when you buy a Hewlett-Packard calculator now. Free reserve power packs. During Spring Added Value Days, Hewlett-Packard is adding a free reserve power pack—a $20 value —with the purchase of every HP-21, HP-22, HP-25, HP-25C and HP-27. It's the best way we know to remind you of the added value you always receive when you buy an HP calculator—like free application books, uncompromising quality, efficient RPN logic system, and exceptional service. Each HP instrument is designed to be the finest of its kind in the world. NEWLEFT-PACKARD New Accessories A DC Recharger/Adapter lets you operate and recharge your HP pocket calculator in cars, boats —wherever a 12-volt DC supply is available. Hewlett-Packard is also introducing two new access stories to increase the value of the HP calculator you may already own: A Games Pac for the HP-67 and HP-97 includes 19 programs designed primarily for fun but also useful in teaching principles of math, physics and logic. Come in and take advantage of Hewlett-Packard's Added Value Days today! kansas union BOOKSTORE SC Light casual fabrics for spring days—available at Britches BRITCHES CORNER Bank Americard—Master Charge—B. C. Charge—Cash Contemporary Clothing for Men and Women 843 Mass. St. I'm looking for a home where there's - Swimming in a heated pool b - Free utilities - Air conditioning - Laundry facilities - On campus living - Covered parking - Wall to wall carpeting I'm looking for a home at Jayhawker Towers Apartments 843-4993 1603 W. 15th A. Thursday, April 28, 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 Defense is deficient Recent speculation about the Soviet Union's having a far better civil defense system than the United States apparently was behind a civil defense budget boost of $44.8 million approved Monday by the House of Representatives. The appropriation is hoped to be a stepping stone toward the planning of more precise programs and correcting the vast deficiencies in the U.S. civil defense program. Although the intelligence community doesn't know the extent of the Soviet program, many researchers in the United States contend that the Russians are far ahead of us in preparedness for nuclear attacks or radioactive fallouts. Soviet preparations are to include: *Compulsory training for children in the nuclear age. - Special classes for men 16 to 60 years old, and women 16 to 55 years old. - Periodic drills at factories and practical training exercises during national war game exercises for more than 20 million Soviet youth. *$shelters in apartments building hasty* shelter in ongoing evacuation area. The U.S. national emergency preparation system does sound well-planned, but figures show that Americans would be left in bad place if nuclear attack were to hit this country today. For instance, on the second Wednesday of each month, raid warning sirens are sounded throughout the United States for testing purposes. While the sirens blow, Americans simply ignore them and go about their business. A sudden attack would surely leave many people among the country's ruins. Many people also wouldn't know how to call the Emergency Broadcasting System if an attack were to occur, or where their nearest fallout shelter was. Even if they knew the general vicinity of a shelter, they still might have trouble finding it. Over half or the country's shelters aren't marked with the familiar yellow-and-black signs. EVEN THOSE finding shelters might not survive long. The government stored 55 million pounds of candy, 7.4 million pounds of wheat wafers and 258.8 million pounds of biscuits in warehouses and shelters, most of during the war. But these materials and it is being fed to American pigs. Ten million water containers also are on hand, but they're empty to prevent rust. Studies show that there are civil defense directors in more than 6,000 local jurisdictions, but a scant percentage of them are fully trained. The training of American school children also is a joke—they aren't able to hide under their school desks any more. Add to these woes the thin appropriations by the federal government in recent years. Last year's budget was cut by nearly 25 per cent to $82.5 million. Only $94 million had been requested by the Pentagon for this year's budget before the House action Monday increased it to a total of $134.8 million. Some have attributed the different attitude of Congress to the civil defense gap with the Soviet Union, while others say it's because of the recent Russia rejection of a U.S. strategic arms proposal. NEVERTHELESS, only a group of researchers, led by a University of Miami director of Soviet studies, have been able to develop an idea of Soviet strengths in civil defense. But the CIA hasn't looked at Soviet capabilities for six or seven years. The agency did conduct a crash program last summer when it heard of the so-called gap, but that program has failed to turn up anything. The United States is still spending far less than it should in improving its civil defense program. But the 50 per cent increase just approved is an improvement of recent Congressional attitudes. And it just might be a step in the right direction. Prayer is last resort in campus traffic fright Dear God You're probably wondering why I'm praying to you. I know haven't been one of your best friends. You've been a point of desolation. If you you, God. Couldn't you please make the cars go a little slower on campus after dark? PLEEEEEEZE? I try best to look both ways before crossing the street, but some of those Diane Wolkow Editorial Writer don't help me, I don't know who else to go to. It's already 7 p.m. and my white jacket is at the dryclearer's, so I have to wear a black windbreaker instead, and I'm wearing blue jeans and I have to stay on campus real late. The truth is, I'm scared to walk across the street after dark, dressed like this. I looked for a white arm band to wear on my neck. I didn't have a reflector sticker off my bicycle. But I couldn't find anything. OH WELL, they probably wouldn't help, anyway. The cars shoot down Jayhawk and the car fast they won't even notice me. Which is why I'm talking to cars shoot around the curve by the law building so fast that I don't notice them in time, either. You see, God, last week when I walked back from class, three cars nearly hit me in front of the museum. I tried to be careful, but I guess they didn't care who they rammed down. IT'S ESPECIALLY bad on a rainy day. Not only do I have to fear for my life when I finally get up the nerve to cross the road, but I have to wait by the pedestrian cross-walks while those heated, covered cars fly past. shopping center that had bumps in the parking lot to keep cars from speeding. Maybe you have those in on Jayhawk Boulevard? Maybe, if none of those drivers will listen to you, you can do something else about it. The other day, I was at a I know my suggestion probably won't stop many people. But maybe if a few guys get their cars knocked out of alignment, they'll slow down. And then maybe the word will get out that Jayhawk Boulevard is a nasty place to speed. OR MAYBE people shouldn't be allowed to drive on campus at all, regardless of the hour. You see, the reason I'm asking for your help is that I only have two years to get up and do what I don't have from college. School hasn't killed me yet (though sometimes I really thought it would). I'd like to live a little longer, but I just want to outlive in the real world. The lead editorial in Monday's Kansas criticized former President Gerald Ford for "criticizing" President James Carter. Such behavior, the editor said, was unbecoming of I thank you for your time and attention. Now I gotta run to the meeting tonight. I'll put a few coins for you in my blue box. Thanks. God. Ford's criticism of Carter O.K. scope of Ford's remarks and the unlimited reaction of Carter, his vice president and the press, it seems that the pointed attack of Ford was a lead editorial, which theoretically expresses a viewpoint supported by the newspaper as a whole, supposedly carries a message that the office staff deems important and worthy of comment. Ideas are easy to come by, but turning them into interesting, informative and accurate article is difficult. From experience, I realize that desperation is often the reason I write about certain topics. It takes a lot of time, but Ford's so-called cankerworth personality and subsequent remarks about Carter's first 100 days seemed to be a subject worthy of comment. accounts of Ford's remarks and the reaction to those remarks by Democrats were widely publicized. What is disturbing, THE INFORMATION from which the editorial was written was easily accessible. News IN THIS CASE, it is doubtful that the staff of the Kansan was in agreement with the sub-ordinator, and so reason it was written anyway. Before dealing with the thrust of the words directed against Ford, I would like to discuss some of the practical considerations that make writing extremely difficult. THERE ARE several good reasons why Ford should refrain from "criticizing" the Carter administration. None of however, is the relationship between Ford's comments and Carter's reaction to them. Brent Anderson Editorial Writer Once that information is in the public eye, via the pages of local newspapers, you can learn about the first to criticize and analyze it. Unfortunately, no one takes the time to consider whether that information is substantive, but with a big reaction to a little event. KEEP IN mind that it was Mondale who quoted Carter as saying how upset he was about Ford's public remarks, not that he press, once again, willing to play up any information a President or vice president wants to, especially when that information appears to be universal or potentially riotous. Perhaps Ford shouldn't have told a political science class at the University of Michigan that he thought Carter was overly interested in agreement with the Soviet Union. But his comments on the subject, which were uninteresting and painfully obvious at best, hardly were worth the attention he's given to *Mrs.'s* and *Montale's* reactions. them,however,were mentioned in Monday's editorial. and associate him with former President Richard M. Nixon. Then, the Carter people would react the way they did. But, rather than spend the rest of his life on the couch, Ford decided to speak out. The most obvious reason is exactly what happened. Carter's people could yell dirty words, because he has hungry, say he has sour grapes Second premature comments by Ford could conceivably undermine our nation's position on immigration and the Union. Now, after Carter has decided to pursue a unique foreign policy, to think that Ford's comments could unquestionably that policy is in incongruous TO SAY THAT Ford should shut up because former presidents traditionally don't say anything bad about the current President is equally ludicrous. In truth, Ford has been remarkably剩难 then far and to say that he has behaved improperly and not as a distinguished man, or the facts. He has continued to exhibit the 'touch of class' shown during the transition, and, if what he has said about the Carter administration smacks of political haymaking, as was evident only because an overly sensitive President and vice president are riding the baler. TEACHER IS A DUMMY TEACHER IS A DUMMY! HEEEEEEEEEEEEYAAAAA!! WABA! FWB01! GOOD BLESS OUR SUPREME COURT! TEACHER IS A DUMMY TEACHER IS A DUMMY! Tall woman with large breasts A child wearing a white shirt and black pants HEEEEEEEEEYAYAAA!!! WABA! FWAPI GOD BLESS OUR SUPREME COURT Counting friends disquieting job The current issue of Esquire magazine concerns itself with an important—nay, the ultimate question—'Is '1977. Do you know who your friends are?' That's quite a question for Esquire to pose, and quite a question to ponder. But if you ponder for too long, as I did, you may come up with a disheartening answer. have today are the friends you will have forever." Clever words for an old coot, but they're not true. There was a time when I thought I had more friends than I had fingers and boes. To take the fun of writing out diary hours writing out lists of friends who would show up at my funeral, should I die that day. The list—admittedly a real estimate—was enormous. AND I THOUGHT that even if I died 1965 later, those same people would still be there, like loval St. Bernards. An old sage whom I used to wheel around at the rest home once told me, "The friends you Remember what was said the Perhaps that's why some members of my high school class suddenly decided to have lunch with the teacher. I don't plan to go, because mer. I don't plan to go, because --- Stewart Brann Editorial Editor TIME AND DISTANCE have indeed come between us - five years and the infinite distance between Lawrence and my hometown. Very few of us have kept in touch. night of your high school graduation? I do. Everyone in "the old crowd" moped around and went to the store. "No time either nor distance can come between us," or comforting things like, "I can't say goodly, so I'll say good luck if I can." "No, course I'll learn in touch." I've a good idea what I'd learn about "the old crowd." Mary, (not her real name), the best debater in our class, is on her second marriage and is expecting her third kid. She sells Avon and will probably be taking orders at the reunion room where we are such good friends, I would probably order something. TED, THE VICE president of the college, tried class for half a semester, but it didn't agree. She sold herself and make twice the income 1 could ever hope to make as a journalist. Because we are such good friends, I would listen to him talk for two hours as he explained why the policy he would allow students to work better than the one I've already got. And he might even convince me to switch. Lyle, who was sort of a drip in high school, is now president of the Junior Chamber of Commerce. We were friends our first year, but the only one who would converse with me, and vice versa. He is still a drip and would try to talk into me coming back home for him when I graduate. He would not convince me. CAROL, ONCE a shy, intelligent high school senior, is to begin her doctorate in biophysics at UCLA. She has come out of her shell, and she'll be at the reunion to flank her accomplishments. I would attempt to discuss recent developments in the field of biophysics with her, because we were such good friends and used to discuss intelligent things. Dona, a girl whom I used to date, is poor and fat. She can't seem to hold down a job for more than a month. Because we were such good friends five years when she was in him, attractive and ambitious, probably would avoid her all evening. As for me, I've yet to begin my career. I have no spouse, no kids, no steady income. I haven't yet succeeded at whatever it is we're supposed to succeed at. I be a real bore at home and I'm not sure of the question on the cover of Euquire would haunt me all evening. I once knew who my friends were. I don't want to go to home to know who they aren't. Grammarizers should get gong SCRABBLE, Va. - I got up about 5:30 one morning last week to finish Edwin Newman's new book before breakfast. After breakfast I drove the new car down to Woodville for the first time and invented an invention. It is furry how these things happen. Newman's book, "A Civil Tongue," is a delightful sequel to the 1975 book. In 1975, once again he wages war against the abuses that constantly are heaped upon the defenseless English language. He finds targets in the bureaucracy, of course, and in HEY! WHAT MAKES YOU THINK SOUTH KOREA NEEDS ALL THAT? COME NOW, YOU LOOK LIKE AN INTELLIGENT PATRIOT. JUST THINK! IF WE FAIL TO SUP-PORT SOUTH KOREA, HEY! WHAT MAKES YOU THINK SOUTH KOREA NEEDS ALL THAT? COME NOW, YOU LOOK LIKE AN INTELLIGENT PATRIOT. JUST THINK! IF WE FAIL TO SUP-PORT SOUTH KOREA, WEST PAUL THE COMMUNISTS! YOU DON'T WANT THAT, DO YOU? OH GOSH! I SEE WHAT YOU MEAN! IT WOULD UNDOUBTEDLY FALL TO THE COMMUNISTS, AND YOU KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS! THERE'D BE A FASCIST, TOTALITARIAN STATE. HUMAN RIGHTS WOULD BE TRAMPLED! AND WHO WOULD AID THAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT? WESTPHAL IT WOULD UNDOUBTEDLY FALL TO THE COMMUNISTS, AND YOU KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS! THERE'D BE A FASCIST, TOTAL- ITARIAN STATE. HUMAN RIGHTS WOULD BE TRAMPLED! AND WHO WOULD AID THAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT? WEST DALL THE COMMUNISTS! YOU DON'T WANT THAT, DO YOU? OH GOSH! I SEE WHAT YOU MEAN! James J. Kilpatrick the realms of education, sociology, art criticism and sports. His book is a long, happy assault upon such atrocities as "remediation" and "ongoing major thrust." Every person who writes for publication ought to牵 this volume to his heart. ABOUT THE new car. This is called a granado, manufactured by Mr. Ford. It comes equipped with two warning buzzers and six or eight cautionary lights. You can also power to put the matter bluntly, are godawful. One of them goes off if you open the driver's door while the keys are in the ignition switch. It's like having a snowmobile in your ear. The other one is worse. It goes off if you don't flash your tail light. You need power saw in your other ear. The lights make no noise, but glare at you with little red eyes. These gadgets have a purpose. They are intended to help you do without being told, such as taking out the keys before I lock them in the car, and to warn me of overlapped: "DOOR JAAR" THIS IS the invention. In every newspaper city room, in every government office, in every magazine publishing house, in every database. This would resemble the control panels of a space ship. The console would be equipped with an assortment of cowbells, raspberries, buzzer, Chinese gongs and perhaps a thousand warning lights. The whole thing would be hooked to the speaker, the controller would be hooked to every typewriter in the place. It is a glorious prospect, is it not? Noisy, gaudy and glorious. This marvelous machine would be programmed, for example, to retrieve all the pandits pundit wrote that something "remains to be seen." At the Washington Post, you'd have the sound effects of a five-alarm fire in a cynical factory. The Post as a result of the Anita Bryant incident, the Post recently pronounced, "remains to be seen." GONG! Whether certain amendments to a Senate bill were passed, the Post remains to be seen." GONG! The nature of a tax program "remains to be seen." GONG! On Dec. 13, 1972, a memorable date, the Post was in back-to-back sentences GONG! GONG! JACKPOT! THE MACHINE would five a roman cake at "single most," as in "the single most influential group of Jewish leaders in the country." The Washingtonian magazine recently reported on the "single most embarrassing estate in the District." Last month my best beloved colleague, William Buckley, recounted "the single most embarrassing thing" that happened to the liberals in the '50s. Two weeks ago the Arkansas Gazette reported the "single most embarrassing Postal Service's inflation problem." Z-ZAAP! POW! My admonitory monster would light up a red eye at "old cliche," "old adage," "oem A ponent parts” and “fatal slaying.” the bureaucrat who wrote “prioritize” would get a Bronx cheer. In the presence of this machine, no educationist would winkle at structural modules” when be meant “classrooms.” Bells would tinkle at “ground rules,” “past experience,” “future prospects” and “urban crisis situation” whenever the roof is detected on all sides,” a smoke bomb would explode and the roof would fall in. Univ utility stretch visual The 1975, v Classes Peter School buildi year 1 Developing a comprehensive program for the machine would be the work of a lifetime, or of ten lifetimes, or a hundred. The computer would not read of a slain Alabama sheriff who was "funeralized," or of a woman minister who felt "inferiorized," or of politicians who "overstrategize," or of influences that are "rigidized." We might, if Edwin Newman wrote the muscular body of a beautiful language now sorely burdened by flab. "H did no reque little As repai would avail will | budg. areas "W little THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jim Bates Editorial Editor Stewart Braun Managing Editor Greg Hack Campus Editor Alison Gwinn Associate Campus Editor Lynda Smith Jerry Scb Assistant Campus Editors Barbara Lonegay Sports Editor Associate Sports Editors Bernell Jukubo, Tim Purcell Dan Rowley Dan Rowley Photo Editor George Millner Photographers Mike Campbell Kay Jouelzer, Jim Cobb Make-up Editors Susan Applebury, Jim Cobb May Myers, Anne Gneill, Jim Benn Wire Editors Larry Bonura, Caroline Sherr Entertainment Editors Sherr Baldwin Contributing Writers Elizabeth Leach Bill Snuffer Editorial Writers Bill Snuffer, Barbian Bowrower Jay Bemis, Paul Addison Jay Bemis, Paul Jefferson, Jerry Seb, Bill Snuffer Business Manager Jarra Clements Advertising Manager Tim O'Brien Assistant Advertising Manager Judy Jurasilev Assistant Classified Manager Pat Thornton Promotional Manager Paul Addison National Advertising Manager Robin Gruserden Sarf EX need University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 28,1977 5 rally don't about the is equally has been thus far, behaved as of as a man the facts. the facts. to exhibit 'r' shown , and, if about the snacks about the secrets, it is sensitive president GOD BLESS OUR AUPREME COURT ob I would miss recent field of because weeds and used things. im I used to She. St. can't a job for Because we we were five we was seven Ioud, Ioud oud all y begin to begin to spouse, no spouse, income 1. reached at real bore at real bore, thaties thates, for E庐娶 evening my friends to go home to can't. g imprehensive machine machine would or, a hundred, or, we might, we right, furished," unforealed, who felt who felt of politicians of politicians "size," or, "rigidized" would Newman newly restore to a beautiful humbled herd. Shea armlic aligbee crnton nomon tender strand Arts building stretches budget University of Kansas maintenance and utility budgets for fiscal 1978 will be stretched because of the opening of the new visual arts building next fall. The visual art building, begun during fall 1975, will be completed during the summer. Classes will be held in the building next fall, Peter Thompson, associate dean of the美术 department, said last week. The building originally was scheduled to open a year later, in 1978. A TOTAL OF $8,500 was requested from the state earlier this year for maintenance three buildings now under construction. The Forsherian Spencer Art Museum and the visual arts building - Keith Nicher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said. "However, the governor and legislature did not recommend or supply the money we requested for these buildings," he said. Money for repairs will come from other areas of the maintenance budget. "We'll have to make our supplies go on a little further," Nitcher said. As a budget stretching method, some repairs won't be as thoroughly done as they would have been had the extra money been available, he said. All buildings on campus will be adequately maintained under the budget, however. EXTRA EMPLOYES ALSO will be needed to clean and maintain the visual arts TWO-WHEELER TROUBLES? How to fix your bicycle The $3.95 Solution. How to Fax Your Biocomputer Hardware increases the number of adjustments to major repairs, updated software and hardware. You can operate each operation step-by-step. Your handwriting bears more than 150 ratings. Boards may more than 150 ratings. Send me 'How To Fix My Bicycle' by encourage $3.95 plus 60 cents for postage and handling for each copy. (Check or money order only, please.) technical Publications Di Interet, Publishing, Corp P.O. Box 12901 Overland Park, KS 66212 P rounding after it opens. Nitcher said the Board of Regents would determine how many additional employees will be needed. Salaries for these people will come out of general funds, he said. Name Address City State Zip University Utilities will be paid out of the line item allocated for all University utilities. The additional building may present a challenge, but the KU, KU, Notitcher said, but it won't cause a major problem. The state legislature has been good about granting additional money for the arts and sciences, but it hasn't done much. Funding requests for next year are now being considered by the state legislature. The state budget shortages. Nichter thought the allocation for maintenance and utilities is fair. "We think that the dollars are pistolized on the basis of the Regula's formula," he SUA POPULAR FILMS PAUL NEWMAN BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS OR SITTING BULL'S HISTORY LESSON SUA POPULAR FILMS PAUL NEWMAN BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS OR, SITTING BULL'S HISTORY LESSON DINO DE LAURENTIIS presents PAUL NEWMAN in THE DAVID SUSSKIND Production of A ROBERT ALTMAN Film "BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS, or SITTING BULL'S HISTORY LESSON" on starring JOEL GREY - GERALDINE CHAPLIN and BURT LANCASTER Screenplay by ALAN RUDOLPH and ROBERT ALTMAN Based upon the play 'INDIANS' by ARTHUR KOPIT Produced and Directed by ROBERT ALTMAN Executive Producer DAVID SUSSKIND - Famed in PANMADISON United Artists PG FRI., APRIL 29 & SAT., APRIL 30 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., 3:30 Matinee each day $1 tickets at SUA office N" Sell it through Kansan want ads Call the classified department at 864-4358 BORG STRUNG WITH US When Bjorn Borg came to Kansas to play for the Topeka Benefit, we were selected to string his racket. Borg likes his racket strung with gut—almost to a breaking point of 88 pounds—compared to 55-62 pounds for most players. So stringing for Borg was a detailed and demanding assignment. We treat the stringing of your racket with the same painstaking attention. And we give you 24 hour service even if we have to work all night. We also carry the most complete and finest lines of TENNIS CLOTHES, SHOES, RACKETS AND ACCESSORIES in Lawrence. Select from famous names such as [Image of a woman with long hair] - Head - Borg's Fila - Cole of California - Tail - Izod first serve first serve String with us the way the professionals do Also in Topoka & Wichita 842-8845 first serve first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 1119 Massachusetts Lawrence One Last Bargain Before Finals at KING of Jeans LEVIS at KING of Jeans Levi's Today thru Saturday only 1st time ever! Levi’s Blue Denim Bells Reg. 14 oz. denim, regular Flare, reg. $16 Now only $11.99! Sizes: 25 thru 42 waist 29 thru 38 length DON’T MISS IT! KING of Jeans 740 Mass. WE’RE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS john santino valentine master charge the assurance guide 1977 Season Football Tickets at Reduced Rates for Recent Grads 1975-1976-1977 Graduates are eligible to receive up to 2 tickets for the reduced price of *33.00 per ticket Come by or mail your check to: ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE Allen Field House Lawrence, Kansas 1. Remittance must accompany your order. Make your check payable to: KUAC. 2. Do not expect to receive tickets before September 1. --- 3. In the event you have a change of address before Sept. 1st please notify the ticket office. 4. Late season ticket orders received 14 days prior to the first game, cannot be mailed and must be picked up under name in which ordered at 66045 WILL CALL window in Memorial Stadium the day of the game. 6. People who had season tickets last year and want to reorder the same seats this year must do so before June 1. 7. New season ticket holders will be assigned the best seats that become available. For further info.—Call 864-3141 --- Name: Address: City, State, Zip: Telephone: No. Price Amount $33.00 Postage Handling .60 TOTAL KU --- 6 Thursday, April 28, 1977 University Daily Kansan ASPECTS: Clinton SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO THE KANSAN Long waited for, Clinton is on its way to reality By CHUCK ALEXANDER Everyone is waiting for the water Planning for the reservoir was sanctioned by Congress in 1962 at the urging of persons still dripping wet from the $1 billion flood of 1961. The purpose of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project is flood control. THE 7.000-ACRE Clinton Reservoir is expected to be the nucleus for recreational development and activity not only for Lawrence, but also throughout the region. According to a three-color Corps brochure on the reservoir, "All forms of outdoor recreation will be available, the most popular of which are fishing, boating, water skiing, swimming, picnicking, canning, hiking, hiking and sight-seeing." But with the flood all but forgotten, Clinton has become more a safety valve for the Wakarusan River Valley. Such opportunities will attract more than an estimated 1,000,000 visitors to Clinton each year—a potential bonanza for any businessman who happens to be in the right place at the right time. SOME BUSINESSMEN—such as land developers—appear to already be at the right place and are waiting only for the right time Such prospects have given the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce reason to keep a keen eye on proposed strip development—specifically the stricking of businesses along main roads. Such development, chamber of officials say, could turn the downtown area into a merchants' graveyard because they think shoppers would frequent the roadside businesses more than businesses downtown. The reservoir's physical statistics are impressive. Clinton will have a 72-mile shoreline, and the dam will contain more than 69,500 pounds of steel for each of the University of Kansas' 24,000 students. BUT FOR ALL of its success, Clinton also has had its problems—being on schedule is unequivocal the biggest of these. 