Handouts protest distribution policy
By CAROLINE TROWBRIDGE
Staff Reporter
Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies, stood in the rotunda of Strong Hall at 1 p.m. yesterday and opened out 100 sheets of paper to passa-
It violated KU's literature distribution policy and Miller knew it.
Miller and nine other persons violated the same policy Nov. 5, when they, in two separate groups, distributed two different leaflets in protest of the selection of a Higher Education Week banquet speaker.
In the two instances, Miller violated the policy that prohibits literature distribution inside University buildings.
"This time," Miller said yesterday, "I got a little more frontal at it, but I doubt that the administration will do anything about it."
HE SAID HE thought he could be taken before the University Judiciary for violating the policy.
However, David Amberl, vice-chairman for student affairs, whose office released the policy in October, said he had received a grant from the University would penalize Miller.
"In terms of taking action," Ambler said, "I would, from what I know of the incident, save no.
"Good will and voluntary cooperation in matters such as this have usually been the University policy."
The literature Miller was handing out condemned the University's policy and urged people reading it to let Chancellor Eliot know they disagreed with the policy.
"Join me," Miller wrote, "in saying no to this abuse of power by Strong Hall. Ask why it is that KU now officially opposes freedom of expression. Do it NOW, while we have a few strokes of constitutional freedom left."
MILLER ALSO suggested that people fill out a coupon at the bottom of the page and give it to Dykes.
One woman, Miller said, gave her coupon to Dykes. The coupon stated, "I am outraged by KU's adoption of a policy
of censorship and restriction of literature, and demand that it be revoked immediately."
Dykes said he read the coupon and suggested the woman talk to Ambler because he had not read the distribution policy.
"I don't know what the policy specifies," Dykes said. "I really don't know much about it."
Miller said that although administrators probably would not react to what he had done, he would continue to attempt to get the policy changed.
"I will wait and see," he said, "and if nothing happens, I'll do something else. I've had a lot of good reactions from people I've talked to.
"ONE OF THE relatively high-level administrators in Strong Hall congratulated me and told me he thought I was doing OK."
Miller said he would consult with people before he decided what to do next.
Ambler said he did not think that Miller was going through the correct channels to get the policy changed.
"There are appropriate ways to look at it if there are objections to parts of the policy," Aambler said. "Those parts can be reviewed."
"The University Events Committee would be an appropriate forum, a primary forum that anyone could use."
"I think a policy like this is meant to be used as a general guideline."
Miller said he thought the policy was in direct violation of one of the functions of a university; to encourage the flow of ideas in print and speech.
"DISTRIBUT inside is flatly forbidden," he said. "A blanket札则 that is ridiculous. There are no exceptions made."
Miller said he did not understand how the distribution of materials in the rotunda of Strong Hall could disrupt any classes.
He said if the policy were interpreted strictly, he could be charged for violating it if he passed a syllabus in one of his classes.
"This is clearly a violation of rights," Miller said.
1966 surcharge not reviewed
An agreement that instituted a student ticket surcharge for KU football games will be carried through at least until a $1 million loan for Memorial Stadium renovation is paid by the university. A residence assistant last night at an Athletic Seating Board meeting.
By BARB KOENIG
Staff Renarter
Bonds for a 1968 expansion of the east-side student section were to expire in 1980, when the Kansas University Athletic Corporation Advisory Board was to review the need to continue the surcharge.
However, Harper said that some time last year, before the terms of the recent stadium renovation were finalized, it was decided that the surcharge would not be eliminated. Instead, it will be carried through to help pay back the new cost.
HARPER SAID that $1 from football season tickets and $4 from basketball season tickets were surcharged in 1960 to pay for the east stadium loan and now would go to pay off this year's football tickets to help pay for the remaining $2.
"We didn't know they would be using any part of the east-stadium bonds for this," Harper said.
No members of the athletic administration were present at the meeting.
At a KUAC advisory board meeting last month, former
chairman J. Hammond McNish said that the continuation of the surcharge was a "myth."
But according to minutes from a KUAC board meeting on Feb. 26, 1986, the All-Student Council asked the Athletic Board to increase in student charges for football and that tickets is to help finance the student addition to the stadium and that once the addition has been paid for the matter of more seats it will be open for review. The motion "received" and carried.
**IN A letter to Harper from Michael J. Grady, a student member of the board in 1966, Grady said that the board would not automatically terminate the surcharge "on the basis of the actual cost to pay." Costs might justify definite extension of the surcharge."
Grada said that a compromise was struck in the form of a resolution to review the need for a coronavirus later 1980.
Harper said, "We know that they were automatically combining the increase from the 1968 bonds into corporation assets. Nowhere did they decrease corporation assets because of the expiration of the bonds in 1980."
"The corporation has refused to admit that any such agreement exists. They're trying to deny it, they're saying
*WE DO know that the student council passed a resolution making the cause for review clear and nowhere
in the files did I find that the chancellor at that time rejected the resolution. I also did not find that he accepted
"I think it is worth you to review the situation and at the same time I think they should be admonished for trying to do so."
Harper also said that business students were auditing all Senate bond commitments for all buildings on campus to determine exactly what the Senate had committed in student money so far.
Concerns about student seating at basketball games also were discussed at yesterday's meeting. According to Laura Smith, chairman of the athletic Seating Board, basketball tickets were sold for the 1975-76 basketball season.
HOWEVER, ticket sales this year were cut off at 7,200 tickets. Prompted by several calls from students complaining about a student ticket sell-out, the seating board began to look into the matter.
Now members of the board are wondering what has happened to the additional 160 tickets which they, say, they bought.
Smith said, "I think we should be able to come up with 160 extra seats because that is what they use in our '75."
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
KANSAN
Members of the board hope to meet today with Bob Marcum, his athletic director, to discuss the issue.
Vol.89,No.66
Friday, December 1, 1978
Ruling won't stop plans for audit
By TIM SHEEHY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - an adverse ruling by Attorney General Curl Schneider will not bark plans to improve the state's audit state colleges to determine whether community-college credit exams are being used.
In an opinion prepared by John Martin, assistant attorney general, the state said audit researchers were barred from viewing academic records, such as transcripts, because their access would violate the Buckley Amendment.
The Buckley Amendment guarantees the confidentiality of student records.
An audit was proposed because of reports that some four-year colleges and universities would accept credit hours from a student. The university not apply them toward a student's degree.
The state funds community colleges on the basis of credit hours. The auditors have said they think non-transferable credits are a waste of state money.
The opinion also said that because the Buckley amendment was a federal law, it
would be up to federal authorities to decide the fate of the orphaned audit.
Richard Brown, a post audit official, said he was expecting a ruling from the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act office in Washington either today or early next week.
Brown said that, although the opinion from Schneider had not been requested, it was welcome because it clarified that he did not believe fall under federal, not state, jurisdiction.
"The attorney general has made it perfectly clear that, under state law, there is
nothing to stop audits, unless prohibited by federal law." Brown said.
Brown said he expected the federal government's ruling on the proposed audit to be clear.
"Whatever the federal people say goes," Brown said. "The Buckley Amendment was not made to exclude authorized auditors or those who "rather, someone coming off the street."
Brown also said that if the federal government ruled against the state auditors, he would ask the Post Audit Committee to appeal to a federal court.
A woman is seated at a desk, holding a pencil and pointing to a document on the table. In the background, a large audience of people is seated in rows, attentively listening to the speaker. The room appears to be a conference hall or auditorium.
Socialist says nation requires labor party
By BILL RIGGINS
Socialist candidate
self. "I can't think of a better thing for a young person to do today than become involved in the social movement," she said in her speech in the Kansas Union last night.
Linda Jeenness, 1972 presidential candidate for the Socialist Workers Party, told about 45 persons that socialism was inevitable in the United States but it wouldn't happen by it.
Staff Reporter
Jennesse, who ran for the presidency as a candidate of the Socialist Workers Party, told about 45 people in the Jayhawk Room of the US embassy in Jerusalem up with inflation and unemployment and were willing to listen to the alternatives and solutions proposed by the Socialist Workers
Linda Jenness, who ran for the U.S. presidency in 1972 as a socialist, said last night that the victory of socialism in the United States was inevitable.
"The revolution isn't going to happen all by itself," she said. "It needs organization and training."
Jennese said the formation of a labor party in the United States would be the first to do so.
"WE'RE THE only major capitalist country that doesn't have a labor party," she said. "The masses of America have been trapped into a two-party system and as long as we're trapped in that system we can't move forward."
"The U.S. government is the most violent government the world has ever known, and it's going to be violent when the people want to change that government," she said.
"The more people that participate, the less violent it will be and the quicker it will happen. And when American capitalism falls, so fails world capitalism."
Jenness said the Socialist Workers Party had a solution that would make inflation and unemployment go away.
SHE SAID the program called for the reduction of the present work week to 30
hours. But workers would continue to be paid the wages they had received for a 40-
SHE ALSO called for a "cram public in" construction schools, homes and other building facilities.
"We put a $120 price tag on this program," she said. "That’s the price we buy."
Jenness said that diverting the defense budget to a public works program would not put the United States in danger of invasion from a foreign power.
Jenness she didn't think the defense budget was used for defense but for "propping up vicious dictatorships around the world,"
JENNESS ALSO denied charges made by members of the audience that socialist democracy in the United States would result in a loss of bureaucracy for socialistic bureaucracy.
SHE SAID that bureaucracy was not inevitable, and that it arose from specific circumstances.
"The only guarantee of democracy is mass participation." Jenness said.
Jennesse also stressed that the Socialist Workers Party was opposed to the socialist governments of the Soviet Union and the United States, she said should be "booted out on their ear."
She said those governments were totalitarian and bureaucratic and did not represent the "socialist democracy" that the Socialist Workers Party was fighting
Jenness' speech was sponsored by the KU Young Social Alliance,
Red Lion's bite worth carefully-guarded roar
By EVIE LAZZARINO
Staff Reporter
One of Lawrence's most popular, most talked about restaurants isn't listed in the phone book, doesn't have a sign and is carefully guarded from strangers by its owner.
The Red Lion, 609 Vermont St. is a sort of underground retreat known for its hearty, inexpensive food and service.
The food is cheap *a* 22 special, such as German roast beef with mashed potatoes and gravy and all of the toppings. The meat is not anyone full. And the sandwich section, including mounds of roast beef on bread for a thin 90 cents, is good.
Eating at the Red Lion is a ritual. Once inside the small, pine-paneled dining, a customer must order rapidly from the cafeteria line when Bill asks, "Would you be demeaning?"
When customers' hesitation exposes them as strangers, Bill usually throws them out.
Even though he makes threats, yells and forgets
the normal restaurant guidelines, customers love it and keep coming back for more.
Friends who are Red Lion regulars told me it would be impossible to talk to Bill.
"YOU'LL GET kicked out—or worse," one of them said.
"Now, he'll say, 'How 'bout ya darlin', and just ask for a name. Friend said, 'Don't take long to answer,' he says, looking eagerly at my wife.
But he finally agreed to take me there for lunch. On the way to the Red Lion, I was briefed on how to stay there.
I was a little insulted that I would have to practice to order a simple meal. However, when we stepped inside and ill, a Burl Ives look alike in a red apron and red, cook's beret, asked, "How 'bout ya', darlin'?" I answered, "a special," relieved that I didn't embarrass myself and my friends.
We finished our special—chicken and noddles in a rich sauce—and made our way to the front door. We served it on platter.
And, true to the ritual, he shouted, "Thank ya",
dear. Thank ya "darlin".
It hadn't been eventful at all. I wondered what the larger than life legends were about.
Several regulars, all KU students, told me However, they flatly refused to be identified.
"LISTEN, I always eat there," one of them said.
"I print my name I could get another apple."
"I saw him make an old lady leave once because she took too long to order."
"Two little girls came in once by mistake, and they got a yelling they never forget."
"Well, let's just say that Bill takes care of his regulations."
I kept going back to the Lion, as regulars call it, to absorb the atmosphere and prepare myself for my journey.
The banter began to the sound the same
"Try that peach cobber, dear," Bill said to a customer. "It'll blow the roof off your mouth."
"Need more Coke, darlin'—or are you drinking water?"
Refills of drinks are free at the Lion.
Several people told me that the framed warnings Bill received for yelling at strangers in the Lion are gone now. Also gone is the picture of Bill smiling, exposing his diamond capped teeth.
I talked to some Lawrence businessmen about the Red Lion.
THEERE IS, however, a proclamation naming Bill "Mister Nicev."
"Those lunches were always incredible, and part of the fun was being with Bill." Hedges said.
Charles Hedges, of Hedges Real Estate, said heite at Bill's years ago, when it was called the Beeefeeper, and was next to what is now the Lawrence Opera House.
He said he once saw Bill drop mashed potatoes on a man's head.
"Someone came in and asked for the special with no gravy. Well, Bill put gravy on all his spectacles, and I had to just keep it there."
could just leave,” Hedges said. “The man started getting angry, and before you knew it, Bill just flung the mashed potatoes over the counter and onto the man.
"But, if you're nice to Bill, he'll bend over you and give you some extra gravity or a larger piece of meat."
Glenn West, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said he hadn't eaten there often, but
"I think the proprietor is rather notorious. If you like that environment of a sense of杰杰, you should take his advice."
THE BEST insight about Bill came from a local restraurateur who said he has known Bill for about 15 years.
"Bill's pranks started out to keep business down, but 'it's turning out making people want to eat there. The joking and yelling is always at somebody else's face," he said. "I will tell you this, he one's great cook."
See RED LION back page
2
Friday, December 1, 1978
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Carter vows to curb inflation
WASHINGTON—President Obama, asserting that his anti-inflation program "is exactly what the American people want," vowed yesterday that he was ready to raise taxes on wealthy Americans.
Carter said he would maintain the fight against inflation even if it meant risking his losing the presidency after one term.
Of the nation's economic woes, Carter said, he did not anticipate a recession or a depression next year. A number of prominent economists have predicted a recession in 1979 as a result of Carter's wage and price guidelines, which would generally limit wage and benefit increases to 10 percent and price increases to 20 percent.
Carter also commented about the deaths of more than 900 members of the People's Temple Cult in Jomeynetown, Guyana. He said he did not think the cult was responsible for the deaths.
was typical in any way of trying to override because of the Jonetown tragedy by injecting government into trying to control people's religious beliefs.
He said that "temporary setbacks" experienced in the Egyptian-farah negotiations were no more serious than the Camp evacuation framework for future accords.
Turning to the Middle East, Carter spoke more deliberately than at any other point during the 30-minute session with reporters.
Price ceilings to lift gas cost
WASHINGTON - New federal price ceilings on natural gas, taking effect today, are expected to lower the average household's gas bills by about $1 per month.
The higher price ceiling are included in legislation which was approved by Congress after an 18-month battle and which is intended to provide added incentive for businesses.
Cost increases in natural gas are expected to be uneven around the country, partly because of varying demand, related to weather. The increases will be
relatively gradually, but bills could go up as much as 42 percent by 1985, however, when federal regulation of the price of newly discovered gas will be removed
Meanwhile, decisions to be made in the next few months will probably result in further increases in the cost of gasoline, heating oil and another petroleum
How much costs increase will depend largely on the price increases ordered by the forsale oil-producers' cartel, OPEC, which will meet in December.
Tab on KSU office is $99,648
TOPEKA - The taxpayers of Kansas have invested $90,648 in the remodeling of the office suite occupied by Kansas State University President Dane Acker
The remodeling expense is almost $30,000 more than Acker estimated in an interview last week. However, the cost figure is very close to the $100,000 price estimate by Sen. John Crofoot, R-Cedar Point, who stirred the original fuss about the project.
The final tab was compiled by Daniel D. Beaty, K-State vice president for business affairs, and was included in a letter written by Beaty to James R. Cobbler, director of the State Division of Accounts and Reports. A copy of the letter was sent to Sen. Crofoot.
Beatty put the cost of materials for the remodeling at $38,092, with about $6,000 that going for native Kansas walnut wood, which matches the walnut finish of the staircase.
At least 57 arrested in raids
At least 57 arrests have resulted from drug raids that began Wednesday night and ran through most of the day yesterday in Topkapi and Kansas City, Mo. (AP)
Toppea police, assisted by two undercover agents, arrested 21 persons and said they had identified two gas stations as possible centers of drug activity.
Kansas City police reported 36 arrests by mid-afternoon yesterday. Five guns were seized but no injuries were reported.
Jerru Rau denies complicity
WASHINGTON-Jerry Ray, the brother of James Earl Ray, denied yesterday that he had named an alleged agent in the assassination of Martin Luther Rafter.
The House Assassinations Committee had said it appeared likely that Raoul was either Jerry Ray or John Ray, another brother of James Earl Hays, who is accused of killing a police officer.
The committee, hearing the conclusion of its two-year investigation, confronted Jerry Ray with indications that he met and talked several times with brother James in the months immediately preceding the April 4, 1968, assassination in Memphis. Tenn.
James Earl Ray pleaded guilty to the murder charge but then recanted his confession, saying he was drawn into the assassination plan by a man he described as Raoul. He described a series of contacts with Raoul in the months before he was killed. His son, Jared, called his travels from Los Angeles, to New Orleans, to Montreal and to Mexico.
November food price rise low
The dollars consumers spend at supermarkets were stretched a little further last month, but an Associated Press monthly marketbasket survey indicated the November boost in grocery prices was the smallest monthly increase so far this year.
The latest survey, in which prices were compared at one supermarket in all 13 cities, indicated that the marketbasket bill increased at the checklist store in six cities last month, up an average of 2.5 percent. The bill decreased in six cities, down an average of 2 percent, and was unchanged in one city. On an overall basis, the marketbasket bill at the checklist store was two-tenths of a percent higher at the start of December than it was a month earlier.
Oxford cheers, jeers Nixon
OXFORD, England—Richard M. Nixon, showered with jeers and applause, protesters' eggs and British courtesy, told a student group in this historic university town yesterday that he has retreated from politics, but, "I'm not going to keen my mouth shut."
The former president spoke to an audience of 800 in the hall of the prestigious Oxford Union debating society. During a 9-minute question-and-answer session, Nixon was asked how he felt about being forced from office by the Watergate scandal.
"I screwed up." Nixon said. "I paid the price."
As he left, protesters waving placards grappled with 80 police officers who linked arm-in-arm in a vain effort to keep them from pounding on Nixon's black limousine. The placards read "Why Shame Us Here?" and "Nixon, Crawl Back Into Your Hole."
One U.S. Secret Service man awing his fists at the protesters as he lunged from side to side of the road and onto the roof of Nixon's car to guide it through the street.
Police said 10 protesters were arrested.
Cult members released soon
GEORGETOWN, Guyana—Most of the Peoples Temple cult members who have been cleared by an investigation of more than 900 deaths at the fated temple in South Carolina have been arrested.
Cecil A. Roberts, deputy crime chief, indicated some of the remaining 72 American survivors in Guyana could be released late this weekend. He said the eight survivors who already have returned to the United States were allowed to go because of their ages. The youngest was 61.
Several of the survivors remaining in Georgetown, many of whom lost relatives in the mass deaths, have complained that the U.S. embassy is not helpful.
One cult member has been charged with murder in the deaths of Rep. Leo J. Ryan, D-Callif, three newsmen and a disaffected cultist who were ambushed as they attempted to leave the agrarian commune Nov. 18. Another has been charged in the killings of four cultists in Georgetown.
Weather...
The high today will be in the mid 40s, but temperatures will dip down to the
20s tonight with a 30 percent chance of snow tonight. Tomorrow will be
the coldest day of the year since November 15.
Board finds 4 guilty in '72 kickback case
TOPEKA (UUP)—A state licensing board yesterday found four former defendants in the state architectural contract kickback case guilty of professional misconduct.
The Kansas Board of Technical Professions issued rulings against Kansas City engineer Wint Talaferro of the Taliaferro & Browne engineering firm, and architects Edwin Koffr of Overland Park, Robert Jarvis of Kansas City, and Robert Sledge of Prudenceville, all officers of the Marshall & Brown Inc. architectural firm.
THE FOUR were among 26 defendants originally accused of bribery conspiracy in the alleged trade of a $30,000 contribution to former Gov. Robert Docking's 1972 reelection campaign for a $500,000 design contract for expansion of the Nationalasia Medical Center. Criminal charges was dropped against all four several years ago.
The Board of Technical Professions determined that the four had lesser involvement in the alleged conspiracy than did other defendants found guilty of misconduct earlier and gave them correspondingly lighter sentences.
Board members delayed action on a fifth case, that of engineer William Burgess, former head of the engineering firm Burress. Latimer & Miller.
THE BOARD voted to reprimand Taliafero and place him on six months' probation. The panel voted merely to reorward Korff, Jarvis and Sledd.
The panel determined that Burgess' attorney, Robert Hight of Topeka, had failed to submit his proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Action on the case was delayed until January to give Hecht time to submit his proposals.
DURING HS HBISS, Taliafero had testified he was ignorant of any unscrupulous deal that might have been made by the contractor completing combine to obtain the design contract.
TESTIMONY IN the hearing for Korff, Jarvis and Sledd indicated the three minor company officials had little more than peripheral involvement in the alleged bribery conspiracy. At the direction of their superiors, all three chipped in for the contributions—Korff and Jarvis $1,000 each, Sledd $600.
JARVIS AND Sledd also testified that, under orders from their superiors, they had delivered portions of the contribution to the Johnson County apartment of then-state Architect Kenneth McLain, where Docking aide Richard Mallow waited.
In July, the board suspended another former defendant in the kickback case, Charles Campbell, who was president of a state insurance company charges against Campbell had been dismissed, the board suspended his engineer's license for a year and placed him on probation for an additional year. Campung was forced to decision to Johnson County District Court.
MCLAIN AND Frank Fisher, former Marshall & Brown board chairman, also have been suspended for periods of six years. Mr. Fisher was indicted dico-conspirators in the original criminal case, testified for the state both in the criminal case and before the Board of Patrons.
Kansas City architect Norbert Sidowicz, the only man found guilty of the attack in September. The board revoked his license. Sidowicz, who currently is imprisoned at Kansas State Penitentiary, had been asked by asking to retake his architect's tests.