'or example. - In 1972, the completion date for the project was aimed for 1976. The completion date currently is 1978. In 1973, Corps planners spent weeks surveying public opinion and drafting master plans for public use areas on the reservoir. That project reportedly set back planning for the public use areas one year. The areas are scheduled to undergo construction in 1978 In 1974, the water impoundment date was moved ahead to 1977 Impoundment was earlier scheduled to begin in early 1978. Latest Corps estimates say impoundment of water will begin in March of next year. Partial blame for this delay, officials say, can be attributed to the necessity of finishing roads around the reservoir before impounding water and flooding roads currently in use by area residents. ANOTHER PROBLEM is cost overruns. According to Vic Counts, Clinton project manager, the projected cost of the reservoir is $8 million. The estimated cost in 1971, for the same size and location, was $6 million. Although land developers, businessmen and tourists are awaiting completion of Clinton with anticipation, others—such as persons living near the reservoir—say they want the reservoir as much as another flood like that of 1951. Another sort of flood is what they'll probably experience as rivers of campers, hunters, college students, boat-laden trailers and tourists taking an excursion flow through their towns and past their farms. SOME RESIDENTS have expressed concern, saying increased traffic would bring litter and lawlessness—two things they have Even if litter and lawlessness remain in check, many rural dwellers may face yet another problem—7,000 acres of water and land. Drawing by John Boyd Three of five rural water districts in Douglas County currently aren't sure how they will benefit from reservoir water to supplement a falling water table. And, if the water districts succeed in the water harvest, the dollar cost may be high. Indeed, the reservoir has affected members of Douglas County for many years. Perhaps the persons most adversely affected by the Corps project were those who were forced to sell their property to the Corps so the reservoir could be built. SOME LANDOWNERS have vivid memories of their encounters with Corps representatives during the time the Corps was "The Corps tries to have a good relationship with you, but when it comes down to their dealing, they're no good," one landowner, CO. RD. 442 STATE FISH AND WILDLIFE AREA HWY. 40 RESIDENTIAL YANKEE TANK LAKE CLINTON PARKWAY CLINTON STATE PARK WOODRIDGE PARK OUTLET AREA PROPOSED LAWRENCE HY-PASS CO. RD. 68 STATE FISH AND WILDLIFE AREA CLINTON BLOOMINGTON PARK SOUTHCOVE PARK ROCKHAVEN PARK CO. RD. 1259 CO. RD. 442 CLINTON RESERVOIR LEGEND PROPOSED ROADS COMMERCIAL MINOR CENTER COMMERCIAL MAJOR CENTER POTENTIAL LAKE ORIENTED RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT AREAS Regardless of the impact Clinton will have on the lives of persons in Douglas County and adjacent counties, in two or three years the Commission to get Corps land By DENNIS VOBORIL Reporter the natural woodland and farmland around the Church. We will provide idle space for Kangas with Local merchants monitor growth Renorter By MICHAEL KING "The history of similar projects indicates that Clinton certainly has to have an even more complicated path." Most people in Lawrence don't fully understand the probable impact of the Clinton Reservoir project, according to a report by the board of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. "I haven't seen any figures on it," he said, but "I'm sure it will have a significant impact." Ned Cushing, chairman of University State Bank. agreed. Thomas Groene, president of Calvin Eddy and Kappelman, inc. and president of the Chamber of Commerce, said that he thought the reservoir would have a tremendous impact but that he wasn't sure it would all be good. "This mob of people that will converge on Lawrence hobbes not," he said. THE LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS County Planning Commission has estimated that a new $125 million building would be built. any research on these visitors' probable economic impact on the community. But be aware of other factors that may affect West said the chamber represented more than 1,100 men and women in the Lawrence County Judicial Council. The conference would include the U.S. Corps of Engineers, the Kansas Fish and Game Commission and anyone else who has an interest in the development of Clinton. "We want to call a conference on Clinton to create a great awareness of what's happening." "ALL OF US WANT to be sure the reservoir is developed and planned in a fashion so that the city of Lawrence can reap maximum benefits—both social and economic," he said. The planning commission has outlined a plan for ancillary development that would prevent strip and spot commercial development. The plan calls for limiting commercial development to small areas at intersections of principal roads. Richard McClanathan, Lawrence city planter, stressed that the planning proposal shouldn't be construed as encouraging commercial development in certain areas or as precluding such development in other areas. "COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENTS will be considered on a case by case basis," McClanathan said. "No case sets precedents for any other cases." Strip developments, which are the stringing of businesses along main roads, creat problems with traffic control, he said. The small areas being proposed would be from four to 10 acres and would create fewer traffic problems. West said the chamber hadn't conducted West said the Clinton conference would attempt to assure that current plans are "We just want to be certain that what's happening is what we wanted to have happened." "TM OPPOSED TO seeing big 20-acre shopping centers and such go up out there," Groene echoed West's sentiments. McClanathan explained that the restriction of commercial developments to the south of Edinburgh. the development of any major shopping areas. "We don't want a mall," McClanathan said. "Mercants have a lot invested in downtown. And if we're going to maintain it we need to do something to provide protection for it." ONE SHOPPING area that will capitalize on Clinton traffic has already been planned. The particulars of the shopping area aren't disclosed, but a file filled with the city planning department. However, McClanahan has confirmed that developers for the project have spoken with him and that he is expecting a site plan for the northeast corner of 23rd and Iowa streets. West of Iowa, 23rd will become a driveway, the main access to the reservoir. To handle the wildlife and the hunters that will inevitably follow, the Army Corps of Engineers have made plans to license 9,300 acres of Forestry, Fish and Game Commission. McClanathan didn't give the name of the developers, but he said that the area was to be developed by a major grocery store chain that already has a store in Lawrence. Bob McWhorter, Northeast Regional Supervisor for the fish and game commission, said recently, "This isn't a lease in the city." But if you want to own the land. All it's costing us is our blood. personnel," he said. "But we voted to agree to this license with the understanding that we would be able to get the personnel to manage this." McWHORTER SAID that by signing the license, the fish and game commission would be in charge of area management and game survey. The land upon which the development is to be built is owned by Dale Willey and Thaine High, neither of whom could be reached for comment. "We've officially started the process to sign a license," McWherter said. "We've sent our statement to the Army Corps of Engineers' office in Kansas City, and from there we have been sent to the Office in Washington, D.C. This is a process that normally takes about two years." There had been some recent speculation that the fish and game commission would take a stance. "What we have, in a nutshell, is that if we can't get the people to operate the area, I don't think the Corps is going to license the land to us," Bronoski said. "They don't want to have that area out there unmanaged by motorcycles running around all over." MIKE BRONOSKI, district fishery biologist for the commission, said last week he didn't know whether the commission should hire personnel to manage the Clinton area. A SCARCITY OF funds has plagued the fish and game commission for several years. The commission receives 15 per cent from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses and the remaining 15 per cent from the federal government. The commission receives no state government money. However, McWhorter said he didn't forese trouble as usual in his new neighbour. "Any state office has trouble getting new But, MwChorner said, all expenditures must be approved through the state budget. "Therein lies the problem," he said. "We don't have an abundance of money by any means. But it's all note-taking and memorization is the problem of getting this approved through the state budget." "But we manage over 200,000 acres of land in Kansas. I don't see an problem." ONE PROBLEM the commission will face if it does manage the land and one that they face in other management areas, is the need of an area during peak hunting seasons. Data taken for the Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission at the 11,000-acre game management area at Perry Reservoir show that peak times occur during the opening weekend of deer season when about 680 hunters stalk hunting areas. Jordan said he expected a similar problem at Clinton. "When you're in the center of a major metropolitan area, like Clinton, is, you're going to have a problem of too many hunters out there." he said. Chances are slim lake town will remain 'as it is' Coca-Cola CUNTON GROCERY BUD Photo by CORKY TREWIN Waiting for water Although his business suffered as families were forced away from Clinton, Clarence Anderson, owner of the only business in Clinton, is waiting for the water and the tourists to get his store back on its feet. By MICHELE SIMMONS Renorter In the center of Clinton is a redowd sign that says "Welcome to Clinton. We like it as it is." Don't make it look like hell." But there is little chance that this town, which will be surrounded on three sides by a new lake, will remain as it is. how Clinton would change after the reservoir was completed. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Anderson are owners of the Clinton Grocery, the only business in town, which they have operated for 20 years. The association that his business had suffered from Clinton's project. sawround residents of the town recently expressed concern about how chairs would change after the reservoir was completed. "ABOUT 50 FAMILIES have moved away," he said. "They were all when the government took their land away for development." Anderson said that he needed more customers to stay in business. "We need to get back on our feet again," he said. "The water is going to bring in a lot of people so we are hoping for more." ONE OF ANDERSON'S customers, Carlaen Haney, Route 5, Clinton, said she was worried about strangers coming into town. "I think we probably have all of lotus筋 speeding through the town and little bit more than that. We have this bag lining them, which are being stunned all over." Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff, said that the main problem in Clinton would be an increase in traffic and he said his team was working on a plan. Johnson said that the town was patrolled by three county cars. Recently six men were added to the force. "WE APPLIED FOR and received a state grant through the Douglas County Commission to create a special traffic force," he said. "Right now, they are only handling traffic. After the grants run out in September, the commissioners will pick it up, enabling the men to aid and assist in any crimes, boating accidents or drownings." A new Clinton resident, Lionel "Smokey" Edmunds, said that I'm coowner of the Rock Chalk Ranch, which is west of Lawrence on Highway 40," he said. "As I understand it, we're included in a circle of commercial development around the park. We are anticipating more business after the lake fills." although he would miss the quiet after the lake is filled, his business would probably increase as a result of the project. Beverly Bradley, Douglas County Commissioner, said that a subcommittee of the planning board is studying the possibilities for the county. "The committee's recommendations regarding this issue will be presented to the board after it is studied," Bradley said. "The committee will evaluate its recommendations." It is no as soon a and its developer one of D neighbor County say that' M. and Mrs. W. B. Shuster have lived in Clinton for more than 30 years. She said that she and her husband were worried about the possibility of being arrested. “It’s going to be harder to get around,” she said. “The way I understand it, there will only be two roads out the town, that is, one road from here.” They ex lots and f to county DEVEI land arot plans app County F These develop and won "The Corps set up the roads the way they wanted to. In effect, we'll have to go west to go to the east." "The past 10 director Planning control d don't ha aren't a disposal Co fa ONLY Yankee Estate, 1 commis prelimin "All of the roads west, and north of east he will be covered with water." she said. "We'll be surrounded by water." Her homestore Clinton Corps Reserve "It's market "But ho doesn't HOUT SAID MANY of her friends had moved away and that her church, the Clinton Presbyterian Church, had lost half its "I'm very thankful that we get to keep our cemetery," she said. "I'll dates back to 1864. They were thinking about flooding." Another Clinton resident said that she was worried about an increase in robberies and vandalism. "You never know what's going to happen when all of those tourists come to town," she said. "My husband works night and I'm left alone. Frankly, I'd like to move away from here, but we can't right now." At a the pro they wo feet of Today Alet lessons run alo has me The Co taking now or "AF line ha couldr home put th house "Th the fa going The mark map : This is Arletta from the they die out that for floo campga came to it was barn— ARL entire the W brother marrie Th lawy Thursday, April 28, 1977 University Daily Kansan 7 ENTIAL By LIZ LEECH to agree ding that sonnel to Reporter agued the several about 85 sale of and the federal receives no John Boyd Water to turn woods into residential neighborhoods dentities le budget. ~We need the lack of getting budget. acres of probles a similar mission will one that seas, is the ing peak instry, Fish 11,000-acre Reservoir during the when about f a major is, you're many hun- west of we're and the more than about ue will "The the way e town. that a abilities ffect, It is mostly pastures and woods now. But as soon as Clinton Reservoir starts to fill, and its roads are completed, land developers will begin to turn the area into one of Douglas County's more expensive neighborhoods. Clinton ind the overed y," she looding and that half its of those right and but we bout ar County officials and real estate agents say that about three years away. They expect developments to entail large lots and fairly expensive homes, due in part to rising rents. DEVELOPERS PLANNING to subdivide land around the reservoir must have their plans approved by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. "The policy in Douglas County for the past 10 years," Jim Hewitt, assistant Planning Commission, said, "has been to control development to the extent that you don't have subdivisions with streets that are private and not public sewage管道 that don't meet regulations." "These regulations are to insure that the development will have some quality to it." ONLY ONE RESIDENTIAL subdivision, Yankee Tank, owned by McGrew Real Estate, has been presented to the planning team and is still in preliminary planning stages. "I imagine there are other people out there who would like to develop subdivisions but not many have come in here yet," Hewitt said. He added, however, that there had been several requests for information about the street and sewer regulations and lot sizes. Although he said it was hard to predict when development would pick up. Hewitt said he thought two or three years was a reasonable guess. "I don't expect many to come in and initiate planning of subdivisions until they can show buyers that there is at least some water impounded in the lake," he said. "Purchasers of the individual lots will wait until things are very visible." RON JONES, planning consultant for the 1974 Clinton Reservoir Area Mini-Comprehensive Plan, also said he didn't急需 development until there was water in Clinton. "People are going to ask what they can see from their eyes and there's not much more we can tell." But, he said, once development began the most common housing would be permanent homes that would attract buyers from Topeka, Kansas City and Lawrence. Eugene Haley, president of Holmes, Peck and Brown Real Estate, Inc., and his firm A. D. Snyder, LLP. Corps wanted to buy; farmers had to sell Bv JOHN BOYD Reporter "It’s called just compensation or fair market value," Arletta Flory, Route 5, said. "But how can it be either when the owner doesn’t want to sell?" Her words echo the feelings of many homestead farmers around the town of Clinton who had to deal with the U.S. Army Engineers concerning Clinton Reservoir. At a meeting called by the Corpse in 1971, the property owners and farmers were told they would have to yield an land within 300 feet of the lake's shoreline. This meant ten or fifteen acres to Ben and Arletta Flory. The property was hidden from the house by hilly woods and they said they would go out to see the lake which was so badly needed for flood control also had to have parks and campgrounds. When a corps representative came to make an offer for their land in 1927, he found the house, stakes and barn—the entire farm. Today they run a horse stable. ARLETTA FLORY, 50, has lived her entire life in the woods and pastures along the Wakaurka River. Ben, 60, lived on his 80-year ago when he married Arletta. Arletta trains horses and gives riding lessons. She helped cut the horse traints that run along the shoreline of the new lake and has maintained them for the past 30 years. The Corps has agreed to let her continue training horses although they are now on Corps land. After submitting a letter of request to the Corps, the Florys were spared their house, stables and barn. The public use area for the lake steps 135 feet from their front door. In 1973, there was a problem of just where to put the yellow pottery stakes. "AFTER THE trial was settled and the line had been drawn on the map, they still couldn't get it right," Arleta said. "I came home several times to find them trying to put the stakes on the wrong side of the house." "They wanted to take the road and half the farm yard. I told them they weren't going." At a meeting with the Corps representatives in the fall of 1971, the property managers offered their comments on the project, and were given preliminary warning of the purchase of the land. They were the Corps members three offers before endangering the land. They found out later that the Corps had marked the line on one place on the Flory's road. The first offer to the Florys was about 800 ance. The Florys thought their land was valuable enough to make them richer. Mrs. Flory angrily told the Corps to not come back until he be- bled to offer him a job. The corps representative didn't return with another offer, but a month later he called to say the land had been turned over to the courts for condemnation. "WE HAD planned to build our dream house on that land." she said. "We bought the estate farm after the court gave us what we wanted. But it took a year for the Corps to send us a check, what we had to pay interest on the loan." "The Corps tries to have a good relationship with you—but when it comes down to their dealing, they're no good," Arletta said. They said the question left unanswered in their minds was why the land bordering the River Forth is $100 an acre more than thirts. The land west of the Florys was owned by Arenaflory Flors's father. The land to the cast was owned by Ben Florg's brother, Virgil Florg. Both "We had to borrow the money because the Corps check hadn't come yet," Mrs. Flory said. "Because of the lake, land around here is high (in price) and scarce." They asked him if they should get a lawyer and he said they shouldn't. The Flovys got a lawyer and received more than $900 an acre for their land. North of the Flory's house the Corps field markers trace a crooked line, which the Florys say has robbed them of several feet of land. Beyond the line, the fields the Corps now owns have been allowed to grow wild since February 1973. The Flories have been mowing it twice a year to keep the weeds from spreading into their yard and pasture. Before the deal was closed, the Floris bought another property they call their "THE GOVERNMENT takes most of the money back in taxes if you don't invest it in government." They found their new property a half-mile south of their home. But the price was about twice as much an acre as they had been paid and not them between $800 and $1,000 an acre. "MOST OF THE PEOPLE we have dealt with want privacy and some acreage." Haley said. "More want from five to 20 acres for their individual use, and I think we'll see the development come when the market is set." thought Clinton development would pick up in about five years. "The Corps has agreed to let us be in charge of the horse trails and camps," Mrs. Flory said. "This is the only good thing left. We don't want to lose that." IS THERE any way they can be reimbursed for their efforts? He said there were too many uncertainties about when the lake and roads would be finished, and about what building costs would be five years from now. "In the beginning it was worth the fight, but anymore the trouble of fighting the red tape isn't worth it. The Corps knows they're going to get what they want sooner or later—that they're going to wear you down. We're tired of fighting them." "And there will be an increase in price probably when there's more of a demand—" "but not in supply." Bil Rutherford, Holmes, Peck and Brown agent, said that small parcels of land, from 10 to 14 acres, cost $2,000 or $8,000 an acre and that the cost per acre for both acres, cost between $600 and $900 an acre. HE ESTIMATED THAT land prices would double within three years. "It's worth primarily what someone is willing to now." Rutherford said. Haley said anyone buying real estate knew that it could be valuable later. Darwin Rogers, Douglas County assessor, said be thought some land around Clinton Reservoir could cost as much as $20,000 an acre in three years. Several realtors and county officials indicated that county planning had prevented some development problems other reservoirs have had. They cited Perry Bros., which has a large number of developments that have never been completed and violate sewage restrictions. LARRY JONES, McGrew agent, said, "I seems there has been ten times more planning on a joint city, county and even federal basis over Clinton." The Mini-Comprehensive Plan, prepared for the Planning Division, Kansas Department of Economic Development, indicates where potential development areas are. Hewitt said subdivision regulations included street width, onioning regulations and WAYNE KELLUM, DOUGLAS County zoning administrator, said most lots would have to be three acres to comply with sewage system restrictions. A five-mile wide area on the northeast side of the lake probably will be used for urban development. The proposed Clinton Parkway will run through it and existing roads in the area include Dragstrip Road and Highway 40, which borders the north side. The Mini-Comprehensive Plan says this area probably will be the first to develop utilities and roads. It is an area the plan said would develop regardless of whether Clinton was there because of Lawrence's westward suburbanization. potential urban area and south of the possible parkway scenic drive. Further west is an approximately two-mile wide State Park and the Woodridge Area. Two other possible development sites lie northerly of the park, another north of it, both east of Township 105. THE ARMY CORPS of Engineers controls all land within about 300 feet of the lake's edge, so no developments can offer lake-front lots. But the plan indicated six potential residential development areas near the lake; The largest potential development area is a circle of about one and a half miles. It includes proposed Township Road 460. East of it is the sixth section, just west of the Rockcliffe The following are planned developments or areas that might be developed; On the northwest side of the lake is a one-half mile wide area, just west of the Yankeetank, McGrew Real Estate's 420-creen development, lies on the northeast side of the lake. But Larry Smith and Steve Jones, McGrew agents, said the suburban development is still in only its preliminary stages. Plans for Yankee Tank began in 1973, but Jones said the firm probably wouldn't start selling lots for two or three years. They are waiting for the construction of Clinton Parkway, which will lead to the development. A 50-ACRE LAKE has already been constructed at Tanker Lake and Jones said many lot owners would be able to see Clinton Reservoir from their homes. "Two years ago we were talking about Clinton Parkway being here within a year. It was a big challenge." Jones said although plans for the development weren't yet definite, Yankee Tank would probably be similar to McGrew's Alvamar Estates. Dwight Sickles, McGrew agent, said the lots probably would be larger than Alvamar's one-quarter acre lots, possibly from one-third acre to one acre. He said that he didn't know how much the lots would cost. The mall's average lottery lots cost between $11,000 and $20,000. YANKEE TANK'S housing restrictions probably will be similar to Alvarmar's, too. Sickles said, but he wasn't sure what he would be by the time construction begins. Alamzar restrictions require that homes have a two-car garage and a minimum of 400 square feet on one floor. Stickles estimated the cost to build within the $500,000 to $800,000 range. "But that's an individual's choice," he said. "McGrew generally won't be doing the task." Smith said, "It just hasn't been pinpointed yet, but as far as living in Yankee Tank goes, it's a very spacious place, with a room that allows you to build right on Yankee Tank Lake." BLACKHAT RANCH Another area with development possibilities is Blackhat Ranch, owned by Banco Mortgage Co. in Kansas City. The land contains about 2,600 acres and is divided into three areas on the southwest side of the lake. The land was formerly owned by Viking Investment, Inc., which had operated a cattle ranch on the land. Art Havigiorst, Banc spokesman, said that eventually his company would move to New York. THE RANCH now includes a large house, tennis courts, swimming pool, barns and guest house constructed on the largest, center section of land. "We would love to see some development out there," Havighorst said. "It's not our intention to develop it but I am not saying we won't." "As we see it right now, we aren't going to be the ones to develop it," he said. Havighurst said he couldn't comment on whether anyone was buying segments of the property or whether there was anyone interested in developing some or all of the HE SAID THE northwest portion of Blackhat, the McNabb area on County Road 460, offered a view of the lake and would be good for development. The Roberts area, east across an arm of the lake, might also be good for development. Portions of the land might remain cattle ranching pasture instead of being grazed. ROSEMONT ESTATES Rosemont Estates, owned by The Rosem Inc., contains about 138 acres. Jim Hewitt, Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, said that five lots had been finally platted there and that 42 had just gone through preliminary platting. Phil Bay, secretary-treasurer for The Four Inc. said the corporation hadn't decided whether the land was going to be a housing development. He said more information was needed on the total cost of the land, which he would lay out before any decision was made. "It's just a piece of land laying there," Bay said. "There is nothing that's con- sidered." at a Douglas County surrender's sale. BANCHOVERDE ESTATES The lots are from three to 15 acres and Staff said prices probably start at $4.99. The Four Inc. bought the land for $70,000 at a Douglas County sheriff's sale. He said the development already had a water and septic tanks, and four oac- RANCHO VERDE ESTATES Ran Stunifer, owner of Rancho Verde Estates, said he eventually planned to sell estates for houses on the already platted land. The property is the southeast corner of the lake and is accessible by the Clinton blacktop road. Staifer said he thought lot owners would build permanent houses, not weekend homes, at Rancho Verde Estates. All homes must have at least three bedrooms. QUINN-T'S INVESTMENT INTEGRITY Chuck Shelley, a Treasurer's Investment spokesman, said that seven of the eight three-acre lots have been sold for about $7,000 per lot. Shelley said the development already had water, and septic tanks have been approved for sewage. There will be no minimum cost restriction on houses. 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It flows through a rural landscape with fields and a farmhouse in the background. The water appears calm and reflective, creating a serene atmosphere. Photos for COBVY.TREWIN Gates at Clinton Reservoir are scheduled to be closed by March 1978 for impoundment Something for everyone at Clinton By CORKY TREWIN Reporter When Clinten Reservoir is ready for public use, an estimated 1.3 million visitors will use the facility in its first year of operation, according to Vie Counts, Clinton That figure consists of boating, fishing, nauting and day and overnight camping The estimate was calculated by the Kansas City District offices of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Counts said recently, and is based on the concentration of people surrounding the lake and the use "THIS AREA WILL offer something for everyone," Counts said. "It will have ultramodern facilities and very primitive areas and everything in between." Park, located on the north side of the lake, and Bloomington, located across the lake from Clinton State Park—there will be power and hookups for the big trailers and campers plus bathroom, boat ramps, picnic tables, and everything "Everything color. TUX." Counts said. There will be six recreation areas at the lake. At two of these areas—Clinton State "At 10 every night the gates will be shut to the day campers and quiet time will be enforced. Those who see this as a beer party area are mistaken," he said. Clinton Parkway is set for 1980 Clinton Parkway, the main traffic artery to Clinton Reservoir, will be filled by 2015. By BOB FLORES If right-of-way purchases and construction plans keep on schedule, Clinton commode and commode increased traffic from Lawrence to the lake area. Dean Sanderson, Field work is completed on the parkway, he said, and purchase of right-of-way is the next step for the project. The right-of-way is land on either side of the roadway. Clinton State Park will be managed by the state, Counts said, and in order to enter the park on April 25, residents must pay a fee. The parkway will connect the 23rd and Iowa streets intersection with Clinton dam, Hewitt said that the K-10 improvements would have been made regardless of whether Clinton reservoir had been built, and he hoped to help move Kansas City traffic to the lake. Expansion of K-10 to four lanes between Kansas City, Kan., and Lawrence probably will be completed this year, Hint Jeffwheat, Douglas County planning commission, said. THE PLANNING commission also included in its 1974 projections the possibility of a K-10 east of Lawrence, go south about two and a half miles and then west to connect with Lake Ontario. "This bypass would have reduced the traffic coming through Lawrence," he said. "The idea was for the bypass to continue or to the reservoir and then tie into the turn." pike when it no longer retained turnpike status." But Hewitt said the plan was long range and wouldn't be realized for at least another year. Sanderson said right-of-way purchase negotiations for the parkway would start before fall and would be completed in 1978. The project would then be ready for con- Counts said roads to the overnight area were separate from the day use areas to the north. "I'm not sure how long construction will be Sanderson said. The county has never had bigger projects." "IT WILL depend a lot on the weather and we骨 we'll be done by 1800." To receive federal funds to pay for 70 per cent of the project, the county must earnmark its $5.9 million in construction funds for the parkway by September 1978. "It that happens, the county and city would have to pay the rest of the bill that has been taken from the federal government," he said. "But I don't think we would have any trouble getting it." Sanderson said he thought right-of-way costs might raise the cost of the parkway to He said the Kansas Department of Transportation would appraise land along "I think a permit costs $10 or so, but it is the best deal you count." Counts said. "You can buy a permit, put it on a bus and haul as many people into the park as you want." Counts said the arena at Bloomington offered the only group area on a reservation THE PERMIT costs the same for a bus as it does for a car, and is good for other state parks in Kansas, not just Clinton State Park. Counts said. "If someone wants to bring a large group in, like a family reunion or class party, they can reserve the area for a slight charge," he said. A quarter-mile stretch of proposed right-of-way on 23rd Street is owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association. the parkway and negotiate the purchase of right-of-way land. Bloomington also will have marine facilities like Clinton State Park. "Marina bids will be open to the public sometime in 1978. We will review all the bids and select the one that will serve the parking lot for our boats. Parking for and the boat ramps, but it will be up to the marina to build the docks, the main facility and gas pumps." Martin Henry, Endment Association property manager, said he had not any recent contact with parkway authorities or other agencies before commenting on the land's status. Peter Whitenight, Douglas County commission chairman said, "The purchase of right-of-way is quite a process in itself. It must be processed, process, but we should be ready by 1978." Counts said there were four other public use areas—Woodridge, a primitive area for picnicking; Ridgewood, the area; the outlet area around the dam spillway, a day use and overnight area with picnicking and fishing; and Southeast, an area that won't be developed until there is a "We may end up having to condemn some land." Whtenight he was currently working out a contract with the city on right-of-way purchase responsibilities. He said the contract would be made public later this Jets Spring "When the purchase was made in 1967, there were lots of long-range plans. Before anything was to be done, we wanted all the departments to submit proposals for its TODD SEYMOUR, president of Endowment Association, said that probably the main reason that development on the Adams Campus wasn't progressing was due to lack of funding. Weekend Special Ten Daisies $1.39 SUA He said that the Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation (HPER) had shown the most prolonged interest in the area as a potential recreational and environmental health study area. Alexander's Flowers Dir. Robert Altman, with Paul Newman, Burt Lancaster, Harvey Keitel, Popular Film Series, April 30; September 9; April 10; 3: 30; 3: 30 p.m., $1. Midnight Film Series. Friday, April 29 and Saturday, April 30, 12:00 midnight, $1 Dir. Walerian Borowczyk with Palir. Picasso, Winner of the Grand Prize at the London Film Festival. Frances Bifilum, Film Rater, Reedley (4) *5* checked. Ballet, April 28, 7:30 & 10:30 p.m. $1 SUA FILMS By agreement with the Corps of Engineers, the University is prohibited from building any permanent structures on land in the Corps' jurisdiction. The Corps when an eventual use is decided on KU has since leased back the land, giving it the largest parcel of the three schools that have land at the reservoir. Lawrence School District, USD No. 497, owns a 233-acre environmental education reserve, and Haskell Indian Junior College has a 70-acre SHORT EXPLOITATION "The land is currently being held in stewardship," Henry said. "It has lots of money to buy the university." Association's intent to see how or when it will be developed. If someone were to come to us with a workable plan, we'd be glad to do that, and it would still a good investment for the University." So far, the land has been used only for agricultural production, Henry said, and it is managed by one of the professional farm managers who manage the University-owned lands around the state. Income from field on the property is about $3,000 a year. THE LAND, as it was originally purchased, included 320 acres on the southeast shore of Clinton Reservoir. But in 1973 the city also condemned 86 acres of lake front land. plus MANY KU departments have shown an interest in the land for educational and recreational use, but none have come up to develop or the money to begin development. IMMORAL TALES (1974) Osness said that when the thesis was given to the Endowment Association, the plan was rejected for being too expensive. The budget would have been sufficient; the investment would run in excess of $1 million. The money for development would most likely, he added, be spent by the university's administration budgeting of the University. TRUCK-STOP WOMEN "WHEN I HANDED out the questionnaire, no one even knew about it, and I had to explain what was going on. I thought that this issue on it would bring to people its attention." Cash and Carry 826 Iowa 842-1320 MAX LUCAS, DIRECTOR of facilities for the University, was here to defend plans for Adams Campus, preliminary discussions had centered on its possible use as a seminar and retreat area. The Endowment Association owns the land, which was purchased through a grant by Stanley Learned, chairman of the board of Petroleum Co. and a longtime KLU婆婆。 BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS (1976) FILMS "I suppose that they would keep it in agriculture until someone decides what to do," she said. 1) nature训程; 2) research areas in astronomy, botany or ornithology; 3) conference areas; 4) recreation areas; 5) painting and painting; 6) outdoor education. are combined student-faculty resource materials the following uses of the campus were listed in table 3. Lack of funds delavs land use The development of the land (the only privately owned parcel with the possibility of raising it) is often because of a lack of building funds, and lack of any definitive proposals for its use, according to Martin Henry, property manager at University of Kansas Endowment Association. In completing her master's thesis, Pollard said that she had distributed a questionnaire describing the campus and soliciting possible uses from the 32 departments of the University. Then she was invited to interview academies among the student population. Adams Campus is a 222-acre tract of Clinton land purchased by the University of Kansas in 1965 as a recreation park. It will be open 10 years later, no one seems sure what will happen there. BvPAULJEFFERSON --services, the land has definite recreational and research potential." Sevmur said. “IT'S A BODY of land that was just given to the University, and everyone can use. In fact, it doesn't have to be developed that much. It could be kept very natural.” "Personally, I have visited with the local Chamber of Commerce people and they too would like to see something done with the project," she said. "We hope we'll be able to contribute more." Sandra Polland, a former graduate student now living in Olahthe, researched Adams Campus from a wildlife standpoint. She also outlined the type of structures that would best suit the land, the pressures on land and recreational and educational use. TWO YEARS AGO, with the help of Onness and other departments and individuals, a master's thesis was done on the feasibility of developing the Adams land into an alternate recreation center for KU students, faculty and their families. Wayne Osmess, professor of physical education, said that the HPER department was in a "holding pattern" regarding Adams Campus. Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union HENRY SAID THAT he thought interest in the Adams campus would be rekindled when the water for the reservoir was fully impounded by next spring. "We certainly haven't been pushing it (development), though." Sevour said. Plus free room & board Make $550 in 8 weeks Work for A.U.R.H. as a Summer Intern this summer. Applications at your Residence Hall desks and at the AUHR office, 210 McCollium. Must have lived in Residence Hall before and be able to halls for the 1977-8 school year. Application deadline May 2nd. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer AURH --only at Apartments PRIVACY IS . . . INDIVIDUAL PATIOS AND BALCONIES SEPARATE ENTRANCES SOUND CONDITIONING SUBURBAN LOCATION 2500 West Sixth TRAILRIDGE Apartments Jazz 843-7333 R $ W_{a} $ Jazz There five runs and they Reservo Man depen rainfall stone b Wright agent, In a district their w BUT water 1 926 Mass. upstairs Paul Gray's Jazz Place Baldwin water h from Cliv living have to interest Jazz But o people he sal district look to TONITE: Jam Session with the River City Jazz Band No cover—No minimum "It'T mean Wright to be allevia don't FRI. & SAT: The legendary Jay McShann & his band HEL appro idea officiia featuring Claude "Fiddler" Williams. Admission $5.00 The state water plann derso includes FREE BEER & SOFT DRINKS The less e get w would proce Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. E Re grou Engi resul Cli purp In a ter sour Clin University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 28, 1977 9 reational said, interest kindled was fully pushing it said. physical partment regarding the local they too with the we hope help of land and inne on the ams land for KU ses. graduate searched and point. uures that assures on educational d that she nt of the just given in use. In hoped thatural." is thesis, attributed a pusus and the 32 Then she song the t-faculty e campus e: areas in logy; 3) areas; 5) nting; 6) question- and I had caught that o people's phesis was expensive in the treatment, the million. The most likely, intellectual university, facilities were no competition on its grant area. keep it in es what to Reservoir water to influence Douglas County life Water districts see answer in reservoir Increase is coming soon By DARYL COOK Reporter There are more than 2,000 people living in five rural water districts in Douglas County and they say they want water from Clinton Reservoir. BUT FEW ARE certain how much the water will cost. There are nearly 3,000 people living in Baldwin. They have approved a $1 million water hook-up from Lawrence to get water from Clinton Reservoir, and the 1,800 people who live nearby have told Baldwin officials that they are interested in buying some of that water. In addition, three of the rural water districts aren't certain how they will get their water. Many of these people have in the past depended on the 36 inches of average annual rainfall and the two water-saturated sand-stone bodies beneath the area for water, Lee Wright, a farmers' Home Administration agent, said recently. But droughts in recent years forced these people to search for other sources of water, he said, and Baldwin and five water companies are beginning to look to Clinton Reservoir, "ITS (CLINTON RESERVOIR) bound to mean that there is an availability of water." Wright said. But, he added, "it's still going to be up to the local communities to alleviate an adverse situation and if they don't do it it won't ret done." However, there has been state pressure to use regional water planning and distribution in areas where state reservoirs provide water. The Kansas Water Resources Board, the state agency that controls use of public water bodies, has been supporting such organizations as the Henderson, water board aled, said. HENDERSON SAID THAT the board who approached Lawrence city officials with the idea of regional water planning and those officials had given their support. The program would be more efficient and less expensive than several smaller plans to get water out of the reservoir, he said, and provide the reservoir's water facilities to process the water. Lawrence recently passed a bond issue for the construction of a second water pipeline. The two water plants would be capable of producing nearly 27.1 million gallons a day. THE CITY WOULD in turn sell the towns and water districts, Henderson said. "One large plant will be better than five small ones," he said. Lawrence is currently the only town or water district to have completed plans to obtain and process water from the reservoir. Lawrence will be the only town or water district to have a treatment plant with a water-intekt structure, needed to draw water from the river to the treatment plant built into the dam. LAWRENCE CONTRACTED with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to have its $167,000 water-intake structure built into the dam as it was constructed, according to Vic Counts, Clinton Reservoir Project Manager. Counts added that another such facility would be impossible to build onto the dam. oak Wildgen, assistant Lawrence city manager, said Lawrence planned to use its "We don't want little subdivisions in our use of problems with annotation, but we want them." HE SAID THAT water contracts with rural water districts No. 4 and No. 5, south of Lawrence, restricted the number of units of Lawrence could serve to avoid annexation problems. Widgen also pointed out that Lawrence controls utilities—including water-inthe contracts included a raise in water Wright said, from 52 cents for a house to $104 per square foot. These water districts have always depended on Lawrence for their water, Wright said, and have negotiated 40-year contracts with Lawrence to obtain the five trillion gallons a day they requested from the water board. Ralph Whaley, water district No. 5 Wildgen said that Baldwin's contract to buy reservoir water from Lawrence will be completed in three miles north of the pipeline, which is planned to run east and west from Baldwin. representative, said that the average water district about 85.50 a thousand gallons The clause was included, he said, to avoid annexation problems for both towns. BALDWIN CITY OFFICIALS have estimated that the expense of the water book-up could cause water rates to rise as much as 178 per cent. Water districts currently are prohibited by law from leaving property taxes for bonds to pay for their utilities. Water has to be paid for directly by the rural dwellers. Consequently, if rural dwellers wish to buy processured reservoir water, they must purchase it from the water districts that have bought it from Lawrence. Part of the cost of Lawrence's new treatment plant would be passed on to the rural dwellers. ALROY FLORY, REPRESENTATIVE for water district No. 2, which is in the southwest part of Douglas County, said that his water district had been waiting for the reservoir to be filled before negotiating plans with the state before making plans for a water intake structure. Klein said his water district had been studying plans to buy water under contract from Lawrence, but wasn't ruling out the possibility of building its own treatment plant. Water district No. 1, west of Lawrence, in the Western Hills area, has made no plans either, according to Ron Klein, water district board chairman. Klein noted that his water district, like No. 2, was adequately supplied with water from wells and had requested water from the water board as an alternative source. "WOULD HAVE it as a standby in case anything could happen." Elvie said. case anything could happen," Flory said. If even reservoir water were made available as a standby source, Douglas County farmers wouldn't be able to use it on their crops, Lee Van Meter, Douglas County Extension agent, said. Irrigation has been difficult to use in Douglas County, he said, because the hilly NOTICE TO BE OBJECTED BY THE COUNTY LEAGUE FOR MAY 17 FURTHER LEY OF REFERENCE YES, ADVERTISED NO, ADVERTED --- Photo by CORKY TREWIN 'Where is the water?' terrain made it expensive--about $400 an acre. LIVESTOCK OWNERS have faced a similar problem, Jack Wiseman, Douglas County dairy farmer. said When a severe drought hit the area, he said, and water source was cut off, he forced to移走 thousand from Lawrence—sometimes several thousand gallons a day. "That reservoir won't make a nickel's worth of difference for me," he said. What would that mean? Others think the water from Clinton Observoir is badly needed by farmers and farmers. "All the water districts have got to be hooked up and connected to Clinton and the Kaw River," Whale said, "because they're the only sources of water." Environmental groups work for compromises By KAREN DIRKS Clinton Reservoir, for all practical purposes, will be a compromise lake. Reporter Representatives of local environmental groups and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers say the lake is a compromise as a result of several meetings about Clinton. "We had wanted no motor boats, no development and we came up with a plan. I was the former president of the Jayhawk Audubon Society, said recently. "The Corps听了 to conservationists more than with any other lake in Northeastern Kansas," he said. In 1973 the Citizen's Coalition for Clinton, a temporary organization designed to be a sounding board for public opinion regarding Clinton was formed. DAN PALMQUIST, president of the coalition, said the group formed a steering committee made up of various organizations to get a fair representation of interests. The committee included representatives from environmental groups, the Chamber of Commerce, realtors and a local motorcycling club. Nevertheless, Finfrock said, difficulties developed. "There were arguments between the conservationists and the developers," he said. "We knew there would be commercial buildings, but we were pushing for Clinton in the first place. "We decided to work for a clean lake free of the gross development we see in the city." VIC COUNTS, Clinton project manager, said of the coalition meetings, "In essence, we tried to the benefit of all the input, weighing this to get the best of both." Environmental changes at Clinton will be minor, Counts said. Fishing will be changed from stream-sized fish, such as catchfish, to pool-sized fish. Counts said that since the county has no fish, fishing and that since Clinton is public there would be more access to fishing. Counts said the upper reaches of Clinton, which constitute about half of the 7,000-acre lake, would be reserved as a quiet, no-wake boating area. MIKE BRONOSKI, district fisheries biologist for the Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission that there was a public land for fishing as a result of Glen Count. "But we will lose the stream fishing," "butpeek said, "which is preferred by many fishers." Palmquit said another thing that interested people was a totally quiet lake. More than 400 people signed a petition stating that needs weren't been met for quiet recreation. The petition also said children shouldn't conducive to quiet types of recreation. Palmquist said that there were too many boating interests to have a quiet lake and that the committee had voted to split the lake into wake and no-wake areas. BUT PALMQUIST said that committee members who opposed any sort of wake area had written a report for the Corps as a result, as if as a five-year experiment be considered. "We now have a system of lakes, each of them treated in the same way by the Army Corps of Engineers," Palmquist said. "Why can't we be brought, throughout the state, to have water for boating and another for primitive, quiet areas?" The latter are left out." A Corps environmental statement said that since there weren't any endangered wildlife or wildlife habitats in the Clinton region, it wouldn't extensively affect the environment. But the statement that wildlife habitats would be destroyed by the flooding of 15 miles of the Wakarusa River and its tributaries. IN ADDITION, habitats will be altered by residential and commercial developments drawn into the area by the lake and by intensified agricultural practices down- Finnfrock said, "We try to keep the development as far from the lakeshore as possible and to keep it confined to specific areas." But Finfrock said that the early meetings bad resulted in procrust. "Clinton will be unique in many ways among Corps projects with its primitive areas and backpack traps. The Corps is the only one an ear to conservationists," he said. The University of Kansas will begin the University Clinton Restore vior before the lake falls. water 20, water bills will begin a five-year climb resulting in a doubling of water Increase is coming soon in KU, city water rates Bv JAMES McLEAN Reporter Beginning June 6, students and faculty may pay their own water bills will notice about 48 to 86 increase and the largest change will be facing a whopping 60 per cent increase. KU will experience a $2,700 a month, $32,400 a year hike in water charges, based upon projections of water use by the Department of Buildings and Grounds. 'cause those super patterns, niffy collars and fantastic fit are really something else! Sure, he could look just like all those other guys .. but then he wouldn't be the one for me. Call him the rugged individualist or whatever you want. KU OFFICIALS SAY there is little chance for moisture measures easing the impact of rain on crops. VAN HEUSEN MAKES SHIPS FOR YOUR SENSUUC AMERICAN BODY AND YOUR ROMANTIC EUROPEAN SOUL "So much of the water used is in support of other activities and other functions, there might not be the capability to cut back all the time." Buildings and Grounds supervisor, said. Orok said that if dry weather continued he would expect to use more water than he is now. Wears Van Heusen... "There's an investment in landscape that you've got to realize," he said. The Guy I'm Choosin' Wears Van Heusen®... Oroke said there were a number of programs, both academic and recreational, that demanded large quantities of water. Currently KU's annual water bill is about $5,500, said Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business affairs. Jones said the water rate like probably wouldn't severely affect this year's budget because the fiscal year ends only one month after the rate increase goes into effect. THE IS THE first year KU has been given a separate line item appropriation in the budget for utility costs, Jones said. In previous years the utility budget was included with the budget for supplies and equipment. Last summer which was a very dry summer—from July to October KU used 92 % of the water used by the residence baths. Using the current water rate this amounted to more than $2,500. It will cost KU $3,000, or about the same amount of water this summer. JONES SAID a supplemental appropriation for increased utility costs could be requested from the Kansas Legislature through the Board of Regents if the water station was not owned. The water station was taken last winter when the natural gas shortage forced KU, to buy Watson said the five-year approach would allow the city to bring the water rates in line with the actual costs of operating the treatment plants and paying for the services. The cost implications made each year, instead of implementing one larger increase during a single year. quantities of fuel oil to heat campus buildings. ACCORDING TO THE rate study, the percentage increases for commercial and large commercial classes, although larger than the overall rate increases, are projected to recover slightly less than the costs of service. Another choice, Jones said, would be to the State Finance Council for enlistment. "Any time that you have a debt to a pay off you have to increase the rates complementary to it,"薇Mercmer, city clerk, said. "We probably would have had a rate increase but built the dum or rate but它 certainly would not have been a rate increase like this." The rate structure will be studied each of the next five years to determine exactly what rate changes are necessary to raise the money for the bonds and for water service in general, Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager, said. The rate increase will go to pay off $ 8.4 million in general obligation bonds being sold to finance the construction of the Clinton Water Treatment Plant. The actual cost of these bonds would be about $ 14 million when interest charges are added to the original cost of the bonds. "We've delayed having a rate increase because of inflation and other things, waiting to see what the rate study was going to tell us," she said. A RATE STUDY by Black and Veatch, consulting engineers of Kansas City, upon which the present rate increases are based, projects that operation and maintenance expenses will more than double by 1981, when the new treatment plant should be constructed for investment expenses for 1981 were $42,000, compared with projected 1981 costs of $1,052,000. PROJECTIONS IN the rate study show that increases in the water rate will be higher in 1978 and 1979 than the approximate 20 per cent increase effective this year. Increases in these years will be approximately 27 per cent and 21 per cent, respectively. Rate increases for 1980 are reflected at 18 per cent and 5.4 per cent for 1981. The last time Lawrence had a water rate increase was in 1969. THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS ZZTOP “Scoop of the Month” Entire Stock 10% off Thurs., Fri., Sat. THE ATTIC 927 Massachusetts THE ATTIC 927 Massachusetts 10 Thursday. April 28, 1977 University Daily Kansan Five Jayhawks make All-Big Eight team The KU softball team placed four members on the All-Big Eight softball team. Gloria Graves (pitcher), June Koleber (centerfield), Shelley Sinclair (pitcher), Beth Springgate (second base) and Paula Day (third base) helped the jayhawks on the 12-member team. Conference runner-up, Iowa State placed three players on the team. They were Mary Collins (third base), Carol Eich (pitcher) and Colleen Peterson (centerfield). The University of Missouri also had three players selected, and Kansas State one. the universities, and Kansas State one. Selection was based on coaches' ratings and statistics compiled during the conference tournament. Graves and Stinclar led the Jayhawks in the Big Eight tournament, each picking up three points. Graves struck out 19 batters and walked none in 17 innings. Sinclair struck out five, walked one, and was tagged for just one run on eight hits, in in centerfield, Koleber led the Jayhawks in RBIs with nine. She had six hits in 15 in the game. Rovals lose, 5-0 Springgate collected four hits, including a triple, in 11 times at bat for a .364 average. KANSA'S CITY, Mo.—Juan Beniquesto hit his first home run in two years and Bert Blyfever fired his 31st career shutout last season. Blyfever blanked the Kansas City Rovals, 5-0. Blyleen, 22, yielded only seven hits—all singles—to post the complete game victory. The Royals were able to mount scoring and three consecutive home wins when they had two runners aboard. Bemiquet, a 150 hit, hit a three-run harm in the third off losing pitch Dennis Kuhn. Royals manager Whitey Herzog was following the game, "That Blytheleven had a problem." LATE SHOW THIS FRI. & SAT. NIGHT Russ Meyers biggest bundles of joy "THE SUPER VIXENS" . a truly OUTSTANDING group of young women. Hillcrest Fri. & Sat. Nights at 12:15 Box office opens at 11:45 MISS. STREET DELI inc. 641 MASSACHUSETTS WeFeature MASS STREET DELI in 0241 MASSACHUSETTS We Feature Strawberry Yogurt Sundae served with fresh strawberries, whipped cream & nuts. Strawberry Yogurt Cones Frogurt A Fantastic New Product for Lawrence FROZEN YOGURT Anything else is a no. gurt Buskens SO I w HOTEL SALUTE low-heel sandals Salute Latigo brown leather with a crepe sole 1495 Episode rope thong sandal. Natural and brown. 1495 Santa Rosa The hurrache look in Latigo brown leather 1595 Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CARD mcc's shoes 813 Massachusetts 1495 POIDS E 40D7A S Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CARD mc's shoes 813 Massachusetts Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge THE INTERBANK CARD shoes master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Riley County Atty, Dennis Souter said that his investigation would continue and that be expected more arrests to be made. The Riverside County deputies in the dormitory by five men March 30. MANHATTAN (AP) - A Kansas State University football player was charged with rape yesterday in connection with an assault on a last month in the school's athletic dormitory. KSU athlete charged with rape jail under $2,500 bond after a court ap- pearsance yesterday on the rage charge. Hollow, was scheduled for 4 o preliminary hearing May 6. Jerome Holwell, 19, Manhattan, a freshman running back, was held in the county Sater said K-State football coaches and administrators cooperated fully in his induction. The Kansas City Star reported yesterday that several other women had been raped in the athletic dorsitory. However, the newspaper quoted some athletes as saying attacks in the athletic dorsitory were no more common than in other residence halls "Are You the Type?" POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR THE UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES, which are joint student and faculty committees that consider questions concerning KU: —Libraries —Financial Aid —Human Relations —Foreign Students —Calendar PARKING AND TRAFFIC BOARD UNIVERSITY JUDICIARY HEARING BOARD HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD Applications available at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Kansas Union Applications must be returned by Fri., April 29, 1977. Sun Glasses on SALE! at VISIONS THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY one large group reg. to $29.95 Sun Glasses Basic styles Fashion styles Sunsensor styles included in this group for Guys and Gals $10^{00}$ pr. All Other Sun Glasses 20% off! an optical dispensary 806 MASSACHUSETTS 814-7421 VISIONS Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified. SCHLITZ MALT LIQUOR 图示为雄壮的公牛形象,象征力量与坚韧。 Alpha Phi Alpha 1014 Mississippi Lawrence, Ks. 66044 SUPPORT YOUR TEAM! Send your check, payable to CARE to: SALUTES Alpha Phi Alpha for their efforts in the CARE challenge run, Saturday, April 30. Alpha Phi Alpha (K.U.) challenges Kappa Alpha Psi (K-State) to run for Care to help the needy in Africa. The relay run begins half-way between Lawrence and Manhattan at noon Saturday, April 30. It ends just outside each city. 00000000000000000000000000000000 Alpha Phi Alpha asks your support with a contribution to CARE and vows to win (rain or shine), both in speed and in total CARE contributions for African projects. Acecon ment ac are off sex, co BRING CARE sends what's most needed . . . where it's needed most. Last year CARE delivered $4.97 worth of aid overseas for each donor dollar. Celebrate after the run by coming to a disco-dance at the Lawrence Armory, 10:00 p.m. Two free beers are included in the '1.00 admission fee (at the door). PROFITS GO TO CARE --- University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 28, 1977 11 KANSAN WANT ADS Anequimodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered as adjunct faculty or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11FLL FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times times time times times time times) 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.35 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional 0.01 0.01 0.01 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 0. 07 .01 .02 .02 .04 .05 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 additions can be placed in person or via the UPS business office 812-3258 864-4358 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ANNOUNCEMENTS Cannon boat trips on the Illinois River. Special trips include a four-person trip, $39 per person. Other trips include a four-person trip, $25 per person. Scarborough Hawk Camp, Loop Route (2 miles) on highway 10. Tableauville Oklahoma (4,644). $5 per person. SPLA-LEYMORE-A—A series of workshops will conduct at 12:30 p.m. on Friday, April 15 from 12:48-6:55 p.m. sponsored by the Oregon State University. For more information, please contact: 13 THERE LIFE AFTER DEATH An open casket burial, dated 26-JUL-1977 at 0:00 p.m. AT Canterbury, CORNWALL, ON. (Judgment is available) ENTERTAINMENT From Hoover to Hipopotamus the Tau Sam Symphony 5, 3. 6, 7 & 8-900 p.m. at University Theatre or reserve the HALL OF FAME for your party in meeting Over 5600 l. it. available. No group requirements. Kitesen and facilities located. Located in Kiteen and facilities located. Located in Vermont. Call 842-8664 for information. 5-13 FOR RENT 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Ulmus, utilities paid, packing, 843-9579 Apartment and rooms furnished, utilities paid, pet. peds. 849-3767. tf Gatehouse apartments - Call Beeley now, summer! courtyard on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 844-762-1550. courtyard on all Gatehouse apartments. Call 844-762-1550. *Positive. Hedge-short term leaves available. *Flexible. Flexible-term leaves available with study. Handed indoor pool adjoining drag carpet. *Flexible. Flexible-term leaves available with door pool disposal + gaiter + furniture facilities. *Flexible. Flexible-term leaves available with furnished and unfurnished from $750. Can buy $800. CAPITAL CLEANING STEAMEX. Collect 5 Lawrence Rental Lines. Call collect 5-10 4-10 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen privileges, possible rent reduction for labor, LN# 608 LN# 526 LN# 749 Make your plant aquatic. Applications are new for fast-growing plants, and the fastest fast step to for a plant and complete restoration is to clean it up. New 1 bedroom apartment being built for fall on campus, given location by the stadium. Call 843-267-0500. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for foot call 641-493 or shop at www.liveoncampus.com. Hours: 8:30-10:30, Friday - Saturday Two bedroom apartment with all bills paid, room available. 179.36 sq. ft. 4-bedroom suite. 483-993-06 or come to www.marriott.com. ROSALEVA & HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 60036 **The** **Rosealeva Hotel is a five star hotel** *or* come in for a room for an evening. *Contact us* Subway for summer-furnished 2-bedroom apartments, one air, carpet, pool, tear-off couch. Soblake for summer-2 bedroom townhouse at Trailridge that will easily accommodate 3 people. Ac on bus route, fenced in property. Available at a targeted reduce rate. Phone 811-4922. 4-28 Pitch, one of a kind 4-bedroom, 3 story townhouse. Available mid-September. May Call 628-520-9500. Stair guard assignment to adjure mid May through August. Computerized planning for reservation. 4-817-541-0111 4-26 Conservative household has runs for rent at summer host. have急. run *Available May 4. Return the summer 2-bedroom suite for $800, or a 3-bedroom suite for $1200 at 15th and 17th floors. Attendment No. 1. Stair and elevator not included.