Hillel Presents
Alfred Hitchcock's
Movie
"Rebecca"
Friday, Dec. 1
9:30 pm
Dyche Auditorium
Saturday, Dec. 2
$1.00 Members
7:00 & 9:30 pm
$1.50 Non-Members
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
It is not the object of this column to satisfy profane demands, but to show how God, who good and faithful servants of God has differed and disrupted down through the ages. Turning aside to discuss the world of the past, we find that the world plunged into what history calls the Dark Ages. There are Celestial things and Truths concerning the history of the Earth. There are Martyrs. "The secret things belong unto the Lord our God. But these which are revealed belong unto us and our children forever, that we may do all the words of this Law." Deut. 26:37.
The object of these articles is to bring you face to face with the question whether or not you are seeking to live in the light of revealed Truth and "do all the words of this Law." Are you obeying God's Ten Commandments, or striving to with the help of God? Have you the purpose or desire to do so? Have you the opportunity to ask for God's Law and accept Jesus Christ as your sublute for obedience and your atonement for disobedience, then God is not your Saviour but your enemy!
In the Old Covenant God's Law was written on two tables of stone and delivered to man by Moses in the New Testament.
heart by the Holy Spirit, and Jesus Christ is the Mediator,
obeyed and seated to honor and please God.
It is the testimony of this column and writer that there be many who call themselves Christian, claiming great spiritual merit. The one who can prove his merit by heatsite to run rough shod over some of the Ten Commandments—which reveal the very character of the men whom he has to defend—the lord Jesus Christ, saying He kept the Law for them and paid their penalty for sin, and made them free with the liberty to do as they please My answer to looks with a such faith as I have received from God. 53, 70 and 115; "Horr hath taken hold upon me because of the wicked that forsake Thy Law." There their is as fat as I can believe, and it is noteworthy that elders; for I will keep the commandments of my God. God grant that my heart in its attitude towards God's Ten Commandments might be in perfect accord with every man who lives.
Near the very close of the Bible we read: "BLESSED ARE THEY THAT DO HIS COMMANDMENTS, THEY THAT MAY HAVE A RIGHT TO THE TREE OF LIFE, AND MAY ENTER THE GATES INTO THE CITY," —Revelation 22-14.
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Friday, December 1. 1978
3
Towers rent agreement contested
By PHILIP GARCIA
Staff Reporter
Ibrahim Edalaty has a bill totaling more than $1,300 for three months rent for an apartment in New York.
According to the management of Jayhawk Towers, 1603 W. 15th St., Edalay, Iranian freshman, signed a lease for an apartment until May 19, 1979. He says
Eataly filed a formal complaint against
Jaywahke and the Lawrence
Affairs Association.
John Langstrom, legal counselor for Lawrence Property Management, which manages Jayhawk Towers, said that the attorney told them that Edalaty sipped were stated clearly.
Garnett Wrigley, director of the association, said she referred the complaint yesterday to the Kansas attorney general's office.
In his complaint, Edalaty stated that the difference between an "Application for Rental Agreement" and the "Jayhawk Towers Rental Agreement," both of which
"IT WAS not made clear to me, when signing the application for rental agreement for summer and fall, the difference between a rental agreement and a lease (Jayawker Towers Rental Agreement)." Edalaty stated in his complaint.
are legally binding, were not fully explained.
Wrigley said the attorney general's office would be asked to confirm the legality of its request.
"To insure that I was going to stay, I was told I better sign rent agreements," he said.
Edalaty said he had first moved into Jawahar Towers in January.
Two applications for rental agreement were signed on May 26 by Edalay, one for the summer and the second for the fall and next spring.
He said he was later called in to sign the hawker Tower Rental agreement for the same property.
"FIRST, I signed two rental agreements, and then about two days later they asked me to complete the lease."
Edualty he then sent him a letter to the management on Aug. 5 stating that he would be transferred to the University.
The summer lease ran until Aug. 19.
On Aug. 7 the management sent a letter to Eldalay, who was then in California, informing him that he would be liable for the apartment before Aug. 10.
On Aug. 15, a second letter was sent saying that if he had not moved out of Jayhawai Towers by Aug. 19, he would be liable for rent until Mav 1797.
"I got back from California on Aug. 22, so there was no way I could have moved out by the 19th." Edalay said. "This could wreck my life. Or for my future. The matter is getting serious."
BARBARE FENDLEY, Jayhawker
Towers manager, said the agreements were
"We strongly suggest that students read the agreement before they sign and that they be aware of their responsibilities," he said, "and sure that contract was explained to him."
Med Center building's faults listed
From Staff and Wire Reports
TOPEKA-K A Kansas City, Kan., lawyer told a legislative committee yesterday that the University of Kansas Medical Center's basic sciences buildings might be struc-
Orr-Major, the basic sciences building, has been involved in a series of controversies about construction and design, including claims that the construction companies and the state.
James Eisenbranth, a lawyer specially hired to study deficiencies in Med Center buildings, gave the committee a list of problems and proposed the construction of problems in Med Center construction.
During the last session, the Legislature appropriated money to hire a special lawyer in connection with the investigation.
deficiencies. The attorney general's office hired Eisenbrancher in July.
EISENBRANTH SAID the majority of his report to the Special Committee on State Building Construction came from a state architect's study.
He told the committee that the floors sloped excessively, indicating that they might not have been poured to the proper thickness.
He said fire safety violations also had been discovered. The bottoms of the fire doors had been saaved off, leaving a gap at the bottom, he said.
Most of the doors will have to be replaced, he said.
He also reported that elevators used to evacuate the building in a fire malfunction were also disabled.
Elsenbranch said he had hired a career lawyer to defend deficiencies. He said the legislative bill that appropriated the money for his job also hit him the power to hire whomever he wanted.
THE CONSULTING firm is the same one that helped the state of Louisiana recover $4.2 million in damages from contractors constructed the New Orleans superstructure.
"This whole thing has been an ongoing process," he said. "There are constant studies made of the building all the time. We are always finding new things to report."
James Lowman, dean of the School of Medicine, said he had not heard of the report, but he was aware that such action had been occurring.
Busing for handicapped delayed Harper, administrator offer rides
Staff Reporter
Bv TAMMY TIERNEY
Handicapped students needing a ride to class during the last weeks of this semester can depend on the student body president and a KU administrator to get them there.
Mike Harper, student body president, and Bob Turvey, assistant director of the student assistance center, have volunteered to chauffeur handicapped students, on request, because a transportation service provided for that purpose is not ready for use.
Harper said a University van equipped to accommodate handicapped people would be
Operation of the service, which was scheduled to begin today, has been postponed until next semester because it has not been diversified in university and bus drivers have not been hired.
The Student Senate Wednesday allocated $2,888 for gasoline, drivers' wages and a two-way radio, he said. The responsibility for the bus system had been授秩 at 13 cents a mile, has not been determined. Harper said he hoped the Kansas Board of Regents would make up the difference.
Harper said members of the newly-
appointed transportation board might drive the van if necessary.
"I doubt if the demand will be that high, though," he said.
Initiation of the service will bring the University into compliance with the transportation section of a Rehabilitation Act passed by Congress in 1973.
"We decided to provide transportation-in crisis situations for people who can't use a car," Ms. Patterson said, the end of finals), "Turvey said, 'Students who need a ride can call the student."
When ready for use, Turvey said, the service will include a regular route planned around the schedules of the students who use the service.
Anytime the van is not in use, Turvey said, students can call and arrange for raid to places, such as the library, that might not be on the regular route.
Turvey said that he was pleased the service had been initiated and that he thought the University would give final approval.
"I think this is a major step, not only for handicapped people who are here. It also means that students who could not have come to KU now can include it among their
"What we're trying to do is duplicate 'KU on Wheels' for persons who cannot use that service," he said. "Students with mobility aids may be allowed to go on snow on the ground or to a slick or icy."
choices because they have a way to get around."
Turvey said he thought about a dozen students would use the service, but expected that a lot of them would not.
"There probably will be a small ridership in the beginning, but I expect it to grow," he said. "It can't really grow too much though—the van only holds 11."
KIEF'S Records
25th & Iowa
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Fri.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
Bahai Fireside
EXTRAVAGANT
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located in the
K.U. UNION BALLROOM
by
DECEMBER 3rd — Sunday —
2:00 PM to 6:00 PM
DECEMBER 4th thru DECEMBER 7th
Monday to Thursday
9:00 AM to 8:00 PM
DECEMBER 8th — Friday —
9:00 AM to 1:00 PM
sponsored by
INTERCOLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION
FOR WOMEN STUDENTS
1979 Convention Committee
Free Weather Protection Provided For All Plants
Hanging and standing plants at
REDUCED PRICES
Visa and Mastercharge Accepted
at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
A speaker is presenting general information about the Bahai faith.
Wrigley said the conflict stemmed from potential tenants having to sign both the Application for Rental Agreement and the Jayhawk Towers Rental Agreement.
KU Bahai Club will meet on Monday, Dec. 4
Everyone is welcome.
University Daily Kansan
Lingstrum said, "When the application is signed and accepted, that a lease. Putting it in the record will be appreciated." Jayhawker Towers management can incorporate the rule of occupancy along with
"WHEN THE application is signed, that binds the tenant to the apartment and binds the landlord."
Both the Application for Rental Agreement and the Jayhawker Towers Rental Agreement state. "... everything in the property, which property is hereby leased to the lessee (applicant) for the term of the conditions which are set forth below."
However, Lynn Chance of Lawrence Property Management, said earlier, "The application is binding to the extent that you hold the unit for the tenant. If the applicant's application is accepted and he does not move, then the applicant is not obligated to move."
If the application for agreement is not accepted after a credit check, the security deposit paid with the application is refunded, Lungstrum said.
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❤️
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
DECEMBER 1, 1978
Senate abuses power
Corrupted by a perverse righteousness, the Student Senate has managed to go beyond its usual inanity.
This time the Senate moved in a frightening direction, abusing its powers as controller of student activity fees.
At its meeting Wednesday, the Senate voted to become financial pupeteer for the Student Bar Association, which comprises the entire law school enrollment. The Senate agreed to fund the organization only after restrictions were placed on the bar association's actions concerning the Jimmy Green statue.
The Senate, with only about a third of its members present, voted 23-17 to amend a bill giving the bar association a block allocation of student activity fees.
THE AMENDMENT stipulated that the student money would be lost if the bar association or any of its members acted on behalf of the association or the law school student body "to persuade the governor of Kansas to issue an executive order directing that the Jimmy Green statue be moved from its rightful location on Jayhawk Boulevard to new Green Hall."
The amendment, was introduced by Senator Barry Shalinsky in response to what he said was a petition drive by the
narr association asking Gov. Robert F.
Bennett to order the statue to be moved.
That clearly seems to be the overly righteous precedent the Senate has set with the Student Bar Association. Moreover, the Senate appears to have based their decision on faulty information.
However, Jeff Roth, association president, said the association backed no such petition. The only thing close to such a petition was, according to its circulator, merely a poll.
NEVERTHELESS there can be no reasonable explanation for the Senate's action. It exceeded the farthest reaches of responsible student government.
Is one now to assume that the Senate has become the self-appointed policymaking body for all student organizations at the University of Kansas? Must a student group now bow to the political and individual dictates of the Senate or face a loss of student funds?
As the amendment says, the Jimmy Green statue should stay put—but that doesn't save the sting of the Senate's notion it can suppress student opinion.
Carrot and stick tactics may have a place in the political arena, but the Senate's action was far from proper or responsible. It would seem, as Lord Acton said, "Power tends to corrupt."
Cairo mirrors history future of Arab world
N. Y. Times Feature
By FOUAD AJAMI
NEW YORK—There is a multifaceted
President Anwar el-Sadat
and his Al-Qaeda.
The one we hear of the most is over the issue of war and peace with Israel. Two others are deeper cultural struggles: One is a struggle for and over Cairo itself—the last real city in the Arab world; the other is between cosmopolitan Cairo's intransigent elites and the more fundamentalist, sheltered outlooks of Arab deserts and provincial towns.
Arab Islamic history began in the Arabian Peninsula, for that was Islam's birthplace, the site of its initial simplicity and triumph. But it was in Cairo, more than anyplace else, that Islam fashioned a civilization, made its peace with the world, outwitted and out-waited conquerors, debated the great issues of the day.
Cairo is home to the Arab-Moslem world's leading university, to its pre-eminent press. It is also the last major bastion of religious co-existence between Moslem and Christian
Lebanon was another, but it fell to the passion and fanaticism of its inhabitants
If the Arab world possesses a measure of political-cultural unity, that unity was achieved through an agreement between
During the days of the Ottoman Empire's tyranny, Cairo provided a haven for the talented and the dissident to think and interact with the world. Cairo and Beirut were the two places where mobile Arabs—businessmen, students, intellectuals, conspirators—got to know one another. But it was Cairo that the bearer of a paradox was the one. There were bourgeois, cosmopolitan civilization had its heyday in the Arab world.
Modern-day Arab nationalism may have been conceived elsewhere, but it was Cairo that gave it power and meaning. The Egyptian film, book, university, and the Egyptian teacher knitted together a vast region of considerable diversity.
Colloquial Egyptian was popularized by films that were the cultural diet of the overwhelming majority of Arabs. The film *Sayid* (1962) depicted shipping of tastes and mores of other Arabas.
Egypt's universities were a magnet to Arab youth at a time when few Arabs could and would go to Europe and America. The Egyptian teacher, living as he did in a crowd society, sought to make a living as the Arabians in the Arab Peninsula and Algeria.
The lights of Cairo, like the lights of other metropolitan centers, have attracted and
repeled. When Col. Muammar q-eldafadi of Libya wanted to play Bismarck and unite the Arab world he wanted to recalm Cairo; women's liberation, institute law, women's liberation, institute law.
But Cairo was too sophisticated—or compromised and lost, to use the Libyan president's language—to accept his ideas. This of course is an old theme; the decadent urban civilization and restoring the austerity of tradition.
Intuitively, the Libyan president understood Caire's centrality and realized that he must make a concerted effort to order. In the peninsula, with men immense wealth are busy trying to erect massive and beautiful homes.
They wish to combine the puritanism of the desert with the technology of the West. They want to make cities, for a city is more than prefares and steel bars. What is naval are the habits of mind, the culture, the vibrancy—and the impossibly imposed, duplicated, or bought off the rack.
Damascus and Baghdad were the seats of two Islamic empires, but they are large provincial towns today. The latter was a fortress that served as a military base ago and has never recovered its grandeur.
All this, in addition to the obvious military calculus, must have figured in the recent Baghdad summit meeting that brought together Arab "moderates" and "rejicee-ries."
Predictably, Mr. Sadat turned it down. Egypt, he confidently stated, can isolate and cannot be isolated. There was in that country a great degree of its pride and its artifacts, its beliefs that its lights and wealth will prevail, and that such things must not be still lead and that other Arabs will follow.
If Cairo was giving up on war, so they reasoned, it must have been because of the appetites of the city, and so maybe an offer would do it and bring Egypt out into the jungle.
Cairo is an authentic capital, a world in its own right, and no shadow of something else. It holds up a mirror for other Arabs: In its successes or failures, its visibility or troubles, they can see the harvest of much of their history and a great deal of their future.
Whether stated or not, Mr. Sadat's was that it is the saver faire of his capital, and not the hardware of Saudi Arabia or the provincialism of the outwardly militant capitals, that offers the best interpretation of the world in which the Arabs live today.
Found Ajiam, assistant professor of politics at Pretoria University, is a guest speaker.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is afiliated with the University, the letter should include the writer's home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
The ministers of the 13-member Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will meet later this month to review the price at which they sell crude oil.
Oil price rise will devalue dollar
All signs point to a price increase.
The figure heard most often in OPEC capitals is 10 percent.
Nothing will be welcome next year in oil-dependent America. But, at the same time, nothing seems more certain than that the United States will pay the cartel's cost.
For the United States, no acceptable alternative exists; either we pay or we give up high living. Anticipate, therefore, that oil prices will rise next year—and with them prices of all the products into which we place everything from plastics to fertilizers.
When the QPEC ministers met a year ago to decide price, the news was better. Saudi Arabia balked at a price rise in the neighborhood of 10 percent because it felt the Western economies would be hurt badly. The West is no stronger this time, but Saudi Arabia seems less adamant about holding the line.
Skippy, they differentiate themselves from the believe, but the reason behind it grows more preposterous. The Sauds, like their OPEC sisters, are losing money primarily because of the
THE SAUDIS' change of heart probably involves pure economics.
I will help with the transcription of the provided image.
Rick Alm
Simply, they have been losing money.
huge volume of their sales to the United States.
One must start with U.S. imports of oil. Commerce Department figures released Wednesday indicated that oil imports had doubled in September, despite the deficit in October, which increased the deficit for the first 10 months of the year to $28.3 billion last year's record $25.9 billion deficit.
The problem is foreign oil. The United States consumed $3.5 billion of it in October.
It has been the same story for 29 consecutive months, creating a crisis that has led President Carter to pursue tighter controls on corporate responsibility, although not solely, for the glut of U.S. currency flow overseas—$200 billion was held by foreigners in October. The excess of dollars has caused inflation, precipitously on foreign money markets.
OPEC prices, however, are quoted in dollars. The oil producers have found themselves being paid less, in terms of purchasing power as the value of the dollar has dropped.
OIL ANALYST Paul Frankel estimated in the latest issue of Forbes magazine that the decline of the dollar has caused the $12.70 posted price of oil in the Persian Gulf to fall to an equivalent of less than $8.50.
"Producers obviously want to bring the price up," he said, "and that can happen two ways. You can change the system to shield receipts from fluctuations in the price of horses or do that: if the dollar starts to go up, then they will have backed the wrong horse.
"For the moment, they are more likely to keep the raise in dollars. The question is how far it can go without triggering a new world recession. If there are no surprises, the smart money is better on a maximum 10 percent increase."
Considering the fact that the dollar's fall has cost oil suppliers at 33 percent of the value of their output, an increase of 10 percent or less, however unpopular it may be in Europe, ought to be considered an act of charity toward the West, something on the order of Saudi Arabia's stand last year.
PUT THIS appears to be one of those tread-suils that makes economics confounding. "The United States buys more oil next great," will fur-
BUT THIS appears to be one of those readmails that makes economics confounding. If the United States buys more all next year, precipitating perhaps a recession, OPEC will further decline. And, when OPEC sets time to set price, it will be forced to charge
more to compensate, at least partially, for the dollar's diminished value.
The trick is to get off the treadmill
The trick is to get off the tread.
Or hook the various circle.
It's the nature of a vicious circle, of course, to have no beginning or end. Each one of them is another. The oil conundrum laid out here can be solved by either eliminating the trade deficit, perhaps by importing less, or strengthening the value of the dollar.
Both actions are advocated by the Carter administration
Consuming less has proved downright un-American.
But bolstering the dollar serves only as a temporary expedient when the underlying supply chains are unabated. We could, of course, continue our level of oil consumption and import less of other commodities. The possibility of a price stabilization balance of trade by selling more abroad.
THE PROBABILITY of doing either is low. Buying less oil has been a national goal, never achieved, since oil prices rose after the OPEC oil embargo in 1973.
It presents no easy task. But the silver lining in the otherwise dark cloud of the falling dollar that it U.S. products will sell overseas. Exports should increase.
That, in fact, may be the only painless solution.
But just in case: buv American.
$150
WRIGHT
"---AND AS A MEMBER OF THE ORGANIZATION OF PETROLEUM EXPORTING COUNTRIES, I SPEAK RIGHT FROM THE HEART"
To the editor:
Metric value needs remeasurement
I am writing to express my concern regarding Allen Holder's recent editorial concerning the current 10-year gradual increase in the metric system of weights and measures.
A study of this conversion has convinced me that the associated costs will be massive and quite inappropriate in this era of financial catastrophe, taxes and sparinged national debt.
This is only the tip of the iceberg, for there are millions of hardware, home appliances, business equipment and other everyday items that also will become obsolete and become outdated. This would result in a tremendous inconvenience and confusion to the public at large. For example, how can the average housewife who bakes her own bread at 350 degrees oven cook with a microwave one-half pound of shortening be expected to produce an edible product with her new
Although the adoption of the metric system would provide a degree of worldwide uniformity of weights and measures and would be pleasing to the scientific community, may I kindly indicate some very real problems that are arising.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Further increase of these costs can be anticipated. Literally millions of gasoline pumps will have to be totally recalibrated. The amount of fuel required in grain market, truck weigh station and hospital will become outdated. Thermometers and barometers will all become obsolete, and automobile gauges made to comply with industry standards square inch, degrees Fahrenheit and gallons in every American car will all now be in comprehensible. Of course the tool and die factories producing such items will have to be equipped to accommodate the new standards.
Currently signs throughout the nation's highways are gradually being replaced by similar signs in kilometers. This, of course, incur considers coastal an increase in car accidents; most automobiles have speedometers and odometers calibrated in miles. Few drivers have concept of the length of a kilometer. In other words, virtually expensive road signs are virtually same.
oven calibrated only in degrees Celsius, a measuring cup that is in units liters and a measuring cup that is in inches.
It is also quite interesting to note that with a national issue of such great magnitude as this, virtually no public disclosure of the proposed metric conversion would be necessary if the American public had been adequately informed regarding the proposed metric conversion, the adverse opinion would have been ignored.
This is not to suggest that the United States should completely ignore the metric system inasmuch as it has been used to some extent for 200 years.
As a student who is currently majoring in two different scientific fields, I think that I am able to evaluate this situation from both sides. The sciences have for years operated independently and should continue to do so. With most scientific endeavors being shared internationally, it would be extremely impractical for scientists to operate with computers in the system. This is currently what is being practiced. For scientists, the use of metric in the laboratory and the English system domestically poses no problem. However, for the average American familiar with the metric system, it is easy to foresee great confusion.
it has been said that the solution is education of the public. From whence will the funds come to finance such a massive program?
Hence it seems that in the United States, the metric and English systems of weights and measures should both survive but remain segregated. The United Nations' recommendations for international trade is desirable, there is not reason why the English system should not be perpetuated among the states. A program of voluntary mutualism is needed to meet current mandatory regulations.
It is most interesting to review the government publications concerning the metric conversion. Regarding the financial resources, the budget is the maximum of $45 billion to the country. However, current reports state that "costs will be more appreciable than had been" in previous years.
Proponents of the change continually maintain that a uniform metric system is necessary to promote foreign relations. These countries have been said has been a significant hindrance in our foreign relations have been grossly exaggerated. Scare tactics have been employed in the Congress in an attempt to move the country into making unwarranted change.
It is for these reasons I feel strongly that positive action must be taken before this conversion has gone on. For example, if we already have become law; however, because we are only in the fourth year of a 10-year conversion, there is no reason why this poorly conceived law will work.