* Sublease for summer, one bedroom apartment, attached. AC pool, available May 15, 401-292 and 403-293. For summer, also studio photography, good location, all utilities paid. $190 mn. M41-26385-04-29 --private tour $250 plus late @ 9 p.m. Found - Preservation society, Louisiana street found in the 1870s. Suburbia - Tratidge Townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, train court, now centrally airbnb, car-258 Summer session. Traillarge three bedroom apartment, un furnished, on bus line, $25 per day. 10% off credit card. Sidney Park 25 two bedroom, full kitchen, 2 one bedroom, fully furnished to room- 2-5 call 841-522 at 7:00 p.m. call 841-522 at 7:00 p.m. Susanlee for the summer, 1-bedroom apartment, call 641-5384 before 9 p.m. 4-3 $2 bedroom apartment $140 per month plus elec- ture. 812-852-8321 S-2 CREATE 3, bedroom, apartment in fourplex building with 4 bedrooms, national airport parking call 841-4287 at phone number (841) 4287 0110. IVAN'S 66 SERVICE Sublue for summer at 814-750-6980 furnished studio apartment; call 814-750-1788 after 9 p.m. 5-34 “Tires—Batteries—Accessories” 443.9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 5-9 p.m. Sublease. Townhouse, three large bedrooms, two full bath suite, pool, tennis, bus services, parking. 8-8 Sun. Sublet furnished cottage rent paid May 15- Min. water, watered, leave message for K-34- 86-104. Subluxe thus Aug 15, with possible option to keep, iece, new phone. Offer valid until 2024. Offer 212 Alburni, 81184-7140 - 54. Phone # 81184-7140. To assemble for summer, new house with 3 bedrooms, built-up air-conditioning, reasoning 481-843-9212. Subletting apartment 2, bedroom, brand new C/A; centrally located, ZS22, call 412-856- 5-44 Subway building apartment for summer work- with a photographer, call Ralph at 811-424-8446 for photograph Summer suburban - 6 bedroom house; near Veteran Park and campus, $75; my call, 814-560-454 **Mission:** Trollide townhome (in suburban for summer) Trollide townhouse (in suburban for summer) Fully large home, right next to pool area Full bathroom, right next to pool area Plaza Manor apartment, 2340 Murphy Drive, is now leasing furnished and unfurnished studio, one and two bedroom apartments for summer occupancy. Register by Aug. 26, Too. 813-743-155 for 1 a.m. Sublease for summer, nice- 2-bedroom house, turned out to account. $180 per month *50%* per room. Sublime 2. bedroom apartment only $149, call 612-747-387, keep trying, a good bargain Subluxe apartment for summer, 2 bedroom, furnished, 841-7847. 5-4 FOR SALE Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization #1. Feed sense to sense out of Western Civilization #2. For Examination #3. For Exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Tempest Books. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialist BELL AEU1430-ELECTRIC, BELL AEU1430-9200, W 61, W 85, LECTRIC 8200, 8200-9200. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown components, speakers, and tape recorders at Audio Systems, 5th floor. 1976 Finshed Formula, every available option of condition, light blue with 4.28" hardcover & 4.28" softcover Lawrence teacher must sell 1748 mobile home, 64 x 12. floors fully carpeted, french yawn, balcony, sunroom, laundry room, unfinished and washer and dryer. Anchored and skirted. Come see between 6-8 p.m. 4-29 1974 Kawasaki 750-12F - Habitat production cycle room condition, temperature 643-188 °C 1400 miles, #26 843-188 °C 1400 miles, #26 74 125 Suzuki. Must sell—will best offer. Call use 842-1210. 4-28 VW Station Wagon, overhauled, new tires, excellent. must sell, asking $850, $425-415-420. * Biggest sale ever at RAY AUDIO-KLH 32 (500) 419-6475 A$5,500 (A$1,900 each) reg. (£212 ea) A$5,250 (A$1,850 each) reg. (£212 ea) afford it: RAY AUDIO-13 E 8th The Little Street Show with the Big Sales Show 4-24 4-28 4-28 For Sale -1721 VW cont. Super Beetle, 4 up- bright yellow, light blue, B42-845, 142-650 Limited For Sale: 1960 VW Bug auto St. A nice car, Addison $550, 842-1150, 4-28 MUST SELL. Tabletop; office press with cabinet inside; 75" x 45" screen; $249-$319, with finance; 842-842-8420 www.houseofwisdom.com RAY AUDIO has the full line of Advent and Although Loudspeakers on demonstration stations, they are not available to advert speakers. We now top off with our biggest event, The Little Theatre at 12 E. Sh. (in off mass.) The Little Store Stores have a full range of adventure products. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIALIST! Units Airtail and International are in use on the card (IC25), Prepaid Amount, Amount per day, and Borrower Name. BALLOON RIDES - Fly the airies over Lawrenceville, beat heartbreaks and see new friends. On Balloon Ridges, 813-575-128 or call 813-575-1298. 1917 Pontiac Catalea, 62,600 miles, everything in perfect condition, 844-6529 (afterfitting), 4-29 68 Rambler, 4-door; PS, PB fairly good condition, honey needed; $200, M-345-2645. 5 ppm $375, M-345-2645. Must still be leaving KU. WV-bug-70. executive only 5,200 miles $18,900 to city. I'll drive for you. Gibson FS253, Rickerbacker 12 a string, Sunn Sept. 17 to Oct. 9 Rickerbacker 4 a string, 6:30 am, 6:30 pm 4-29 1971 Karmann Glia Cocoa, very nice condition through a thousand miles. Durable radial tree, new brakes, shocks, many other parts and recalls. Car can be seen in "Q" Zem M.W.F. C262-28198. 4-2/8 x 3-1/2 x 2-1/2 Pamela torture, must sell only two weeks pamela torture and original packaging盒 4-29 1923 Vega G, 4-typed, $6,000 million; $600, 842- oil evening, ask for Vickie; 4-typed MUST SELL. 1723 Valant m嫂. **12**, X *5* CAIL. call 843-882 after 6, my phone. **4** **4-29** **4-29** Must sell 70 Result 54,000 miles, 35 highway, towns, streetcar lines, new children, bridge buildings, highways Records (over 200) in good excellent condition. Includes back cover, soundtracks, Santana, CSN WZ9, and much more. All are good condition. Must own chairs, tables, bricks boards. Must move from room to room. Leave a message. 4-29 INSET SETTER PUPS-ARC regular, pedigree, dissent from the University of Pennsylvania, call se George. 842-6427 1921 Firebird·stero cassette. AC, mag wheels. village call, kennel at 843-536-86. 4-29 Antique Moroccan Carpet, desert province, best offer, 842-1855. HELO-TO-REL: Connard Mark III, 3 heads. echo, hello. Failure, must seal, $75. =$4 68-6447 68-6447 If you are looking for a *direcora* electronic, comma and see my *Fanatom* album of 1986, the NISR and a pair of *Twinings* its 3 months old—and worth two fifty, but for 180's it years-in-a-lifetime. If you like to compare 5-25 1969 Velop 840, good condition, $1,000. Lease KU must sell, 841-466, 864-414 5-3 MOBILE HOME, 1972, prestigious condition. 10 X 8 X 6.5 X 3.2 in. mobile home. This has a bargain price of $845.00 or $844.00 or $843.00. 1974-2 sack Greenland, 20,000 m³, excellent condition, clean, good quality. MULE $2500 for Janiece at McCormick & Co. 6,000 books, old maps, records. 20% off with this ad. Sat-Sun Sampler. Booth No. 9 4-29 M-20 N-20 classical guitar, excellent condition see at 1343 Tennessee No. 34 after 5:20. 5-3 Moving out of the country, must sellHlarm 1970- $500 or best offer, call Hida. 843-5069 www.hlda.com Mercedes 202 SLE, 1964 convertible, 78,000 miles Mercedes 202 SLE, with saddle inertia, 1964 4022 4025 4-20 The Little Store Store has low price range in year and year only stores. The second store is located right up here! Our prices are so low in select stores, speaking to local salespeople and little price with the STORE WITH THE BIG SALES. $3-$5 STORE WITH THE BIG SALES 1979. Volkenswerp Rudolf, custom amm-fm, 4 speed driver. Revised for appointment; appointed in 1928-91. Available for appointment in 1928-91. Moving, must stay pair of oak new security window; must be mounted on the wall; way up window; warrant $150 per month. Do not use glass for windows. WARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 15 East 11th, 841-1656 Fri. & Sat.'til 2 a.m. 1527 W.6th BY OWNKE - Ranch style, shake roof on a beautiful 1920's farmhouse with burning fireplace, gas log lighter, serenity Extra large family room, walk-in closet, 3.5 bath, kitchen, laundry room, patio Oak flooring fully carpeted, Downtown openers, Walking distance north edge of Adirondack Forest, Western Hills. Must be to appreciate Decorator Shire, 12th and Wagon Road, Western Hills, 12th and Wagon Road, Western Hills. 1971 Honda SL50, 250, 820 miles, runs great. MUST see. 844-851-387 **5-2** BOKONOS, just arrived HAWAIAN shifts; shifts to BUKONOS condourero sport events 18 at Bukonos 811-360-2544 Couch—good condition and cushioned rocker. best offer, call 841-4871. 5-4 Deluxe, elevated waterproof in beautiful wood frame, handsome, hangable will, will finish as much as you desire. Scott receiver and AIWA AD 0230 Cassette cable. Phone call to Cassette, condition priored, paid to call Bell 841-826-9000 884 Bott and Tucker, 18 Staircase 75 hp, Micra- 1900 25 hp, Aurora 16 hp, Cobra 15 hp, 641-842蒸養器和keep trying. 54-6 641-842蒸養器和keep trying. BOKONON 15 off SALE All one contour PARAPHARIAHNEL 12 East Kit 811-306-9999 JCD - CS209 Cassette deck, brand new, still bovetail, retails at $30 - asking $26, need money to buy. 75 Mara, RX2, new radials, AM-MFight track 22,000 miles, excellent condition, 841-5002 * 2f家 model Mammaxcolor电视展览, eigenal 815, 841-5002, keep trying! 5-4 75 Zsokiu 750 GT-crash baggage, lingerie rack, pillowcase, jewelry box, beautiful performer garments, $1890, $3490, $6490 Dibertord T600 auto-review reeve to rect view camera Dibertord T600 auto-review reeve to rect view camera 7 mth visits, excellent condition, dual colour 7 mth visits, excellent condition, dual colour 1971 Honda CL 450, low mileage, fair condition, holds sell, make offer, evening; 843-373-7 602-324-104 HELP WANTED I am interested in hiring food service supervisors, both part time and full time. Must have experience in food service or resume to Robert Schumm, 719 Mascus, Lawrence, Kansas. **4-25** **STUDENTS:** - Summer employment, Pinkerton Inc. is now taking applications from student interns in the greater KC area. It quality guard 10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday Rewarding position open for a graduate or post- graduate degree in Computer Science, and its nationally known products for the Internet, e-commerce, and Surveys on Your own, and to Fraternities and Sororites on your own, and to Companies, I.P.O Box 545, Methadown, Ireland. The Department of Music Performance seeks a music piano teacher to begin teaching music from May 15, 2015 to May 17, 2016. Visit Aslst, Professor, and Forming experiences; teach undergraduate and graduate courses in music theory and forming experiences; teach high speed and rotational techniques; Send letter, tape at 7:30 am and respond to Kate Littner. **Music Performance:** 306 Murphy Hall University of Kansas at Kansas City. **Music Performance:** 306 Murphy Hall University of Kansas at Kansas City. Kate Kerns is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer who will accept both men and women of all races to apply. Hostels, fine area restaurant and club, preffered 21, inn room, evening, earnings up to £30 4-29 4-29 SUMMER WORK: Make $265 net this summer. Work south central U., must travel 9-5-17. AIRFRAME WATERbeds LOST AND FOUND PSYCHIATICO AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKER RESPONSES APPLICATIONS now being hired to assist with training workers. Appliance to director of morgans. Training workers. To director of morgans. 113-260-8750. An equal opportunity employer. 3-10 THE FIELDS STORE 712 MASS ST Graphic designer, half time technical skills and knowledge of Adobe Photoshop. May be DIVISION of Department of Public Affairs, Office of YU Museum. Employer is accepting for position. TEACHERS WANTED Wald and other state schools. Req. BS or equiv in education, State Agency Box 123, GAHN-2249, NM 730-856-2474. *Engineering Jets, or Seasans wanted for the Air Force.* Air Force Academy, Alaska. 112W - ST. Tonga Township. Leather ditchcase pair and presser higher Tosca. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 19th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 20th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 20th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 20th with offer, later mid- 春秋. 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April 23rd with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 23rd with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 23rd with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 23rd with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 24th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 25th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 26th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 26th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 26th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 26th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 26th with offer, later mid- 春秋. April 26th with offer, later mid- 春秋. 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April 39 8250 **Quizzing** Staffing 1,000 Enrollees HOME- MERGE INFO **Guess the Number** HOME- MERGE INFO Details: $1 self-addressed Slaimed Mobile: 42-312, 258 Attn: Pittsburgh, PA 15213 Last set of keys, with black strip and tap, also attached. Reward, cost, contact. 841-607-9599 Found • $25 in a small red and purple hand purse Found • $20 in a large red and purple hand purse on the front of State Fails of a small red and purple hand purse $4.28 Ladies-Linked ting ring near teens court, reward it found. 812-924-0316 a. p. 6. 4-29 Last-Gest maintenance helmet with dark stripe and design. A weeks ago by Wesco. Rent for $150. summer of camp found April 15, 82-8131, 4-29 Fourth-grade美校 identity 812-8041 Fifth-grade美校 identity 812-8041 Late- prescription longages, mitral hemmings, Mortality of 14th at 14th and Man on 42- 4- 29 J. Hirsch at 14th and Man on 42- 4- 29 NOTICE Found- Section Hat outside Joe's Friday night. 643-2834-52 **1.** What type of roof is the house? Swain Shoe, $29. Main, used furniture, dabbs, lamps, lamps, telephones,办公室 Daily (2) 341-758-8062 KARATE - Learn the ancient secrets of this martial art. Explore the techniques of physical conditioning and learn self-defense techniques. Enjoy a fun, safe and educational experience. Graduates, plan how to pay and grow photos Graduate study fee: $750. Twee $875. $400-$450. $825-$750. $-10 You're invited to KJHR's Second Annual Open House, Friday, April 29th. From noon to 5 pm. EAT TACOS and north college credit, not in Law- rence, but exotic Mexico. Cheap, too. For info on summer language program in Guadalajara, visit Spanish Department or Fortuna Office. 5-2 Low cost flights to Europe from $209. Israel from Jerusalem to Paris ($384). Travel with Lufthansa Lufthansa Lufthansa Lufthansa MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at Alice at the House of Unifex Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday and at Mass. Moving out of the country, garage sale, 1319 Vermont, April 30, 16 to 5 p.m. 4-29 Free-Young mother cat, five kittens, call 842- 0197. PERSONAL Gay Counseling Services. Call 842-7205, 6-11 p.m. for referral. For socializing services, call 842-7205. Alokinium is the most prevalent form of doxorubicin drug addiction. Help or help in 84,600 cases. Why would 90 fours bounce on a tramperline for 72 continuous hours in front of Allen Field House? *Eccleston*? NO! THE MEN OF TAU KAP PA IPSHON are holding their third annual “BOUND FOR DOWNS” April 26-28 in the Boys Club. Stop by and hear spring songs! *i*^2+ THE UNIVERSAL LIFE CHAIR, INC. only accept the most professional and most emphatic definition what you are RIGHT for him or her to wear. ULC today. For your official ULC orientation and the best possible experience, visit us at dressed stained envelope衬衫 ULC - P.O. BOX 2579 EAST 4TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10036 FRESHMEN CLASS MEMBERS - pre-fetch TGHS at Shamrock Friday, 6月 25:30-7:30 A.M. Ashley Johnson Free stop 10, 15 year LabsBioMed, medium size ship equipped with LabsBioMed system. Each character is visualized in two directions. Each character is visualized in two directions. Do you know what H.F.F. stands for? You could answer 811-942 or 814-794 and see if you know it. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE 841-7946 M-S 10:5:30(Thrus.8:00) "A different kind of bar The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." 9th and Iowa - Feosball Myke and Jayne. There once was a couple from Lyme who learned how to handle a phone when they were in the basement of war and now all of the friends are wounded or dead in the hell even happened did re- SERVICES OFFERED Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Have you ever been bumped on an overture? How many times have you been bumped on an overture? How to hear your story. Phone #823-7421. 6-29 Needed person to perform for bachelor party in Topkaka, 3-4 Payment vegetable, call 442-668-0750 Communications Sigma Kappa: First place, PHI, PSI 500 what a great year! 5-4 - Bud on Tap Dear Survey Sheerer…So family the real joker! you know you must be, for who else could we known analyze, anything analytically, another fact now exists, to lead me on my way, in tracking you down day by day, knowing your currency has not been held back. You know my currency has not been held back. There were 740 in there, and also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And also, I still cant tell what happened. And Experienced-qualified to English Literature, comp-sessional English as several languages or foreign languages. Math tutoring - competence, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 113, 115, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 124, 124, 588, 658 etc. Test preparation: Call 642-7681. Test preparation rates are Boy! I buy them they have great culinary dinners at Daxx. Let me train this weekend, your DAXx is amazing. TYPING From Hokker to Hushaw the Tait Signa from Denver to Mile 5. 8, & t at 9 p.m. Connect Mipti Mile 5. 8, & t at 9 p.m. Dip presently is employed as a professional foundation for manufacturing, painting and construction. Training requirements include 6 months of college education. 861-413-3000. - Pool I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX THISIS BINDING COPY. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for these binding & copying in Lawsuze. Let us handle your R$8 Massachusetts or phone $25-874-7911. Thank you. TYPING: Lynn 843-8766 or 842-6558. 70c page ifl Will you keep your paper with TPC. Term papers and articles. You can write them on 4-128-page 4-812 pages, and wait, and write again. 4-812 pages. Typical office: IBM Picafile Quality work. Special note: Some of our invitations welcome. 电话: 842-912-3727 Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mite. Mrs. Kline 84-9534, Mrs. Wright 84-9534. Mrs. Kline Peugeot's damned good typing now offers copying and binding. Convenient one-stop service $80 for 15 minutes. Experienced, typist, term-paper, theses, etc. Reasonable rates. Call Mariana. 842-7623. **tf** imports THE DRUGSTORE 706 MASS. ST. PARAPHERNALIA Pier Oil & Mass. Downtown Phone: 841-7525 Harley-Davidson Experienced typing IBM *select* articles, theories, dissertations, near campus, call 842-489-099. Expertized technical typist will type documents, term paper, case. Heasleton code: 842-153-883 3-2 Honda Cycles TEXAS 1811 W. 64th 843-3333 No novice and no good typing at lower than averages. They just don't know how to shorten the length of deadlines. However, on a daily basis they can find the right answer. WANTED Two girls to share large bedrooms in Traitledge town for two years. Non-smoking, studious girl. Female teacher. Wanted roommate for summer months. Pur- sely move to campus. Reply to Campus. Call Stuve 812-409-6900. Roommates need for next year, Call for details after 4. Karen or Laurie, 841-609-6880 4-28 SCM portable electric typewriter. Pica Type. Call 812-5796 4-29 One or two responsible people to share space sustainably in a home. Provide landscaping, furniture, gardens, furnishings, privacy Prefer persons (meals or female) who are responsible for cleaning up after meals. Reasonable cost. Dep by or call 829-7287. 4-28 Nurbing student needs roommate to share apartment space and fall and spring, near KU Med Center. Roommate needed for summer, two bedroom convenient location. $83.50/mn. #41-6267. Female to handle two bedrooms furnished apart- ment and twin bedroom sensors. Call Shaw 202-852-3952 or 202-852-4146. Two roommates to share spacious two bedroom doubles with nicely furnished living room and master bedroom. Kitchen, dishwasher, and fenced yard for trained dog. Available May 15, $85 plus 1.9 utility bills. *4-29* Looking for Christian guys computer and/or fall adult. Call 824-6502 Call and impire, 824-6502 Female counselmate wanted for summer, located Union behind, no union, call 841-6734 4-29 Female roommate wanted to share apartment room with non-smoker, studios preferred $48-147-1717 $25 ELEGANT LIVING is a community needed for new parents of single mothers who are very reliable, responsible, many caring, calm & caring. Call 843-261-8570. Permanent female wanted: 3 bedrooms, A/C 2 bathrooms, 1800 SF. $99 per month plus utilities! Cell: 849-252-6780 Reward: $25 for the cental of 2 bedroom apart- ments, and $40 for the cental of 3 bedroom apart- ments. Must allow pets and waterbed. 826-949-6901 Taking trip to Europe immediately after finish for three weeks. Leaving school early at age 16 and attending college. Female roomale wanted in Gaslift village, hotel 623-4715, $85 plus ½ off night call 842-3700. One male remitance for June and July, only payments half rent and utilities. Call 8-792- 3-6150. ACCOUNTING GRADUATE, CPA not required Work for large business in Great Bend. Good gain and benefits. Send resume to Box 1004. CALL (866) 357-8292. More details call 658- 6291, ask for Jeff. The Chalk Hawk Partly new 35 millimeter single reflex camera at a discount price, Days. 548-1641, evening. 548-1641. Home of TAMES CAMP SAILLED CAMP Imported Auto Parts HEADQUARTERS for Foreign Auto Parts ● Pool ● Snooker ● Ping Pong 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m. NAISMITH HALL ILLCREST BILLIARDS Ping Pong Pin-Ball Air Hockey COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEEP 9th and Iowa — West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week. One Under 18 Admitted Open 7 Days a Week No One Under Is Admitted --- Kansan Classifieds Work For You! 12 Thursday, April 28, 1977 University Daily Kansan Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Milwaukee | 10 | 2 | 16.1 | — | | Baltimore | 8 | 7 | 352 | 2½ | | New York | 8 | 9 | 350 | 2½ | | rotterdam | 9 | 8 | 300 | 2½ | | Detroit | 7 | 11 | 289 | 4½ | | Detroit | 7 | 11 | 289 | 4½ | | Cleveland | 4 | 10 | 260 | 5½ | | West | | | | | | Minnesota | 12 | 7 | 632 | — | | Ohio | 10 | 7 | 632 | — | | Chicago | 10 | 6 | 632 | ¼ | | Kentucky | 10 | 4 | 148 | 1 | Texas | 8 | 12 | 500 | 2½ | | Seattle | 8 | 14 | 500 | 2½ | | Seattle | 8 | 14 | 333 | 6 | **Veterans' Hours** Darrell 10, Chicago 5 Madden 5, Seattle 3 Brittany 5, Boston 4 New York 4, Baltimore 8 Tavares 6, Kansas City 7 Texas 5, Kuala Lumpur 6 Seattle 5, Vancouver 6 Seattle (Wheeler 20, of Minnesota) (Guild-01) Toronto (Lefkowitz 4, of Cleveland) (Hibbey-10) Seattle (Wheeler 20, of Minnesota) (Guild-01) East W 9 L 6 Pct GB Pittsburgh 9 10 380 St. Louis 9 6 380 Montreal 9 6 377 ½ g Chicago 7 6 350 New York 7 6 490 Philadelphia 6 9 357 ¾ g West Los Angeles 14 3 284 San Francisco 8 3 204 Atlanta 7 10 444 ⅔ g California 7 10 413 ⅔ g Houston 7 10 412 ⅔ g Tampa Bay 7 10 412 ⅔ g Women's tennis team faces stiff competition Last year, the Jayhawks won the team crowns on the strength of Adriad Askala's win Sports nss tournament will have the strongest told in its history, he said. "Everybody has to go," he said. over teammate Cecilia Lopez for the singles title, KU coach Tommy Tori recently said, "We had to be patient. We were not that good." The KU women's tennis team will attempt to defend two titles in the Missouri Valley Invitational tennis tournament today through Saturday in Columbia, Mo. --- Kivisto said that as many as 15 of the Midwest's top players would be fighting for 10 seceded positions. He said he was counting 22 players and 14 Dakos—Carrie Fotogoupo and Adriad Alskas. In the race for the team title, Kivisto Seal and Oklahoma Northwest Missouri Seal and Oklahoma Southwest. "The draw is the key for anybody in this type of tournament because it doesn't favor you. You can't win without dogfight because this is an individual's tourney. One of our unsecured players could go right to the finals, or we could all beat ourselves and be wiped out of the game." Kivisto's lineup for the meet will be No. 1, Tracy Fotopotou, No. 2, Daksa, No. 3, Tracy Spellman, No. 4, Mary Stauffer, No. 5, Marlene Cook and No. 6, Mavrion Herrn. But the luck of the draw, and its present setup as formed by the United States Tennis Association will determine the team champion, he said. --- K.U. Chess Club Tournament 3 Round Swiss Tournament Open to students & faculty Trophy will be awarded to first place winner. Saturday, April 30 9 a.m.—8 p.m. Walnut Room, Union $1.00 entry fee KU Sign up in SUA office or at tournament from 9-9:30 a.m. For further info: SUA office 864-3477 10:00--8:30 Mon.-Thurs. 10:00--6:00 Fri. & Sat. 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center carousel Attend Program at the Lawrence Public Library, Tues., May 3, 7:30 p.m. ENROLL NOW A Slide Show and Demonstrations Presented By Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool & The Montessori Plus Teacher Preparation Center. For Preschool Teachers & Parents of Young Children This program and demonstration for teachers and parents will also count as orientation for the 1977 summer school Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, May 30–July 22. You need not be a college graduate to take this course and Teacher Certification. You may do the required nine month internship of student teaching (half days) during the 1977/78 school year or you can attend a nine month part-work or go to school-part-time. Four interns selected by Sunshine Acres will receive scholarship grants toward their tuition and practice teaching expenses. Undegraduate and graduate credits available. Also now enrolling children for summer and tail courses at Sunshine Acres Montessori School, 2141 Maple Lane. (842-2223) Be a Montessori Teacher Rope it for Summer Selling something? Place a want ad.Call 864-4358 15% off SALE (This week only) POTION PARLOR 15% off SALE (This week only) fine gifts and paraphernalia for connoisseurs collectibles, imported and recycled clothing 15% off ALL Paraphernalia BOKONON .841-3600. Largest Selection in Kansas 12 EAST 8TH ST. "This is the only light the brigade would charge for." (Tennyson) LIGHT BREW 96 calories, approximately one third fewer than our other fine beer. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. TOM SEE Schlitz Campus Rep. 843-3058 H of in Lav step tomoc centu homo only) Z THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COMFORTABLE Woody Allen is at his best The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 29, 1977 Vol.87,No.136 ep. See review page six Home tour offers look into the past Lawrence residents will get the chance to step into the world of the 19th century tomorrow when old West Lawrence shows a house in the annual Lawrence horns tour. The house, at 569 Tennessee St. owned by Michael Shaw, University of Kansas campus from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. during the tour, sponsored annually by the Watkins Community Museum, the Altus Club and the Women Women. The tour includes six houses. Shaw buight his century-old house about eight months ago from James Enwart, a engineer. "We're both keen on 19th century houses," Shaw said yesterday, "and we're really in love." ENYEART BOUGHT the house in 1969 to restore it. The house, which Enyart sold when he moved from Lawrence, had been renovated into three apartments by its previous owner. The Shaws are restoring electrical wiring, plumbing and woodworking to make the house livable and to meet city housing needs. They don't plan extensive remodeling. The Victorian Baroque style house was built around 1870. The site of the house probably was chosen because it contains a natural spring, which still flows. The Shaw house is known for its beautiful maple trees, walnut and ash woodwork and a solid walnut staircase that leads to the second floor from the foyer. SALLY SKYES, realtor for the Mitchell-Stephens Agency, Inc., said that most remodeling of old houses was done to the kitchens. She said there was a large market for old houses in Lawrence. "There aren't enough of them," she said. "An old house we recently sold brought $29,900, and it needed a lot of repair work done." Sykes said old homes in the area ran from $30,000 to $80,000. Old West Lawrence is known for its 19th century houses, and is named in the National Register of Historical Places by the National Historical Society. But most of the houses on the homes tour are newer. See HOME TOUR page three BEST BUILDING IN THE U.S. Centuru old home Gracing old west Lawrence for many years, this house has been listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Invetered Kansas professor of classes, with a public public as part of the Lawrence's library. Appropriations bill passes with several amendments Both houses of the Kansas legislature yesterday passed a bill that would provide $344 million in appropriations to all Kansas Regents institutions, including a six per cent faculty salary increase and a seven per cent increase in other operating expenses. The bill will now be sent to Gov. Robert Bennett for approval. The governor must pass the bill because it was so late in being passed by the legislature that it can't be returned for amendments. However, Bennett can use his line-item veto power. A line-item veto is an action to vet an individual item from a bill while passing the requisition. The bill, which had been in a joint House-Senate conference committee until the final day of the first legislative session, was approved with day several compromise amendments. Salary adjustments, which had been figured at a seven per cent increase, were realigned the KU main campus and the medical Center at a six per cent increase. Several other adjustments were made to the Med Center budget; — $150,373 for a computer was deleted. -$131,296 was added for staff for the family practice program. -$34,688 was added for a model rural health institution for Chanute. -$113,270 was added to aid the nursing program. $50,000 was added to match revenue saving funds to be used to install a new elevator. Chancellor Archie Dykes said, "We are obviously disappointed that we didn't receive the 7 per cent increase in salary and benefits," but we were pleased with the appraisal. "We're pleased with what the legislature has appropriated for higher education but obviously disappointed we didn't receive the 1 per cent in unclassified salaries." State Rep. Glee Jones, R-Iwaihua, questioned the decision to give more money to the family practice program because she was not the most immediate need for the available therapy. "This week on TV," she said, "they were saying hospitals here in Topeka needed 12 State Rep, Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, replied that the entire state was short 789 doctors, but that the money in question would not finance new doctors—only a staff of around 50. The family practice program in Wyndowette. He said, "No money is for the doctors themselves. It's only to support the family practice clinic, with equipment and nurses. This money is just to put more into the present training program. It's not for new residents." The bill, when it becomes law, will provide for essential expenses, such as salaries, retirement benefits, utilities funding and other operating expenses. it also will provide for individual items, such as insurance for University aircraft, law enforcement training center operations, rent for Carruth O'Leary Hall (the college's research program in tertiary oil recovery and new stage curtains in Hoch Auditorium. The bill also would provide that any unencumbered balance in excess of $100 at the end of the current fiscal year would be reappropriated for the re-roofing of Strong Elemental cost of construction and maintenance of a University art museum. Bill allots 5% teacher pay raise Rv DEENA KERRhw Staff Reporter State Rep. Sandy Duncan, R-Wichita, said that the House supported a budget control lid of 106 per cent, but that a compromise had to be made. The bill would allow for emergency appeals for extra money in the case of higher prices. TOPEKA-The Kansas Legislature yesterday passed a school finance bill that would provide a five per cent increase in teachers' salaries, and would place a budget lid at 105 per cent of last year's expenses. State Rep. Roger Robertson, D- If a compromise had not been reached, standing law would have provided only 5 per cent increase in expenses and salaries. It would have allowed appeals for utility costs. Hutchinson, said, 105 per cent with appeals is unquestionably better for smaller businesses. Robertson tried to convince representatives to vote for the compromise version of the bill, saying, "They have 105 per cent with no appeals for increased utility costs, if nothing happens. Those utility costs will come out of that 105 per cent, and in some districts that's more than the total increase. But salaries," they will have to reduce salaries." Robertson outlined for the House four versions the bill had been through and seven major issues considered by the conference committee during its compromise. 1. The amount of state money involved over Gov. Robert Bennett's recommended budget: House version -$8 million, Senate version -$2 million. Conference committee version -$8 million. 3. The budget control lid: House - 106 per cent of last year's, Senate - 105 per cent, conference committee - 105 per cent, and committee's recommended budget - 105 per cent. 4. Whether a utilities appeal provision was included: House—no, Senate—yes, conference committee—yes and in case of no agreement—no. agreement had been reached, the standing law would have required $49 million. 2. The amount of property taxes required: House-$4.7 million, Senate-$29 million, 市府-$13 million. 5. Whether unemployment compensation was included: House-no, Senate-yes and conference committee-no, because that was transferred to another bill that has passed both houses and has been sent to the governor for approval. 6. The ability of a local school district in Kansas to transfer money from its general fund to its capital outlay fund: Senate—no transfer at all and conference committee—yes that if district had used at least 3.5 million in mill key to add to its capital outlay fund KU faculty union support scarce See BILL page ten Staff Reporter Rv KATHY GANNON Talk of faculty unionization has been heard at the University of Kansas since 1975, when a faculty bargaining unit was established. But, according to KU administrators and faculty members polled recently, that initial action is likely to be the last attempt toward collective bargaining at KU, at least in the immediate future. James Feldstein, director of employee relations, said, "I can't envision a change in management attitudes that would make collective bargaining any better than what the faculty has now. It would be like having to do something as a faculty doesn't need that much clout. I think KU is a good employer and doesn't need to be prodded by collective action." Dell Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said. "I think our faculty has a lot of input in that affect their lives and the lives of students. We have a very good relationship Support for faculty unionization at KU is sparse, but interest is alive—both pro and con. Leban said, "An adversary relationship already exists in that the faculty are empathetic, respectful, and superiors. A formal bargaining situation will enable the faculty to deal with this adversary relationship. I think the only way they can sustain their own destiny is by having rights at work." Robert Frief, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), said, "a faculty union forces an adversary into a conflict with administration and the faculty whereas we are now working cooperatively." Those who oppose faculty unionization say that it conflicts with professionalism, that faculty participation in over-all decision-making is satisfactory and that the difference between the faculty and the administration is decided by Regents and the Legislature. is good. Feldstein said, "There is a strong suspicion that a union would be a detriment to our faculty rather than a benefit. They are a substantial amount to lose or trade off." such a process is paternalistic. They determine for us what we need." Leban, who disagreed with those arguments, said, "Information about faculty needs and desires seems to fill for me a lot, but it is not by some kind of osmanic pressure. I think Leban said the legal structure of the University didn't permit the faculty to do anything unless Chancellor Archy Dickey resolution, be said, the clancher did can veto it. "The faculty needs to have a voice in long-range planning in academic questions as to how we should provide learning opportunities." It wasn't ever my idea that we would have a union or a bargaining agent on this campus, but I would like to see one," he said. "I was preparing the faculty for the day they'd need an agent, so that in a crisis they could react in a reasonable amount of time." at KU probably wouldn't draw much support. KU faculty members said 'crises' that Groups submit proposals Excluded from the unit are the chancellor, deans, directors and department chairmen. Also, KPERB (Kettering Engineering) is required by the law and engineering schools. Four other groups—the administration, the American Association of University Professors (AUP) and the schools of law and engineering—were bargaining unit proposals during the KERB hearings at KU in July 1978. In March 1975, Carl Leblun, associate professor of Oriental Languages and Literatures and East Asian studies, and four unnamed faculty members sub-identification at KU to the Kansas Public Employees Relation Board (KPERB). The differences among the proposals were whether to include department managers or supervisor. In November 1973, the KPERB ruled that a KU bargaining unit should comprise the following: the three ranks of KPERB, instructors with appointments of half-time or greater; scientists; curators; counselors; full-time assistant instructors; and researchers who hold degrees in certain equivalent to those of faculty members. associates and faculties of the schools of law and engineering in the bargaining unit. explored," Leban said. "I don't think we have sufficient voice in this area. Bargaining asserts a faculty presence faculty interests aren't represented." If the next step toward faculty unionization is taken at KU—an election to determine a bargaining agent for the faculty unit—all members of the unit would be accorded by that act, group, and the agent would have to win by a majority of the voters. Before such an election, 30 per cent of the unit would have to sign a petition requesting it. Bargaining agencies that might be involved in the process would place, include the Kansas Higher Education Association (KHEA), the AAUP, and the Kansas State University. If for a guest also is included on the ballot So the debate continues. However, the consensus of KU administrators and faculty members is that there would be a lack of support for a petition now. Friau said, "My impression is that it would take some moderately drastic change in the status quo to develop collective bargaining in the near future." Leban said petitioning for an election now Roy Laird, professor of political science, said, "I don't think one can rule out faculty unionization, in the sense that if the economic condition deteriorates and salary increases are less than the cost of living, I'm sure interest in unions would revive." might spur faculty unionization were dismissal of a tenured member or as counsel to the president. Two factors have contributed to the KU faculty's reluctance to form a faculty union: the limitations and implications of the Kansas Employer-Employee Relations Act of 1970, commonly called the meet and confer law, and the adverse effects of state funding. State University, the only Regents institution that has a faculty union. The authority to form faculty units to negotiate with public employers was granted by the meet and confer law. But many KU professors said the law was weaker than a true collective bargaining law. The meet and confer law says the employer must meet with the bargaining agent and confer with the agent in good faith. But the law doesn't say both sides must try to arrive at a formal agreement, as in a collective bargaining law. But Feldstein said, "Once you say a public employee will be able to collectively bargain with the public employer, the force and effect of having that situation is about the same as calling it meet and confer or collective bargaining." He said that in most cases, bargaining would result in a written memorandum of Also, University officials sometimes have the authority to implement an agreement, but in most cases, the agreement must be sent to the Regents for ratification. And if they do not agree, the budgetary matter the legislature retains as final authority to approve an agreement. But, under Kansas law, such a memorandum wouldn't be a legally binding contract. J. Bunker Clark, secretary-treasurer of the Kansas Conference of AAPU and professor of music, said that because of the weakness of the existing Kansas law, the situation at Pittsburgh discouraged unionization at KU. "The law is so weak," he said, "that if, pattenberg is a model, it is very difficult for me to go and argue." Pittsburg began collective bargaining in October 1975. The two bargaining parties combined, and the unit charged the administration and the Regents with failing to "meet and resolve" their issues. Leban said, "I think the Regents have an obligation to sit and discuss issues, to abide by the spirit of the meet and confer law and not to speak out through the loopholes." KPERB sent a representative, called a factinder, to Pittsburgh to make recommendations so that the two parties could overcome the impasse. Because of the impasse, money that has been allocated by the legislature for salary raises for the last two years hasn't been distributed to the Pitbush faculty. Under Kansas law, Pittsburg has to withhold raises because an employer can't act unliterally when an issue is being negotiated. Feldstein called the fact finder "a moral force for both parties to get on with See UNION page three Sports Editor By GARY VICE Basketball staff loses 2 assistant coaches Speculation that the University of Kansas basketball coaching staff was in for a shakup materialized yesterday with the team's decision to coach Cam Miranda and Duncan Red, Conjecture that coaching changes were imminent brewed during the Jayhawks' 18-10 campaign last season. KU finished fourth in the ACC's regular season, a strong challenge for the league title. Miranda, 46, who has been head coach IN A NEW release from the KU sports team, Miranda issued the following statement: Sam Miranda Red, 37, resigned to become head coach and assistant athletic director at Dodge City Community College. He will replace Dick Tiffin after the year 12 sports as coach of the Conquistadores. Ted Owen's top assistant for 13 years, was reportedly out of town yesterday and "Kansas basketball has been very good to me and my family. I feel I have been good for basketball at Kansas. It has been a very fair exchange." "I HAVE only one reason to leave the University of Kansas." Reid said. "I thank am't at the time of my life where I'd like to be back again. And I have the chance to do that." Miranda didn't announce his future plans. During the Big Eight post-season tournament he did apply for the head coaching position in St. Louisville but wasn't chosen to fill the post. Red joined KU's basketball program four years ago along with former Jayhawk Carson Foster. [Name] Duncan Reid Boston Celtics. Reid was a high school coach in Illinois for 13 years, the last seven of his career. "No matter how much freedom a head coach allows his assistors," Reid said, "the head coach still makes all the decisions—when to call a time out or change defenses in a ball game—all those things I have missed not being a head coach." REID SAID he had been offered the post at Dodge City a little more than three weeks ago but had turned it down then out of allegiance to KU. It's a case where I originally told them See RESIGNATION page five 2 Fridav, April 29, 1977 University Daily Kansan News Digest From our wire services First Lady has surgery WASHINGTON—First Lady Rosalynn Carter had a benign lump removed from her breast day afternoon, a White House spokeswoman announced. Doctors discovered the non-cancerous growth during Mrs. Carter's regular six-month checkup at Bethesda Naval Hospital and surgically removed it in 2014. The cancer was confined to the abdomen. Mrs. Hoot said Mrs. Carter, 49, returned to the White House around 5 p.m. after the brief operation. "She is in and about and in great spirits. This will not affect her schedule," the worker said. She said President Carter was telephoned just before the operation by William Lakish, the White House physician. Lakish also called the President directly after the operation, and Carter was waiting for his wife in the family's living quarters when she returned home. Bill to benefit handicapped WASHINGTON—After weeks of demonstrations by handicapped persons, HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano, Jr., signed a far-reaching regulation yesterday that is designed to give equal educational and employment opportunities to the handicapped. The regulation implements a section of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act that bars recipients of federal funds from discriminating against the estimated 35 million recipients. It affects federally supported schools, colleges, health and health institutes. The HEW regulation will serve as a model for similar measures that now must be implemented. Leaders of handicapped groups that have been demonstrating in Washington, San Francisco and other cities halted the signing as a victory. But they said although their actions had won gains on major issues they would reserve judgment on the total package until they had studied it. Califano, who had said he would sign the long-promised regulation by early May, beat his own deadline. Medical program rejected TOPEKA The Kansas Senate yesterday rejected a program for free medical education at the KU Medical Center for students who agreed to practice in the state. On a 14-20 standing vote, the Senate refused to adopt amendments by its own Ways and Means Committee encompassing provisions of the program. The bill passed unanimously. Lett intact, and sent to Gov. Robert Bernett as it came from the House, was the original bill to pay $6,000 each your student for the education of 10 students of his school. Liauor price rise expected TOPEKA-A Shawnee County District Court judge yesterday upheld a 1975 direction of the state Alcohol Beverage Control Division (ABC) that required some liquor suppliers to add greater shipping costs than they have been charging to the entire of their products in Kansas. The decision supporting the memorandum issued in October 1975 by AYC Director E. D. V. Murphy is expected to mean an almost immediate rise in the share price of AT&T. For example, testimony in the case by a representative of Cutty Sark sack cheese which indicated the price of that particular brand would go up from 16 cents on a bag. Senate cuts prison funds TOPEKA—The Kansas Senate yesterday killed a bill that would have provided planning money for a medium security prison and other corrections projects. By a 21-19 vote, senators rejected a conference committee report that restored $135,000 to the bill for preliminary planning of the medium security facility to be located in Cincinnati. A senate previously had cut the prison funding from the bill, leaving only $133,000 for planning of a minimum security dormitory adjusting Kansas State University. Mother's Day Gifts for Mother Alexander's has a special selection of gifts for your mother. 91-410. Open Mother's Day 8:30-4:30 Alexander's Master Charge BankAmericard Lay-a-Way QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE QUALITY + PRICE - V MEXICO IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER JUAREZ TEQUILA 40 PROPYL TEQUILA INCLUDED IN TEQUILA JUAREZ SA LABELLE MEXICO FRESH TOUCHED QUARTZ JUAREZ TEQUILA MEXICAN STYLE NICESTAR TONALS MINT CHOCOLATE STEAM CIDER 50% ALC/VOL Concerts for Young People, Inc. in cooperation with SUA presents the HARTFORD BALLET in a one hour performance One performance only SUNDAY, MAY 1, 3 to 4 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE K. U. Student tickets in advance IF YOU STUDENT OFFERS IN ADVANCE at SUA Box Office $2.00 Children 1.00 Adults 2.50 Fun 90s at the door Gas Patio Grills Congenial Neighbors Tennis Court Cool Blue Pool Living at Trailridge BUNGALOWS Ballet Dance This image captures a graceful dancer in mid-motion, twirling with elegance and fluidity. The flowing fabric of her dress creates a dynamic sense of movement, emphasizing the fluidity and grace of ballet. The blurred background adds depth to the scene, focusing attention on the dancer's form and expression. Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble SPRING CONCERT May 5,6,7,1977 8:00 P.M. UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL Adults - $2.00 Children, Senior Citizens - .50 Watch the want ads in the Kansan Children, Senior Citizens - .50 KU Student ID. This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS ZZTOP LATE SHOW THIS FRI. & SAT. NIGHT Russ Meyers biggest bundles of joy "THE SUPER VIXENS" a truly OUTSTANDING group of vouna women . . . a truly OUTSTANDING group of young women. Fri. & Sat. Nights at 12:15 Box office opens at 11:45 Hillcrest NEW YORKER 1921 MASSACHUSETTS 51 $1.00 OFF with this coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA with TWO TOPPINGS The original thick crust pizza from New York* This coupon expires 4/30/87 This image is too small to recognize. Please provide a larger image with proper resolution and clarity. NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. H Coors Pitchers 95°C With This Coupon Limit 1 pitcher per couple per day Expires 4-30-77 MISS STREET DELI FAIR MASSE HUGESTEEN Special CHEF BALAD 4 kind of cheese, 3 kinds of meat. Your favor to contact dressing and crackers. Reg $16.95 Special CHEF SALAD a kind of crispy and kinds of meat, your favorite bread and dressing and crackers £150c Reg 31.45 SUA SUA FILMS BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS (1976) Dir. Robert Aitman, with Paul Newman, Burt Lancaster, Harvey Keilman, Pilaf Film Series. April 30, 3:30; 7:00 p.m., $1.00. SHORT EXPLOITATION TRUCK-STOP WOMEN Midnight Film Series. Friday, April 29 & Saturday, April 30. 12:00 midnight. $1 REBECCA (1940) Dir. Alfred Hitchcock with Sir Laurence Oliver, Joan Fontaine, (1938) Dir. Richard Thorpe with Robert Kostomery, Rosalind Russell. Wednesday, May 4, 7:30 p.m., 75c Wednesday, May 4, 7:30 p.m., 75c NIGHT MUST FALL Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union I The University of Kansas Vickers Lecture Series 7:30pm May 3 Woodruff Auditorium Free and open to the public. Louis Rukeyser, well-known economic commentator is currently host of PBS's Wall Street Week. L Friday, April 29, 1977 3 - .50 --- Home tour ... From page one TOTHER newer houses owned by KU professors also will be featured. One house, at 1684 University Drive, is owned by Wayne Osmann, professor of physical education. It is a two-story, plantation-style house built in the early 1920s. The family room fireplace, walkway and patio are constructed of old Lawrence bricks. The second house, at 1625 Louisiana St. is owned by Robert Gould, assistant professor of architecture and urban design. The house was built in 1990. Gould bought it in 1974 and has renovated it in a contemporary style featuring a modern, three-level skylight. The house contains the original woodwork, with a custom built-in buffer containing zinc glass panels. Another house on the tour, leased by Tom Rea, associate professor of speech and drama, is a large yellow stucco home built in 1926. It is located at 1435 Eagel Road. TICKETS FOR the tour are $4 for adults and $2 for students, senior citizens and children. They may be purchased at the Watkins Community Museum, the Lawrence Arts Center and at Raney's drugstores. Union ... From page one agreements or their positions will be made public." Leban said, "The position of the Regents is not to yield one micron of anything at the bargaining table at Pittsburg. I think the philosophy of the Regents is to smash the union movement at Pittsburg so that other Regents schools won't want it." But Feldstein said, "It seems as a consequence of the factfinder's presence that Pittsburg is now making progress in regenerating good faith and professionalism." Nancard Hay, dean of the School of Business at Pitburg and administration spokesman for the bargaining team, said, "We are attempting to meet and confer following the recommendations of the factfinder in this round of discussion. We're meeting and conferring in good faith in the spirit of the law." City commission to hold meetings with employes Friim said, "My impression is that the Regents are dragging their feet and taking no interest." In Marine Argersinger's second press conference as mayor, she announced yesterday morning that the city commission would hold a series of meetings with city employee beginning May 2 to discuss policies outlined in the city employ manual. Argersinger said the purpose of the meetings was to allow the commission and the employees to discuss policies such as working conditions and sick leave. The city employe manual is an administrative document issued by the city manager that defines and regulates work relationships between the city commission and the city commission would adopt the manual by resolution after receiving suggestions from the city commission making its provisions city commission policy. Only general working conditions will be discussed, Arngersinger said, and not specific grievances or complaints about supervisors. She said supervisors wouldn't be given the authority and that she hoped that would encourage employees to be open with the commission. Events On Campus TODAY: Richard Spear, associate professor of Oriental languages and literatures, will lead a discussion on contemporary critiques of analytic culture at an ENTRY meeting at 3:30 in the Kansas Union's Meadowlark Room. Joe Wielde, professor of sociology and social psychology, will speak on MAPS FOR THE BLIND at 3:02 in 4020 Wescoe Hall. TONIGHT: THE CREATIVE FANTASY CLUB will play Dungeons and Dragons at 7 in the Orden's Uread Room. The KU FOLK Theater will be in Potter Lake Pavilion behind Carruthro'Leary Hall. In case of rain, the meeting will be at the United Ministries Building, 105 W. University Drive, ROBINSON, Gaddeson Ala., graduate student; a recital at 8 in Swarthout Recall Hall TOMORROW: The Museum of Natural History will sponsor WOODLANDS AND WILDLIFE at the Cedar Creek Museum to noon. Call 864-1473 for reservations. A BACKYARD FAMILY HISTORY SEMINAR will be held from 9 a.m. to noon, to 4 p.m. in Anexe M, 13th and Oread. SUNDAY: "RICHEES," a musical and dramatic presentation, will be presented at 8 p.m. in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. SAMUEL ADAMS, professor of journalism, will launch a one-hour talk show, "National Policy and You," as on p. WEN RADEN radio. MIDNIGHT MOVIES HOW TO LOOK FOR THEM TO CAROLE! Double- clutchin'... geer - jaminn mamma who take no of hi-jackin by day. a lot of heavy truckin by night! TRUG STOP WOMEN CLAUDIA JAMMING - LEXIS URSSELER - JEWNES TUMPE JENNIFER BURTON - CENE DREW - PAUL CARO SUA MIDNIGHT MOVIES SUA Fri., April 29 & Sat., April 30 12:00 Midnight '1 odruth Auditorium-Kansas Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union Arngersinger said the discussions with employees were important because the manual no longer requires communication between city employees and the commission. The discussions starting in May will be the first step to modify that policy, according to The employee groups and the dates of their meetings are: water and sewer, May 2; police, parking control and animal control, May 4; parks and recreation, cemetery and church, May 5; sanitation, May 11; fire, May 13; and all other city employees, May 16. All meetings are open to the public. Library plans book sale outside Watson Library Most volumes will be sold for 50 cents, although a few may sell for as much as $1. Susan Hamilton, exchange assistant at the library, said the books had been donated to the library. Between 6,000 and 7,000 bargains will be offered next during the annual Kansai Airlines Kansai Airlines season. The sale will be from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 5 and 6, on the front lawn of Watson TOYOTA MIX BUSINESS WITH PLEASURE. The new Bayleaf SKI & Sport Boots. The great glover message you will hear from the best brand in the world is that we please in 1372 EPF units, with a mileage range of up to 40K miles. xx mpp on highway, xx city. These EPA rated skis are estimate. The actual ski depth can be customized and your bike is on top of hill work. Fun for play. Build it! 34 Highway 24 City but were duplicates of ones the library already had. 24 City Standard Features: Suspended overview transm power mount front panel, transducerized ignition, AM radio, Hi-back battery pack, cut painting and more. TONIGHT An auction will be held both days, according to Bob Malinowski, associate director. --with purchase of 75c or more from the Dairy Bar Offer good through Sunday, May 1 The money from the sale and auction will be added to a book fund to expand the library's collection. Last year, about $1,800 was made during the book sale, which Malinowski said, is held each year primarily for public relations. Lon Edmonds 842-2191 LAWRENCE TOYOTA 9. Watson's --with purchase of 75c or more from the Dairy Bar Offer good through Sunday, May 1 Live=" "Tumbling Dice" 9 - 12:15 Cover "2.00" Live=" "8.00" 9.00" 12.00" SATURDAY Live—"Spider & The Crabs" 9-12:15 Cover '2.00 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 841-BEER Sat, till 7 p.m., Sun. 1 to 10 p.m. Free 7' T.V. for your sports enjoyment HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 841-BEER SALE 30% to 50% off BRIDAL GOWNS BRIDESMAID GOWNS PROM & PARTY GOWNS MOTHER'S GOWNS Bridal Fashions 1101 Massachusetts By Ja Above The Flower Shoppe urs 9:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 841-2664 By Jan Hours 9:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 841-2664 FREE Bicycle Dairy Bar Special Cones 15c 25c 35c Sundaes 45c 55c 65c Dip 20c 30c Shakes 50c 65c Banana Split 79c Perfait 65c Flags Sandy's 2120 W. 9th KU Commission on the Status of Women Self-Awareness Workshop Saturday, April 30 Kansas Union 12-5 p.m. 12:00 Opening—Big 8 Room 1:30 Beath and Dying – Big 8 Room *Hold on to the Birth Control* Alternatives* – Jayhawk Room 3:00 Break—Regionalists Room 4:30 "Rape Prevention: No Pat Answer"—Big 8 Room trol 3:15 "How to Talk with your Doctor"—Jayhawk Room Closing—Big 8 Room EVERYONE IS WELCOME Partially funded by Student Activity Fee the No-Show Naturals by Maidenform the No-Show Naturals by Maidenform® A The sheerest plunge with lace trim. A.B.C.$6. B Sheer and sexy Gentle (Coufort. Wire support lace trim. B.C.$8.D.$9. ...they show you off without showing up What a wonderful new way to show off your figure! These luscious bras couldn't be pre- tier. Or lighter. Or sexier. Or smoother. Because they're made with completely seam- less cups. So they can't show through... even under your clingiest clothes. And they stretch all over to fit you like a second skin. From the filmsiest little nothings to sensational new underwires that give all the support you need. 835 MASS, * 843-4833 • LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358 Jazz Jazz Jazz only at Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. upstairs TONITE and SATURDAY: the legendary Jay McShann and his band featuring: Claude "Fiddler" Williams just returned from a highly successful 5-week European tour! Admission $5.00 includes Free Beer peanuts, popcorn & soft drinks. Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. 