Oread neighborhood needs unity. leaders
To the editor:
The resolution was not even an attempt to
David Holroyd is misleading Kansan readers in charging the old leadership of the Oread Neighborhood Association with being ineffective and too slow to enact projects.
The vote to remove him and his fellow officers from DNA office (we both would have preferred the resolution to have concerned Holroyd alone) was certainly not an attempt to reinstate a sluggish leader among the old leaders were anything but sluggish.
reinstate the old leaders, or to exclude one viewpoint, and Holroyd and his friends were immediately asked to serve on a committee to nominate new officers. The resolution was a reaction to observed incompetence in running a meeting, to the lack of an agenda for important issues and to apparent willingness to enact only the most picayune projects.
The Oread neighborhood is an unusual place, a city neighborhood in the middle of a valley with beautiful hills and live or own property here value its special qualities and are willing to work with residents.
This is what the Oread Neighborhood Association is about. We hope Holroyd will forget his disappointment, regain the ONA leadership to make this neighborhood a better one.
Judith Roitman
Assistant professor of mathematics Stanley Lombardo Assistant professor of classics
Assistant professor of classes
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily
and weekly. Subscriptions through Thursday June and July are
applied through Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-
day subscription by mail are $15 for six months or
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Second-day subscriptions are $1.50 a semester.
Editor
Steve Frazier
Steve Fraser
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Jerry Sax
Editorial Editor
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Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowing
Friday, December 1, 1978
University Daily Kansan
5
Lawrence
By MELISSA THOMPSON
Staff Reviewer
There are ghosts upstairs in the Elizabeth Watkins Community Museum.
'ghosts' haunt museum
They stare plaintively from photographs hanging on display boards. Their somber expressions hint at an environment different from one that exists here now.
The "ghosts" are part of a three-part exhibit at the museum that illustrates the history and development of Lawrence. Part I, on display until Dec. 31, is "On the Banks of the Kaw": A History of Lawrence, Kaupunakee; Part II and III will be shown next spring.
The exhibit is a collection of photographs, drawings, diagrams and information about the generation of Lawrence, the people who settled here and the people who were driven
It is a fairly impressive collection—don't expect to breeze through it in a few minutes.
KANSAN Review
exhibit's material is as boring as a third grade history book. It's more of a short course for those who want an overview of this area as it existed in the 1800s, before parking lots and football stadiums cut into the hillsides.
The topics covered include Douglas County geology, the changes in the animal and plant life during the past 100 years, the history of the land and its trivia about the people who lived here.
One particularly delightful part comments about the unpredictable Kansas weather, quoting settlers' letters and diaries.
Another woman echoed Snow's sentiment when she complained about the spring weather. "The winds of March and April are like windstorms, outdoor arrangements in Kansas."
One man tried to maintain his sense of humor in a letter to a friend in the East Coast.
"Mud is the predominant element just
"Mud is the predominant element just
Snow wrote," and the mud is
Snow wrote."
A montage of individual portraits gives a scattered impression of the type of people who lived here. Some of the faces have sunken eyes that suggest a hard life. One woman's picture gives the impression that she was shy and soul together in the thread in her clothing.
Another woman represents a more vivacious side of Lawrence life, with a flashing smile and crisp lace around her throat.
The exhibit also is meticulous in its demographic detail about the people in early Lawrence. An 1860 census painstakingly details every resident's soci-
cupation. Among the townpeople there were 18 merchants, 13 grocers, 4 farmers, and 6 other people.
Some impressive photos in the exhibit are "before and after" pictures of scenes around Mt. Oread and the University of Kansas.
Next to this is a current photo of the same hillside—a parking lot, at the foot of the hill.
One large photo depicts a grassy hillside with a tiny house on the uppermost horizon, a board fence running through the field and a mule team and a mule team moving across the scene.
The illustrations of change are probably what make this exhibit worth attention. Lawrence residents—be they 9-month transients or permanent—would be invariably responsible if their duet ever casually investigate their city's background.
Mimes clown with human nature
By KATHLEEN CONKEY
The European press named her theatre dance troupe The Lotte Goslar Pantomime Circus. The troupe was said to have so many different, magical elements that it was like a circus anyone could enjoy, Goslar said.
Staff Reporter
Goslar is the director, creator, choreographer, costume designer and main performer in the Lotte Goslar Pantomime tour of touring dance troupe that she started in 1984.
She has been at the University of Kansas since Nov. 23. The members of her circus gave master classes to various groups on campus and performed at several venues throughout the country. These classes are informal lessons that professional performers give to students.
Tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre, the Pantomime Circus will perform a two-hour show of ballet, modern dance, pantomime, acrobatics and humor
TICKETS FOR the show are available at the University Theatre and the SUA box office for $2.75 for students and $3.75 for the public.
"It's a fun show with a serious problem," Goslar said. "The people will laugh and have fun and then when they go home they will realize there was more. I'm proud that the numbers are all very siet, yet say so much."
Goslar said the numbers varied from satirical to nonsensical to serious.
"I'm interested in human relationships. What people do to each other, both good and bad. The subtile is 'Clowns and Other Fool's' and that explains a little of what the show is about—how foolish people can be," she said.
Goslar, a tiny, ageless woman with bright intense eyes, sat drinking coffee as she explained how she started her circus. Her mother, a sweet girl, had to make visible everything she said.
GOSLAR GREW UP in Dresden, Germany. She came to the United States during World War II and has stayed since then. She began performing her unique brand of dance mixed with humor and mime and it caught on.
"It developed without a plan," Goslar said. "I was always crazy about dancing. My mother used to say I danced in the club, but it didn't. It judge it's true. I was very soft but I danced."
She wanted to take dancing lessons but could not afford them. Her aunt then paid for lessons as a gift for Goslar. She didn't like the rigid instructions, however, and she was a fan of her teacher. Later she heard about a new, young dance instructor and auditioned for her classes.
"SHE PUT ME in her professional dance group right away. that was my start. I liked what she taught but I still wanted to do my dance. I wanted it gradually and it snowballed." Goalar said.
She said her ideas come to her through music and through observing life and
Go "Jay
KU
nature. She said she uses all kinds of music; the accordion, saccharin sentiment and treads.
Go "Jay-Hog" Wild
at the
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Draws 25¢
Cans & Bottles 50¢
Pitchers $1.75
She said she picked her dancers for their evening skills, not for mine. All of these are behind her.
"They all love to dance," Goslar said.
After performances, they go to the dance school.
OUR CLOSE OUT SALE AT THE COUNTRY HOUSE CONTINUES WITH FURTHER REDUCTIONS
John Meyer, Emily &
Pandora Sportswear... 25% off
Pendleton Sportswear ..20% off
Coats ... 25% off
Blouses ... 20% off
The circus members are: Janice Roswick, Kathleen Corlin, Marianne Claire, Charles Haack, Ronald Dunham and Quinan Krichels.
Sweaters... 20% off
One group . . .
Values to $38.00 now $4.99 ea.
Dresses... 25% off
Goslar's lighting designer is Todd Randall and the circus pianist is Richard Fields.
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GOSLAR SAID teaching takes more out of her than performing when she is on tour, because she never knows for sure what she needs. She knows how to group students and discovers their needs.
"With performing, you do all the work beforehand; the performance is a bonus."
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Schneider Investments
Apartments Available Dec. 1 and Second Semester
502 W. 14th. No. 6 (14th & Ohio) modern sixplex, two
bedroom. $200.00 tenant pays utilities (approx.
$25.00 month).
Next Semester Try A Course
in Convenient
Campus
Living
Jayhawker
1603 W. 15th St
TOWERS
Apartments
19 W 14th. No. 5 (14th & Vermont) one bedroom
$125.00 month pay electricity, water and gas fur
homed old home.
314 W. 14th, No. 4 [14th & Tennessee], one bedroom.
$175.00 month, all utilities paid, older home.
galleries
interiors
Holiday Plazas
843-1878
19 W. 14th, No. 3 (14th & Vermont), one bedroom.
$100.00 month, pay electricity, water and gas furnished. old home.
No pets — $100.00 deposit on all apartments.
728 Ohc. No. 3, one bedroom. $160 month, pay electric, water and gas burned, old home
Mark Schneider—The Lawrence landlord who cares!
1021 Rhode Island. No. 1. one bedroom. $160.00
month, tenant pays taxes. modern eight-plex.
933 Rhode Island. No 4. Studio apartment. 1215.00
month, pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older home
800 Ohio, No. 3, studio apartment, $100.00 month, all utilities paid, older home
933 Rhode Island. No. 7. one bedroom. $100.00 month pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older home.
Drive by and look at these homes. then call Mark Schreiber at 842-6141 or 843-2712 to see the one you want to live in
933 Rhode Island. No. 6. Studio apartment, $750 mo.
mouth, pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older
home.
Office Hours:
Mon-Fri 9:00-5:30
Sat 10:00-4:00
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Friday December 1
FAST BREAK
R&B and Rock at It's best
Friday December 1
FAST BREAK
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PORTRAIT
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Both Nights:
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PARTY
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7th & Mass.
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Spirit Club
Saturday December 2
11TH STREET RHYTHM METHOD
Lawrence's Best
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Rock Group
Next Weekend:
KOKO TAYLOR & HER BLUES MACHINE
6
Friday, December 1, 1978
University Dally Kansan
KU to give a modified
Sophocles' classical Greek drama "Electra" will be presented as a human story next week in the intimacy of KU's theater. The theatre, according to the plav's director.
The story is about Electra's revenge for her father who was killed by her mother, Queen Clytemnaestra, and the mother's lover, King Agigustis. Electra is played by Kathleen Warfel, Kansas City, Kan; senator Queen Clytemnaestra by Judy Kroeger, Lawrence special student; and King Agigustis by Steve Harlin, Lawrence sophomore.
As the play opens, Electra has been
responded to a servant because she rebelled
against her master.
BILL NESBITT, who directs the play, has eliminated some elements of the original work, as well as adding new ones.
less plodding tale with characters of greater death.
"We cut the number of chorus members from 12 to three," Nesbitt said, "so that each could have a character of his own and the narrative chanting of the Greek style."
The intimate setting of the Inge Theatre allows the characters to be closer to life, Nesbitt said, and allows the consequences of the stands people take to be emphasized.
He said the acoustics of Inge also would allow the story to seem real.
"The ANCIENT Greek actors had to project so that an audience of 30,000 in an amphitheater could hear them. We don't realize how much they hurt, so the emotions seem real," he said.
The set, which depicts the outside of King Agigusthus castle, is dark and slightly
"These people live in a diseased environment caused by centuries of bloodletting. The caused illness and the disease set help illustrate this deceased, decaying life," he said.
THE DECAYING society contributes to "Electra" as a melodrama, according to
"Our sympathies go totally with Electra," he said. "She is totally under the thumb of the Queen, and good and evil are very clearly defined."
In addition to the performances in the Inge Theatre at 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, Dec. 4-9, the drama also will be presented in the courtyard of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art at 8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 8.
General admission tickets are $1.75.
students will be admitted free with KU IDs.
Moody Blues to hit KC after 5 years in silence
By RICK ODELL
Staff Writer
After five years in British mothballs, the rock band credited with fusing rock riff and full orchestration has come forth to search again for the lost chord. The Moody Blues are on tour and will appear in Kansas City Dec. 4.
Not since the release of "Seventh Sojorn" and their accompanying world tour in 1973 have the Moody Bless recorded or performed together. To fully appreciate the news of the Moodies' decision to step back into the sunlight, after their five-year musical hibernation, one must have a feel for the sound of the band's music, which, at its peak, had attracted a following that approached semi-meansmic proportions.
The Moody Blues were formed in Birmingham, England, in 1943 as a rhyme and blues group. The founding members were Denny Laine (now a member of Wings) and Denny Laine (now a member of Wings) and Clint Warwick. The group soon released their first album," The Moody Blues No. 1." They also released "Now" but the album proved to be a false hope for the Moodies and the group's popularity slowly faded. Laine and Warwick replaced by Jasmin Hayward and John Lodge.
SOON AFTER HAYARD and Lodge joined the group the Moodes purchased a mellotron, a keyboard instrument which produced sounds of a multitude of orchestral instruments. With it the group undertook a tour of England, the legend of the Moody Blues begins here.
Experimentation with the melioron soon led to the Moodies' collaboration with the
London Symphony Orchestra and the release of "Days of Future Passed," which spawned the hit single "Nights in White Satin."
The Moodies' professionalism—the group would often spend months producing an album—began yielding albums of immaculate technical production. After the release of "In Search of the Lost Chord," and "On The Threshold of a Dream," the Moodies' following bordered on evangelical. Their albums were going gold and platinum in the mid-1980s, but that the following was burgeoning. In 1973 the Moody Blues went silent.
Although the Moodies never officially announced the group's end, the 1974 release of "This is the Moody Blues," "a best of" and all the appearances of a posthumous set.
Why would a band that was enjoying the success that the Moodies had encountered decide to up and leave in the middle of their backstage door at the back-stage door for a five year smoke?
Corker Carry, an employee and resident Moody Blues authority at a Kansas City record store, Capers Corner, says that the Moodies painted themselves into a corner in 1973 when they failed to relinquish their winning style.
"PEOPLE WE GETTING into a new sound in 73. Music like Howie and Mott the music of the early 80s public was buying music with a greater drive beat than the Moody Blues had to
KJHJ disc jockey Jeye Greenwood
attribution Woodies fade in 1973 to a
disc jockey
Greenwood said
"The Moodies were going into the studio and coming up with the same old stuff."
As paradoxical as it might seem, the Moodies success could have ultimately pushed the group into silence. Producing gold records with the ease of feeding pigs in Trafalgar Square may have been conquered by the group that all had been conquered by the group.
However, the Moody Blues' recent album, "Octave," and accompanying tour are proof that "This is the Moody Blues" was not the group's swan song after all.
THE LATEST RELEASE reflects the Moodier warmer than orchestral sumptuosity of its title. It is also a characteristic of the group in the late '60s, is no longer in wog with today's rock 'n' roll.
The current Moody Blues' tour stars all the names familiar to Moody fans—Hayward, Lodge, Edge and Thomas—with one exception. Even though keyboard player Mike Pinder recorded with the Moodies on Octave he has refused to accompany the band on their fourth Foray. He named the band Patrick Morail will in for Pinder on the current tour as it winds its way across the United States, including a stop in Kansas City on Dec. 4.
As of Wednesday evening limited seating was still available for the concert. One of the ticket outlets for the concert, Capers Corner, still had 100 upper level set seats available at $75 each. The current tour will include older Moodles' material.
The exact reason for the Moodies' decision to set out again on their musical journey is anyone's guess. Possibly the catalyst is money, perhaps it is something else. Their reemergence may be designed to put them on the threshold of that dream.
CIRCUS
A daughter's sorrow
Electra, Kathleen Wartel, Kansas City, Kan., senor, mourn for her divided family in *Scoliosis* classical drama "Electra." The
Steff photo by BRUCE BANDLE
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
one act play will be presented at 8 p.m. Dec. 4-8 at the William Inge Theatre and, at the Helen Foresman Museum of Art at
Niaht Life
Lawrence Opera House, 644 Massachusetts St.
- Strut and Fastbreak, Dec. 1, 9 p.m.
to m. and $2 general admission + $15
member.
11th Street Rhythm Method, Dec. 2, 9 to
12am, to 12pm, $2, general admission
Spare Time
- Dave Chastain Band, Dec. 6, 9 p.m. to
12:30 a.m. free.
- Koko Taylor and Her Blues Machine from Chicago. 8 d, 9 in to 12:30 am. $3
- Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St.
- Jay McShann, Dec. 1-2, 9 p.m. to mid-
night *
- Jam Session, Dec. 7, 9 p.m. to midnight, free.
- Klute, dir. by Alan J. Pakula, with Donald
- Earl Robinson and the Red Hot Scamps,
Dec. 8, 9.m to midnight, $5.
Last Tango in Italy, dir. by Bernardo Bertolucci with Marlon Brando and Marie Claire
World Is out, a documentary of the lives of 26 gay men and women, Dec. 12, 7 p.m. Fri., Nov. 9, 8 p.m. Sat.
Movies
Sutherland and Jane Fonda, Dec. 4, 7:30 p.m.
$1.
Yogimbo, dir. by Aika Kurosao, with Toshiro Kurosao, 6 7:30am m $1
Umberto D. dir, by Vittorio de Sica, with
Carlo Battisti, Dec. 7, 3:0 p.m., $1.
Bringing Up Baby, dir by Howard Hawks,
with Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, and
Daniel Day-Lewis. dir by Frank Capra, dir
by Frank Capra, with Clark Gabie and
Claudia Colbert, Dec. 8, 3.10 p.m. and
11 a.m.
Concerts
University Chorus and Orchestra, War
Rebuild by Benjamin Britten. B迭, 3; 3, 10p
Britten.
The Mandolin Guitar Ensemble, Dec. 3, b.p., Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vernon
Queen, Dec. 8, 8 p.m. Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. Mickets are $7.50 and $8.50.
Recitals
Student Recital Series
- Nancy Schmidt, soprano, Dec. 1, 8 p.m.
Swainthor free.
- Compositions by KU students, Dec. 5, 8
n.m. Swearthout free
- Compositions by KU students, Dec. 5, 8 p.m. m.p.showfree, out.
- Murphy String, Quartet, Dec. 8, 8 p.m.
Swarthout, free.
Faculty rectal, Charles Hoag, double bass;
Dec. 8, p.m. Swanton, free.
Master Classes, Leon Fleicher, piano, Dec.
1. 3 t.p. and 7 t.p. free.
Exhibits
Lands Gallery, 918 Massachusetts St. to
Ball Penny and watercolor by. Lori
Maurice
Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont st. sculpture by Chris Brier, ceramics by John Schoenfeld.
Roy's Creative Framing and Gallery, 711W. 23rd St., watercolors by Sherry Slaymaker Breicha, and John Garcia, oils by Don Hoyer and Paul Penny.
7E7 Gallery, 7. E Seventh St., a display of prints by several local artists
- Collector's Choice
- Spencer Museum
- Paintings by Hung Husien
- Early Topographic and Documentary Photography
Kansas Union Gallery, Walker Evans at For tune.
Theatre
Electra, by Sophociles, Dec. 4-8 p.m.
$1.75 bus. KU students with ID card
Odds & Ends
Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massa chusets St., will present a program on the early life of Lawrence by Sara Robinson, Dec 5, 7:30 p.m. free.
Satin Special
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holiday plaza
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UKPA
The University of Kansas Panhellenic Association
reminds you that rush registration materials
must be turned in to the Panhellenic Office
no later than 5:00 pm, Dec. 4.
104B Kansas Union
864-4643
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 1, 1978
7
Lawrence police yesterday arrested a 20-year-old man in connection with the aggravated battery of a KU student and his friend and the destruction of private
Police said Michael Walker, 2327 Murphy Drive, was arrested shortly after midnight last night for an attack on Gary McKinnon, the junior, and Debra Davis. 2012'1/2 W. 27th St.
POLICE said the incident occurred at Davis' home. The assailant kicked in the door, police said, and then assaulted and sprayed mace at both Davis and McCutcheon.
He also cut Davis' telephone cord with a knife, nailed.
Police said Walker remained in the Dauley County tail in lieu of $15,250 bond.
Police Beat
Asso reported to the police were two thefts of stereo equipment from cars and a burglary at Klepper Oil Company, 2447 W. Sixth St.
Compiled by Henry Lockard
Police said the burglary occurred yesterday between 4:30 a.m. and 5:30 a.m.
Homer Faulconer, manager of the service station, discovered the crime at about 6 a.m.
was placed in the box at $50 each.
Houded value the speakers at $50 each.
Police said the burglar threw a rock through a window, and then stole 19 sixpacks of beer and four cartons of cigarettes. The loss was valued at about $60.
Lily Barrientos, 1738 Kent Terr., reported the theft of a tape player from her car, which was parked at her home. Barrientos valued the tape player at $100.
John Hodge, 1703 Indiana St., reported the theft of two speakers from his car, which were later stolen.
Both thefts occurred Wednesday, police said.
KU police yesterday reported that they occurred several reports of crimes that occurred several times.
KANSAN
On Campus
Events
TODAY: A MARINE CORPS OFFICER SELECTION OFFICER will be in booth 1 of the Kansas University 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to inquire about the Corps officer program. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE will meet at noon in Cork of the Union. BIOLOGYCLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the United States Military Meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. MUSIC SPONSOR a dance seminar and dance at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight room of the Union. THE LAWRENCE CIVIC CHIOR will present its annual fall concert at 7:30 p.m. at the First Methodist Church, 10th and Vermont streets.
TOMORROW: KU RUGY CLUB will meet this morning in Parlors B and C of the Union. The FOOTBALL AWARDS BANQUET will be in the Union Balroom at 4:45 p.m. The McCOLLUM RESIDENCE BANQUET will be in the Union Balroom at 9 a.p.
SUNDAY: FINE ARTS MASTER CLASSES will be at 1 and 7 p.m. in Swararthu Rectical Hall, Murphy Hall. Leon Fleisher, pianist, will perform SUIGEHAM B and C and the Union at 1 p.m. A CARILLON RECITAL will be given at 3 p.m.
William Bell, professor of entomology,
reported the theft of a typewriter, valued at
$150,000.
Police said the theft occurred between
Oct. 6 and Nov. 17. There were few details of
the theft.
A student reported that a person kicked a student in his car, which was parked in the Park lot north of 18th Street behind Watson Street. The car to the car was estimated at $120.
Police said the incident occurred two weeks ago while the student was in the locker room.
Police said the flags were in a locked box in a men's restroom on the first floor.
In a user's retail cart on the first shop,
The flags were valued at more than $100.
Theses store two flags Wednesday from
sanction Hall and also a student's purity
pole.
The flags were vaulted at more than $100. A student reported that her purse was stolen from a room on the first floor of Fraser Hall, when she left it untended for a few minutes.
Police said the student was in the restroom when the theft occurred. The student valued the purse and its contents at $105.
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SHENANIGANS
"Why'd I let you talk me into that place?"
"Just because it takes a while to get to class..."
"Do you realize we've been late for this class 4 times this week?"
"Correction.
5."
"Why'd I let you talk me into that place?"
"Just because it takes a while to get to class..."
"Do you realize we've been late for this class 4 times this week?"
"Correction, 5."
"Next semester it's the Towers. We'll be right on campus. I don't care how much your uncle promises to lower the rent."
Jayhawker
TOWERS
Apartment
Consider Us
Office Hours:
Mon-Fri: 9:00-5:30
Sat: 10:00-4:00
Jayhawker
TOWERS
Apartment
1603 W. 15th St.
Ph. 843-4993
"Next semester. It's the Towers. We'll be right on campus. I don't care how much your uncle promises to lower the rent."
Jayhawker
TOWERS
Apartments
Consider Us
Office Hours.
Mon.Fri. 9:00-5:30
Sat. 10:00-4:00
Jayhawker
TOWERS
Apartments
1603 W. 15th St.
Ph. 843-4993
Jayhawker
TOWERS
Apartments
THE CHARLIE BAND DANIELS
WITH A SPECIAL GUEST PERFORMANCE BY
Billy Spears & His Band
The South's Gonna Do It Again!
GREENBIRD BAND
Thursday December 7,1978 9:00 P.M.
Hoch Auditorium Tickets; *6. and *7.
Tickets available at the SUA Box Office
Also at Kief's, Capers in K.C. The Record Store in Manhattan
Liberty Sound in St Joseph, Mother Earth in Topeka.
Tiger's, and David's in Emporia
The Steering Committee for the national convention for the Intercollegiate Association for Women Students will have a plant sale Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The sale is to raise money for the IAWS national convention, to be at the University of Kansas in March.
IAWS plant sale set
The committee needs about $1,000 to run the IAWS convention. It has held sales on campus and will apply for federal and corporate grants to try to raise the money
The hours for the sale are: Sunday from 2-
People interested in working on the convention may be able to receive college credit through the department of Women's Studies or the department of Social Welfare.
6 p.m., Dec. 47 from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and
Dec. 8 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
TIGHT BUDGET?
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Eve at 7:20 & 9:40
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Eve at 7:20 & 9:35
Sat Sun 2:40
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A ROBERT ALTMAN FILM
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A WEDDING
with Carol Burnett
Eve at 7:15 & 8:35
Sat Sun 1:45
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KU to receive Pearson funds
WASHINGTON (AP) - A plan to transfer $100,000 in unused campaign funds to the University of Kansas Center will be approved by the Federal Election Commission.
In an unanimous vote, the commission said it was lawful under the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 to give the money to a nonprofit organization.
the money is excess collected by Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kans., for his reelection in 1972. He did not seek reelection this year.
The money will be used to finance a fellowship program for students to attend graduate school abroad.
Campus Beauty Shoppe 9th and Illinois - 9th St. Shopping Center Hairstyling for Men and Women REDKEN
1XOYZ Call 843-3034
open Mon. thru Sat.
films sua
Friday, Dec. 1
THE CONVERSATION
Dir. Francis Coppola, with Gene Hackman, Allen Gaffer, John Cazale, Clindy Williams. A film about prickety and wettingting. Grand Prix
$1.50 3:30 & 9:30 pm Woodruff Aud
(1977)
WORD IS OUT
(1977) Dir. by the Mariposa Film Group. Documentary on the lives of 26 gay men and women.
$1.50 7:00 pm Woodruff Aud.
WORD IS OUT
Saturday. Dec. 2
$1.50 3:30 & 9:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
THE CONVERSATION
$1.50 7:00 pm Woodruff Aud
LAST TANGO IN PARIS
Midnight Movie
Dir. Bernardo Bertolouci, with Marlon Brando, Maria Schleiner, Jean-Pierre Leaud. "The most erotic movie ever made—"Playboy." A landmark in movie history." -Pauline Haak. The English, Peter. English & French titled.
Friday & Saturday
Friday & Saturday
$1.50 12 Midnight Woodruff Aud.
KLUTE
(1971)
Dir. Alan J. Paka, with Jane Fonda,
Doubler Saluther, Roy Schaider.
Fonda won an Academy Award for
her role in a staged attack by a
psychotic killermaker.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Wednesday, Dec. 6
Samurai:
YOJIMBO
(1961)
Dri. Aira Kurosewa, with Toshiru Milene. The basis for, but much better than, A Flatfist of Dollars. Japanisubtilted.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Thursday, Dec. 7 UMBERTO D.
(1952)
Dir. Vittorio de Sica, with Carla Bartlett. The book contains the best examples of Italian neo-romance by Cesare Bianci and de Sica. "Britiant and flawless." - Life, II.
$1.00 7:30 Woodruff Aud.
8
Friday, December 1, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Phone
843-1211
K.U. Uniou
Travel Plans?
make them with us.
Maupintour travel service
Phone
843-211
K.U. Union
Apex Air Fares/Youth Fares/Eurail and Student Passes/Auto Rentals/Hotel and Amtrak Reserva
O
SUA PRESENTS
lotte goslar
pantomime
circus
AT THE
UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
A RARE
COMBINATION OF
DANCE, HUMOR,
AND MIME.
PUBLIC $3.75
STUDENTS $2.75
DEC. 2 8 PM
Made possible by a grant from the
National Endowment for the Arts &
The Kansas Arts Commission
Graves left self tough second act
Snorts Writer
--two hours at night," he said. "We lift weights three times a week, and we do dryland exercises—push-ups, sit-ups, and things—before each workout."
Bv BRETT CONLEY
Steve Graves left himself a tough act to follow this year after winning three events at the Big Eight swimming championships and the CWA Championships last year as a freshman.
"To place at the NCAA championships is my goal this year, instead of just qualifying. Graves said. "Last year I 1 year ago was sort of a gift. I didn't do much after that."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Winning the 200- and 400-yard individual medley and the 200-yard backstroke came as no surprise to either Graves or Bill Spahn, men's swim coach.
"Earlier in the year Coach Susha and I talked about it, and we thought I could do it," Graves said. "I was counting on two of them to be around about the third one, the 200-medley med."
"THERE SOME GUMS I thought
would be pretty tough in there. Once I got
a bite, it was good."
Though he and Spahn are both from water, they swim in swam for the swim club's coaches caught
Last year Graves swam times of 1:53.5 in the 200 IM, 4:94.5 in the 400 IM and 2:07.4 in the 200 breaststroke. They were all KU records. The NCAA qualifying times were 1:54.1 in the 200 IM, 4:94.5 in the 400 IM, and 2:07.1 in the 200 breaststroke.
Sports
"I swam for the other team," Graves said. "I had known Spain in Wichita for several years. I came to KU because it was a good condition. I expected a lot of competition."
He spent last summer in California, instead of swimming for his old club.
"I WENT OUT to Los Angeles and swam with the Dutch Boy swim club, which is coached by Peter Daland, the USC swim coach," Graves said. "It was good experience, because you get to swim with the top level swimmers around the country."
He said that his favorite event was the 200-yard individual medley, and that it the 200-yard breaststroke were his strongest events.
But it took him some time to find it out.
"I started in local programs when I was 1 about 7 years old. It was something to do during the summer," he said, "I finally took it over in AAU competition when I was 12.
"When I was little I was a backstarker and butterflier. I probably officially became a breaststroker when I was 14. It wasn't until about my junior year in high school that my IMs started coming around to my first time I made it into the state finals."
Graves he was used to the long hours that swimmers put in during the season.
"We swim an hour in the mornings and
strengthened ourselves in our weak events," he said. "We didn't improve as much as we thought we might, but we should be tougher. We'd better be tougher to take the Big Eight this year."
Graves said he thought this year's team was improved from last year's.
"Overall, we are a little better. We
KU sent only two swimmers, Graves and David Estes, to the NCAA championships last year. Graves said he thought KU would have a larger contingent this year.
"There are several guys that are planning on going to the NCAA this year. We should have several relays, and we should have a lot more guys there this year."
The Big Eight championships will be held the first week in March, and the NCAA Tournament will be held in April.
Swimmers to compete in relays, invitational
The men's and women's swim teams will be in action this weekend as the men travel to Norman, Okla. for the Big Eight Relays, and the men travel to Lincoln for the Nebraska Invitational.
Admiral Car Rental When was the last time you rented a car for
The men will face all of the Big Eight schools plus Texas-Arlington, Missouri-Rolla and Drury. Bill Spahn, men's swim depth would probably decide the meet.
"Missouri has the best depth in relays,
along with us," Spahn said. "We have better relays last year. We really have no room to grow."
The women will face some of the top teams in the country in the Nebraska Invitational. Gary Kempf, women's swim coach, said he was unfamiliar with some of the skills.
$5.95 per day plus mileage
We have a few late model cars for sale
2340 Alabama
843-2931
A Dazzling Blend of Photography and Poetry
photographs by John Pearson (author, photographer of THE SUN'S BIRTHDAY and MAGIC DOORS)
poetry by e.e. cummings
over 85 full-color and black-and-white photographs
$6.95 trade paperback
ISBN 0-201-05555-4
love is most mad and moony
photographs by John Pearson
poetry by e.e. cummings
Addison-Wesley
Reading Micah Northgate
KANSAN TV TIMES
"I don't know enough about some of the teams to be able to predict how we will finish," he said. "I think we will be right in there."
This Space For Rent
New England Christmas 3:00; 4 Memories of Christmas past are evoked in this holiday fare. Homes and locales throughout Maine lend a Curtier and affection to a homestead boy who returns to spend Christmas with his father.
Winnie The Pooh And the Blustery Day 7:00; 4:12 This 1968 Oscar winner follows Christopher Robin and his animal friends as a storm tipples Owl's treehouse and brings a crunching rain. While the flood waters rise, Pooh has haremates about honey stealing creatures called heifaalms and wooleds.
--rose, 37, who owns the modern National League hitting streak record of 44 straight games, has been searching for a new team since he played out his option. He has played the last 15 years as a star infielder-outfielder with the Cincinnati Reds.
EVENING
TONIGHT'S HIGHLIGHTS
Movie—"Singin' In The Rain" 10:30; 5:9
Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds and Donald O'Connor in a hilarion apof of movie making in the late twenties.
P. M.
6:00 News 2, 5, 9, 13, 27
Cross Wires 4
Zoom 11
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 11
5:30 ABC News 2,9
NBCS News 4,27
CBS News 5,13
Rookies 41
6:30 Soviet Night, American Myth 2 h
$100,000 Name That Tune 4
Family Feed 5
Dating Game 9
MacNeil Leaper Report 18
Kansas City Sip 19
Mike More 27
New York Gamble
7:00 Donny & Marie 2, 9
Winnie The Poo And The
Blustery Day 4; 27
Wonder Woman 5, 13
Washington Week In Review 11,
19
Tic Tac Dough 41
The Untouchables 8
8:00 College Football 2,9
New England Christmas 4
Boston Celtics 5,13
Firing Line 11
Rockford Files 27
Movie "-" "White Christmas" 14
Who's "He's Been In My Bed"? 16
7:30 Different Strokes 4, 27
Wall Street Week 11, 19
Joker's Wild 41
8:30 Congressional Outlook 19
9:00 Billy Graham Crusade 4, 13
Flying High 5
Congressional Outlook 11
Dallas Eddie Duke Street 19
Eddie Capra Mysteries 27
9:30 Economically Speaking 11
News 4, 5, 13, 27
Kansas Fish And Game 11
Dick Cavett 19
10:00 Dollywood Carson 4, 17
Movie Musical “Singin’ In The Rain” 5
ABC News 11, 19
New Avengers 13
Train Trial 41
Movie“‘Fine Madness””
11:00 News 2, 9
Dick Cavett 11
MacNeil/Lahre Report 19
11:30 Boston 7, 11
Flash Gordon 41
14:05 Movie“‘Twin Detectives’” 13
A.M.
14:20 Midnight Special 4, 27
Phil Silvers 41
12:30 MacNeil/All This And Heaven Too’s
Playhouse 6
Best of Grouch 41
1:00 Movie“‘Deadlock’” 2
1:20 Movie“‘White Christmas’” 41
12:55 Gunsmoke 13
12:30 News 4
2:00 News 5
3:00 Art Linkletter 5
1:15 Weekend At The Walderd“’”
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news & weather
The Sanctuary invites you to attend their 1st annual New Years Eve Party, on Friday, December 1st
Auditions for 1979 Rock Chalk Revue IBA Players. Have a prepared song; an accompanist is provided. You will learn and perform a dance—so come dressed accordingly. Auditions will be held Monday and Tuesday, Dec. 4 and 5, 7-10 p.m., call backs Dec. 6, 7-10 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
Breakfast will be served after midnight for $2.50 a plate.
--rose, 37, who owns the modern National League hitting streak record of 44 straight games, has been searching for a new team since he played out his option. He has played the last 15 years as a star infielder-outfielder with the Cincinnati Reds.
Auditions also being held for MC.
Party with your Lawrence friends before you go home for the holidays. Between 8 & 10 o'clock hour d'ourses will be served and Texas drinks will be sold at Happy Hall; party hats and noise makers will be given out at the party.
Reservations are not required, but advisable.
There is a $200 cover for meals and guests and members
The Sanctuary members and members guests only memberships available
The Sanctuary
TAEKWONDO
re not re-
sailable.
00 cover
door for
uests
1401 w.7th
843-0540
--rose, 37, who owns the modern National League hitting streak record of 44 straight games, has been searching for a new team since he played out his option. He has played the last 15 years as a star infielder-outfielder with the Cincinnati Reds.
1
Kempf said he expected Wisconsin, Minnesota and Florida State to be tough competition. Florida State has been rated in the nation in the country for the past three years.
Phillies dump greedy Rose
"We have made an offer that would have made Pete the highest paid player in Phillies history," club owner Rudy Carr commented. "Unfortunately, it was not quite enough.
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—The Philadelphia Phillies announced yesterday that they were no longer negotiating to acquire Pete Rose, baseball's aging superstar in search of a new uniform for next season. next season.
"He didn't get into the game of one-upsmanship, and for that I have the greatest admiration. He's a great player and I wish him the best."
THE PHILLIES for some time had been considered the front runner in the Rose sweepstakes with a reported offer of $1.8 million over three years.
Since returning last week from an exhibition baseball tour with the Reds in Japan, Honda has visited Atlanta, Kansas City, St. Louis and Pittsburgh. San Diego and the New York Mets also made overtures, but are no longer in the running.
ROSE SAID the Phillies offer was "a tremendous one, but it wasn't what I thought I could get from a couple of the other ball clubs."
Asked who the frontronter was now, Rose said, "I don't think there is a frontronter. We're down to four—three in the National League and one in the American League—I've said all along I'd like to stay in the National League and beat San Mausa's record."
MUSIAL HOLDS the National League record for career hits with 3,630.
Rose said he might reach a decision as early as Sunday and would first call all the teams involved before making any public announcement.
Earlier in the day, the New York Mets announced that they were withdrawing from the Rose competition, saying the switch-hitter had turned down a package offer and received an offer amounted to $800,000 for three years, five then years in an off-the-field capacity.
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1
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 1, 1878
Basketball teams risk wire poll rankings
9
The men's and women's basketball teams will try to defend their national rankings
The men, 10 and ranked fourth and fifth in the wire polls, play at home tomorrow against Murray State. The women, 3-1 and ranked 15th, play No. 5 Wayland Baptist today in Plainview, Texas, and Texas Tech tomorrow in Lubbock.
The KU women won their home opener Monday from the University of Minnesota 81-63. KU's only loss has been to No. 6 Old Dominion University.
Sophonore forward Lynette Woodard leads the Jayhawks in scoring and rebounds, averaging 30 points and 16 rebounds a game.
Woodard, Adrian Mitchell, Shyla Holders,
Crystal Burnett and V. C. Sander make up
some of the company's most successful products.
The Murray State Racers—as in thoroughbeds—bring a 0-1 record to Allen
Field House for the 7:35 p.m. game. They lost 81-70 to Tennessee Wesleyan.
KU, 91-68 winners over Fairleigh Dickinson will面 Wednesday, who are starting to rebuild this year from a team that went 8-17 last year. The Racers don't bring any full-time starters from last year, which took to KU 106-71.
Probable starters for Murray State include John Randall, fourth on last year's scoring list with an 8-point average; Bobo Clemens, 4.6 points; and Robert Kelly, 3.4 points.
Roy Taylor, a 6-4 guard and juco transfer from Vincennes, Inc., Juco, who a-c won奖 of Indiana's Mr. Basketball title four years ago. At Vincennes he averaged 22 points a game and was an honorable mention juco All-American.
After Kansas' sole game, Darnell Valentine has 16 points; Tony Guy, 14; Paul Mokeski 12; Wilmore Fowler 10, and John Crawford eight.
Stanley gets injunction against Big 8 hearing
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (IOI) -Ousted Oklahoma State football coach Jim Stanley yesterday obtained a temporary federal restraining order prohibiting the Big Eight Conference from taking action against him in cases of hearss testimony against Stanley.
The restraining order was issued in U.S. District Court and remains in effect until Dec. 8, when a hearing on Stanley's request for the arrest will be held by James Russell G. Clark.
As a result, the Big Eight announced the postponement of a scheduled session during conference hearing this week in Oklahoma to the Oklahoma State football program.
Stanley was fired as coach Nov. 21, following a 4-7 season. He was accused of being involved in alleged player payoffs before the start of the season.
"They can do whatever they want to do to Oklahoma State," James P. Linn,
Stanley and his lawyer filed for the restraining order when court opened for session at 9 a.m. and presented it to the conference shortly before noon.
Stanley's lawyer, said, "as long as it does not involve Jim Stanley."
"We thought we could work out some agreement with Big Eight attorneys as to what evidence would be used," Linn said. "But we couldn't so we decided to use this route. We did not feel we were getting minimal due process of law."
"He (Stanley) is named in the report. He's mentioned in the report. But the testimony is hearsay. It's like, 'Somebody said, somebody said, somebody said.' Let me say this, very clearly, the report deals with Jim Stanley."
Both Stanley and Big Eight Commissioner Charles M. Neinas declined comment.
We have a sauce that's a favorite among the very courageous.
TACO JOHN'S
And we also have a mild soak source that a gentle enough for piscinol tankers too. And one in between is shown in Figure 6-24.
It's Tacorrific!
1626 W. 23rd
KANSAN WANT ADS
Aesmemodiatum, good, services and employment
Associate in Banking, Management &
Finance. Must have Bachelor's degree in Banking,
Management & Finance. Send resumes to:
BRIEL AESMEMODATUM, 100 EAST 3RD STREET, N.Y.C.
110024.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times times
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.35 $2.50 $3.00 $4.00
Intraditional
word
01 02 03 04 05
AD DEADLINES
to run :
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The DUM 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.
Four items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be shared in person or by calling the UDR business office at 961-4238.
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UNICIP cards, calendars at Oaks, Bookstore,
Cards Library, and Adventure A Bookstore Near
Nashville.
You will be *optimized* Dec 4 and 5 at a
very small shell. No Leisure Suite. 12-6
PARTY-TIME IB-ANY TIME BOWN wishing
PARTY-TIME IB-ANY TIME BOWN wishing
WILFRED SKILLET IDLATUR INQUOR
WILFRED SKILLET IDLATUR INQUOR
SALE! from new year 2017 Christmas with 82% OFF
1st book of The Nine Children's Stories
Quiet Books, Quilt Series 1990, Vermont, #851-3461
2nd book of The Nine Children's Stories
Quiet Books, Quilt Series 1990, Vermont, #851-3461
Cross Country Sking Jaxn 1-6 with HPER Devil 35 Call Rich Marks or Mika Haleh at 846-354-2000
Employment Opportunities
Pointy Therapy Workshop with Susan Hammill
Celebrating the lives of emotional and physical blocks. 9 & 10 $75
(2). 9 & 10 $75 (2).
ENTERTAINMENT
Why Study? See "The Vietnam" Dec. 4 and 12 at an awful small hall hall
FOR RENT
Extra nice apartment next to campus. Utilizes
free space in the lobby and one more efficiency,
a total of 893, 847, 858, -849, 847.
Apartment and rooms furnished, parking, most
stores, phone. 843-757-6761, and rear town.
Phone: 843-757-6761
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW NENT-WRITE. Studio in Bedford, Bedfordshire, furnished and carpeted with wood paneling. Large work-space, art package. On KU OK. Call 82-2443 or visit at 824 Floor No. call 812-4434 or visit at 824 Floor No.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimalh Hall now has a couple of openings for the revered and beloved, Ms. Abismith HALL, or give us a call at 83-8503 and we will be glad to answer you. Ms. Abismith HALL, 1800 Naimalh Avenue, ABISMITH
The Victims" don't care whether or not you
receive them. Dec 4 and 5 are small
small halls.
Two bedroom apartment, 6-10x, 502 W. 14th,
floor. Call Mark Schmidt, 888-292-3472,
prt; call Mark Schmidt, 888-292-3472,
prt
Convenient studio apartment for sublease. Avail-
lance on 24-hour route, Trailside complex 896-853. Ask
896-853. Ask
OPEN-HOUSE-TO HOUSE 3200 W. Bldg.
AUGUSTA-TOWNEY Two employees who leave with win rewards.
NO TIME LESS THAN 10-DAYS. 3200 W. Bldg.
Individuals feature two and three winners each.
Feature two and three winners at HVACR for $4,500. Call Ron at 862-322-7996 or HVACR at 862-322-7996.
Need sublease one bedroom apartment at 12-
Norton Ridge. Call after 6 p.m. 841-899-8658.
Clean Park 25 Appartement, 2 bedrooms,
Chemist Park 15 Appartement, January 1 Call for
the details. 841-602-3922
2 BR apartment to rent rent spring
室 2 BR Park 53 Call 841-8099 12-4
Need sublease one bedroom apartment at Red
Bod Land. Furnished. 821-932-6158. 12-48
Sublease 2 bedroom-2 story townhouse Trilridge, 841-7828 after 5 12-6
Available Jan 1—three months towneeshouse
Jan 8–August 5, Trailrattle House
841–2622 12-7
Beautiful new 4 bedroom house awaiting you! Perfect for a family of four, new kitchen appliances,匀居住舒适的家,超大的空间.
bikolease-Nice, cell 2 bedroom; 2 apartment;
7-15 p.m. Union Call 841-280-126; 12-4
10 p.m.
Sublease One room apartment Park 25 8158
electricity 942-9622 or call 123
931-6531
Christian House. Very close to campus Call 842-6529 between 1-3 p.m. 12-12
Sublease - Modern studio apartment. Ideally situated in a quiet neighborhood with nearby golf facilities. Available 2am - $180/month
Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in four-plex.