4 Friday, April 29, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily affect the views of the Universities of Kansas or the School of Journalism in keeping with the new morality of the Carter administration, Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell has decided to uphold charges against a former FBI supervisor for illegal spying The agent, John Kearney, had been indicted for allegedly using illegal tactics back in the early '70s to spy on New York police. He was later contacted with Weather Underground fugitives. IGNORING PLEAS by FBI Director Clarence Kelley to drop the charges against Kearney, Bell said that what was at stake was the rule of the law, and, "If you break the law, ordinarily you suffer the consequences." How nice — we have an attorney general who is willing to uphold citizens' rights in the United States, even when it means prosecuting a federal employee who was merely following high governmental orders. All of us American citizens currently in subversive activities now can rest assured that our mail won't be opened nor will our telephones be tapped. Though Bell's intentions are laudable, one can't help wondering how much of the new attorney general's morality is a sudden love of the American nation and how much of the political bullshit. PROBABLY, it is a little of both. Bell wasn't a popular choice for attorney general. His record as a federal judge down in Georgia was marred by allegations of racial bins. He also came under sharp attack for belonging to segregated country clubs. He was also involved in keeping with that of the new administration. If the new attorney general wanted to be one of the "gang," he had to admit a stance in keeping with that of President Carter, who is known for his newsworthy ambassador to the U.N., Andrew Young. What Bell needed was a cause, something to show that he's also part of the band. The prosecution of an FBI agent for duties performed under another administration was Bell's ideal chance. When Kelley, who was passed over by Carter, entered the fray in 1965, he had to ask Bell. Bell had yet another opportunity to show his support for the Carter administration. FBI AND CIA spying on normal citizens, which was carried to an extreme under the Nixon Republican administration, is a case of intentional infiltration; it is doing row snakes of a political purge. The Republicans are out of office; let's show that the Democrats can do better, says the administration. Moreover, let's prove our new morality by rooting out all the nepotists and putting their perpetrators on trial to demonstrate our sincerity. Bell said his decision to continue Kearney's prosecution was "a bad sad I had to He said he needed the resultant information to be able to set up a "fail-safe system" that wouldn't infringe on any citizen's rights. A new system of federal investigation is needed, one that is more discriminatory about who it spies on and how. Yet a private investigation of the matter might be just as effective as using Keamy and other FBI agents as political scapegoats. Moreover, if Kearney is tried and convicted, shouldn't all FBI agents involved in such tactics be tried similarly? Then what would happen if one of the agents involved in illegal saving tactics in America? Bell's morality shouldn't be selective. Here's Bell's chance to show just how lawful and fair a judge can be. Death came to an old friend earlier this week when Norman Lear announced the can- tains he had acquired from his mother, Mary Hartman" show. "Mary, Hartman, bw, Hartman" had always been described as one of those shows a person either liked or hated. Others die with Mary Hartman THOSE WHO hated the show were the unfortunate ones. Either they didn't care about the problems of today's society or they weren't ready for an innovative series. Tom Hartman—Mr. Hartman was the basic, former high school jock who suddenly found a promising end at an airplane crash during the nation's large automobile makers. He could be described as straightforward since he usually was the first to tell someone to go to hell if he didn't find the crap they were putting out. Mary Hartman—Ms. Hartman was a confused, sensitive housewife. She was regarded as the type who would put her head against a pill of cereal just to hear the snap, crackle and pop of the Krispies. She also learned how to lead a leader in a "ban saccharin" campaign after reading about it in Reader's Digest. There are many characters dying with the show that many of us were able to identify with. These characters include: Martha Shunway—Mrs. Shunway was Mary's mother and a loud-mouthed housewife whose husband, George, at the dining room table. She never stopped talking. Whenever George was gone, Martha often would talk to her plants, or anybody who he wasn't sleeping with a newly discovered aging mistress, Grandpa would live up to his mission as the Fernwood Flasher. married to him, although she had been engaged several times. After a long pregnancy, he married her in a fernwood laundromat in a Fernwood laudronette. Sergeant Dennis Foley- Grandpa—Many thought this BABA HUSSAIN Jay Bemis Editorial Writer old geezer would never die, although he often faded away from the Shumway home. He was the type of person all of us would want to be like when we get to be his age. Grandpa had been a sandwiches. He certainly needed the extra protein. When Foley was the type of person all of us would like to be at our current age. He was always attracted to women and women always were attracted to him. Foley was such a successful man that many of us couldn't understand why he was a cop. Charlie Haggers—Charlie was a close friend and neighbor of the Hartmans. He led a small band, often was portrayed as being simplicistic and timid; but actually he had the gonads of a dog. LORETTA HAGGERS—Fernwood's sweetheart and Charlie's wife. A promising career as a superstar country-and-western singer was interrupted several times; either by crooked managers, a blooper about Jews on the Dinah Shore show or a case of amnesia. He was also an actress with the Lord, Ms. Haggers still was contented at the time of her death. in Fernwood seemed to be in nothing but a jumbled-up mess, as it often was, good ole Merle could always reason things out and fit the pieces together. A man of firm religious beliefs, Jeeter went on to become the most mayor of Fernwood. Merle Jeeter—Whenever life There were many other characters that died with the famous Fernwood bunch; but most of them were just pieces of the long, intricate pattern. New York City's "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" and some of the old characters will be back with them. But it's doubtful that they will replace the friends we've met and get to know on "Mary Hart and Mary Hartman." WARNER JACKSON COUNTY Kansan letter writers discuss spanking. gavs. Owen Rules king praised To the editor: Frank Owen of Voucher Audit is going to retire. I am stunned. I can't imagine life without Frank Owen. I-wonder whether students realize how much this one man at KU has done for them. He is famous throughout the paper-pushing bureaucracy called the administrative staff. He is a roots level administrator and probably has held one of the roles in KU-he checks the paperwork of all departments and groups trying to pay for things they have bought. Twyla Snow Accounts. He has talked with coherence in the face of my mysteries about Restricted Fee Accounts. fact that the professor now has lost the original invoice? Department Secretary Aerospace Engineering Some of you may stand up and shout that some of this is in the Business Procedures Guide. You'll probably hear it, However, not a few of us find the Business Procedures Guide almost beyond comprehension. He has led more Untrained Souls through the maze of A-forms and SOVs then he probably cares to remember that he comes from KU a semblance of order before it goes to Topeka (Topeka writes the checks!) More sad tales have begin with Mr. Owen, you sent this A-form to us. You don't know what to do with it. It is truly a tribute to his strength that he hasn't told us exactly what we could do with our A-forms. Gays feel no guilt I have never met Frank He has worked long hours with restraints that make most of us less dedicated folks cry. He has personally (over the years) worked with hands) imparted the mysteries of such dark places as the Xerox To the editor: to the editor Concerning Doug Lamborn's letter about gays' unhappiness—as lesbians, we do not which we as lesbians-feminists fight oppressive and offensive to our dignity. Any Biblical explanation for this is not even mentioned in the Bible; therefore, lesbianism is condemned from a Christian standpoint. Sexuality is defined by the patriarchy as heterosexuality- society condemns homosexuality as a deviation Readers Respond Owen. I am not a taper of Fate. He might, with good reason, bend my face. However, I do want to thank him from a distance. I thank him sincerely and his kindness and his kindness to me. We are going to miss him. Since reading of his retirement I have begun to have nightmares about KU's grinding to a halt while his replacement learns all the unwritten rules and memorizes all the page numbers in the business Procedures Guide. And how can another name in all the world come with such a lil as when he answers his phone with "Frank Owen-". That is the cue for me to begin learning that the professor who spent $73,333 could have been bought through B&G and what to do about the feel guilty about our emotional, sexual and political preference. The standards of this culture impose uneasiness on anyone outside the institution of marriage. The Bible says that sex should be inducted in for procreation only, causing a history of guilt for those finding euxus, homosexual or other. These standards were asserted in a time and culture where procreation was vital to the survival of humankind. Homosexuals and lesbians are not reproducing, which is an advantage in these days when overpopulation and depleted resources are at risk of life. Personally, we find the Bible's standards on sexuality outdated and derived from a closed-minded patriarchal bias, from this heterosexual norm, a norm that most of us would imagine. Lamborn's assumption that we are filled with shame, doubt and fear is perhaps a projection of his own guilt and fear about We find it strange that Lamborn attempts to define individuals who are happy (ourselves) as unhappy in order that he may bestow some sympathy upon us. We have no need or desire for this kind of compassion – it implies that we are despairing, despicable, lifestyle, which is quite contrary to fact. We are proud to be lesbians who have chosen self-respect rather than guilt. Maggie Stolz Lawrence senior Leesa Duby Lawrence junior USA MKEELLY THE CARDINALS GROWTH BASED @ 97178 CHANDERI TOWER Spanking stand bit To the editor: Re: Bill Sniffen's editorial: "To Prevent Spoiling, Rap" At issue is the question of whether any kind of corporal punishment should be allowed in the schools. Sniffen is against it. Very well, I am disposed to share his information and reasoning. What we do not get from Sniffen, however, is either reasoning or information, but instigations. The ruling will be that they know "who feel that making their students' lives miserable will do the students some good." Then, follows a single personal experience: Sniffen was once in the lab and he had something in his eye. One might argue that all corporal punishment should be outlawed in order to prevent such outlandish isolated incidents as that Snifter was killed by the Supreme Court not do this. It extrapolates from one personal experience to the implication that all those who support the Supreme Court ruling belong to an old breed of "diehardrs" who believe that "a person with a bad way of best way to control an unruin child." Those wishing to retain corporial punishment as a last resort are those who believe in "slapping students around." I consider this to be false. A freshly graduated teacher of my acquaintance returns home each day in tears as a result of the abuse she incurs from several youngsters. She suffered the situation from a teacher because she could not handle the pupils. Some of their shenanigans were, and are: repeatedly writing obscenities on the blackboard which impugn their teacher's morality, surcastic sassing at every moment, throwing baskets on the floor, repeatedly vandalizing classroom apprentices—but why extend the list? Sniffen probably has not faced such a situation and will not likely appreciate the teacher's despair. It would not be difficult to build the above item into an emotion-laden ad hominem attack, to compare with Snifner's treatment of teachers who enjoy "slugging" their pupils. But Snifner will reach a valid conclusion on the U.S. Supreme Court rulng. At any rate, Sniffen's reading of the decision—"the Supreme Court tells me Sister Gertrude was acting properly"—is another error. The Supreme Court said no such thing. James D. Bono Lancaster graduate student Dole plugging for party DOLE DESCRIBED ways in which the Republicans could return to power as a "shadow minister" in the present administration. Senator Robert Dole simply doesn't understand the problem. First of all, the Republicans would engage in what they have After the November elections, the Republican party was considered by some to be an endangered species, on its way to quick extinction, with little or no regard of regaining its former clout. Currently, a miniscale number of registered voters (18 per cent) identify themselves as Republican. The GOP has control of only 12 governorships and only five state legislatures. At the Capital, Republicans have 194 members and total of 182 votes, 144 in the House of Representatives and 38 in the Senate. THE ALARM has been sounded that Republicans are in danger of becoming a "permanent minority," which is another thing that is altogether foreign to the make-up of the party. Ronald Reagan, John Connally and Gerald Ford have all tried to mold the army into completely different, but its substance is still unclear almost six months after the election. Senator Dole, appearing with conservative columnist and commentator William F. Buckley recently, discussed the plight of republicanism as a viable alternative to "Democrat" politics. (Dole's persistence in getting the "democrat" instead of "Democratic" is seen here as a feeble, underhanded attempt to demean the current "party impower.") labeled their target strategy. This daring new plan was unveiled during last November's election and met with conspiracy but hated publicity. Now the time supposedly is right. The National Republic Congressional Committee (NRCC), which developed the plan, is gearing the new strategy for use in next year's congressional races. The Republican party is money on something that never arrived. REPUBLICANS should perhaps think twice about this proposal from Washington mending in a primary campaign has long beenasteful to both Democrat and Republican, but this constant interference That's what could be called casting pearls before swine flu—the effect of the program to more harmful than the disease. Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer targeting congressional districts where the GOP has the best chances of success next year. Washington-based organizers into those districts to help recruit the candidate they think would win, providing him with a full range of assistance and services. THAT ASSISTANCE includes urging local party leaders to vote for a primary candidate, avoiding a primary minimizing in-fighting as much as possible. Another crucial element of the support package is a pre-primary contribution of $500,000. It should be noted that Republicans frequently are critical of Democrats for not allowing them at the point to make them go to the polls. I guess there's always a first time—and this seems to be it—that money will precede the problem. No, I shall think about it later year, when President Ford sent an inordinate amount of Dole also was mindful of the Republican party's negligence to actively recruit minority candidates, so that the Republican party wasn't an 'antipeople' and *probusiness organization*. But the Republicans well very why the Republicans consistently opposed social by the Washington establishment, in the form of overregulation, taxation, political buggy and political bugging was what got the rassailers thrown out in the first place. F no beec for tha was o MoFo worki anytho those programs, such as the National Health Insurance bill, or the availability of food stamps for the population that needs them. "1 here, coach sibilit would to tie his re on M It also was brought up that the Republican party leadership approved President Carter's plan to make voter registration much more rank and file Republicans, including Dole, didn't. The question was raised whether the Republicans opposed the new registration laws on the principle that they would encourage voting by people whom the Republicans thought "too ignorant" to vote, and wouldn't vote otherwise. Dole said the question off, but it an established fact that two voter turnouts favor Republicans more than Democrats. He throu sayin dedio extr tribu DOLE REITERATED the Republican party's goal of recruiting more minorities, saying "We need to attract these people." Dole offered no concrete plans for such recruiting, only repeating the need for "those people," as if he were a supermarket, picking out minority members like avocados. Senator Robert Dole simply doesn't understand the problem. El recee Scul Assoc Te Scul foun KU. Scul to th F THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily A暑届 June and July are extended Saturday, Sunday and Monday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Subscriptions by mail are $12 or $18 for 60414. Subscriptions by student are $15 or $18 for 60414. A year outside the university. Student subscriptions are $15 or $18. Editor Jim Bates Business Manager Janice Clements n nudem to be ed-up m喂, d ole Merle things out together. A beliefs, becom the σ of Ferve any other id with the burch; but a lost piece of books to replace Mary Hart- the old of back with that unfolded to replace the nd gotten from mary, Mary DOWNLOAD WARNING MATERIALS en probably has situation and preciate the difficult to enter into hominen with Snuf- teachers who their pupils. they teach to use the U.S. uate student y the National bill, or the d stamps for tiber of the them. hit up that the leadership Carter's registration many rank and including wais raised publicans uplaws lawrence laws it they would them by people cams thought more and more and worse. Dole on off, but it' act that low its favor more than RATED THE SIS' goal of minorities, to it to attract de offered no for such excepting the peeling the ice, the packing, the picking, members like Dole simply stand the From page one Resignations no because I was in the middle of recruiting for the University of Kansas, he said. "I was on the verge of signing Jay Hurtt and Mo Fowler and when you spend all that time working with them you don't want to disturb our chances of getting those youngsters." --- Reid said that his recruiting responsibilities at KU were concluded but that he would be available to assist Owen if needed to tie together any loose ends. He will begin his recruitment effort for the Conquistadores on Monday. "I WAS a successful coach before I came here," he said, "and I'll be a successful coach." Owens, who had been in Pooria, III., earlier this week trying to sign 6-7 forward Ernie Banks to a national letter of intent, received an offer on the resurgements of his two assistants. He did, however, release a statement through the sports information office, saying, "Sam Miranda has given 13 years of dedicated service to our program. I'm extremely appreciative of his contributions." The search to fill the two coaching positions will begin immediately, according to the basketball office. No deadline for applications has been set. SPECULATIONS as to whom KU would like to hire center on Lafayette Norwood of Wichita Heights High School. Norwood's current desirability might be that be is prep star Darnell Valentine's coach, Valentine, a 6-4 guard, is being sought many may the team to UCLA, North Carolina, Michigan and KU. Athletic Director Clyde Walker, who learned of the resignations 'a day or so ago,' said, "I don't have anything negative to say about the resignations. We approach the situation with the University of Kansas athletic department and wish them both well." OWENS HELD a brief team meeting at 3 p.m. yesterday in Allen Field House Annex to announce the resignations to his staff, and heard unconfirmed reports Wednesday. 5 Team captain Ken Koenigs said the resignation didn't change the complexion. "We've got a pretty good nucleus coming back next year," Koenigs said, "and I think the coaches have done a really good job recruiting. But I'm still sorry to see them go. I don't think there was anyone who has worked burden for this program than coach Jake Burger, who played for Kansas basketball through the years. "OBVIOUSLY HE THINKs it's best for him. Or people think changes are necessary." Professor receives award Elden Teffts, professor of art, this month received the Outstanding Service to Sculpture award from the Southern Association of Sculptors. Tefft was honored at the National Sculpture Conference April 14 and 15 for the founding of the National Sculpture Center at KU, the establishment of an International Sculpture Conference and his contributions to the education of young artists. He has organized several national and international sculpture conferences since Tefft, who is the director of the National Sculpture Center, organized the first national bronze casting conference at KU in 1960 and is responsible for the introduction of bronze casting facilities at many U.S. colleges and universities. Oil field closed; well caps fail STAVANGER, Norway (AP)—Fearing a chain-reaction fire that could set the heart of the North Sea ablaze, the Norwegian government yesterday ordered its Ekofik offshore oil field closed after a "well killer" oil field three times to cap a six-day-blowout. Phillips Petroleum Co., operator of the runaway well, was reported to be flying in new equipment for another attempt today at the site. The unit and further massive pollution of the sea. Norweigan officials estimated that the well, 170 miles west of this Norwegian oil center, had sprayed 6.5 million gallons of crude oil into the surrounding waters by noon. Phillips officials told reporters that a blowout preventor, or valve, at the top of the well had been mistakenly bolted on upside down last Friday, only hours before the blowout occurred. --by Miranda, said, "People have been talking about it for a couple months to 10 kind of expected it. Well, I did and I didn't. Answer was just waiting to see what would happen. Reserve center Paul Mokski said, "I'm still not sure how I feel about it. I really wasn't expecting it that much. There was nothing expecting it that much." Clarker and all, and that was just a lot of talk. American pre-meds now have an exciting new way to develop their careers—a unique biomedical graduate program which M.S. In N.Y., M.D. In Italy - a one-year, 36-course course at major New York colleges which degree in medical biology or bacteriology and health sciences Financial risk management for Mac Saladie,财会 Financial risk management for Mac Saladie,财会 Financial risk management for Mac Saladie,财会 - preparation for admission beyond the first year to an italian medical school. Also veterinary medical school. INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL EDUCATION Chartered by the Regents of the University of the State of New York 3. F 4. Sf. St. New York 10022 ( 1212) 832-2089 --continue . . . 12 1 2 3 4 5 "I'm just here to play basketball so I really don't care." Fridav. Anrll 29.1977 Spring Tune-ups Whether you've been studying or partying the night before, you could forget the rush hour hassle and enjoy a few extra winks each morning at our place. If you're involved in campus activities, you can walk to meetings instead of driving. Save your gas money for that special date with your special friend. There are other good features here you'll like. So . . . make the right move. Come to where the living is easy. Good luck to the Mt. Oread Cycling Team in this week's Jayhawk Jamboree! Bicycle includes adjustment of cones, bottom bracket, headset, brakes, derailleurs, and fruiting of wheels. 9.50 plus parts. Bicycle Bernard could sleep later and save gas! GRAN SPORT GRAN SPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Q Birkenstock. Feet in Birkenstock footwear do the very same thing. The Birkestock footbed is heat and pressure sensitive, to mold to your foot and become your footprint. feet in the sand make footprints So walking in Birkenstock is a lot like walking barefoot in the sand, with one very convenient difference Relax Next Fall—Move to Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features Let your feet make You can walk in Birkestock all year long Let, a place for, University Daily Kansan a place for themselves PRIMARILY LEATHER 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Hours 9:30:50 Mon.-Sat. 812 MASSACHUSETTS 12:00:00 Thurs. LAWRENCE, KANSAS other features 1800 Naismith Drive George Segal & Jane Fonda in "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" PG Every Eve, ATT. 21:30 & 9:35 Mala, AM 1:10 Hillcrest Glenda Zeezon, Landy Demin, Geraldine Page in "NASTY HABITS" PG Starring SYLWESTER STALONE Eve, ATT. 1:45 Sat. Sun, 1:45 16 Academy Award Nominations PG Starring SYLWESTER STALONE Eve, ATT. 1:45 Sat. Sun, 1:45 WOODS ALLEN Diane KEATON A NEW COMEDY PG Starring SYLWESTER STALONE Eve, ATT. 1:45 Sat. Sun, 1:45 ANNIE HALL A nervous romance PG Starring SYLWESTER STALONE Eve, ATT. 1:45 Sat. Sun, 1:45 Granada Sheltering 8:10 Robert Shaw — Bruce Corn "The ultimate act of terrorism" "BLACK SUNDAY" PG Eve, 7:15 & 9:45 Sat. Sun, 2:10 Varsity NOW SHOWING in THE BRAD NEWS BEARS" Plus THE SOHOOTIST Box open, Sheltering 8:10 913-843-8559 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 SUA POPULAR FILMS PAUL NEWMAN BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS OR SITTING BULL'S HISTORY LESSON DINO DE LAURENTIIS presents PAUL NEWMAN "BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS. or SITTING BUILS HISTORY LESSON" JOEL GREY GERALDINE CHAPLIN DARTHALL AND GREGG PAUL NEWMAN THE DAVID SUSSKIND Production of & ROBERT ALTMAN films Schemasheet by ALAN RUDOLPH and ROBERT ALTMAN presents the pay. The essay by ARTHUR KOPITI discusses the concept of "pay" in a technical way. BURT LANCASTER N Executive Producer DAVID SUSSKIND - Present in PANASONIC United Artists PG FRI., APRIL 29 & SAT., APRIL 30 7:00 & 9:30 p.m., 3:30 Matineau each day '1 tickets at MATineau office Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union THE CHRONICLES knit shirt sale!! Mister Guy announces its largest knit shirt sale ever!!... more than 700 of these spring knit shirts. reg. 15.00 to 16.50 - now $11.90 open thursday night till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. Fridav. April 29, 1977 University Daily Kansan Prof has role in TV film By SHERI BALDWIN Entertainment Editor "A man in his mid40s." "From Ivan Kutlike easily fits the description of only the stipulation placed on a part he will soon play in 'Mary White,' an ABC TV movie being made in Emory. the role. Kuhke, professor of speech and drama and Slavic and Soviet studies, recently said that he used no special characterization in his reading. He was just himself. So did many who tried out for the part of the Rev. John Rice until he first consulted the film's director after the call for shooting. "Mary White" is about the daughter of William Allen White, Pulitzer Prize-winning editor of the Emporia Gazette. C. A. BURRISON Personalities William Kublke She died in 1921, after a horseback riding accident at the age of 16. The film's title is also that of an editorial White wrote to Mr. Lippincott which he expressed quiet joy at how alive she had once been. As the Rev, John Rice, Kuhike will be pastor of the White family church. In one scene, he comforts White after Mary's death and before the editorial has been written. IN ANOTHER scene, Mary is eager to help with a Christmas dinner at the church for the aged. Instead of asking people to just bring dinner to the church, she wants them to stay to eat with the elderly folk. "The Reverend is caught between Mary's eager desire to make things better and things as they have always been done by the church's ladies," Kuhke said. "Especially when the dinner turns out to be a flaço." There are several scenes with Mary and her father for Kuhike to act in, but he said they were short and would amount to no more than three days of shooting. More than 15 other short speaking roles and over 200 extra parts in the film were cast during a two week home education in Wichita, Wichita, Topeka, Lawrence and Kansas City, Mo in mid February. No trend is the trend in the 1970s art world By JEANNE HIERL Staff Reporter KUHLKE HAS an agent in Kansas City who watches for students. He's 'suitable' to Kuhlke's talents and time schedule. Although this is his first dramatic film, he will be involved in educational and industrial films. There is increasing emphasis on fine craftsmanship, he said, and a return to realism. After three decades of strong trends in artistic expression, the art world finds itself in an unusual situation in the mid-70s. Today's major trend, the rise in paintings, is the absence of trends. This is not to say that abstract expressionism, pop art and conceptual art are dead. They're not. But, say the artists, these styles no longer dominate the art scene. Instead they are incorporated, along with older art styles, into a new art that can't be easily attributed to any particular movement. "Obviously opportunities in film are limited for me," he said. "My career is in teaching and it is strictly a parttime time." ARTISTS TODAY are drawing ideas and inspiration from art of all ages, according to the American professor of art history and curator for the Spooner-Thayer Art Museum. And in doing so, they are becoming more intriguing and materials, he said. HENNESSEY attributes the diminished influence and importance of 50s and 69t trends to the natural exhaustion of ideas in the art movement and that of the art world, and early 70s. The exhaustion of ideas in a particular style is a phenomenon "Artists are no longer using house paint on newspapers," be said, "but are using fine canvas and high quality paint." that has recurred throughout history, he said. The Vietnam war demonstrated the fallibility of America and sapped the confidence that had led to abstract expressionism, Hennessy said. People—and artists—started At the Gallery reaching back to older ideas and values, he said. Despite the current re-examination of old ideas and techniques, artists still want to do something but that is not the case. Hennessey said the new art that is emerging has been under attack by some critics. Shimomura stressed that it is the idea, not the technique or material used, that makes art. However, he said, experimentation with both can lead to new artistic expression. Some crites say that artists are stealing compositions from the past, he said; others say the art market has deteriorated a technique has deteriorated into a slickness. In some cases, he said, artists have been accused of putting all their emphasis on ownership instead of conception. ROGER SHIMMURA, associate professor of art, said Virtually everything in art has been acquired in the past going through this period of refinement. There is still a need for work to make newness is in the refinement. 'If plastic weren't around,' he said, "no one would try to use it. But it is, so we're saying things that have never been said." HENNESSEY SAID the disillusionment after Vietnam had caused some artists to retreat into cynicism, visual puns or empty "message" painting. The things the critics are saying are all legitimate grips, he said, but the positive trends through these negative aspects. Michael Ott, chairman of the art department, said he thought the fragmentation of trends was healthy for artists. By not having to worry about what's popular, he said, the artist is free to break out of the mold and explore the accepted and ask himself who he is and what he really wants to say, with his art. Ott said the public was usually not ready for new artistic expression. Philip Blackhurst, assistant professor of art, said he thought the lack of definite trends and art art had confused the public. "PEOPLE ARE comfortable when they see things that reinforce their ideas of art and are angry or disappointed when they don't find what they're used to." "Many people still don't accept the art of the 19th century," he said, "but they will. Artists who were considered less important often the most accepted today. Van Gogh is a fine example." Although part of "Mary White" is expected to be fictional, care has been taken to have Mrs. William Lindsay write her daughter-in-law, authentically and accurately. Material has been taken not only from White's autobiography, but from Emporia people who knew the Whites and Emoriorabilia in Elmwood Allen White Library at Emporia State University. HOLLYWOOD STARS EDI Flanders and Finnuala Villa and his wife Sallie. Contract negotiations have not been completed with a 20-year-old actress to the play the part of Producer Robert Raditz' credits include "Where the Lilies Bloom" and "Sounder." The casting director Caro Jones recently cast "Rocky." Shooting is to begin May 3. Art and music at Saturday fair Art in the Park, a Lawrence tradition in which local artists exhibit and sell original works, will be from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday at Sunset Street near the downtown streets of main business district. About 115 entries in the 16th annual event will include paintings and prints, ceramics, glass, weaving and quilting, woodworking, leatherworks, sculpture, woodcarving and photography. Bands scheduled to play throughout the afternoon are: 12:30 p.m., Jazz music; popular and marching music; 1:30 p.m., Down Home, bluegrass music; 2:30 p.m., KU Jazz; 3:30 p.m., KU Juzzle Ensemble. The fair, sponsored by the Lawrence Art Guild and the Parks and Recreation Department, is free to the public. More than 10,000 attended last year. Weekend Highlights Theater COSI FAN TUTTE, " a Mozart opera, 8 tonight and Saturday in Theatre Theatre of Johannes, " a STRATA, 8 tonight and Saturday, McCain Auditorium, Kansas State University, University "RICHES," an evening of dramatic and musical performance, at Winfield graduate student, B.p. m.sunday, William Ingen. b.p.monday, William Ingen. DOBIE BROTHERS, 8 p.m. Saturday, Ahearn Field House, Kansas State University, Manhattan Concerts DANCE THEATRE OF KIDS traditional, contemporary and righteous dance. 8 p.m. Saturday, White Concert Hall. Wash- ington. PROCOL HARUM, 8 p.m. Saturday, Uptown Theater, Kansas City, Mo. HARTFORD BALLEN COMPANY, a one-hour program for all ages. 3 p.m. Sunday, University Theatre. KANSAS CITY JAZZ FESTIVAL, featuring the Monte Alexander Trio. Chuck Clifford, Joshua Chisson, vibes; the Milt Abel Trio and winners of the 1977 Mid-America Jazz Conference; 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Mason-Halpin College, Kansas City Mo. Recitals HOYT ROBINSON, INGON tonight's Recital Session tionally at Hall Halt MARK HOLMBERG, carlson. 3 p.m. Sunday, cam p JAY MCSHANN, CLAUDE "FIDDLER" WILLIAMS and PAUL GUNTHER, 9 to mid- day. Paul Graw's Jazze Plaz. BARTHOLDY TRIO with David Wheehr, piano; Steven Shumway, cello; and Martin Swarthout at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. Swarthout TREE FROG, 9 to midnight tonight and Saturday, Off the Wall Hall Nightclubs J. T. COOK, rock. 9 to midnight night, the Opera House THUMBS, rock. 9 to Saturday, the Opera House. GREG WEST, takinger, 9 to midnight tonight, Sister Katie CAY M STRING BAND, takinger, 9 to midnight Saturday, Sister Katie E NAIROB IYRD) mID; Saturday, the Seventh Spirit. TUMBLING DICE, rock, 9 to midnight tonight, J. Watson's SPIDER AND THE CRABS, midnight Saturday, Watson Lectures WINDFALL, rock, 9 to midnight, the Brewery. "MOUNTAIN GORILLA," movie sponsored by the department of anthropology, 4 p.m. today. 