Short walk to campus. Quail: 841-4803. 12-8
Be prepared for second semester! Check out the
course notes on our website at www.hawaii.edu/
UUIllined paid and close to campus. Call 812-
357-0141.
Need to sublease 2 BH Jawacker-
hill ApL all utilities价 $price negotiated
485-7600
Rent now! 2 BR unfurnished. Front, Rde. cheap,
for 2nd晨设. Call Julie 14:59:17-19:46
2 BR apartment informalled 10 minute walk to campus. $156 month. 843-1027. Available Jan. 1.
Studio apartment for rent. Utilities paid. 842-12-7
8737
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator. Speakblitz
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 653-800-9000, 2000 W-kW, UTV
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 653-800-9000, 2000 W-kW, UTV
SunSpace-Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-
Supreme lenses are the solution, reasonable.
1021 Mast. 841-5770
Western Civilization Note—New on sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Make sense to buy in Western Civilization. Attend ration 31. For exam preparation. *New Analysis Courses*. Attend course Critic, Mails Bookstore, and Oread Bookstore. If Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with straps, cords, and speakers, mustang bass covers. Very good condition.
Girl! She's "T" T-shirt In Town! Regularly
$6. Now $49. The AWT. 927 Mass.
Mountain guitars-dura to factory shutdown, J. A. Watson's guitar is fitted with a single string guitar unit used here half original print quality. Note that the guitar's original print quality.
A cure for die fever—"The Victims" Dec. 4 and 5 at an awfully small ball. 12-6
1972 Mercerault 220 D Sun roof, stereo rebuilt
from a March 4, 3000 mile warranty. As
recommended by the manufacturer.
Swedish Officer's winter coat. Original white
waistcoat with sheep skin lining $50.00, JE
12-5
1977 Dodge Van. Customized 318 V-8 swivel seat,
factor air, model name 684-162 before 6-12
550cc
1975 Pontiac Grand AM - 400 V-8. AM-FM 8
-125
battery 844-102 use V-8.
Panasonic FM-AAM FM Stario Receiver with 5-channel configuration. One chip, old-Excellent Condition, in excellent working order.
(Price includes a 2-year warranty.)
Tools. Full set of snap on hand tools—4 tool
buckles, wheel grinder—4 foot tilt lamp 1/2"
*30-60
65 VW with 72 engine. Leaving town, must sell $200 or best offer. 843-670-460 for Tom. 105
Furniture: Bedroom, dining and miscellaneous
Furniture: Also color灯及 stereo 12-1
842-6166
Shirrow model S 710 receiver. Excellent condition, one year warranty left on parts. Call (800) 259-2593.
Fender Duo Precision AMP 75 tone, single coil condenser preamp and speaker. Designed by Robert Fender in the 1960s. A beautiful preamplifier. Must be 82-400mm or 81-350mm compatible. Musical equipment only.
Moving: Must sell 1975 Kawasaki 500, $425, 81-1
6397.
Brunschach 27 cm by Bischaye 10 ft. *Exemple*izmatik cunzai 37 cm by Büchery
Michigan Street Music cells and services multigroup, a subsidiary of Fountain Street Music. In stock Martin 05-28, Duskin D-40, Duskin D-39, Sloane D-29, Gould D-29, Emmett D-29, Johnson D-29, and have a good selection of violins and accordions. A good selection of violins and accords are given (15-38), Mon to Sat, and until 11 noon. Born 15-38, Mon to Sat, and until 11 noon.
JAVELIN. 1974, V-8. automatic transmission, air-conditioned, power brakes, power steering, snowing, fog light, and warning lights.
(Alvance) Concert Connect with shoulder strap and case. 150 Call 864-6177 at 7:00, 7:26, 7:43, 8:00.
for sale. one Teac taped, persian rug, chest of drawers, bookcase. More info: 844-1039-1012
1973 Datum 1200 Coupe Depoquet. now tires.
1973 Datum 1200 Coupe inspection *450* Cali 811-843-
694. (Trucks only).
Nordica Foam ski boots. Size 6-7. Call 841-8524.
1969 Cougar XR7. Very nice car! Call 841-6634
10.27
L. MOSSMAN GUITABS. I have a few very
original guitars — [2161,2162,968] w/ 2161,2162 after
original repair.
Pretty, new shearling hatch short jacket, zip
side, size N 8 (35cm) with zipper. £169,
pre-order online at www.northface.co.uk or
441-825-7850.
Battery. Extra Hour Duty. Maintenance Free.
Battery. Extra Hour Duty. Maintenance Free.
show out in front. Will separate itself on
the back of the truck.
1970 Creswell Impala. 2 dogs, 72,000 miles. Three and battery like new. In good condition. 12-8.
Take a sale, buy a new unupholstered 40 channel CBH chair. For $799, take the chair from 7:30 and 10:30 am, or after a Sale of $899.
ENTRAVAGANT PLANT SALE Perfect holiday plant sale. $295 a m - 8 p.m. Dec. 1 to Dec. 3. $395 a m - 9 p.m. Dec. 4 to Dec. 7.
Excellent hire! 2*15' JBL speakers $70 each
Audience hire: 8 base days. bass at 8am
841-8841 12-7
FOUND
"The Victims" are the only hand left that you won't see until December 4 and 5 at an awfully shallow bank.
Calculate in irl 111 Strong On Nov 16 Call
864-4826 or come by SA 9 Strong to 12-3
IP address
Found at 12th and Louisiana, silver wire frame
accessory. Contact Information center at the UMN.
12-46
Contact Information center at the UMN.
12-46
Lost calculator on 4th floor of Wescoe It found,
please call Comnie at 864-1041. 12-5
Warheaded smallbatteries and a tiny Detachment Carrier landmine duty and nightfall Warheaded largebatteries and a giant Detachment Carrier landmine duty and nightfall
**VERONICA JOBEZ** Biomass full-time Europe, Austria and Switzerland. Reqs: 2 yrs of experience in the job position's monthly requirements. Expands skill set. Frequently requires: PhD or master's degree in a relevant field.
PSYCHIATRIC AIDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE PERSONS
Male and Female Students encouraged to apply Applications to director of nursing, Topeka State Hospital Phone 913-258-4376. Equal Opportunity Employer.
PSYCHiatric AIDES, LICENSED MENTAL WORKERS. Manages enriched to apply. Applicants apply to Director of Nursing, Topeka State Hospital, Phone 913-296-4576. An equal opportunity employer.
Bill Mizer, John O'Dell, Mark Gilman, Kevin McHugh, John Schroeder "Detects" and a small, private mail hall
MCCALLS SHIRES now taking applications for their positions. Please visit www.mccallshires.com. Be a friendly, dependable home-person person that likes to work with people. Excellent communication skills are growing company. See Howard Pearlman. An equal opportunity employer.
Godfather's is the fastest growing pizza restaurant chain in the country! Because of this management experience is required if you have management skills and have the drive and determination to grow your business. You contact KGH Gehrer or K.Kehl, Godfather's pizza, 711 W. 23rd. Managers $190 per month.
Part time day干洗师 must be able to:
11:20-Mond-Friday. Apply in person only. BSC
www.bsc.org.uk
Student Trainers, Learning Disabilities Research Institute, Atlanta, Georgia; Professor (preferably Psychology, Education Biology) for tabulation and analysis. Stipend amount based on completion of program. Cautionary note: Carruth (4-1786), Deadline Dec 20. 12-4
From 4 a.m. to, closing, weekdays and weekends.
Saturday and Sunday, or night or day shift.
Appointments: (310) 528-5756.
MEN! WOMEN!
Godfather's now hiring for delivery and weekends help night. 711 W. 22d. 12-1
A student half-time research assistant position is offered by the Project Bureau of Child Research to assist with data collection. The position requires include data collection from police and court records, from East Kumamoto region. Additional responsibilities of data for computer analysis, data analytic, and data for data management will be working qualified applicants who have at least a bachelor's degree in the field or who has had research experience and who has a background in statistical packages for data analysis. Specify experience with the use of ANOVA, COVAR, Pearl, Levene, and Student t-test experience with but not use of remote terminals capable of work cooperatively as part of a team starting December 19, 2018. Senior applications apply to the University of Hawaii, Kauai, Hawaii. Application deadline is February 19th. The University of Child Research is an equal opportunity employer.
Waffles meet 25-30 hr. per week. No nights or Sundays. Uniform furnished. Woolworths. Free wifi.
Lawrence Quiet School is filling a position in the accounting department. Send resume to Lawrence Quiet School at 212-684-7500 or qualified at the law school career center. Mail resumes at the law school career center.
Male or female gymnastic instructors. Knowledge of techniques for both weightlifting and free weight training. Min. Tuition费: $300 per hour. No prior experience required.
Part-time custodial maintenance job available.
Convertible to computer Experienced (high
efficiency) 12.7
NEED EXTRA XMAS MONS! Suncity catering has openings for walkers, waitresses and staff. Experience in food service necessary and being a professional will prepare you to appear a mask Call Ace At Gc340 for invoices.
SUMMER JOBS FORGE SERVICE I here, where
we are located in the O'Neill Mountains. Mm.
Ct. 184 K. Fovearcrest, Kalpland, Mt. 39001
Kentucky. Job details, apply online at:
www.jobsforge.com
Full time co-lead day care teacher beginning
jun. 12. Bachelor's degree, certificate in early
education (e.g., child development) or
school level are required. Call Hittikin. 849-4300
Equal Opportunity Employer Application deadline.
Email hittikin@uva.edu
Dermaceuticals Pharmacology and Toxicity
Appointment 12 months with possibility of ex-
amendment 12 months with possibility of ex-
amendment. Duties Conducting behavioral and bona-
ficial requirements. BS or equivalent experience in
Requirements. BS or equivalent experience in
Familiarity with biochemical techniques Labo-
ratory animal surgery Deadline for applications.
Small animal surgery Deadline for applications.
Teacher Department of Pharmacology and Taxi-
tical Services West Central, Lawrence KS; 6005, Phone: 844-793-8750
Affirmative Action employer Application area
religion, race, sex, disability, veteran status
inclusion.
Driver to transport child home from University of Illinois at Chicago Thurs. 11 a.m. Call Cassandra Hall, 843-6521.
LOST
Dress down and dance to "The Victims" at an
awfully small hallway Dec. 4 and 5. 12-6
6 month old cat, black and red collar with black
marker. Call: CALL-794-2861. 12-2
Lost; I 1 pair made muffin in Smith. If found,
please call 843-8565-mack for Tracy.
12
Last either at Blake Hall or Carruth. Withnauer
watch, Silver with blue face for Residential value;
or Red with black face for Residential value.
Glasses, blue can, brown wire frame, brown tinted lenses 12 weeks ago. Rowward H6-8428-17-7
MISCELLANEOUS
Turn a campus, college faction into a virtual community by inviting new members to the right platform. Here is how business now to the right platform. Here are three steps you can take to make a ton of money while building equity in your business. First, build a profit if this sounds like your kind of deal. Then, create a virtual campus or community.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
weekdays only. You can contact the
Friday's AM or PM on Saturday at
the provided phone number.
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Choose and cut your beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive eat on Hiway K-10 approximately 3 km to County Road 405. Open weekends till Christmas. PINE HILL FARM.
The Victims? Just ask the police who we are Apparent at an actively small hall. Die.
NOTICE
"The Victims," O'Yeh, John, Paul, George,
Drawe, De 4, and 5 at an airwreckly 2-
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10
Friday. December 1. 1978
University Daily Kansan
Red Lion ...
From page one
He recalled a story, also from the days of the Beefeater restaurant:
"Bill never accepts checks, he always deals in cash. Well, one day, a vice president from a local bank came in for lunch with his wife, and wanted to pay with a check," he said. "Bill asked him if he could read the sign prohibiting checks, and when the man still didn't get any cash, Bill told him to get out, and threw both the lunches in the
"There were a lot of workers in that day who I know had probably been turned down for loans by this bank, and when BILLicked him out," he said, "they all cheered."
The day of my last lunch arrives. After all the perfect receptions or the party, I will pick up "kicked out"
Hedges confirmed that the incident occurred.
BILL JUST muttered, "Too late darlin';
You're taking what you get," and disapired up
I heard him talking to several regulars, "Yep, about 12:30 those strangers come in, asking stuff like, 'Gee, is that real knotty wood?' or 'What's my time,' he said, looking in my direction.
The sign over the door warns: "Please do not tell anyone about the Lion. We have no time for strangers. Remember—it's your seat."
It was going to be a long dav.
I went back to talk to Bill at 3:30. The lunch crowd thinned, Bill was standing behind the counter, a coffee cup in his hand, laughing with a couple of regulars seated at
"No, Bill, no special." I said. "I was wondering if I could ask you a few
It got very,very quiet.
The regulates began to laugh softly. Bill said no. "I've got too many goddamned strangers hangin' around as it is," he said, walking in the opposite direction behind the
"WELL, COULD I at least see the diamonds in your teeth?" I asked. Bill and the regulars laughed again. "She wants to see my teeth."
Then he walked back up the counter to me and opened his mouth. His front teeth, top lip, are very visible.
"I moved the one-carit diamond to the bottom," he said, his mouth still open. "I don't have to do anything special to them. They're self-cleaning."
He hadn't kicked me out yet, so the questions turned to comedy: did him if he
"Darlin," I'm not sure," he said. He looked at the men at the counter. "You guys remember how to spell my name?" They asked, and I told them, "Well, I guess you won't find out, then."
"Look, I serve my regulars in seven seconds, and they can eat in seven minutes—enough time for a work lunch break," he said. "The strangers mess things up. They should be afraid of one of my regulars take's a swing at them, not me.
I asked him why he hated to serve strangers.
"I moved the place here about three years ago, but the goddamned bridge is bringing too much traffic through, and people see the Red Lion. I'm going to move again pretty soon—I'm lookin' for a place in an alley with a back doorway."
Bill turned to his customers. "Now look.
The little shta't takein. I won't talk to
him."
LBEGAN to take notes.
I told Bill I would put my notebook away.
We made a deal that he would keep answering as long as I didn't write anything down.
At that point, a regular came in the door and animated, "What'll it be today. Didn't you know?"
The customer joked that he would charge his bill.
Bill turned to me, pointed to the customer, and said, "People like this—my regulars—if they forgot their wallets, that? OK with me. I just won't have it." The stranger, well, he can just get the hell out."
Wright and his wife, Aletha Husten-Stein, also a professor of human development and psychology, received a grant from the Spencer Foundation a little more than a year ago for research on the Influence of Television on Children, CHITC, was set up with the grant.
If it's fun, it's bad for you. That's what is often heard these days. And that's what children who are told of the results of a study on autism are seen at the University of Kansas might say.
Favorite kid shows most harmful
Some of the programs children watch most in "Happy Days," *Six Million Dolls*, and "American Greetings."
The center has tested the viewing habits of children from age 4 to the sixth grade, in groups ranging from four and five children, in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago.
The television shows that are most popular with children are bad for them, according to John Wright, co-director of the study.
"Nope. I can't tell you anything about that. No way."
Another harmful effect of TV commercials in the sexual stereotyping inherent in pornography is the increased risk of pregnancy.
The average child sees 20,000 commercials a year, an average of more than 50 a day. Three-fourths of the commercials shown to children are for food products. Most commercials during "kid vid" viewing slots are for junk foods.
Children are likely to misunderstand many commercials, Wright said. Many children think that Frito-Lay products have some sort of fruit content, for instance he
The Center's researchers have found several differences between commercial banks and the other financial institutions.
"How long does it take a stranger to become a regular customer who does you have?" I ask.
By LYNN WILLIAMS Staff Reporter
"It won't be long before everybody's on a cable," he said.
Bill sidied down the back counter to the coffee machine and poured another cup.
This probably will mean more educational programs that invite viewer participation,
Commercials for boys' toys are characterized by a lot of action and noise, competitive action and male narrators. Girls commercials feature slow transitions, female narrators and soft visual effects, such as pictures with diffused edges.
He looked to the men at the counter.
What would you say, one of them an-
swered?
"The harder you try to make TV for children that's high quality, pre-social, of good taste, low in violence and modeling desirable behavior, the fewer people watch it." Wright said. "We hope that our research will improve children's programming."
For the moment, people at CHTC are concerned with making good programming practices.
Bill hugged. "I like that—say it varies from day to day."
"Nope, I don't talk about that either," he said. "It's kind of my treasure hunting."
I ASKED Bill about a story I had heard that he liked to lower himself into wells to look for artifacts, and that he had found the ancient Quantrill, who burned Lawrence in 1863.
Bill said he came here from Chicago, but wouldn't verify a rumor that he had been in Chicago.
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Almost 45 minutes had passed. I asked him if it were true that some Red Lion strangers had served Bill with formal complaints after being yelled at or thrown
"Oh, I get sued all the time," he said.
Then "I have to go to court. But always
have to go to court."
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Cameras, cops observe sneaky shoplifters
Staff Renorter
By DEBRIECHMANN
A grocery store manager eyed a size-16 woman who had ripped off his store后 he watched as she lifted her full skirt and slipped a half gallon of ice on her plump thighs before heading for the door.
The manager approached her and struck up a friendly conversation. Soon melting ice cream tricked down her legs. She was in a "sticky" situation-caund red-handed for shoilifting.
"IT GOT PRETTY messy myessage the whole thing is over so I asked Lawrence grocer when he demanded it."
Market managers cannot excuse any customer of stealing inside the store. Legally, customers are not allowed to leave inside the store. Instead, he used one of many techniques to catch dishonest customers who are stealing local supermarkets.
Jack Leatherman, manager of Falley's Discount Foods, 255 Iowa St., told of other shoplifting tricks that every month account for a $4,000 to $6,000 loss and lost 10 percent of the value loss for 10 of the largest shopper stores in Lawrence.
"We had a guy back in the meat department who tucked some packages of sliced ham into his pants and the assistant manager walked up to him and casually asked him to put the ham back." Leather-
"WELL, THE assistant manager wasn't about to reach into the guy's pants and so he got away with it."
man said. "The guy told him if he wanted it back he'd have to get it himself.
Although there is no way to tell exactly how much is stolen, last year as much as 15 percent of U.S. supermarket prices went to cover the cost of dishonesty, according to industry estimates.
Despite one-way mirrors, video cameras and signs that threaten prosecution, customers are nickel and silver. The state Department of Public Works marked up 1 percent to compensate for shoplifting in some Lawrence stores, Leatherman said, and "the store was the first."
So far this year, 203 shoplifters have been caught stealing merchandise off the shelves of grocery and pharmacy stores.
Shirley Easum, municipal court clerk, said most of the shoplifters were caught stealing at supermarkets. Stores frequently hit her she said, were Falley's, which they are calling "the black market." Nandasm Drive; and Dillons' 1 W. 6th st.
SIE SAID K-Mart Discount Store, 31st and lown
trees, and 25th and discount Center, 2525 Iowa st,
St. Louis, MO.
While merchants are stepping up the precautions against slappiers, another concern is the rate at which they can be killed.
Some local greecers said that shoplifting by University of Kansas students was one of their biggest problems, but that the largest part of their thefts were in the school system which would explain the higher number of student thefts.
Grocery store employees across the nation last year reported were responsible for as much as 30
However, Easum, who sees shoplifters appear in court, estimated that 75 percent of Lawrence shoplifters were not students, but housewives and people from low-income families.
About three-fourths of the prosecuted shopfronters are female, she said. The most common offenders are young business owners.
REASONS FOR stealing are diverse.
Leatherman said he thought students shoplifted because they wanted to see whether they could get
"They don't do it because they need something to eat," he said.
Terry Garman, manager of Wayne's Way-1o, 848 New Hampshire St., described one incident involving a girl who was struck by a car.
"There was this girl dressed really nice. She didn't need to steal," Garman said. "She took a pack of strawberries, and I asked her why she took it. She told me all the other kids did and got away with it.
"She said she didn't know why she had to get caught and that it was her first time."
The most common answer given by detected shopfitters is, "I have never done this before," according to the Small Business Administration in Washington, D.C.
A brochure published by the SBA says: "Failure to prosecute first offenders encourages shoplifting. It is best to operate on the premise that he who steals also lie. Call the police when you catch a shoalfier."
SOME GROCERCS in Lawrence, however, sine use,
did not always call the police when they caught it.
"What's really sad," said one store owner, "is stealing by elderly people who are on fixed income."
Mike Valentine, manager of Safety, 26rd and Iowa streets, said that if the offender was elderly, senile or mentally retarded, he would take the person's condition into consideration.
Most supermarket thefts involve less than $100 worth of food or other merchandise. An average of 20 petty larceny cases—mostly from groceries—have been viewed by the municipal court each month
The municipal court has dismissed or deferred 41 percent of all shipbuilding cases reviewed since Jan. 1. Although second offenders can be jailed for up to 10 years, they must never serve time in jail. They can be fined up to $100.
This year about 30 shoplifters have had to pay fines because they did not pay at the store. Only 12 shoplifters have to pay the full time and only seven served time behind bars.
An effort is being made by grocers to catch customers stealing, but many more people are stealing.
EVERY WEEK at Falney's, Leatherman said, he sees at least 10 people scampling, but he thinks many are not.
Mirrors and video camera have been installed at Falley's. Although Leatherman would not say how many cameras he had, he promised that more would be installed soon.
Valentine, manager of the new Safeway store, has a different method for detecting shoplifters. The entire store is visible through six one-way mirrors installed on the second floor of one side of the store.
Valentine said he did not want to give the impression that there was someone constantly watching the store, but that he placed someone behind them when he thought the store needed to be watched.
Senators sued by law students
Jim Meyer, who has managed Rusty's at Hillcrest for four years, does not use commercial shopfitting equipment on alert employees. Six years ago, he installed video cameras from the ceiling—only two actually work.
By TAMMY TIERNEY
See THEFT back page
Charging infringement of their First Amendment rights, the Student Bar Association and three law students are the takers in this case.
Staff Reporte
A class-action suit was scheduled to be filed in Kansas U.S. District Court this morning by the SBA, John Gage, Katieheen McCormick and others.
Named as defendants in the suit were Mike Harper, student body president, Reggie Robinson, student body vice president,
According to Jeff Roth, SBA president, the suit was filed in response to an amendment passed by the Senate Wednesday. The amendment stipulated that the SBA could not receive Senate approval for a petition urging the moving of the Jimmy Green statute.
SBA IS requesting $200, which is one dollar for every law student, plus court costs and attorney's fees, from the 23 student.