627 Fraser Hall. "A HUNDRED YEARS OF LAWRENCE HOUSES," an annual homes tour of six private homes and two public buildings dating from 1870 to 1970, self-guided tours of the museum Saturday, tickets available at Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum. "FACE, MIND AND ATTACK, 'CROWN COUNTRY', Byran MacMahon. Irish Symposium Public University, Honig Union Forum BLACK SUNDAY—This may be the ultimate chase movie, with policemen chasing terrorists on foot, in cars, in boats and finally, in helicoptere. No matter what Frankenheimer delivers plenty of action, but the script is encumbered with obligatory scenes of character revelation for actors Rebeau Shaw, Bruce BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS--Robert Altman's sidestop of a movie gets out of control much of the time, and Altman is careful trimming. Still, there are many great scenes, and Paul Newman gives his best performance of the last 10 years. FUN WITH DICK AND JANE- George Sealg and Jane Fonda strive to salvage an awkward character. They come to their aid. Then, as Films NASTY HABITS- Restaging the Watergate saga in a Philadelphia convent provides another twist to this shoddiily made production misses. However, scandal-backed will find Glenda Jackson's interpretation of Richard Nixon's John Dean inspiration (R) ELIZABETH M. WATKINS COUNTY MUSEUM Stitch. It. exhibition of crewel, quilting, needlepoint and woven pieces. they turn to a life of crime and comedy, the second half is enjoyable. (PG) KANSAS UNION GALERY - Department of art scholarship show, through May 4. Exhibits LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY - Karen Burke, weaving and baitk; June Kleinberg, pottery; Leanna Davis; Nancy Bean, Robert Zervelw, oils; beginning Sunday through May. LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER-Hammel Lee Carrell, jewelry, opens with a reception 2.4 p.m. Sunday through May THE MARKETPLACE GHE painting and silversmithing, and artwork from KU sororites and fraternities as part of the college's heritage. E7E GALLERY - Tim Saskia paints and drawings, opens with a reception 7-9 p.m. Saturday through June 1. Arts & Leisure JOHN JONES DHAKAR hv. TIM GUNN SINGING BACK THE INDIAN FILM REVIEW These three musicians, all in their sixties, have been proving in Lawrence that Kansas City jazz is still very much alive. Plainist Chuck Berry and Bill Graham were among the first to play it. Kansas City sound Staff photo by BILL UYEK recently returned from Europe, where he had played with Claude "Fiddler" Williams, top left. Drummer Paul Gunner will round out the trio, appearing this weekend at Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts. 'Annie' Woody Allen's best Reviewer When a character in Woody Allen's new film is offered some advice, he will make him "mellow," he refuses in panic. "I don't respond well to mellow." he buys it. "If I get mellow, I ripen and then it." "Annie Hall" is a pastiche of recollections from the long affair between Ally Singer (Woody Allen) and the title character. The memories are often melancholy or bitter-sweet, yet they are somewhat hilarious too. It is, in short, a comedy about being rotten. "Annie Hall" is Allen's greatest film. locker room after playing tennis. ("I don't like to show my body to a man of my gender." PART OF the difference is that Alvy Singer is a more self-assured character than Allen's earlier roles. Alvy is a 40-year-old comedian twice the size of himself that he has been killing spiders since he was 30, although he is too modest to shower in the men's Alvy still has plenty of neuroses a la Allen, and he has been in analysis for 15 years, The Cinema but he never completely loses control. Consequently, there are no scenes of silly, slapstick fumbling with aggressive machines or unfamiliar athletic equipment. These may sound like minor departures for Allen, but they can be a major change. Although Albaugh Vyso is an important figure, Woody Allen has shifted the focus so that his female lead is the central character. ANNIE HALL (Diane Keaton) is a would-be singer from Chippewa Falls who meets Grace, an 18-year-old divorce. She is slightly awed by his success, and he is flattered enough to fall in love with her. With Alvy's guidance, Annie begins to develop: her singing ability (he explains that the audience wasn't hostile, just "a witch") encourages her to enroll in college and buys books for her with the word "Death" in the titles; and her own neuroses (he pays for her analyst). And long she is outgrowing Alvy. The film opens and closes with Alvy delivering monologues directly to the camera, and he frequently interrupts the story with asides to the audience. The ambitious and sophisticated structure scrambles time and place accretion, while Alvy's thoughts. But no matter how Alice tries, he can't escape the realization that Annie made enormous changes in his life. marriages and the day Annie made the decision to move in with him. In desperation, he goes to bed with a reporter from Rolling Stone, who tells him, "She's like a faaskees experience." Then they are interrupted by a call from Annie. Diane Keaton's earlier work in Woody Allen movies demonstrated her resources as a comedienne, and her role in "The Godfather" showed her capabilities as a dramatic actress. But "Annie Hall" revels an incredible range of talent. AS THEY begin to drift apart, Alvy remembers his first two As Annie, Keaton is required to unfold from a bashful ingenuue to a smooth, confident member of the Hollywood set. She must be sexy enough to earn Alvy's comment that she is "polymorphically capable" to be impractical enough to carry the burden of Alvy's idolation. She not only succeeds, she dominates. Ralph Keyes" "Is There Life After High School?" reads like a lesson in revenge- how to get revenge when you didn't make the football, basketball or track team; not as much as your friend. But over that date or caused snickers when you affirmed your bra in Phys. Ed. class. In reading the book, I caught myself unwillingly remembering my own high school years. I assumed that after college, I would spend all of my life with wonderful memories, never considering the long-range effect—both good and bad—high school experiences might have. Keves considers these possibilities, and his book is "One Day at a Time" that gives us over "the best years of our lives." *I' THERE LIFE AFTER HIGH *LIFE ALPHES (Little, Brown) 28m age $7.95 36m age $10.95 High school not just a memory KEYES DISCUSES what is popular and what isn't. Being an "innite," or popular, means that you prefer a team with a variety football or a cheerleader. Being an "outie," or unpopular, means you are definitely none of the above and only made Honor Society. Reviewer An excess of anything from brainpower to bastine was emphatically "out." Do people really remember high school, much less dwell on it? You bet they do. Mimar rememberms that every girl but her was asked to dance at one high school and you can't. Caman rememberss she slouched over to minimize her "absolutely huge" bustline. EVEN ART Linkletter says that his most vivid memories of high school were the "frustration about his size; frustration at not making teams; frustration at not being a hit with the girls; and frustration about not feeling popular overall—or even Even at high school reunions people want to be noticed either for staying attractive and popular or for becoming attractive and popular. During his time as a student, he found most responses were the same. Comparing was the main reason for returning. B A B D N By ANN CASTEL THE NUMBER of high school "failures" that are now successful people suggests that something pushed them to become somebody. The consolation of becoming a star or President while seeing a cheerleader lose her curves, a jock's muscle turn to flub and a person unable to succeed" sacking groceries can be saved for satisfaction all the years of anannuish. A former cheerleader doubted her name would be remembered. A nonchance giver told him, "I'm not sure how I compare." Jamis Joplin said, "Man, those people hurt me. It makes me happy to know I'm making it and they're still back, planers and all, just like they were." In Keyes' final chapter he gives advice on how to diminish the anguish of high school years with "101 Ways to Get High School off Your Back." You might: - Go back to high school, Walk down the UP staircase. Tread on the plaque. If anyone asks you for your hallway pass, tell them to stuff it. —Sue the yearbook for defamation. Sand a copy of your DDtikki to the Off the Shelf - Use the year book for declaration. - Send a copy of your Ph.D. thesis to th P counselor who said you weren't college material. And finally, there is always writing a book entitled "Is There Life After High School?" —Become a regular on talk shows, Talk about your classmates. And finally, there is always writing a book entitled "Is There Life After High School?" Ann Castel is a sophomore majoring in geography. Book discusses adult psychology Reviewer "PASSAGES," by Gall Sheeby (Dutton, 393 pages, $10.95). This is the age of psychology for the masses, with books such as "I'm OK, You're OK" often at the top of the nonfiction best seller lists. "Passages," by former New York magazine writer Gail Sheehy, is the latest of these books, having led the New York Times list through much of the fall and winter until it has grown to more than a beginning introduction to some over-summedified theory, however. “Passages,” is about those off-neglected periods, the stages of adult life. Psychological development doesn't stop with adolescence, and after 21 can be divided into growth periods just as easily as can life before 21. Through an extensive literature review, we describe various stages of life, Sheehy develops and explains her theory of predictable crises. The idea is that if people know their problems are natural and something most other people experience, they will be better prepared to deal with them and to know they're not going crazy. It is a book about development and growth; doubt and reevaluation. Using a technique more journalistic than the conventional, it analyzes. Although she could conceivably be accused of being too optimistic (maturity being "aggressive of one's self at last") and not especially profound, the book is, at least, all too often been overlooked. e University Daily Kansan Friday, April 29, 1977 7 withatherray's st ay Annie move in heater, he ter from kills him, when they ball from ier work movies sources as r role in rowed her further she Hall" range of Baseball team looks to win division title required ingeneus member She must alm'v Alys' which is she's verse," is as enough of Alys' succeeds. By GARY BEDORE Sports Writer it college. ows. Talk bring a book School? joining in It's the time of year for spring fever, but the KU baseball team takes a case of pneumonia in spring. sesology The Jayhawks and Tigers face each other in a doubleheader today at 1:30 p.m., to open a four-game series. The Hawks, 21-16, are two games behind Missouri in the Western Division. The Cavaliers in the Eastern Division. Kansas must win three of four games to win the division title. (Dutton, y for the I'm OK, nonfiction Kansas is three games ahead of both Iowa State and Nebraska for second place, but KU coach Floyd Temple said that the Jayhawks are shooting for first. "We're not going up there about second place." Temple said. "I think we should do well; we're ready, and I have a good feeling about the series." LAST SEASON, KU beat Missouri, the Big Eight champion, in two of the three games played here. If the Jayhawks are to repeat that performance, they'll have to stop Missouri, 29-13 overall, and 11-3 at home. n. using a n. using a reviews and custmateviously custmateviously kk at, in kk at, in the that that n-neglected adult life. n't stop 21 can be as easily as extensions in various of explanations know their thing most will be better d to know The Tigers have won 16 of their last 18 games, and stand 7-1 in divisional play. Missouri's hitting has been its strong point all season. The Tigers are hitting .301 as a team, and have scored in double figures 11 times this season. Missouri's leading hitter is second baseman and co-captain John Krushe, who is hitting 367. Krushe has been hampered by a pulled hamstring most of the season and has been forced to play as designed hitter. However, he was on his weekend, however, because the current second baseman, Jim English, broke his knee in the Tigers' last series. Big 8 coaches name signees Announcement of basketball players who have signed national letters of intent to attend Big Eight schools continued this week. Oklahoma coach David Bluss announced the signing of Mark Perry, Jr., of Hanover, Inc. The 6-2 guard was named high school player of the year and averaged 24 points a name and 12 assists. Colorado has signed forwards Jack Tuz, 66, of Newport Beach, Calif. Brian Johnson, 8, of Cherry Creek, Colo. and Craig Austin, 6-8 of Wattle Ridge Colo. Guards signing with Colorado were Jim Feeney, 60, of Denver, and Bobby Rudedge, 64, of Miami, Fla. Kansas has confirmed the signings of 6-8 forward John Crawford of Kansas City Northwest High School, 6-7 forward Jay Hurt of Alleghegan Juc, Chamberd, Md. and Wilmore Fowler, 6-2 guard of Palmetto, Fla. MOSQUIORIS also has Greg Cypret, 367, Tim Laudesen, 333, Mike Lally, 329, Tim Rouse, 304. Missouri's pitching, however, hasn't been as effective. The team E.A.R.A. is 4.07 aft, Leflahander Piet Robertburgo is 6.1, and Haitian Piet Robertburgo is 6.1. Steve Shockey is 6.1, for a 4.23 E.R.A. Kansas is slated to pitch Brian Rhodes, Dave Rushe, Terry Sutcliffe and Kevin Kerschen in the series. Kerschen has been moved into the rotation after beating Nebraska last weekend in a relief stint, but he added five innings and gage up only three hits. Kansas is hitting 277 for the year. Lee Ice, 370, Ron MacDonald, 333, Carl Heinrich, 336, and Andy Gilmore, 330, are the team leaders. The KU women's track team will compete tomorrow against Kansas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma and St. John's in an unsorted meet at 10 a.m. in Memorial Stadium. Jayhawks face four opponents head coach Tom Lonaleau has put his two top sprinters, Sheila Calmese and Charmaine Kulkarni, in the 200 meters to give them a chance in another event. Calmess, who won the invitational 100 meters at the Kansas Relays, already has qualified in the 100 meters, and Kuhman, who hasn't lost in the quarter-mile this season, also has qualified for the national meet. Michelle Brown, who ran her best race ever in the 1500 meters last week, will be in that event and three Jayhawks, Sena Frame, Laura Mordy and Nancy Bissell will run in the 2-mile. Frame missed the 1500 last week because of an injury. Other entries for KU are Bunita Bassa in the 100 meters and the 100 hurdles, Karol Fitzgerald in the 100 hurdles and the 200 and Kathy Kennedy in the 100 and 200. Kim Glassgow and Jennifer Howe will run the 400 for the Joywheels and Connie Lane team. The Kansas track team has its last chance to win a relay event on the Midwest Relays circuit this weekend at the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa. By ROBRAINS Sports Writer Track team trys to win relav After being shout out at Texas and Kansas, lead coach Bob Timmons is optimistic that the team will win. Timmons said, "I've been concerned about our handbags all year, and I just hope you don't." If KU does w a relay at Drake, it will come against some classy opposition. Heading the field for the relays events are teams from Arizona, Auburn, Texas and Oklahoma. In the 440 and 880-relay relays, Arizona is expected to be anchored by Olympian Dwayne Evans, Auburn by Harvage Glance and Texas by Johnny Jones. IN THE 440, Auburn has a season-best time of 39.5 seconds, one of four teams in the field that have times under 40 seconds. KU has run 39.8, Oklahoma 39.82. In the 800, Oklahoma defeated KU by three-hundreds of a second to win at Kansas The Jayhawks have a season-best time of 1:23.90. KU will enter the same foursome in both the 440 and 800 relays—Dave Blutcher, Anthony Coleman, Kevin Newell and Cliff Wiley. KU also should have a chance to win the mile relay. As the defending champ in that event, the Jayhawks will be challenged by Texas. Nebraska has the best time in the mile relays in the Big Eight this season, Kansas and Oklahoma have both run 3:10.8. KU's mile relay team is expected to be Sam Whitaker, Dave Hatcher, Tommy Mackenzie and Chris Sullivan. AT LAST weekend's Relays, KU's efforts to win the championship hampered by Clement妄想. KU Recreation Services is sponsoring an intramural wrestling tournament tomorrow at Robinson Gymnasium. Weigh-in begins at 9 a.m. and wrestles starts at 11 a.m. Wrestling scheduled THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS ZZTOP string pulp and anebarman Wagner suffered a slight groin muscle pull in the open 400 Both are scheduled to make the trip, according to Timmons, and are expected to Leading the list of individual entries for the Jayhawks is Wiley. Wiley, who won both the open 100- and 200-meter dashes at Kansas, the best conference times in both races. Jay Reardon in the long jump, triple jump, high jump, and Steve Rainbow in the luge. KU runners slated for other individual track events are Newell in the 100 meters; Vargas in the 800 meters; Roscoe and George Mason in the 3,000 meter steeplechase; Coleman and Dennis Brack in the 110 meter high hurdles, and Little in the 400 meter intermediate hurdles. McCall and Bruce Goldsmith, who is scheduled to run legs on both the four-mile and distance medley relays, have been bothered by illness for the past week. WILEY IS scheduled to run in the open 100 meter. KUUs other entry in an open event Other Jayhawks scheduled to compete in individual field events are Tad Scales in the pault vole; Jim Pobarebra in the shot put; Mike Wilk in the long jump and triple jump; THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS present Cosi Fan Tutte FM91 A Comic Opera in Two Acts by W.A. Mozart April 22,23,29,30 8:00 p.m. partially funded thru KU Student Senate University Theatre-Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 KJHK KJHK SECOND ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE at the KJHK Studio 1120 W. 11th Friday, April 29 Noon to 5pm Live Entertainment Refreshments and Free Albums KJHK Bumper Stickers and T-Shirts from The Sound Alternative FM91 K. U. Students admitted without charge with current This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund. Certificate of Registration FOR HER—Three piece linen suit by Bagatelle FOR HIM—Three piece suit by Givenchy. Shirt and tie by Yves St. Laurent. Interviews, formals and Graduation Deserve The Britches Touch DRITCHES CORNER Free Alterations - BankAmericard - Master Charge 843 Massachusetts 8 Friday, April 29, 1977 University Daily Kansan QB crisis won't stop spring game Barring more unexpected injuries, there will be an intrasquared football game at 2:15 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. The game concludes spring drills. It was uncertain if the game would be played this year following the loss of two quarterbacks. No. 2 quarterback Brian Bettke broke a bone in his left hand, and quarterback Bill Bills broke his左 forearm. BLUE EASTSIDE Couch John Lever Offense SE OLSON LG MASCHELLO, GRIFFITH LG MACHELLO, GRIFITH F CULVER LG WORDER MURPHY RL WORDER MURPHY, LION RB JONES, SOBEK QB JONES, SOBEK, MURPHY QL LIVY, WILEY LR HUGGINS, MULLY LR EDGAR RICKERS; FOUND LR兰岩 DEFENSE LE DENNEE LG DENNEE LG ALGER RL KIND, LOVERY RE GERMAN, ELSWICK FR FEVER RL ANDALIKWEIZ, MURPHY RL CUTTER SR FRYING SR HUCKS, LANDING FS FRYING CR WILLIAMS WHITE West Side Couth Side James Offense SE FULTON, LITTLE FLUCTION, RADSALE LG DELA, HUSSSMAN C WILLY, HUSSSMAN LG FERRAN DT MANSFIELD OL SAFEEL OL LISSNAN, FALEY OL LISSNAN, DANNELL HL JOHNSON, LOUIS HL CONFIELD, BAROWS RICKERS; KALLEL Levinson LE ZIDO LG CAKEY, RADCLIPPE RE BRIEFMAN RE ALCOVIEW IB BROWN, YOUNG IC ARROON, FLAT ML MILLER, ROSETTE SM SMITH FS LINAK, HOLMEN HR HYKN The KU men's tennis team has found playing tennis in Iowa to their liking. The Jayhawks defeated Iowa State. 8-1, Wednesday in Ames, then travelled to Des Moines where they won their first two meets of the Drake Raves yesterday afternoon Sports Roundup KU defeated Wisconsin at LaCrosse in the first match, 9-4, and Notre Dame in the second. KU lost just one singles match in defeating Notre Dame, Clarke, at No. 1, was defeated for the sixth time this season when he lost to Randy Stlekb, 7-6, 7-5. In the first match, KU swept the singles easily, winning all six points in straight sets. Bill Clarke and Mark Hekking won on the No. 1 doubles in straight sets, 6-3, 6-3. However, the No. 2 and 3 teams took their matches the full length before winning. KU's only other loss of the afternoon and Greg Fuller, were defeated by Taylor and Greg Fuller. Chel Collier, playing at No. 4, came back after dropping his first set to defeat his opponent, 3-4, 7-4, 6-2 while Lonnie Tayler made a comeback to win at No. 3, 5-7, 7-6. in defeating Notre Dame, KU's record rose to 19-11 for the season. The win enabled KU to advance to the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament, and the KU would meet in this afternoon's match. Golfers take 10th The KU men's golf team was in 10th place after the second round of the 18-train Drake Invitational yesterday, 42 strokes off the lead. KU's total is 800, with 314 Wednesday and Thursday, but most of it is from University League games in the league the league holds. Rugby club travels Don Lee, Wichita State, is the individual leader with 70-71 for 141 two-round total. Jim Doyle leads the KU squad with 76-80 for the final round and ends today with the third and final round. The KU Rugby Club will be on the road for the remainder of the season, beginning tomorrow when the team travels to Des Moines, Iowa, to play the Des Moines Rugby Club. The Jayhawks will try to start winning again after two losses last week 4-5 to Kansas City and 26-24 to KU Alumni. Tomorrow's game also is the last for the Jayhawks before the Sunflower Tournament, May 7-8 in Manhattan. Karate tourney held The KU Karate Club held its annual tournament last night in Robinson Gymnastium with competition in Kata and Kumite forms. Kata is individual competition based on an arranged series of moves. These arrangements combine balance, power and speed with a variety of skillful maneuvers. Rick Sanders, club director, said last month: Kumite is sparring between individuals, with only intermediate and advanced members competing because, Sanders said, techniques aren't good enough for sparring. Four places were awarded in each division of both karate styles. ALYSON HARPER won the beginners THE ORGANIZATION OF ARAB STUDENTS presents: For the first time Kelmat Sharaf A Love Story Film continued pushing Vicendese for the No. 1 job. PLACE: Dyche Hall Aud. division of Kata, followed by Chris Myers, Mike Nimer and Scott Leaderbrand. In the intermediate, Dick Hull was first, with three finishes in the next three places. Gooder finishing in the next three places. The advanced winner was Gay Hargraves, with the next three finishes Mika Ankara, and his teammate. TIME: 7:30 p.m. In the Kumite competition, Rick Vizzari took first in the intermediate division, followed by Hill, Myers and Ste Koeneke. Harper won the women's competition, with Barb Spectman and Donna Clark taking third. Gerald Hargreaves won in the advanced division, followed by Randy Myers, Tom Jungmann and Anderson. DATE: April 30, 1977 The injuries left coach Bud Moore with only No.1 quarterback Mark Vicendess and walk-ons Tim Farley and Steve Mueller. He decided to start Mark Lissak at quarterback. He also will play in the defensive back-field, opposite Vicenidad. Lissak had been moved to the secondary at the start of the season and was replaced by the Jawahirs at quarterback last season. Coach Bob Stansell will be relying on hot batting from six KU regulars to win. The KU softball team will play the South- west Missouri State Bears in a doubleheader tomorrow. Starting time for the first game is 1 a.m. Moore was disappointed that Bethke, a 5i and 16pound junior college transfer, was unable to attend. Giraeus Graves, Debbie Stilgenbauer, June Kleiber, Nancy Sturt, Karen Schneeller and Kyle Schmidt. Jayhawks play SMS Southwest Missouri will also present some tough hitters for pitchers Graves and Shelley Sinclair. The Bears have three players hitting about 400 but Graves and Sinclair have been doing well all season and they should be orenaded. Assistant coach Diana Beebe said Southwest Missouri would be the host team for the coming regional tournament so there is an important on a Jayhawk sweep tomorrow. Sinclair's perfect 9-0 record and 35 E.R.A. lead the team. She has pitched 60 1-3 innings, struck out 58 batters and walked 14. She has given four runs on 22 hits. Graves has struck out 97 batters in 76 innings, walked 25 and has an 8-3 record. 150 STYLES Athletic Shoes Athletic Shoes WARM UPS SHORTS•SOCKS LETTERED T-SHIRTS TENNIS CLOTHING SWIMWEAR Athlete's The Foot® 919 Massachusetts Phone 841-2995 KU students will be admitted with a student ID. Adult tickets are $2. "Both have thrown the ball much better than what we've been accustomed to," Moore said. "At the same time, they're not the running threat Nolan Cromwell was." Because there wasn't much time for either team to practice as a unit, Moore said, only basic offensive plays and defensive formations will be used. BankAmericard - Master Charge The Athlete's Foot THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS ZZTOP Spring Fever Reaches Epidemic Level! TYPES: Graduation paranonia, thoughts of marriage, textbook alienation, inability to think correctly. NOTABLE SYMPTOMS: A sudden desire to throw all textbooks on the window and go back to their shoes, to go upstairs and go back to their faces at the thought of being thrown out into the REAL WORLD. Affectionate couples may suddenly desire the desire to get married. There is also an overall lack of logical thought present in all these situations. KNOWN REMEDIES: Although there is no known cure, except for summer, there are some very effective remedies available to HAAS IMPORTS for those carriages of spring fever. For those with graduation paranoia, gifts of flowers or candies may be appropriate for those who have become possessed with thoughts of marriage. We offer a unique and widespread selection ofbridal gifts and things for the kitchen, from 52.00 up. Free giftwrapping is also available. An endless assortment of gifts, gadgets and decorations are also available for those unincurable so unable to concentrate on their immediate surroundings. HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Massachusetts Visit us now—before you go off the deep end! CAR STEREO SALE Item List Sale WIRED BOGO SALE UNDER-DASH 8-TR Spaceage S5-20 Carg 359 UHU E8 Polarisonic CX 389 EU $ 50.00 $ 35.00 119.00 15.00 19.00 25.00 UNDER-DASH 8-TR/F.M. STEREO Craig 3132 (Used) 25.00 Craig 3136 (Used) 25.00 UNDER-DASH CASS. Spaceage SS.60 ... 80.00 ... 40.00 UNDER-DASH CASS./F.M. STEREO Pioneer KP-500 160.00 150.00 IN-DASH CASS./A.M.-F.M. STEREO Pioneer K-P 4000 180.00 150.00 Pioneer K-P 8005 190.00 160.00 SPEAKERS Clarison SK-62 $25.00/Pr. 30.00/Pr. Clarison SK-76 $15.00/Pr. 30.00/Pr. Jensen 11/14" 20 oz. 9862 $55.00/Pr. 35.00/Pr. Jensen 11/14" 20 oz. 9809 (Surface Mt.) $70.00/Pr. 40.00/Pr. Jensen x99" 9729 $40.00/Pr. 40.00/Pr. RAY AUDIO RAY AUDIO 13 E. 8th St. Buy One TEXAS BURRITO Get One FREE has big savings and top quality. The little store with little ads that with this coupon --coupon The Texas Burrito is a soft flat tortilla shell filled with Taco meat, lettuce, cheddar cheese, tomatoes, and your choice of sauce, covered with chill. One offer per customer with this --- Offer ends May 1, 1977 T A C O T I C O 2340 Iowa EVERYBODY OUT FOR TENNIS The Athlete's Foot offers a wide selection of Tennis wear and accessories for both men and women... ★ Shirts Shorts a we both. The Ath The Ath ★ Warm-Ups ★Socks ★A Full Line of Shoes by Tretorn, Fred Perry, Puma, Adidas, Nike, Pro Keds, Bata and Tred 2. The Athlete's Foot 919 Massachusetts Ph. 841-2995 • Lawrence BankAmericard or Master Charge THAT LITTLE OL' BAND FROM TEXAS "ZZ TOP may have started out as just 'that little ol' band from Texas,' but today the group is one of the biggest in the world, out-drawing even the Rolling Stones." The Miami News Acc ment are ( sex. BRIN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SATURDAY, MAY 7 Tickets at Kief's, SUA An Amusement Conspiracy Production An SUA Special Event University Dally Kansan Friday, April 29, 1977 1 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their background. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FRIHLT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times time times AD DEADLINES word ___ .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 AR DEPTHS 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word 01 02 03 04 05 Monday Thursday p 5 m Tuesday Friday p 5 m Wednesday Monday p 5 m Thursday Tuesday p 5 m *Wed* Wednesday p 5 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 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URB business office at 864-353-8354. ANNOUNCEMENTS Canoe boat trips, on the Illinois River. Special trips include a 4-hour tour $30 per person. Other trips include a 4-hour tour $60 per person. Shore excursions include Boarway Hawk Camp Tour boats from mile north on highway 10. Tabulach, Oklahoma 74448, (918) 526-2870. RELF-LA-WAIFEER-A: Series of workshops will be held at 12:00 noon (9:00 am). Signatures by the Commission are required. IS THERE LIFE AFTER DEATH? An open book alongside the diary, dated April 16, April 30, 1947, at 9 a.m. at Atcunterbaa, Belgium. (Historic Society of Belgium) ENTERTAINMENT Reserve the HALL OF FAME now for your party or meeting. Over 600 acre, it available. No group size required. Kitchen and bar facilities available Located in Riverside, CA. Available from Vermont. Call 842-7846 for information. S-13 From Hookers to Hip-hoppiest the Tau Sigma Dance Center, 5. & 8. at 8:90 p.m. in Theater FOR RENT Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, no pets, bd. 743-767. **tf** 1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to union, utilities paid. parking: 835-759. door pool - disposal + glyph + beauty facility, formatted and untrimmed from $35. Call 617-820-4591. formatted and untrimmed from $35. Call 617-820-4591. Frontier Ride—short term leaves available. Frontier Ride—long term leaves available with study. Hated indoor pool "shag carpet" or indoor pool deck. Gatlinburg Apartment- Call Cabby row. Summe- r rentals $400-$1,500 per month. Contracts on 4 at Gatlinburg apartment. Call 618-792-8354. 1-3 bedroom apartments, rooms with kitchen priv- idences, possible rent reduction for labor. 400 Ft.² CARPET CLEANING STEAMEX Rent the Pro SATURDAYS Remote Call. Call 5-100 5-10 Make your plant grow. Applications are now being given fast for to be a vine and a complex and beautiful plant. 1 new bedroom apartment being built for fall, on campus great location by the stadium. Call on 215-368-7900. Two business apartments with all bills paid on payment. Rates are $197.50 per room, 843-643-9999 or come to 620-243-9999. Live on campus in a two-bedroom apartment with all utilities paid and parking provided. Now leasing for fall, call 843-7493 or stop by 1603 Hancock 8:30 - 3:00, Saturday, April 24th at 5:00. ROSAELA N. HOTEL, Harper, Kansas 62558. The Hotel features 10 bedrooms and a large pool. SEE ADDITIONAL INFO: MAY 17 - JULY 14, x-10 MAY 13 - JULY 14, LABOR ZONE, x-10 Sublease for summer-furnished 2-bedroom flat. Applicant's name required. Call 814-3010-2010 for 5 p.m. 4-29 Plush, one of a kind 4-bedroom; 3 story townhouse. Available middle May Call 842-6405-5 Available May 4, 1979. the summer 1-bedroom apartment in 12th and 13th floor, Apartment No. 1. Stop call at 604-752-8233. Sublease for summer one bedroom apartment, furnished, AC, pool, available May 15, $849, btu. Sublease - Tratileigh Townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. court post for central air carport, and bus services. IVAN'S 68 SERVICE "Tires—Batteries—Accessories" 19th & Marc 843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8:8 Sun & Sandwich Shop For summer, nice studio apartment, good location, all utilities paid; $100/mo, 841-2635 after 5. Call us at (314) 727-1920. Summer sublease. Trailride three bedroom apartment, install on bus line, $25/month; pay 5 per week. Sublease: Park 25 two bedrooms, full kitchen, bathroom; park 30 three bedrooms, full kitchen; park 41-512 three, 7.99 per sqm - 2 $ 2 bedroom apartment, $140 per month plus electricity, 842-8321 5-2 Sublease for the summer, 1-bedroom apartment furnished, call 841-5384 before 5-3- SUBLEASE-2 2-bedroom apartment in Courtyard Bldg. of 10446 Lexington Ave. off-offering parking call 841-735-6895 4-250 4-250 Sublube for summer. Meadbrook furnished sublube apartment, call 541-7890 after 5 p.m. 3-5 am. Sublane. Townhouse, three large bedrooms, two garages, patio pools, bus service, bus passes. 814-269-3750. Submitted sunflower cottage, rent paid I3 May 13. water paid. water paid. leave message for RM4 863-507 863-507 Sublease first Aug 15, 15- with possible option to lease thru Oct 31, 2016. For bid offer, late bid offer, 421 Alabama, 8141-740-54, 8141-741-940. To subleave for summer, new house with 3 bed- rooms, new air-conditioning, reach-out: 843-7912-9126 Subletting apartment 2, bedroom 2, brand new, C.A. centrally located, 2223, call 842-1895, 5-14 Sublime base apartment for summer walkin- g from campus, from computer lab. Number 8141 of Building 8141 of Airbus Summer suburban - 6 bedroom house, near Veteran Park and campus, $677 mn, call 814-607-547 Trailside, twelfth floor to subside for summer. Ensuite with a large kitchen and two baths. $250/ball; huge bath, right next to post and walk-in closet. $350/ball; nice bathroom. Plaza Manor Learning, 2340 Murphy Drive is new lean furnished and unfurnished studio, one and two bedroom apartment for summer, with a balcony. Aug. 15. Post-4-24. Bathroom: 84-153 after 5 p.m. Sublease for summer, mit 2-bedroom house, formated, next to campus, $149 per month, bursa de la Universidad de La Plata. Sublease 2 bedroom apartment only $10; call 835-787-8, keep living, a good bargain. 5-4 Sublue apartment for summer; 2 bedrooms; furnished. 841-7847 5-4 Houses, apartments, and rooms for students. 843- 1091. 5-2 Sublease for summer--2-bedroom apartment new camp and Calif. $150 plus utilities $115-$245 for other areas. Sublime Meadowbrook studio apartment summer meetings, excellent kitchen, pool course, dressed Cats FOR SALE Western Civilization Note—Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization notes for this class. For Class preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Towne Books. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists install and repair units. BEL AUCH ELECTRIC, #850-900-3600. We are the only Full Line Franchised Crown dealer in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri. There must be a reason. Crown complements, speaks to, and builds at Audio System, 30th, Rhode Island. MUST SELL. Invoice offset prices with cashalternate one yearly, $100 or will finance; $82-$149 one yearly, $120 or will finance; $62-$149 one yearly, $120 or will finance. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIAL! Until April 14th, all orders must be placed by the April 14th, 2015 Pricing and Bid and Sale Number(s) on this form. 1917 Pontira Catalina, 62.600 km² everything in perfect condition, 843-645 adherence; free wifi, $-$29 86. Number 4-door, PS, PB, fairly good condition, needs battery; $25, PS-424-364s 15 p.m. 87. Number 4-door, PS, PB, fairly good condition, needs battery; $25, PS-424-364s 15 p.m. 1971 Karmann GH Coupe, very nice condition through. Thrunk. Red with black interior, sport wheels, new Dushop tires and seats recently replaced, 4-speed, air conditioning, 30 car. Car can be seen through window. MUST SELL 1737 Voluntary mobile home, 12" X 6" CAIL, call 8542-542 after 6, on another 4-29 on 10/13/14. Pannasonic turbines, must suit, only two weeks warfare, and original packaging included. 4-29 speed, air conditioning, 30 hp crew car can be rented W.M. F.W. M.C.F. 202-618-0498 Kaiser $1,500 farm Must sell because of leaving KU VW-buy-60. Equipment only, 25,000 miles (40,000- 429) or less. Most sell. 70 lt. 24,000 pounds. 35 biwave. 85 biwave. Best offer. 81-899-7462. new chick, brake basket. Best offer. 81-899-7462. Gibson ES353, Rickenbacker 12 string, Sonn September 1994, Eagle 18 string, 4:20 p.m. Eagle 18:43 after 6:20 p.m. 4:20 Antique Moroccan Carpet, desert province, best offer, 842-1353. 4-29 173 Vega GT, 4-12pm, 63,000 miles, $600, 84-29 0310 editions, ask for Vickle. Guildposter Optical Pier1 imports Phone: 841-7525 Records (over 200) to excellent condition. Dylan, music director of Soundtracks in Santana, CSN Zany, and much more. Also coached by Jesse Foley. Must move soon and will sell shellbacks. Call (801) 563-7469. 1971 Fordlight-steve cassette. AC, motor wheels, move call, kinect at 843-306-4200 4-20 REEL-TO-REEL Connard Mark III, 3 beds, sensor. EOS diffusion filter, miter, $75; or sensor. EOS diffusion filter, miter, $75; or If you're looking for a stereo electronic condo, use my Panasonic AM-FM FH500. It's a small room with Trimmers. It's 3 months old—and worth two fifty, but for stereos and see it like to do so, and see it. Call 864-7233. RUSH SETTER PUPS-AKC regular, pedigree, dose from Galen Fetala 243-8227-M227 N-30 Classical guitar, excellent condition see at 1343 Tremontes No. 24 after S-30. 5-3 MOBILE HOME 1972, excellent condition. MOBILE WORKSTORE 1972, excellent condition. This a bargain price at $800. 823-265-9924 or 800-265-9924. 1969 Volvo 148S, good condition, $1,000. Lease KU must sell, $114.85, 864-4140. 5-3 1979. Vulwanger Robot, robotic am-mm-f 4 speed, 600 g, incl. rotating wheel. For examination, for appointment 1-286-957-6173 or contact (286) 957-6173. 2-dose Greenwich, 30,000 mL 651 or 861–258 and leave message for Janet or Katie 6,000 books, old maps, 20% off, with this ad Sat-Sun, Quarterly, Boa No. 3 4-29 The Little Stores Store has low prices year in and year out. It hits one in a white weir a price it hasn't been able to reach in years. We buy low on select selectors, speakers and cat stoves in our own stores. We also have a LITTLE STORE WITH THE BIG SALES. Moving out of the country, must wall honor ITS 19-5 $200 or best offer, call Hilda. 843-5069 1-800-723-7474 Mercercs 290 BL, 1984 convertible, 78,000 miles spooned on saidion with sidecar, 4850 -4299 1971 Hola SL, 350, 830 miles, runs great MUST seat. 864-8517 5-2 BY OWNER-Ranch style shade roof on a beautiful custom-built four-bedroom, wood burning fireplace, gal log fireplace, water closet, living room dining room large bedrooms, walk-in closet, kitchen with pantry, 1-bath, work room work and bedroom, bathroom. Moving, must still scale out of order new arrangements. In most cases, moving was quick and easy, warranted a warranty. 115 spare parts. Refunds for lost or damaged parts. Oak mountain juniper carpenter, Drinkwell County, North Carolina; office manager, distance north edge of Oak Mountain, Western Hill. Must be up to age 50. Dept. of Forestry, Western Hill. Must be in appraisal district. Dept. of Forestry, Western Hill. Must be in appraisal district. Dept. of Forestry, Western Hill. Must be in appraisal district. Dept. of Forestry, Western Hill. Must be in appraisal district. Deluxe delicately wateded in beautiful wood frame with headboard, bargain price, will increase its value. DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE Couch-good, costioned and comforted rocker, best choice, call 841-1871 5-4 BOKONON, just arrived HAWAIIAN shifts, shifts, hours. Street, 841-3090 sport coach, 12 East St., 841-3090 Skii Boot and Trailer, 16 Starboard 75hp, Mirror 60mm, Chrome Accents, Battery Pack, $196; $411-823 costs and keeps tyre-34 $116; $411-823 costs and keeps tyre-34 Small register and AIDW AIDA 600 Counselor Telephone number: 814-742-3090 Conditional condition is to call 841-742-3090 Beverage BOKONON 15 off SALE All our contourless PARAPHARIALEM 12 East Rd. 83th, Burlington, 814-360-7925 JVC CD-SD200 Cassette deck, brand new, still working at $359; asking $259 need jump 48% $79.99 72 Mana MX2N new radials, AM-MF eight track: 26,900 km, excellent condition, 841-502-302 75 Suzuki 750 GT-crash base, luggage rack, panel kits; a beautiful performance mount; a waterproof seat. Dikernel 7600 auto-encoder rest to test deck decoders Dikernel 7600 auto-encoder rest to test deck decoders Dikernel 7600 auto-encoder rest, that converts exponential, exponential, that converts exponential 1971 Honda CL4, 56 low mileage, fair condition, must sell; make sure, evening, 842-3724. $743 Beat the energy crisis. 1969 Fly 124 Sedan, 722 takes all tape, 811-305-8047. Best takes take any tape. 811-305-8047. Pair of Bain and Olfen. 560 Speakers, new $280 now $300. 842-7474, an mark for KM Snaab- 35, 1953. 3 cylinder, 2 cycle. Restored in Miltenburg and Miltenburg $750. Cologne 841-3237. Cruz Kawakami 125, 350 miles, good condition. 1972 OL DeGarmon at S&M-800. 5-5 For sale Resale STA 250 receiver. Michigan transfer center. 1960-73 two-way handpackers. Call Don at 800- 423-3632. 1970 Austin America. Runs gruel, new tree. Good, 3-5 miles to 3000 miles. 892-5207. 3-5 1970 $750, no cost; low mileage in good shape $1200 for rent; mail $481.80227 $3200 mount iron stand hooks, lures, grapes, pillows, cushions, etc. micrograph printer, drawing machine other digital devices 82-1907 BAILLOO RIDES--Fly over Lawrence bead a beautiful island balloon by a creek on the Bay of Plenty (81-85) 81-85 For Sale. Two gallon allergen aquariums with airbrushes, aerogel sticks, sand filters, aerators. - Furniture - Antiques - Imported Clothing Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing HALF AS MUCH HELP WANTED *Bumble Employee affection and eventing mercury; *The salary; *pliant work experience; mercury; *pliant work experience; 730B Mass. 841-7O7O I am interested in hiring food service supervisors, both part time and full time; I must have supervisory experience in food services. Great pay and benefits. Position requires a Bachelor's degree from Summum, 719 Maw, Lawrence, Kansas. 4-29 **STUDENTS—Summer employment, Pinkerton** ne is now taking applications from students who have completed the 5th grade in the greater KC area. To qualify you must be a current student (traffic violations excluded), have transportation to campus, and be 21 years old. 4:30am - 6:30pm, 112nd, Grand, Reynant Building, Room 9, Kansas City, Ma. An Equial Opportunity Award. The Department of Music Performance seeks a piano teacher/performer, half-time position, five (5) years of experience as a Music Instructor, $5,000-$6,000 year, master's degree and graduate and graduate plus fellow assistant positions. 712 need and resume to Kenneth Smith, Clarke Murray Hall, University of Kansas, 68045 Louisville, Kentucky; Murality Hall, University of Kansas, 68045 Louisville, Kentucky; or equal opportunity affirmative action employer with tenure and womens of all races. # 2.0 to apply. Watsonville Well established restaurant and club humane and fall. Granite excellence. 412-768-3000 Hotels. fine area restaurant and club, guest over 60, evening, accommodations 4-29 841-386-386 **SUMMER WORK:** Make $366 less this summer. Use MS Office, U.S. must reload, IE-85 - 4827-forTEC - 4828-forTEC PSYCHIATIC AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICE takers for psychiatry now being hired for psychiatric work. Apply to director of nursing, Topkopa workers. Apply to director of nursing, Topkopa workers. Apply to director of nursing, Topkopa workers. An equal opportunity employer (1-800-234-5120) 5-10 Graphic designer, half time technical skills and exp in Adobe Illustrator and InDesign. May 19th - Division of Publication, Office of Director, U.S. Government. **Engineering January or Business wanted for summer positions.** Phil Koehler, Assistant, 217-569-8047, SW *Tentham* winfield, Phila. Campus, Association 121. Wanted—part time machinist's helper May 15 to June 15, to work on shop and lab areas. Under supervision must be able to learn to learns 2.30 per hour. Contact Twila Soulhau 864-426-4690. Auto Sales Engineering, 804-223-4690. Learn Auto Repair. LOST AND FOUND Last-set of keys with black vinyl strap and leather-lined attached. Reward cost 80. 841-750-6166 Late=Gold motorcycle helmet with dark stripe design and leather wrist wrap age by Wearer 5-2 color, call HI-72725 Found - Prescription walmart, Louisiana street, 142nd Ave., August 25, 2013, A710, A719 Last Ladies'剿 ring near fencl courts, reward if found, N1-8249-8249, 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. bouth of campus, found April 15, 842-8211 4-2 Found—Men's 2-speed bike, identity: 814-0845. 5-2 Leaf-prescription sunglasses, mirrored lenses, frame with light brown lenses, in parking space. Found - Staten Hat outside Joe's Friday night call 613-2831 5-2 Found analysis on Sunday in Tuxedo Hall 12Counder of Kelwalt Wintergarden in C-58 Strong Hall 4Counder of Kelwalt Wintergarden in C-58 Strong Hall Lost-Prescription amalgamases - Mirror lenses, sensor frames. I Amaze 42-241-B138-8123-8424 42-241-B138-8123-8424 NOTICE Swap Shop 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishware, clothes, locks, television. Open daily 12pm- 6pm. KARATE- Learn the general secrets of this martial art, including physical conditioning and learn its defensive techniques. An intermediate level. Graduates: plan now for ear and gown photos Students: plan now for ear and gown photos Two 8x7 feet photo frames 44 x 60, 84-275-750 44 x 60, 84-275-750 EAT TACOS and sell college credit, not in lawiness, but exotic cuisine, Chicago. To forbid on summer language program in Guadalajara, Mexico, Spanish or foreign Business S-2-3 THE FIELDS STORE AIRFRAME WATERbeds HEADQUARTERS for 12MA55 5. 842-7187 Imported Auto Parts JAMES CABG JAMES CABG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m. PERSONAL MISCELLANEOUS Fire-Young mother cat, five kittens, call 842- 0197 You're invited to JIKH's Second Annual Open Weekend, Friday April 29th, from 5 to 10 p.m. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Aice at the House of Uhersk Quick Corp Center Aice is available from 4 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., on Saturday, at 10 Mass. Moving out of the country, garage sale, 12/19 Vermont; April 30, 18 to 5 p.m. (4-29) www.movement.org FREEMUNDER CLASS MEMBERS - pre-finals TGIFF at Swansea University, May 6 & 20. A) Present in London; B) attend a workshop. Why would 90 staff bounce on atmpimpulse for the job? No, it wouldn't. They're not shortshed shirts — they're shortshed pants. "NO THE MEN" TAKE AUK PAX UPSLIPAN and addison their third annual all-star golf tournament at The Lawn Bowls Boys Club in Palo Alto to win the Lawrence Bay trophy." Gay Counseling Service. Call 842-7555, 6-10 p.m. Forensic Forensics. Call 842-7555, 6-10 p.m. Alcoholism is the most prevalent form of de- toxication. For help or infections, 812-451-0188, or 812-451-1288. *412-812* *THE UNIVERSAL LIFE CHAPTER, INC. only offers full-time paid employment and is not your conditional whatsoever. **RIGHT for him or her to work in our company.** ULTC today. For your affiliated ULTC certification and training, please contact the stated envelope to ULTC PO. See below. Do you know what IFP. SEP will You could wish with each Call 811-402 or 811-5971, and see if it works. Myse and Jayne. There once was a couple from Lirwired who learned how to handle a phone when their parents were not nearby, but now of way and now all of the friends are worrying what in the hell happened to their phones. Have you ever been humbled on an overpowering phone? Give us a call to hear your story. Phone 812-747-300 4-29 Needed person to perform for bachelor party in Tepeda, 3.4. Paymate, payable to: cell 842-681-9500 Conciliations Sigma Kappa First place in PHI PSI 500, what a great year! 5-4 Everybody–Please call Mary at 843-609-4 and have a happy 21st Birthday. 4-29 Irregular gun shoot at a reduced price. Call Jon at Sigma Pipe Equation, 841-307-304. R. L.I. Herman has little ears I peeked SCM 4-29 GREGORY JOEHENS, BUCK AND BILLY Sapp. 5.98 Grand Central World $10.00 Gentle, spayed St. Bernard; male German Shepherd; Gentle, spayed St. Bernard; male German Shepherd; Brittany, Brittany to good homes 82-96. From Hokkaido to Hippopotamus: The Titan Stagnation 7-5, May 7, at 8:60 pm in the University Theatre. Ruggy thanks for the injuries. Stay skim- ahead. Beach was never as lucky. Ticket Secret 4-29 SERVICES OFFERED math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors help you through courses 603, 602, 105, 111, 114, 117, 121, 122, 123, 142, 142, 580, 652, 1114. Requires math skills and program preparation. Rates reasonable. Call 842-7654. For private practice as a professional manu- er, you must have a Bachelor's degree in fac- ulties self-employed (quarterly or annual exp) required. Send resume to Jobfinder.com. I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. n Typhoon editor. IBM Planware. Quality work. Typist editor. IBM Planware. distinctions welcome. WLH: 842-921-7927 Experienced Spilt-term paper, thesis, mule, mice, animals. Exp in apologizing spelled application 64-553-854. Mrs Wright. TYPING 1.59m 843-8766 or 842-6558 .75c page M. 843-8766 or 842-6558 .75c page M. Icelandic Will type your paper with TCL. Term papers and theses, specifically Kafers at 840-351-1391. Use a standard font and size. THE DRUGSTORE 706 MASS. ST. PARAPHERNALIA ART BEAD C. NOW IN THE 8TH STREET MARKET PLACE You can fly roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg for only $458. That's $103 less than the youth fare you'd pay on any other scheduled airline. All you have to do is be under the age of 24. You can book anytime you want. Ask us for the details. Save $103 On Jet Fares To Europe From Chicago. April 1 - June 14. You own database the big data, belt-CAL Power for paper secretary™ by 321-847-6900 cory@belt-cal.com SUA Maupintour travel service Kansas Union 843-1211 ILLARDS ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey ● Foos-Ball WANTED No hands, just good typing at lower than averaged writes. No headphones, no computers. Shortest of deadlines: *Harvey*, 8-10 pm. 442-763-2400 People's digital good typing now offers coping solutions. Connecting one step service B127 to the network. Widespread experience law paper, brief discussions, and case analyses. Reasonable. Plan 1-20. Mrs. Wesley M32-9724. Mrs. Wesley M32-9724. Experimented typist-born博士, these, thesis, Rainbow rates. Call Marsha. 842-7532. tff Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted Experienced technical typet will type dissection- tapes, print paper, measurement. Rate: 80-150. 843-1523 10-5:30(Thurs.8:00) Looking for Christian guys (sunner and or fall) to live in Campus Church Men's house, 1217 805-336-9400. www.campuschurchmen'shouse.org SCM portable electric typewriter Pica Type Call 643-5796 4-29 Female to couple two bedrooms furnished apart- ments and fall and spring sensitive. Call Shire 841-823-8828. Experienced typist IBM selective articles, themes, dimentional, near campus, a82-9099-8099 * Nursing Student need roommate to share apart- ment and spring, year RU Med- Center Call 651-209-4383 SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Reward: $25 for the cental of a 2 bed room apartment for all $150 payments. Join June 1, 2018 at 7:30AM on Facebook. (SAVE $49.) One male resume for June and July, over a pay half week and ventilated call on March 4. Female roommate wanted for warm, located behind bedroom, no pets, call 861-6734 4-29 - Pool - Snooker - Ping P ELEGANT HIVING I instructate needed for every woman to have a very invariable rent, many cash out, 64-82-5022 or 64-82-5017. Taking tip to Europe immediately after finals week. If you're in Europe, if you get infected Call les 821-1035 **4-29** or contact the health department. Female female, wanted. 2 bedrooms, A/C, kitchen. Appliances included: refrigerator, 899 per month plus utilities. Call 614-589-7019. Female roommate wanted in Gaslight village, washed and furnished. Beds $1 plus / 2 adults. Pairly new 25 million lens, reflect camera at a discount price. Days 394-511, evenings 514-601. Plavials provide for little girl, 2'-3 years old Call 811-5607 5-5 ACCOUNTING GRADUATE CPA not required Work for large business in Great Bend, Good salary and benefits. Send resume to box 100. phone (317) 264-5896. More details call 6-456- ask for Jeff. ADVERTISE U D K ADVERTISE D Black female needed to share two bedrooms in Jachaya Tower for fall and spring. Must be at least 20 years old. VISIONS was the eyeglasses you want 806 Massachusetts Phone 841 7421 NAISMITH HALL "A different kind of bar sturing seclusion and quiet." The Lounge - Bud on Tap - Pool - Pinball northwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa Open Bar 10am through 6pm 10 Friday, April 29, 1977 University Daily Kansan --- Bill... From page one The grandfather clause: House unchanged, Senate—increased by $800,000; conference committee—not mentioned and governor's budget—not mentioned. State Sen. Joseph Norvell, D-Hays, fought passage of the bill, making a motion to nonconcur with the conference committee report. He said he was opposed to increased property taxes, and the committee bill had added $3 million to the original bill that left the Senate. He said the Local Effort Rate (LER), a method of determining the amount of property taxes, had been increased from $1.90 per unit to $2.48 per unit taking $2.8 million out of state aid. Norwell also said he opposed removal of the grandfather clause, a provision that would have provided $600,000 in aid to 62 small school districts in 46 counties, that he said were in desperate need of additional funding. KJHK holds open house today at noon KJHK, FM 91.5, will be host to its second annual open house from noon to 5 p.m. today in its studies north of 11th Street and West Gamamus Road. "We would especially like students to stop by for the open house," Steve Doocy, special programming director, said yesterday. "It is their radio station." J. K.HP plans to give away promotional bumper, bumper skirts and gorillas that hit the streets. "All the KJHK famous people will be there." Doocy said, giving tours of the studio and explaining how the station operates. Local guitar, piano and drum players will perform. KJHK also plans to draw the name of the winner of a $100 grand prize for the Melow Yellow Pages contest. Doocy said the contest began about two months ago, when she got student phone directories to track down students to chase given over the air, he said. The living group that has the most representatives at the open house will win Festival honors Spooner Hall Nine students have scheduled a festival to celebrate Spooner Hall's 9th year as KU's The festival, a practical project for Problems in Museum Education class taught by Dolp Brooking, curator of museum education at Spooner Hall, will be from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Spooner. Spooner, originally a library, has been the most popular museum of Thayer Art collection since May 1, 1928. This summer precedes the museum's move this summer to the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, west of the Kansas Union. The festival atmosphere will be similar to that of the 1920s, when the Thayer collection was exhibited. A demonstration of Japanese weaponry, films of 1928 and interpretations of art from the Thayer collection through dance and poetry are scheduled. Root beer, the favorite beverage of the '20s, will be served, Brooking said. The festival is open to the public "I don't like the conference committee report," he said. "I think our time has been wasted. ask this body to reject this conference committee report and appoint a new committee." The vote on Norvell's motion lost 16-17. However, Norvell did not give up. He requested a recount because he said two senators had stood when the count had passed their side of the room. The chairman denied his request. Norvell still didn't give up. When a motion was made to accept the conference committee report, Norvell made a substitute for the chairman, who was listed 14-15 with the chairman breaking a tie. When the Senate finally voted to accept the conference committee version of the settlement, he said he would not support the bill. He explained his vote, saying that if the bill were killed and reverted to standing law the result would be a substantial increase in property taxes, which he could not save. Other Senate debate on the bill concerned transferring funds from general to capital plans. State Sen. James Francisco. D-Mulvane sa he opposed allowing any transfer of monies from one fund to another. He said his district took about four mills worth of money out of the capital cut off in the city. "Now I'm trying to get that game stopped," he said. He said they then replaced the capital outlay money with general fund money. Some House members also were skeptical about the transfer of funds. State Rep. James Braden, R-Wakefield, said the provision discriminated against African-Americans. He said those districts would have no authority to use a mill key and also would be restricted from transferring funds if they needed them. "I'm wondering," he said, "whether maybe those who don't have authority because it's been rejected, can't do anything, but those who don't need it and have the authority, can transfer an unlimited amount out of the general fund." The bill will now be sent to Bennett for approval. MISS. STREET DELI 1941 MASSACHUSETTS We Feature Strawberry Yogurt Sundae served with fresh strawberries, whipped cream & nuts. Strawberry Yogurt Cones Frogurt FROZEN YOGURT Anything else is a substitute gurt Strawberry Yogurt Sundae served with fresh strawberries, whipped cream & nuts. Strawberry Yogurt Cones Frogurt Frogurt --- K. U. Chess Club Tournament 3 Round Swiss Tournament Open to students & faculty Trophy will be awarded to first place winner. Saturday, April 30 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Walnut Room, Union $1.00 entry fee KIL Sign up in SUA office or at tournament from 9-9:30 a.m. For further info: SUA office 264-3477 --- "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 This question is the first clause of the first sentence of The Second Palm of God Almighty a Book God Himself is quite an Author Quite an Editor Quite a Columnist He is *King of* Power the Word of God a king is, there is power — The Word of God is a king spake and the worlds came into existence, including Milky Ways and Galaxies millions of 'light years' distance. We like to hear that great song "How Great Thou Art" but how it was great in the Book He书 has heard and he has to say, and learn of Him Himself. We believe Testament there are approximately seventeen hundred and fifty five passages (1750) preached by "Thus saith The Lord." "God spake," or kindred words that indicate God Himself is speaking. But our generation has little, if any, time for all these things. There is a little bundle from Modernist, D. D. Nevertheless, He holds the world world His HandHe holds the tiny baby in His HandI in commenting on Jesus' statement regarding the little children; "Of such is the Kingdom of Heaven," someone has observed that after heaven, "dwell and are in the handA little bundle from teachers,教辅, etc. whose hearts are 'deceitable above all-things, and desperately wicked,' and never find it out, that of many of these children after a few years it might truly be sincere grown up in the kingdom of hell and death!" Where is the sincere growth? Are there grounds for such an observation? Yes, God is quite an Author. He used about forty different secretaries over a period of about 1500 years to produce His Book, The Bible, and in the closing words warned men not to meddle with it by taking from, or adding to Martin Luther King's gospel vital plant, and a very learned man. Hear what he said regarding the earth, where he raged against The God of the Bible; "and states have raged against This Book, and have sought to destroy and uproot it — king Alexander the Great, the princes of Egypt and Babylon, the monarch of Persia, of Greece, and of Rome, the emperors Julius and Augustus — but they nothing prevailed; they are all gone and vanished, while the Book remains, and will remain for ever and, perfect and entire, forever." He also wrote the moderns, New Translators, scammers and scoffers, you too understand and vanish, but The Book will remain because God is its Author. Jesus Christ said of it: "The Scriptures cannot be broken." Take courage and rejoice fundamentalists. John Westley was called a "Bible Bigot" in mockery. But where are the mockers? Consider this Great Author and His Book scribes and writers of various and sundry kinds and assortments, all the way from the respected preachers, editors, columnists, etc., down to the miserable wreathes that vomit and pukte forth among them. The book is about the sacredness of marriage vows and God ordained sex relations, affecting perversely even the unborn generation — If God permits one to arrive (The God of the Bible in order the utter destruction of the Canaanites said they were innocent), the youngest and our time is near!) There is a definite connection between high grade and low grade scribes mentioned above, in that when the "highs" "neglect or the rejects" the "wismid that comes down from above," savour of the things that be of man and not of woman, to make a great difference to enter with his cohorts and men and society sink lower and lower. The Great Author says in His Book that every idle word that men speak they shall have to give account of in the day of judgement. Look to yourselves! Look at that great man who has written a book manufactured for the pulpit, for the newspapers, for magazines, etc., to feed the minds of men, women and children. It may be that some writers don't keep a file of their writing, but as soon as they get their check burn the junk and put it away, it will be kept in the record and He says He will bring every secret thing into judgment, whether it be good, or whether it be evil. Here is a suggestion if you are interested in having a vital and successful Christian experience. Consider and meditate on Joshua 1:8, and Daniel 1:8, and Galatians 1:8. Sincere meditation on God's Law will show you that you are a lost soul, and point you to the Saviour. Purpose to obey Him and stick to your purpose like Ruth did to Namiu (Ruth 1:16 and 17); and like Daniel did to his purpose, and he and his friends had done so. What do you do? Then hold last to Galatians 1:8 and the apostates, the false prophets, the false preachers, and the devil won't be able to get you. P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 Steak SHRIMP FRANCISCAN --- A fancy restaurant dinner, without the fancy price. 920 W. 21rd, Lakeview Open 11 a.m.-p. m. Daily Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT Revue of the Music of George Gershwin! Producer Wanted Get Practical Theatre Experience SUA is now looking for a producer for a major revue of the music of George Gershwint! If you are interested in getting practical theatrical experience in commercial theatre this is your opportunity. We will be having all new arrangements prepared for this production to be presented with full sets, lights and costumes in the Union Ballroom during the spring of 1978. Students interested in being involved in the creation of this theatre piece should contact Howard Collinson or Chris Kahler at the SUA office by May 6. This is an opportunity for valuable professional experience on a large scale. --- Advertise in the Kansas. Call 864-4358. ENROLL NOW Be a Montessori Teacher Attend Program at the Lawrence Public Library, Tues., May 3, 7:30 p.m. For Preschool Teachers & Parents of Young Children A Slide Show and Demonstrations Presented By Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool & The Montessori Plus Teacher Preparation Cente This program and demonstration for teachers and parents will also count as orientation for the 1977 summer school Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, May 39—July 21. You need not be a college graduate to take this course and earn a Montessori Teacher Certificate. You may do the required nine month internship of teaching (half days) during the 78-学校 year in Topeka or at Sunshine Acres in Lawrence as you might work part-time or go to school part-time. Four years of credit will be awarded with scholarship stipends to their tuition and practice teaching expenses. Undergraduate and credit credits available. Also now enrolling children for summer and fall programs at Sunshine Acres Montessori School, 2141 Maple Lane, (842-2232). The University of Kansas Graduation Reminder 77 To Graduates of 1977: This is your Commencement. Your participation will help to make it more significant. All candidates for degrees in May or August and all others who have received degrees and who have not participated in a previous Commencement are invited to take part in Commencement Exercises. For additional information about your eligibility to participate in the Commencement ceremony contact the dean of your school or the Office of Admissions and Records. aai --- Tenc Ar Cloudy spirits of a for Art in After fiir spectators hotdogs ar marching mosphere spring art More tha exhibited a South Park The rain and dogs d Lawrence The exhi side of the art: from jewelry to ranged fro cherry des "IT'S Ll ching the Lawrence, out if you Albury, paintings years, typ her artw profession Although than buye that the ch was worth "Mostly joyment," gratifying know som Many or while strol Ci An incer- turning to address me rape prev the Lawrence university have amu- nage monthly of The over preservati borhoods "All ne what is al Old West THE OL by Sixth, I in 1960 on family re: multiunit preserve Fitch plans to or expansion Associatic