The Senate's restriction on the SBA said no SBAA member attempt to persuade Gov. Robert F. Bennett to move the Jimmy Green statue to new Green Hall from its location on Jayhawk Boulevard.
However, Harper said yesterday he would veto the amendment because he thought it suppressed minority opinion. But, he said, the amendment will not be officially rescinded until the next Senate meeting in January.
The amendment was proposed by Barry Shalinsky, holdover senator, who said he did not think the opinion of the law students was correct.
Although Shalinsky proposed the amendment to offset a petition circulating in the law school that favored moving the杖, Roth never had the power to do so.
HALINSKY SAID he thought Bennett might order the statue because he had only few weeks left in office and "noticed that he is a very hard worker."
Roth said the Senate's attempt to put conditions on SBA's funding was a violation of the group's civil rights of freedom of speech and right to petition the government for redress of grievances as provided under the First Amendment.
HOWEVER, ROTH said, he is pleased that the amendment affected the SSA rather than another student organization.
"I'm happy that it happened to us because we're more well-equipped than any other group on campus to handle it," he said. "Were they to put conditions on another group, those people would not have the machinery at hand to handle it."
Although SBA members appear to be taking the suit seriously, Harper said it "was the funniest time I ever heard."
"I can't believe a third-year law student came up with such a lame-brain idea," he said.
Harper said he did not think SBA could sue the Senate because it was a state body and therefore was immune from lawsuits.
"The only way they can sue us is if they cain we are a law agency," he said. "And, if they do that, they'll have to sue the entire University and the Board of Regents because that is whom we are ultimately responsible to."
"Jeff Rosth stolmed into my office and demanded that I call an emergency meeting to get that amendment off the books by Monday," he said. "I didn't feel it was necessary to call a meeting because of his attitude."
"I'm not worried about a lawsuit at all. I'm having a good time with it. I think it's hilarious."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas
Monday, December 4. 1978
KANSAN
Vol.89.No.67
Lawrence, Kansas
A man in a long coat sits on the ground, surrounded by tangled tree branches.
Cold limbs
Cold weather and a dusting of snow yesterday slowed down Christmas tree sales for Stephen Olson.
who lives at 1247 Kentucky St. Otion works at the Pence Garden Center, 15th and New York streets, and in warmer weather does landscape work for the center.
Faculty defends IHP
Bv DEBRIECHMANN
Staff Reporter
Faculty members of KU's Integrated Humanities Program said Saturday they would favor competition from another university in course at the University of Kansas.
The committee members questioned the professors for about two hours at the Kansas Union in the committee's last meeting all sides of the controversial program.
He said he had taken a "gamber's point of view" and would even quit for two years to give another program a head start.
"We would welcome competition—we'd be delighted to have it," Dennis Quinn, director of IHP, said.
QUINN SAID he did not mind if another program was developed to cover the humanities in a different way.
"Our argument is that there is only one way of integrating the humanities," Quinn asks. "We need to forward our unified, common philosophy, we don't say five and 'take your pick'."
Quinn and two other IHP professors met with a six-member evaluation committee to defend the program's "academic merits," and to respond to criticism made by opponents at one of two public hearings held last month.
"We don't dictate what is true—it is there to be seen."
Critics of HIP have said that the views of three IHP professors are presented in a book.
The HIP advisory committee's next task is to compile the information collected throughout the evaluation and to present it at a conference in Undergraduate Studies and Advising.
"I don't think anyone could possibly learn," courses were given, flirting someone, or thinking about finding out the truth of things. We are not in the business of simply expressing opinion.
Quinim disagrees. It would be wrong to persuade a student to believe something unless the person sees and accepts that viewpoint, he said.
So far, the evaluation committee has held three public hearings to listen to oral testimony from supporters and opponents who wrote 191 letters about IHP.
Quinn said he was skeptical of the committee's ability to complete its evaluation by Jan. 1, and said he expected it to "drag through next semester."
WIL LINKUGEL, chairman of the advisory committee, said he hoped the committee could present its findings before the end of the year.
"We spend half our time not teaching the program, but defending it," Quinn said.
He said that he was not unhappy with how the evaluation unfolded, but that he
was not sure the committee obtained a complete picture of the program.
HE SAID he be understood that this weekend's meeting was an opportunity for the IPH professors to defend the program, but he thought the meeting just "scratched
At the meeting, Quinn presented a copy of a letter sent to the committee that listed former IHP participants, their current occupations, and their fields of study.
"I don't know how they're going to decide what is true or what to believe." Quinn said. "I've read all the letters and some of them have flat errors in them."
Much of the controversy about IHP surfaced after 11 IHP students decided to study in a French monastery.
The list showed more than 28 former students studying law, 12 medicine, nine nursing, 14 theology and 33 pursuing graduate studies.
The list is not a complete list of all HIP participants, Quinn said, but it gives a sampling of other areas of study HIP alumni have pursued.
"The faculty of IHP places great emphasis upon the fruits of our labor's—the students themselves," the letter said. "We believe that we have indicated on the quality of IHP alumni."
Quinn said, "The graduates are influential, intelligent members of the community who still support IHP—not fanatics or crazy people."
Watson branch questioned
By CAROL BEIER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
University of Kansas plans to consolidate branch libraries were compared to a "aFransson army directive" Friday by one member of the university's board.
the member, Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the mathematics department, told committee members at their Friday meeting that he was not convinced continued operation of separate branch libraries was an economic problem for KU.
Himmelberg said the convenience of a mathematics library for faculty research was worth some additional cost.
JIM RANZ, de l'offices, said a centrally located library would be more accessible to students and would require less
Himmelmeyer was not a member of the library committee the past two years when its members discussed and approved a two-part grant.
The first part of the plan provides for the renovation of Watson Library. Funds for the $5.2 million project were approved by the Kansas Legislature last spring. Remodeling is scheduled to begin next fall.
The second part of the plan has been approved by the University administration and has been submitted to the Kansas Board of Regents for funding. It provides for the construction of West an additional library on the site of the military science building.
PLANNING AND construction of West Watson would cost between $15 million and $20 million, according to Ranz. Ranz said the new building would house collections from the sciences, music, architecture and mathematics departments.
Ranz said initial recommendations for consolidation of branch libraries had come from three University committees. He said the new library would be based on the existing library.
Ranz said that until there was funding by the Regents, West Watson would "remain a matter of conjecture."
Paul McCarthy, professor of mathematics and chairman of the mathematics department's library committee, said the "master plan" to consolidate the branch libraries need not be the final word.
"I CAME TO the University 18 years ago and I've seen several master plans made," he said. "I dare say master plans can be changed."
Another committee member, Debra Nails, Baton Rouge, La., graduate student, said she had two friends on the mathematics faculty who she thought would not support Himmelberg's research. The faculty members consulted library resources 20 to 30 times a day.
Another committee member doubted some mathematics faculty's claims concerning the importance of the library collection in Strong Hall.
"Two or three is a lot different from 20 or 30," she said.
Nails suggested a compromise if the mathematics library were moved to West Watson. She said a certain percentage of the collection's most used and most recent material could be duplicated and left in Strong Hall.
4
HIMMELBERG ESTIMATED that the mathematics collection contained 10,000 volumes, 400 of which were journals.
Other business at the meeting included a talk by A趴 Head, law ibrarian in Green Hall. Committee members toured the law office and reviewed documents.
The law and medical libraries are administratively separate, Ranz said, from the branches and Watson. Head said the law library would not be part of the West Watson plans because it was not considered a branch library.
2
Monday, December 4, 1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
AMA raps price fixing ruling
CHICAGO—The president of the American Medical Association said yesterday that his organization would go to the Supreme Court if necessary to overturn a Federal Trade Commission ruling that the AMA has conspired to fix prices.
As delegates to the AMA convention opened its winter session, Tom E. Neshit, the association's president and a physician from Nashtown, stated the AMA's position, referring to a ruling last week by an FTC judge, which held that the AMA had caused medical hills to go up by probating doctors from the hospital.
Judge Ernest Barnes said the AMA's policy against doctors' advertising for patients, adopted early this century to stamp out medical hacking, had not been implemented.
He ordered the AMA to rescind its rules that keep physicians from advertising or otherwise soliciting patients.
Nesthitt contended that injury and death have resulted from "the unsurprised public solicitation of patients for some abortion mills" owned by doctors in Chicago. He also cited "misleading solicitation of patients for cosmetic surgery in California, Florida and elsewhere."
Tornadoes kill 4, injure 250
BONNIE CITY, LA — A tornado ravaged this northwest Louisiana city yesterday and other traisters touched down in Arkansas and Mississippi, killing at least four persons and injuring more than 250. About 250 National Guardmen were called to patrol the area to prevent looting.
The twisters spun out from a band of violent thunderstorms that had spread over the Southeast. The damage in Bossier City alone was estimated at $100 million.
Booster City was the worst hit community. State Police said two young girls were killed and more than 180 people were injured. More than 1,500 were left
A third fatality was reported at Helfin, La., a small farming community near Breslau city, where six persons were injured.
A fourth person was killed in El Dorado, Ark., when her frame house was demolished by trees uprooted by the winds.
Six killed when train derails
SHIPMAN, Va. —A Southern Railway passenger train jumped the tracks on a curve and piled into a ravine in mountainous south-central Virginia early yesterday. Authorities said six persons were killed and at least 60 were injured, several critically.
a severely injured cow was trapped for 11 hours in the debris of the smashed dining car, his legs pinned beneath a stove, before workers were able to release
Seven of the eight passenger cars and three of the four diesel locomotives of the Southern Crescent train, bound from Atlanta to Washington, piled up about 5:40 a.m. three miles north of Shipman, between Charlottesville and Lynchburg.
The cause of the derailment has not been determined.
Draft unprepared for a crisis
WASHINGTON - The Selective Service System is not capable of mobilizing enough recruits to meet Pentagon needs in a time of crisis, a congressional report said.
The study by the House Armed Services Committee said that even with the most optimistic assumptions, it would take more than twice as long as the timetable set by the Pentagon stipulates to deliver the first recruits to boot camp.
The Selective Service is in what is called "deep standby." There are only 98 employees in its national headquarters. There is no state or local structure. Because the military depends only on volunteers, Selective Service does not register or classify potential recruits.
The system is supposed to be able **to** put the first recruits in camp within thirty days of a mobilization order and **to** deliver 100,000 inductees within two.
Using optimistic estimates, it said, it would take 65 days to deliver the first recruits and 90 days to deliver 100,000.
SW Africans are voting today
WINDHOEK, South-West Africa - Blacks in this territory administered by South Africa are voting for the first time today in elections for a biracial legislature. Key opposition groups, however, have called for a boycott of the polls, contending balloting is rigged to favor parties dominated by whites.
South Africa, meanwhile, signaled it is ready to go along with U.N. demand for later elections supervised by the United Nations.
U. N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim said yesterday in New York that South African officials told him they would retain authority in the territory until 2035.
The move apparently was calculated to allay fears that South Africa would turn over power in the territory to winners of this week's elections, who then will be able to take control.
Sub conspiracy trial to begin
ST. LOUIS—Two New York men go on trial this week in federal court on charges of conspiring to steal the nuclear submarine Trepang from its berth in Mississippi.
Edward J. Mendenhail, 24, of Rochester, N.Y., and James W. Cosgrove, 26, of Geneva, N.Y., are charged with conspiracy against the United States. Conviction on the charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
Merdenhall, Cosgrove, and Kurtis J. Schmidt, 22, of Kansas City, Kan., were arrested Oct. 4. A compulsory charge against Schmidt was dropped later and he was released on bail.
2 Vietnam refugee boats sink
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—Two boats packed with Vietnamese refugees sank of Malaysia's northeast coast and in the Gulf of Thailand yesterday, drowning at least 26 and sending the known death toll of refugees in the past two weeks past 350.
Hundreds more refugees slipped through stepped-up Malaysian coastal patrols. There were more reports that ethnic Chinese, who make up most of the population in Malaysia,
At least 12 refugees drowned when their boat capsized in the Gulf off the southern Thai city of Nairthiwat, where they had been refused permission to land Saturday. More than 300 swamp ashore. Police said refugees may have been the source of the number of dead may be higher since no one was sure how many the boat carried.
The other boat sank off Mechang on Malaysia's northeast coast, where hundreds of refugees land daily. One body was recovered, several persons were taken to the hospital and their bodies are being processed.
Bridge over I-35 is dunamited
A series of six explosions toppled nearly 250 tons of steel and concrete onto 35 medical units, fire department officials, Kansas Highway Patrol troopers and other emergency personnel.
LENEXA—About 40 law enforcement officials watched demolition workers yesterday during the $38-foot, 81-stile bridge, which crosses Interstate 35, in New York.
The 66-foot-wide bridge will be replaced by an 84-foot-wide bridge to meet expanding traffic needs. The section of L35 used for demolition of the bridge is
Commuters who normally travel that section of the interstate are taking a detour route—U.S. Highway 80 to Interstate 435 and back to 138—until they reach their destination.
Weather ...
Skies will be clear to partly cloudy today and temperatures will be in the mid
Winds will be out at the west at 10 to 20 miles an hour. The lows tonight will drop
Protests continue in Tehran
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Imperial troops fired into the air and used tear gas in battles throughout Tehran against Islamic State fighters.
Power went in many areas of the capital after the shooting started. The fighting continued in darkness.
There were no immediate reports of casualties. Large groups of demonstrators, many clad in white shirts signifying their willingness to die, rallied in as many as 25 locations in the capital, officials reported.
Power plant employees had warned they would cut off electricity if the shanty's troops opened fire on protesters.
They said at least 14 demonstrators had been killed in clashes since Friday night, but opposition sources said the toll was closer to 70. More than 250 persons have been arrested.
Soldiers fired into the air, swung rifle butts and chased them down streets and alleys.
BEFORE THE demonstrations began, sporadic gunfire crackled across the nervous city. In Saturday night's rioting, troops killed five protesters and wounded 20 others. A general strike called by Iran's extinguished religious
Ant-shah protesters circulated down downtown Texan, yesterday, tying up traffic and taunting troops.
Officials of the city's martial-law government said the deaths occurred Saturday night when soldiers fired on a crowd that was leaving a mosque after the 9 p.m. curfew. Anti-government slogans blared from loudspeakers on the mosque and incited the crowd, which refused to disperse, the officials said.
THE CROWD had been praying at services marking Mohram, the emotional 29-day Moslem mourning period which began Saturday. The opposition has called for a stepped-up demonstrations and strikes to make the holy month a showdown between Shah Mohammad Reza Palaiyil and hisoes.
The military government banned public religious processions during Mohammad and said it would crack down on them.
The government hopes to keep the fervor of Mohammad from turning into the kind of anti-ash riot that have killed thousands in Iraq.
Religious protesters oppose the shanty westernizing social reforms, which they say have sainted Iran's elites.
political dissidents have joined the protests to demand a relaxation of the shah's autocratic rule.
MOHAHRAM MARKS the martyrdom in 641 A.D. of Imam Hosein, bossier of the prophet Mohammed and founder of the Shiite Moslem sect, to which most Iranians, including the shah, adhere.
The bazaar, the heart of Tehran's commercial life, was closed as usual for the 10 days of Moharram.
From his base in Paris, the exiled Ayatullah Kohamian, spiritual leader of Iran's 32 million Shites and symbol of the anti-shi'a movement, had called for a general strike in Iran beginning Saturday. But the strike appeared to be failing. grocery stores, pharmacies and other stores opened up yesterday, a working day for truckers or drivers of striking drivers kept gasoline stations supplied. Banks closed, apparently in fear of attack by riots.
The publishers of Tehran's seven major national daily newspapers, struck by their editorial employees since Nov. 6 in a protest over censorship, said they were going out of business immediately. The publishers of the papers, which had a combined circulation of one million, said they had no money to pay other employees.
Six-time loser hopes to win
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — It is not age that Harold Stassen runs hardest against. Churchill, he likes to remember, saved a country in his 78. And at 71, in his lightly grazed toque, Stassen looks more like a big, sorber mince than an aging grand-
And after half a century in public life, he says his record has "stood the test of time."
What Harold Stassen stuck hardest against is the look that came over Walter Crondike's face last month when Stassen announced he was running for president—again.
It was the sixth time Stassen had announced a bid for the Republican presidential nomination since 1948. Today, he said that he doesn't want to dilute, but a perennial one with little hope.
This time, though, Stassen says public financing will allow him the money to make a serious run. And he yearns to be taken seriously.
ALL RIGHT, then, who is he?
On Dec. 9, 1939, in an off-the-record speech to Washington's Gridiron Club, Stassen says, he called for an end to international isolation and advocated a United Nations conference that was the name him a delegate to the conference that wrote the U.N. charter.
Elsenhower, who had named him head of the Foreign Operations Administration, was under pressure from Vice President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State John Koehler. "I said he says he was one of those who counseled to stay—but which Elsenhower did. Later, Stassen says, he met with Lyndon Johnson and told him to stay out, too—which Johnson didn't. In 1968, Stassen was a peace cannon in the Wisconsin Republican primary.
THE ISSUE of peace was one on which Stassen made his early national reputation. He played a central role in organizing the first summit meeting in an effort to end the Cold War. In 1958, he was given Cabinet approval by White House assistant on disarmament.
As early as 1954, Stassen says, he opposed intervention in Vietnam. President
"If this is not to be an age of atomic hysteria and horror," he said then, "we must make it an age of international understanding and cooperation."
In 1966, Stassen took a leave from the White House to lead a move to dump Nixon as Eisenhower's running mate. But it failed. The president nominated Dayton, though, he points to his effort against Nixon: "It's not a matter of what I had against Nixon. It was a matter of observing him from across the table and documenting what the whole worlds know now."
Venus probes nearing target
LOS ANGELES—The first American spacecraft intended to orbit Venus will arrive at the cloud-shrouded planet today, leading a load of U.S. and Russian probes that will attempt to investigate the Earth's nearest neighbor.
Trailing the Pioneer Venus I orbiter are five more American probes that are the first U.S. craft aimed at the planet's surface. The probes are self-contained pieces of a single
craft that split apart as it neared the planet. They are to reach Venus on Saturday.
One will incinerate after briefly studying the harsh atmosphere. The others will plummet to the surface and be destroyed by the planet's crushing pressures and intense pressure.
Two Soviet craft headed toward the planet are due two weeks after the American fleet. Both are expected to send probes to the surface.
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STASSEN SAYS his attempt to dump Nixon saves his standing in the GOP establishment. Nixon was not the only one offended. Stassen was the first of six people who were held with Sen Joseph McCarthy. He was one of the first Republicans to support Social Security, bank deposit insurance, detente and UN membership for both Germanys and both China. He tried to get the GOP to approve him. He remains outside the GOP establishment.
As he opened his campaign this year, Stassen proposed a 10 percent national tax to balance the budget, said there was corruption in the Carter administration, and made a number of proposals dealing with interest rates, full employment and tax
But his ideas are not the whole story. There is a political track record too-of a meteoric rise, of blunders in timing, of a long slide from the center of power to the
IN THE 1930s, at 31, Stussman was a boy-wonder governor of Minnesota. He was relected twice, the second time in 1942. In 1958, he was nominated to be he was being mentioned for the presidency.
That year, the Minnesota delegation agreed to offer his name as a candidate, but he withdrew in favor of New York Gov. Thomas E. Deewe.
After the war, it is said, he could have walked into the U.S. Senate as a Minnesota senator. But he didn't run in 1946 and instead were at Philadelphia, closer to Washington, president of the University of Pennsylvania, not president of the United States.
HE STAYED in Pennsylvania until this
year and founded a law firm specializing in international business law. He earned as much as $100,000 a year, but the presidential nomination eluded him:
It's about what you think it's about!
- In 1943, he announced but did not get past the primaries.
In 1952, he was the first announced candidate, but the race became one between Eisenhower and Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio. In 1960, Senator John F. Kennedy to Eisenhower, putting him over the top.
It's about what you think it's about!
"IT'S NOT THE SIZE
THAT COUNTS"
- In 1988, he entered the Wisconsin primary, as a peace candidate. A Gallup poll put him dead last, behind "no preference."
- 1976, he announced on June 4, after the nomination, President Gerald Ford took the nomination.
- In the meantime, other defeats kept him out of elected office; two tries for Pennsylvania governor, one for mayor of Detroit. This is this year for the Senate from Minnesota.
- In 1948, he traveled 200,000 miles campaigning, had his name placed in nomination, and got four second round appearances for the national balloting begin, grain helping Dewey.
TODAY, STASSEN says his presidential runs of 1948 and 1982 were not serious—that he ran interference for Eisenhower, for example.
Anway, he says, he has grown used to that.
And his sonorous voice is hopeful.
"Clearly," he says, "there has been less ridicule this time than at any other time since 'S2.'"
Eve 7:30 & 8:15
Sat/Sun MAT 2:30
Daytime - September 19, 2014
“Ridicule means nothing to me,” he says,
compared to looking back and seeing what
Midnight Express
R
Eve 7:20 & 9:40
Sat Sun 2:30
Cinema Twin
31st & Iowa
JACK NICHOLSON
IN Goin' South
with JOHN BELUSHI
PG
Eve 7:30 & 9:35 Sat Sun 2:40
Cinema Twin
A ROBERT ALTMAN FILM
PG
who needs a funny, fabulous love story? YOU DO!
HENRY WINKLER FIELD
SALEY HEROES PG
Eve 7:35 & 8:40
Sat Sun
Mat 1:55
Hillcrest
GREASE PG
With Carol Burnett
Eve 7:35 & 8:40
Sat Sun
Mat 1:55
Hillcrest
A WEDDING
with Carol Burnett
Eve 7:15 & 8:35
Sat Sun 1:45
Hillcrest
Midnight Express
R
Eve at:
Friday 4:30 & 8:00
Sat Sunday 2:30
31st & Iowa
Cinema Twin
who needs a funny, fabulous
love story? YOU DO!
HENRY
WINKLER FIELD
HEROES PG
Eve at:
Friday 2:35 & 8:00
Sat Sunday 1:55
Hillcrest
Gregory Peck Laurence Olivier
Midnight Express
R
"THE BOYS FROM BRAZIL"
Eve 7:30 & 9:40
Sat Sun Mat2:30
Granada
JACKNICHOLSON
in Goin'
South
with JOHN BELUSHI
Eve 7:30 & 9:35 Sat Sun 2:40
Cinema Twin
A ROBERT ALTMAN FILM
GREASE PG
Eve 7:35 & 8:40
Hillcrest
A WEDDING
with Carol Burnett
Eve 7:15 & 9:35
Hillcrest
JACK NICHOLSON
in Goin' South
with JOHN BELISHA
Eve 7.30 & 8:35 Sat Sun 2:40
PG
Cinema Twin
GREASE PG
Eve 7.35
Hillcrest
Sat Sun 2:05
A
WEDDING
PG
with Carol Burnett
Even 7:15
& 8:30
stillcreat
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SUA TRAVEL
University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 4,1978
3
Dykes' aide has Ph.D., thinks of self as student
By JAKE THOMPSON Staff Reporter
Cancellor Archie R. Dykes has a special assistant this year who has his doctoral degree and is on leave.
Donald J. Mabry, an associate professor at Mississippi State University, is studying KU's administration to prepare for an administrative position of his own.
"I have a license to read people's mail and attend any administrative meetings I want to, but I of course, have to make choices," Murray. 37, said Friday.
What allows Mabry such special privileges that few people at the University have?
He is a visiting American Council on Education Fellow and is being sponsored by the ACE Fellows Program in Academic Affairs. He is the inner workings of KU's administration.
The AFP, sponsors university teachers to attend host universities for five to 15 months. The training program has sponsored 197 Fellows since its inauguration in 1979
"I am a participant observer," Marbay said. "It's a funny way to be a student. I pay no Kansas taxes, but I do pay Mississippi taxes. Overall, it's more expensive than if we were living in either place. I see it as a student makes for a college education."
Mabry said he was interested in academic research, but he is working with Ronald Calgary, executive vice chancellor for academic affairs, who is working on the preliminary stages of the new program.
Mabry said he had attended all budget conferences with Calgaard and the deans of the University's schools, one Kansas Legislature meeting, a Kansas Board of Regents meeting and numerous other meetings at the University.
"ABOUT 80 percent of administrators' time is spent in meetings," Mabry said. "I get a feeling about the kind of thinking the administration has done in reaching decisions. It's like being an anthropologist or all of the administrators' do their jobs."
Mabry said the administrators he observed get from him "at least a running
Mabry received his doctor's degree in Latin American History from Syracuse University in 1700. He teaches history at Mississippi State.
He is one of 44 university professors selected nationals to receive the 1978-79 "Aspen Award" for his work.
commentary on their operation and an extra hand in administrative work when they need
Mabry praised the KU administration, especially Dykes.
Donald Mabru
"People work incredibly hard up here," Maibry said. "Archie Dykes is one of the most admired and skilful administrators in New York." He means he has a talented and dedicated staff."
Mabry said he and his family had enjoyed the first months of their year's stay in Maplehurst.
"The great traditions of KU made it very interesting because there is enormous variety, said I. And finding this is a very nice thing to do. The district this is it's like a being a visiting professor."
MARRY SAID all the administrators he had met had been helpful, but had viewed him as an outsider and a transient. In his own words he could think of the University as his institution.
"You come to identify with the University and in reference it becomes 'we' instead of you," Mabry said. "I have to be careful in writing back to Mississippi. They consider me as part of their institution, which I still am."
You're a foster and don't have an active social life."
"People are nominating me for positions around the country," Mabry said. "I guess to be fair I'd have to say that if positions are considered them as they present themselves."
He said Mississippi State wanted him to return at but at this time did not have an advance plan.
Mabry said he planned to return to Mississippi State, but would like to have an opportunity there.
Mabry said KU's administration was more democratic than Mississippi State's but that MSU was growing out of its authoritarian mold.
"What I find is that MSU has to live down the load reputation of the state," he said.
"THE IDEA of southern hospitality is a cultural pattern. I think Midwesterners are
KU administrators, through their dedication and their kindness to Mabry, have helped him realize he would like to be an administrator. he said.
"In a way, I've always wanted to do this kind of thing," Mabry said. "I like problem solving and to be with people and be willing to live with ambiguity. In American society no one wants to boss, but I am not."
Mabry said returning to Mississippi State would be difficult after his experience as an instructor.
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The South's Gonna Do It Again!
THE CHARLIE BAND
DANIELS
WITH A SPECIAL GUEST PERFORMANCE BY
Rocky Mountain Rangers
WITH A LARGE GUEST PERFORMANCE BY
Billy Spears & His Band
Thursday December 7,1978 9:00 P.M.
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets: *6. and *7.
Tickets available at the SUA Box Office
Also at Kief's, Caper's in K.C. The Record Store in Manhattan
Liberty Sound in St Joseph, Mother Earth in Topeka
Tiger's, and David's in Emporia
--films sua
Monday, Dec. 4
KLUTE
(1971)
Dir. Alan Dial, wkite with Jane Fonda
Donald Sutherland, Roy Scheider
Fonda won an Academy Award for
a psychopathic killer by a psychopathic killer.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Dir. Aka Kurosae, with Toshiro Mifune. The basis for, but much better than, a Fistful of Dollars. Japan/subtitled.
Samurai:
YOJIMBO
(1961)
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Dir. Wittorio de Sica, with Carlo Battisti, and Gianfranco Tolino, examples of Italian neo-realism, written by Cesare Zavattini and de Sica. "Britannic and flawless." -Life. It has a wow factor.
Thursday, Dec. 7
UMBERTO D.
(1952)
UMBERTO D.
$1.00 7:30 Woodruff Aud.
Screwball Comedy Double Feature:
City advised on fund requests
Friday & Saturday,
Dec. 8 & 9
By JOHN LOGAN
The chances of Lawrence receiving a $100,000 federal urban development grant might have received a boost as a result of the work of local groups.
Dir. Howard Hawks, with Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Charlie Roggs. The epitome of the screwball era.
BRINGING UP BABY
Staff Renarter
with
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
Dir. Frank Capra, with Clark Gable,
Coben, Golden's 'masterpiece',
including all of the major Academy Awards,
including Best Picture. Watch for the
first time in the series.
Bulford Watson, city manager, said he attended a session at the convention in which experts offered advice on how to apply for employment with the firm.
For both movies:
$1.50 3:30 & 8:00 pm Woodruff Aud
Watson said he had talked to representatives from other cities about how they had presented their applications for federal aid.
Most of the private money would be spent by Maupintur Travel Service of Lawrence, which has agreed to construct an office.
If the grant is approved, it will be paired with $3,775,000 in private investment to redevelop the 600 block of Massachusetts Hill.
"WE LEARNED a little bit about the grants and how other cities push their projects." Watson said.
The advice will help Wiltson when he presents the city's application for an Urban Development Action Grant to HUD in Kansas.
Plans call for a six-story building and more than 50,000 square feet of office space.
ALTHOUGH HE has never attended a grant request hearing.
HUD officials from Washington will be at the hearing. They will forward the city's request to Washington with their recommendations, Watson said. A decision on the grant will not come or several months.
Watson said, the advice will enable him to go into the meeting with confidence.
Watson said that if the application were rejected, the city would search for another means to fund renovation of the block.
Lawrence Mayor Donald Blunsn; city commissioner Jack Rose and Ed Carter; and Brent McFall, assistant to the city manager; Mr. McCormack, assistant to the city manager.
About 6,000 of the nation's top urban leaders attended the conference.
After taking to other city officials at the convention, Watson said, he thinks Lawrence is in a good financial position.
"MANY CITIES tell the effects of a recession," Watson said. "Low income cities and cities with high unemployment are
The three-day convention, which featured President Carter as a guest speaker on Monday, cost Lawrence about $1,500.
1 "lawrence has unemployment of less than 3 percent. Other cities have 8, 16, even 12 percent. All of them are loading jobs."
KC man pleads guilty to robbery charge
An 18-year-old Kansas City, Kan., man pleaded guilty Friday in Douglas County District Court to a felony charge in contempt of trust. The judge said a Lawrence liquor store last September.
The man, Gregory L. Jones, pleaded guilty to aiding the robbery. Jones was scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 13. He faces a probable sentence of one to 10 years in prison.
Jones was one of three men arrested Sept.
25 after a robbery at the Banning Laucer
house.
Jones' brother, Mia carel, 11, and Ronald E. Randell, 19, also were arrested. Liquor and cash stolen from the store were found in front of the car the three men were riding in.
Michael Jones was charged with agnivantage robbery last month after two years to life in prison. Randell is in custody and awaiving a hearing next week on a charge of aiding Michael
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, had previously charged Greesov
Malone said a police investigation had determined that Gregory Jones was in the car outside the liquor store during the raid. The police believe the evidence that a robbery was about to take place.
Jones with taking an active part in the holdup. But at Friday's hearing, Malone said he had reduced the charge to aiding in the escape of Michael Jones.
Randell also had been charged with aggravated robbery in the case, but the police said no arrests were made.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansean editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editor.
DECEMBER 4,1978
Policy hurts programs
KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors wants to know about the University's research and information on special academic programs.
AAUP isn't alone in its confusion.
The information policy, formed in spring 1976, prohibits individual University departments from sending programs to prospective students.
Questions about the policy, however, stem from its relationship to the Integrated Humanities Program. AAUP's inquiry is in response to a letter from IHP Director Dennis Quinn, who said the policy was made to restrict dissemination of materials about IHP.
HPF, OF COURSE, has come under fire from outside forces in recent years and Quinn has said the University itself had tried "to make us invisible."
Whether or not Quinn's reasoning is correct, it is true that HP's enrollment has dwindled. Fewer than 30 freshmen enrolled in HP this fall, compared with about 90 last fall. Part of the reason for a tiny enrollment could be the ban on sending information to new students.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, has denied that HIP was the reason for the policy's implementation. He said the cost for 33 departments and eight professional schools to mail information to incoming freshman would be high and the University didn't want new students delibuled with information.
INFORMATION FROM individual departments is a solution to complains such as Quinn's, but it isn't the only one. A brochure containing information about special programs in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has been available since 1977, but, for some reason, it never has been mailed to new students. Calgaard says he has no objections to mailing the brochures, but there are no plans to mail the information.
Quinn says, "They'll never mail it out because IHP is in there."
One would reasonably assume the University is not trying to destroy IHP. But KU has not recently been supportive of the controversial program. By mailing the brochures to new students, the University could show its support for IHP and other small programs as well.
LARGER DEPARTMENTS, such as English or Western Civilization, don't need special efforts to let new students know about them. But smaller programs, which often are the most effective programs in universities, do need those efforts if they are to remain effective.
The University should want to encourage enrollment in its programs, but HIP and other programs will at best be plagued by lower enrollment if incoming students aren't informed about them.
It is easy to understand the reasons for prohibiting individual departments from mailing information. Small programs shouldn't be competing with one another. But not allowing general information, such as the liberal arts brochure, to be mailed makes no sense.
It can only hurt those programs and KU students.
win the help of science fiction adventures such as "Star Wars" and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is regaining its image as the glamor agency of the government.
NASA is now trying to use its reborn popularity to secure more money from the government.
This new popularity has put the Carter administration in a clash between Star Wars dreams and the realities of Proposition 13 tax cuts when funding the agency.
THE CARTER space policy, outlined earlier this fall, calls for no new initiatives like the man-to-the-moon program called by President Kennedy in 1961.
The Carter administration has remained rational and has taken the reality route in funding NASA. The White House announced a caveat regarding the budget, regarding the space of the program.
NASA exploiting sci-fi craze
Even without the large man-to-the-moon projects, the space program is still the biggest scientific project in the dollars. For this fiscal year the NASA budget is almost $4 billion, twice that of the National Institutes of Health, which ran out of funds last year. The National Science Foundation, which is third
THE MAIN manned project now before NASA is a reusable earth orbiter called the space shuttle. The shuttle program, which will gobble up more than a quarter of NASA's budget this year, is designed to intensely carry large payloads into space.
Building space colonies and searching for alien creatures may be fun subjects for movies, but the costs of these projects are high. The average cost is a time of governmental bail-out tightening.
NASA expects to use the space shuttle chiefly to carry satellites into earth orbit. Some of these satellites would be privately owned, allowing NASA to collect fees for
NASA is going to have to work harder, even with its wave of popularity, to make its programs practical for those of us still building new spacecraft it seems to be taking steps in that direction.
Some critics of this plan have claimed it is an exploitation of space. But making a profit on satellite transportation is about the best way to justify additional space research.
Soviet ideology change unnoticed
Another profit-making scheme for space research is a NASA plan to ease the nation's energy crunch. In this plan, a satellite would be launched from Earth to back it to earth to be made into electricity.
BY CYRIL BATISTON
N V Times Feature
By CYRILE. BLACK
This development is the change in emphasis from the literal view of Marxism-Leninism that predominated in the Stalin era to a new and dynamic appreciation of the role of science and technology as the critical factor in economic and social development.
PRINCETON, N.J.-The most important development in Soviet ideology since 1971 has taken place almost unnoticed by American commentators, concerned as they have been with controversies over detente, arms controls and human rights.
Londin I. Brezhnev formalized this theme in 1971 when he stated at the 4th Congress of the Communist Party that "the task we face . . . is one of historical importance: to fuse the two world systems into a single system, to revolution with the advantages of the socialist economic system."
SOVIET LEADERS of Lenin's era recognized the importance of science and technology, but as late as the 1960s official publications of the Central Committee continued to refer to labor as the primary factor in production.
The significance for a modern economy and society of nuclear power, cybernetics and computers had already captured the imagination of Soviet ideologues, however, and a widespread public reaction has been growing to the significance in theory and practice of these new techniques.
ALTHOUGH THE reform movement was suppressed by the Soviet Union for reasons of national security, the Soviet and Czechoslovak academies of science collaborated in publishing in 1973, on the basis of a wide reading of Western writings, one of the major treatises on the social implications of the scientific and technological revolution. In the 1970s this theme has been taken up more seriously as an example of specialized education, productivity, income distribution, the environment and social change generally.
A major role in this debate was played by Eastern European socialists, and the new ideas were influential in stimulating the rise of the socialist movement.
There are several dimensions to this significant change in the Soviet world view. Acceptance of the importance of science and technology implies the recognition that in most fields the Soviet Union is not in the forefront of research and development.
THE STALINIST VIEWPOINT saw the Soviet Union as the most advanced society because it claimed to be the most fully socialized—that is, the means of production were more completely under control control than elsewhere.
The new view, by contrast, stresses productivity resulting from the application of the new techniques as a more relevant tool.
ALTHOUGH SOME WESTERN polemicists refer to the Brezhnev-Kosygin coalition as "neo-Stalinist," it is generally and more correctly seen in the Soviet Union as reformist. Stalinism in the Soviet sense means highly centralized controls over all aspects of society, dominated by insular and narrow politicians whose ideology is a sterile repetition of dogma.
By contrast, the Soviet debate on the revolution in science and technology and its social impact has been characterized by relatively uninhibited debate, widespread differences of opinion, and intense interest in Western developments.
The new generation of managers favors much greater freedom from central controls of economic enterprises and social institutions. This pragmatic orientation is significantly closer than the earlier Marxism-Leninism to the prevalent emphasis on the advancement of knowledge is the main impetus for societal transformation within countries and for an evolving international integration.
THIS DOES NOT MEAN that Marxism-Leninism has been abandoned. It has still simply been transformed. The proponents of Marxism-Leninism have always maintained that mean those rued by Marxist-Leninist parties, are better able than capitalist countries to take advantage of the opportunities presented by Marxism-Leninism.
Adherents of these views can thus advocate peaceful coexistence and detente as providing an opportunity for the Soviet Union to draw on the new knowledge that has been developed in the West, in the West, while still maintaining that Soviet society is superior.
The need to meet the challenge of contemporary science and technology, they say, will undermine capitalism just as the rise of big business has.
Cyril E. Black is professor of history and director of the Center of International Studies at Princeton University.
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SCIENTISTS ESTIMATE that a satellite, once in the earth's orbit, could create vast amounts of light.
Yes, the science fiction craze has caught on, and even though it is losing out to the tax cut craze in 1978, it may be chalking up victories sooner than we realize.
trying to figure out something to put in his rented space.
energy satellite research passed the House last session, but died in the Senate.
With today's kids tuning into "Battlester Galactica" on Sunday, staying up late to watch reruns of "Star Trek" and finally getting to sleep on Star Wars sheets and pillowcases, we might be in the interplanetary age before we know it.
Although beaming concentrated amounts of the sun's radiation on the earth sounds a bit scary, the idea is worth study. A bill appropriating research money for solar
However, the search to make space research profitable also has been taken to another level in the past with flights, beginning in 1980, NASA is offering the public a program called the "Gateway"
In the program anyone can pay $500 down and $2,500 later to rent one-and-a-half cubic feet of space on the shuttle as it orbits the earth.
One of the first persons to rent space was Steven Spielberg, director of "Close Encounters."
Wan't it Jimmy Carter who saw a UFO one stormy Georgia night?
HEADQUARTERS TO CUBAN RECONNAISSANCE MISSION! SEE ANY SUSPICIOUSLY EQUIPPED AIRCRAFT?
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Whites can't judge apartheid effect
To the editor:
Black leaders have maintained that South Africa is for all, irrespective of skin color. The paranoia of reprisal is understandable but not justified. It is just as in America where it was feared that slaves once set free them because the injustice perpetrated against them.
In other words, he endorses apartheid as a means of protecting the white minority in South Africa. This is his most questionable point. Racial integration is what all responsible black leaders have been preaching.
We have watched with calculated silence the mirepresentation and distortion of facts as regards apartheid in South Africa. Apartheid is the legitimation of racism and perpetuation of injustice on a group of people who appear to have a different skin pigmentation.
General secretary of the African Student Association at KU
Andrew Nwaga
Brower is also quoted as saying, "If blacks got the right to vote, the whites will have the right to vote."
At this point, we would digress to express our support for the KU Committee on South Africa.
Lampoon backfires but point was made
The world at large has denounced every once and again the shortsightedness and inhumanity of this system. It therefore demands that African universities, Jim Brewer's caliber to explain the whites' views on the South African apartheid system with racist undertones. We do not want this to happen without concern but with the dubious way by which he responded to explain his point.
He is quoted as saying, "Americans can't appreciate how the South African whites
Does Brewer appreciate how South African blacks feet? Does he have any idea as to what it is to be a black in South Africa? Obviously he hasn't given it a thought. How else could he when he spent his leave of absence as a white in South Africa, enjoying the thrill of being on the skin color and being given a psychological boost of racial突突量?
Thus in specific response to the three letters, I can easily see, you all made my愿望.
Obviously the Kansan cannot survive
When I noted a Budweiser insult in the Kansan the following Monday, I thought the insult was so absurd that I apply, with absolutely no intention of seriousness, I wrote the Nov. 16 response using much the same format and verbage of the first, not to mention questionable
To the editor:
Now, hang on a second. gang!
Some people had warned me that my letter of Nov. 16 would be taken seriously by some, and sure enough it was—three letters from a group that I didn't recognize. I think a clarification is in order.
or those who came in late: I didn't start this. Everything stemmed from Inside, a Ford insert in the Oct. 23 issue of the University Daily Kansan. My letter was the result of an earlier letter. Nov. 10, by a law student whose name was Robert Hammond. That person saw Inside as a staff sell-out to "Big Brotherism" and business propaganda.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Oh, finally to Misters Seway and Harris,
who ask who I am and why I say these things
that I say: newspapers ethics don't require
me to answer that, but you disclosed more
to me than I could tell, and also as to
you I am and why I say these things.
So much for press confidentiality . . .
I only wish the letter writers had been equally adamant in their responses to the Nov. 10 letter, rather than wait for my response; it seems, was not one to some readers.
without ads; to be sure, I'm in favor of a "balanced viewpoint in its publication"; of course, the entire student body is not anticorporate (witness these letters); and, yes indeed, the profit motive is essential to the press and free enterprise system.
Richard Burkard
Kansas City, Kan., junior
To the editor:
Armco ads political, not about job-finding
I've never been a political or social activist and I've never written a letter to an editor before. But I'm fed up with the propaganda I've been seeing passed off by Armco as "Plain Talk from Armco on Finding a Job."
recently some people have criticized the Kansan for accepting advertisements from Ford and Anheuser-Busch. Although I also disliked those ads, I defend the Kansan's right to its ad dollars. I suggest that those who are disgusted with big business, "righting anti-population preferences to queer letter to the editor, go straight after the source—the advertisers themselves. I therefore direct the rest of this letter to Armco.
Armco.
You call your ad series "Plain Talk from
mcrco on Finding a job," but you have yet to
get the job. I'll tell you what it takes.
remotely related to helping me find a job. They should be retitled, "Propaganda from Armo Design to Frighten Students into Accepting Arnco's Self-Serving Politics."
Evidently you see America's students as being paranoid of the job market. You try to push your opinions on energy, government spending, safety regulation and environmentalism on us with the not-so-veiled threat that if we don't agree with you, we will have to get a job. Your scarce tactics are so blatant that I find your ass utterly repulsive.
You complain about the expense of safety regulations, but you’ve still got money to spend on the ad campaign. You claim that you have paid for it and yet you have money to burn to try to convince me to see things your way. You complain about your pollution control expenses. But I wonder how much money you have paid for the pollution I've been reading in the Kansan.
Give it up, Armco. America's students aren't as stupid as you seem to think. We know that job safety,安全 energy and a clean environment are more important than a cheap seat. The answer is intact, my body plutonium-free and my lungs clean than have an Armco job.
In the future, Armo, I'd suggest you spend your excess money, that you have to pay more for the new political hardships, on real attempts to help America's youth instead of wasting it on unwanted propaganda. I can't believe the world is so divided and I know KU students don't need any ads.
I urge any Kansan readers who also object to Armco's ads to cut out this letter and sign it, or write your own letter and mail it to:
Armco, Educational Relations Dept. U-5
General Offices
Middletown. Ohio 45043.
Kurt Eskilson Lawrence junior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas, daily August through May and Monday through Thursday, on the Kansas State University Press website. Prices paid are based on the regular price. Kansas Counties and $1 for each month in the Kansas State University Press database. Please contact the Kansas State University Press office at (718) 695-3200 or www.kansasstateuniversitypress.com.
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Steve Frazier
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Make Editors
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Dan Bowerman
Brian Settle
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Leon Unnut
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University Daily Kansan
Monday. December 4. 1978
Week to publicize human rights
Human Rights Week at the University of Kansas begins tomorrow. The week is sponsored by the Human Rights Coalition, a new group on campus.
The Human Rights Coalition was formed in November by members of the Latin American community and 21 student groups, including the Young Socialists Alliance, the KU Committee on South Africa, Advocates for Freedom in Mental Health, and Radioactive
The group was formed to promote the advancement of international human rights, to expose the extent of human rights violations and to explore the means to end them. Rhonda Neugebauer, Lawrence A spokesman for the group, said yesterday.
"We want to incite people to do something about the human rights violations that go on in our country," he said.
New Orleans trip canceled by SUA
A bus trip to New Orleans, sponsored by Student Union Activities and scheduled for semester break, has been canceled because of a lack of interest.
Hal Eden, SUA travel adviser, said yesterday that no one had signed up for the campaign.
The deadline for registering for the trip was last Thursday, but SUA stopped advertising the trip earlier in the week because no one had signed up. Eden said.
Last month, SUA canceled bus trips to Red River, N.M., and the KU football game at Kansas State University because of a lack of interest.
SUA requires a minimum number of persons to sign up for each trip it sponsors.
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editors or just think about the issues,"
Neugebauer said.
HE SAIED two of the group's goals were cutting U.S. military aid to dictators guilty of human rights violations and reviewing the investments in the association's investments in South Africa.
Human Rights Week activities begin at 11:30 a.m. with a rally in front of Strong Hall. After the rally, Edward Kelide of the archives library will give a lecture on the history of human rights under the "Human Rights Declarations by the U.N." in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
There will be a presentation by professors from the departments of history, economics and political science, "Two Africans in Africa at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union."
Wednesday at noon the Committee on south Africa sponsor a discussion of South Africa in the U.S.
John Stits from the Catholic Campus center will speak on Human Rights and the Law.
TRURADAY AT noon in the Sunflower
thouse, you will lead a
discussion on radiation and rights.
Bahai Fireside
The St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Concord Road, will have a rice and beans dinning room. The St. Lawrence Community
KU Babai Club
will meet on
Monday, Dec. 4
at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
A speaker is presenting general information about the Bahai faith.
Friday at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union, Laurie Bretz, a Kansas City, Mo., social worker and Alfredo Parra, an officers' group, will speak on prison rights.
cost is $1.50. Proceeds will go to the Nicaraguan medical relief fund.
At 7 p.m. in the Forum Room, Hector Marraquino, a fugitive from the Mexican government who is seeking asylum in the United States, will speak on repression in
Dec. 12 at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union, Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, will speak on "Subtitles of Racism."
Dec. 11 at noon there will be an open discussion about women's rights. At 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union there will be a panel on the topic, followed by J.D. PStevens, an eastern textile company.
On Saturday there will be a display booth set up from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. There will be free refreshments. At 11 a.m. there will be a slide show on Iran.
SUNDAY AT 1 p.m. there will be an
welcome to the St. Lawrence
Carmel Institute, 1910 Road St.
At 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room, Mike Storms, professor of social psychology, will talk about his research on homosexuals and their behavior.
Everyone is welcome.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence police said yesterday that they had received numerous crime reports in addition to several fender-bender accident reports over the weekend.
Police said they received two reports of thefts Friday.
A Lawrence man reported the theft of a $200 10-speed bike from the Naismith Hall parking lot, 1800 Naismith Drive. Brandon Hunt, Shawne Mission junior, 1148 Sinai St., reported the theft of a tire and wheel from his bike, which was locked at his home.
Jeffery Rogers, Wellington senior, 600 W. 25th St., reported the theft of two speakers from his locked car, which was parked in the 300 block of Maine Street.
Police Beat
REPORTS FILED Saturday included crimes reported by five KU students.
Hunt valued the wheel at $20. Police said both thefts occurred early last week.
Police said Rogers was spoken at 100 each. The theft occurred between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.
Compiled by Henry Lockard
Ryan Dupont, Lawrence graduate student, 1941 W. 19th St., reported that a burglar stole two shirts from his unlocked home.
Pole and the theft occurred between
30 a.m. Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday.
Dawn of the Storm
KU POLICE FRIDAY reported that a Prairie Village man's truck received $442 damage when someone tried to break into it. Police responded, but Dashi Fall extension parking lot, police said.
Sandra Engwail, Courtland junior, and Kelly Schreiber, Haysville junior, both of 1723 Tennessee st., reported that a burglar stole $11 from their purses early Saturday. Police said the women's apartment was not locked.
Marvin Graber, freshman, 2000 W. XII.
St. reported that someone stole the hood
caps of his bike and ran away.
Police said the burglar entered a Ramey's home through a door between 8 a.m. Nov. 27 and 10 a.m. on Monday.
Marvin Hall. The store is owned and operated by students. Police said the theft occurred Thursday afternoon. Other crimes reported to city police included two more burglaries and a robbery at the Hallmark Motor Inn, 730 Iowa St.
Police said the car was parked near the intersection of Sunset and Stratford streets.
Steven Rice, 712 Ohio St., reported that a刚argular stole $800 in equipment from factory.
POLICE SAID the theft occurred between
3 p.m. Friday and 1:43 a.m. Saturday. Rice
lost a $400 amplifier and a $400 stereo tuner
in the burglary, police said.
Timothy Ramey, W213 Walden Court,
reported the theft of a $200 shidgun from him.
Police said a woman about 5 feet 8 inches tall who was wearing a skim mask approached a Hallmark Inn desk clerk about 11 p.m. Friday and demanded money.
William Hall, the desk clerk, reported the robbery. The man escaped with $797.45.
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Tuesday, Dec. 5
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Regionalist Room Kansas Union 8-10 pm
Refreshments will be served.
BASKETBALL
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Ted Owens will answer questions and comment on the games.
Action Film Clips of the games will be shown!
Tuesday, Dec. 5 Council Room— Union Noon
SUA
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The University of Kansas Panhellenic Association reminds you that rush registration materials must be turned in to the Panhellenic Office no later than 5:00 pm, Dec.4.
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For Spring Semester '79
6
Monday, December 4, 1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
Events
TODAY: A CRAFT EXHIBITION by the Design department graduate students will open at 8:30 in the Art and Design Building Gallery. A GEOLOGICAL SURVEY LECTURE by Helen McCammon will be at 10 in the Moore Hall Library. COALITION FOR HUMAN RIGHTS will meet at 12:15 in *Aloe of Dove* The II. PHYSICS & ASTROMONY COLLOQUIUM will be at 4:30 in 138 Malot Hall. Edward Wolf of Iowa State University will speak on new directions in electron tunneling spectroscopy.
TOMORROW, INSTITUTE FOR LEGISLATORS will meet all day in the Union. SLAVIC LANGUAGES & LITERATURES LECTURE will be at 3:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union, EUROPEAN CLUB will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE will meet at 7 p.m. in 220 Robinson Gymnasium. ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. MATHEMATICS HONORS RECEPTION will be at 8 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union. A STUDENT RECITAL with compositions by KU students will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Hall of Murphy Hall. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATLETES will meet at 8 p.m. in the Fireside House of Lewis Hall.
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KANSAS CITY, Kan.—The construction of two University of Kansas Medical Center buildings is about two months behind schedule, officials said yesterday.
Med Center projects running late
One of the officials, Vincent Cool, acting state architect, said all of the contracts for the construction of Bell Memorial Hospital had been extended 63 days because of a fire.
Also, Carl Manisfield, chairman of the department of radiation therapy, said the new Radiation Therapy Center would not be opened until after months after the original completion deadline.
He said a nationwide cement shortage, which started in January, caused the delay. The cement is needed to prevent radiation leaks.
The arrival of a highly sensitive radiation trapping machine from France also will be delivered by the National Nuclear Machine, a 40-million electron unit volt, is capable of treating patients with deep brain injury.
It will be the fifth such machine in operation in the United States. The 40 MEV cannot arrive, however, until there is a dry, dust-free room in which to store it.
Mansfield said another cause of the machine's delayed arrival was problems in the system.
The construction setback, however, has hardly affected the relocation of the Med Center hospital into the new Hall Memorial Miller, villen chancellor for the Med Center.
"OUR SCHEDULE IS A few weeks behind," he said, "but there will be no effect
on the total occupancy because it's not affecting the patients."
He said he expected to begin moving supplies and inventory items Thursday, if the corridor that connected the new hospital to the old one was ready.
"We should have the patients moved in by Jane or July, which was our original design."
The move into the basement of the hospital was scheduled to begin in November. Miller said the move was late and the construction problems, not construction problems.
Cool said that although there would be a 99-day inspection period before patients could move in, he thought patients would be in the hospital by July.
Miller said minor setbacks were not unusual for major construction jobs, such as
MANSFIELD SAID that in addition to the therapy machine from France, three therapy machines, a 20 MEV, a 6 MEV and a Cobalt 60, which produces one million electron volts, would be required radiation center on the module. The Med room already has a 6 MEV and a Cobalt 60. Three hives have been received for a new 20 MEV.
Dec 4, 5, & 6
8-5:30
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"We're not going to move those in until we get one moving," Manfield said. "We want to be sure there is always a machine in operation. The 20 MEV probably will be the first to be installed, because it is the easiest to get going."
Bell Memorial Hospital or the Radiation Therapy Center.
often gluing.
"Really, except for the delay in construction, everything is pretty much on schedule."
Oread elections planned
Members of the Oread Neighborhood Association will elect new officers tonight
The election will replace officers who were ousted by ONA members during their Nov. 6 meeting. Those officers were forced to resign because members said they were
incompetent during their one month in office.
The members voted to have a new election and called the Oct. 5 election invalid. The October election was controversial to homeowners and tenants because landlords, voting as a bloc, elected their representatives to office.
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The four officers who were forced to resign were David Holroyd, president; Dick Lynch, vice president; Robert Eggert, secretary; and Virginia Munger, treasurer.
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There was concern about who would chair the meeting, but Mike Young, a member of the association, 1608 Tennessee, said George Coggins, an ONA executive committee member, would preside at the meeting until new officers were elected.
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
YOUNG SAID the tentative agenda also would include the distribution of copies of new ONA bylaws and a presentation of a new plan to the Stowe, Skow, a member of the city planning staff.
the nays have been an object of con-
ference. Young said, because different inter-
ceptors can respond to the same in-
tent.
Young also said the presentation at Stowe was to inform Oread homeowners, tenants and property owners about proposed plans for improvements to the neighborhood.
ONA has more than 200 members. To be a member of the association, one must live in or own property in Oread, the area east of the KU campus, for at least 30 days.
The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union
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Monday, December 4, 1978
7
WEIS 5
Low ball
Murray State's Roy Taylor and KU's Tony Guy gun for a loose ball during the Jayhawks' 116-86 victory on the Races Saturday in Allen Field House. Taylor led the鞍山
scoring with 22 points, 16 of them in the second half. Guy canned 12 for Kansas. The victory boosted KU's record to 2-0.
Hot-handed Crawford setting goals yet higher
Sports Writer
By BILL BUZBEE
Forward John Crawford played the best game of his collegiate career Saturday against Murray State, but the 6-7 sophomore was far from satisfied.
Sports
"I know I can play better defense," he said after the game. "And on offense, there were a lot of things I could have done better."
Crawford led KU in rebounds, with eight, and his 20-point offensive boost was one of the best in the league.
"Except for the first three minutes with John Crawford playing and the first of the
second half there wasn't much to get excited about," head basketball coach Ted Owens said. "Crawford needed a good game. He's played extremely well in practice."
Crawford said he didn't plan on resting.
*IF YOU'RE SATISFIED with the way you play a game, there's no way you're playing.*
But Crawford said he saw a lot of improvement in his performance Saturday.
"It was my best game, no question," he said. "It was the only game I've played."
Women cagers split 2 in Texas
Lynette Woodard continued to be KU's hot hand in two women's basketball games in Texas this weekend as KU won one and lost one.
In Friday's loss to Wayland Baptist, Woodard found herself in a scoring duel with All-America Jill Rankin, 6-3 Wayland center.
The Jayhawks' sophomore forward tallied 68 points and pulled down 34 rebounds in games against Wayland Baptist and Texas Tech Universities. Kansas splined the games.
Rankin won the battle, scoring 46 points to Woodward's 3, and Wayland won the game 81-78. KU coach Martin Washington called for the games played this season by the Javahans.
The game was closely fought—each team scored 38 points in the second half and 45 in the third.
lead at any time. Kansas managed to pull ahead 65-60 in the closing minutes, only to lose in the final minute after Wayland pulled away from a 78-78 deadlock.
In Saturday's game against Texas Tech, Woodard again provided the bulk of KU's offense. The Tigers scored 13 points and Adrian Mitchell backed up Woodward with 15 points and Pat Mason scored 10. Mitchell scored 24 points.
Unlike the Wayland game, Kansas jumped to a 40-22 halftime advantage. The Jayhawks won 76-53 to grab their fourth victory of the season.
next opponent. The game is at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow in Allen Field House.
CMS brings a line-up similar in height to KU's, including 6-2 freshman Lisa Brumnett and 6-5 sophomore Terri Carpenter. The team lost the first game KU beat BCM last season 63-43 on the
KANSAS, ranked 15th, is #4 this season
and fifth in h-ranked-Wayland Baptist
Hospital.
KU beat CMS last season 63-53 on the strength of a 28-point performance by Warner.
Central Missouri State University is KU's
**Kansas:** **Burton** 40 30 75
Kansas - Woodward 38, Mitchell 12, Hodgson 12, Burrent 6, Burrell 4, Jamison 1
Wyland - Woodward 38, Mitchell 12, Hodgson 12, Burrell 4, Jamison 1
Wyland - Woodward 38, Mitchell 12, Hodgson 12, Burrell 4, Jamison 1
**Kansas:** **Burton** 40 30 76
Kansas - Woodward 30, Mitchell 13, Hodgson 10, Patterson 9, Burrell 8, Knox 1
Texas Tech 30, Mitchell 13, Hodgson 10, Patterson 9, Burrell 8, Knox 1
Texas Tech 30, Mitchell 13, Hodgson 10, Patterson 9, Burrell 8, Knox 1
Texas Tech 30, Mitchell 13, Hodgson 10, Patterson 9, Burrell 8, Knox 1
Bo Rein of North Carolina State University Friday turned down an offer by Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, to be a sports coordinator according to athletic department sources.
NC State coach rejects KU job
After the announcement Friday that Rein had renewed his contract, he said, "I nor knew what was going to happen with speculation going around recently, but I think it's best to make a statement and put pressure on them."
In three years as head football coach, Bein has led the North Carolina State team to seven ACC titles.
Marcum talked to Rein about the KU football coaching job day. But Friday Renewed a multi-year contract to stay at North Carolina State.
Radio and television stations in North Carolina last week were saying that Rein had been offered coaching jobs at KU and the University of Arkansas.
Marcum said, "I visited with Rein about the job and details about the job were discussed. He said he would think about it. Later he said he wasn't going to do it."
Marcum had given permission to the Athletic Board to negotiate a contract with Ramsay.
Rein and Marcum have known each other since 1983 when Marcum was the offensive coordinator at a Niles, Ohio, high school where Rein played football.
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University Daily Kansan
Crawford gave two reasons for his performance—he played the game as he had practiced, and he concentrated on rebounding.
"Coach told me to play like I did in practice," he said. "I was moving around instead of standing—looking for the open spots.
"I also set a goal for myself—10 rebounds."
Crawford didn't hit his rebound goal, but after having to sit out the spring semester last season because of bad grades, he said, he's happy just to be playing.
"I have that off my conscience now," he said. "I don't expect to be ineligible any time."
KU wins 81-66
"Last year it started reflecting on my physical and I think about愣ed and couldn't play."
There is a sign tacked to the wall of the KU men's basketball dressing room. It shows that Texas, Indiana, Alabama and Oklahoma were beaten by schools of little
"Sometimes I felt like leaving—like going home. I glad I stuck it out."
Owens also must be glad Crawford stuck it out. Crawford said he just wanted to work on improving." "don't have to worry about the books any more."
Bv LEON UNRUH
Sports Editor
And it admonishes, "See what happens when you are not prepared!"
Saturday night the unprepared Jayhawks beat Murray State 81-46 in a game that many figured should have been decided by 30 points.
KU coach Ted Owens shook his head and said he hoped the 'Hawks would be more awake for another small school, Boise State, which plays KU at 7:35 tonight in Allen Field
"I'm hopeful something can come from within them," he said. "All I can do is get out and look at it."
"EVERYBODY TOOK it for granted," he said. "We just weren't ready for it."
Guard Moe Fowler wasn't very happy
their less-than-awesome per-
formance.
For sure, KU shot 53 percent from the field and outbounded the Racers. But the Jayhawks, 24, hardly looked like the Chargers, team even, if their opponent was little MSU.
Owens summed up KU's play in a single word. "Terrible."
KU got sparkling performances from a pair of starters—Darrinn Valentine and John Crawford. Valentine popped in a career high at 23 points and Crawford shot a career high of 20. Crawford, a sophomore with sky-hoof learning ability, hit nine of 11.
But aside from Tony Guy's dozen points, nobody else reached double figures. The players had to be careful.
"When you don't execute any better than we did against it, any zone is good." Owens said of the defenders. "You gotta move the ball to make the defense shift. It's just automatic. You gotta get the defenses on."
Indicatively, big-man Paul Mokesi shot only six times, making two.
"Instead of passing," Owens said, "we passed two or three times and took a 25-foot shot. That'll get you in the second division of the Big Eight Conference."
Murray State, now 0-2, opened the game with a slow-down offense that hold everyone scoreless for more than two minutes. Then Crawford started shooting.
He hit a lay-in and a corner shot and then stretched far above the rim to slam down a follow shot. Guy hit a jumper, then ran up and grabbed more baskets. It was 12-4 after six minutes.
Moksiak and Guy soon picked up their third fours and had to play cautiously. But they didn't bother to back him, leaving it on.
KU's offense spurted again to open the second half, outsourcing the Racers 10-2 in the first five minutes. Valentine had two breakaway layups and reserve Mac Stallcup got a pair of baskets as the Jayhawks stepped out by 29, 50-30.
**Subbattees playkey to music of the rest of**
**SUBBATTEES playkey to music of the rest of**
**the rest of**
"They came in here playing a highly favored team on their home court. I don't like that strategy, but I don't blame them," he said.
Alen Mann's seven points, to 28 at noontime.
KU led with 40.
OWENS DIDN'T criticize the MSU coach
running—or walking—the wide-open
open space.
KU's inconsistent play disturbed Owens.
"I tired of talking about spurs," he said. "Except for the first three minutes with John Crawford playing and the first of them there wasn't anything to be excited about."
MSU'S Roy Taylor finished with 22 points, all from the field. John Randall, who got 12 points, and Keith Oglesby each had nine rebounds—the best in the game.
VALENTINE WASN'T excited at all about his night. He went one for five at the free-throw line during one stretch of the first half.
"I came out in the second half and told myself I was going to make them," he said.
"If I miss I'm not going to let it bother me as much as it did in the first half."
"The season's still young and thing's
aren't going too well. I'm not too worried.
I'll stick to it."
| | PL | FT | REB | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Randall | 15 | 3 | 2 | 9 | 12 |
| Boudreau | 41 | 10 | 3 | 6 | 12 |
| Mann | 3-11 | 1-3 | 3 | 4 | 7 |
| Jackson | 15,28 | 1-3 | 6 | 4 | 25 |
| Taylor | 60 | 0-4 | 3 | 4 | 10 |
| Hammonds | 1-3 | 0-1 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Dierckes | 3-1 | 0-4 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Larkin | 9-1 | 0-2 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| McNeil | 0-1 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Adams | 2-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Sombrowik B | 6-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Leffler | 1-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Birch | 3-1 | 0-1 | 3 | 0 | 2 |
| Total | 30-48 | 4-11 | 35 | 22 | 10 |
FL PL FT REB PF TP T2
Gay 6-11 0-3 6 4 12
Crawford 6-11 0-3 6 4 12
Makioka 2-6 0-2 4 4 4
Pinker 2-6 0-2 4 4 4
Hancock 6-13 7-12 4 4 23
Mallopk 8-13 7-12 4 4 23
Menlo 3-6 0-2 4 2 6
Sanders 3-6 0-2 4 2 6
Smith 0-6 0-0 0 0 0
Giles 1-4 0-0 3 1 2
Kimberly 1-4 0-0 3 1 2
Magglie 0-1 0-0 1 0 0
Mackey 6-11 6-12 13 13 12
Officials in Joe M. (Mclean) and Woody Maynard.
Marsha Turok 79 21 - 66
Matthew Pohl 78 20 - 64
Oread Neighborhood Association
TONIGHT!
December Meeting
7:30 p.m. Forum Room of Kansas Union Annual Membership Dues—$1.00
All Oread residents and property owners are urged to attend.
SUPPORT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
KANSAN TV TIMES
TONIGHT'S
HIGHLIGHTS
This Space For Rent
Landstern's Colorado Christmas 8:00;
13 A holiday songfest from Colorado
features evangelist Lowell and his
family. Musical selections include "The
First Noel" and "Away In The Manger";
"Angels We Have Heard On High."
Song By Song By Ira Gershwil 9:15-19
a tribute to the lyrics of Ira Gershwil with Milicent Matlin, Julia McKenzie, David Keenan, and Ned Shrinerr. The song How Long Has The Been Going On, and Applause Applause.
Soviet Night. American Myth 9:30; 41
This 1978 program assessing American military strength includes an appeal for funds for the American Conservative Union. Those commenting: Rep. Philip Crane, and Sen. Barry Goldwater.
P. M.
5:30 ABC News 2,9
CBS News 5,13
NBC News 4,27
Rookes 41
EVENING
6:00 News 2,5,9,13,27
Cross Wits 4
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
6:30 Nashville On The Road 2
Hollywood Squares 4
Wild Kingdom 5
Dating Game 9
Kansas City Game 19
Kansas City Game 27
Newlywired Game 41
7.00 Lucas 2,9
Little House On The Prairie 4,27
White Shadow 3,13
White Pearl Love 11
Tac Tough 44
7:05 Evening At Symphony 19
7:30 Joker's Wild 41
8:00 NFLFootball 2,9
Movie "Suddenly Love" 4,27
MOVELY! Onedin Line 11
Landstrom's Colorado Christmas
13
Movie—"But I Don't Want To Get
Married" 1
9:00 Lou Grant 5, 13
Edge of Cold 11
9:15 Song By Song By Ira Gershwin 19
8:10 Many Faces Of Love 19
6 7 8 9 One Day At A Time
9:30 Soviet Might, American Myth 41
10:00 News 4, 5, 13, 27
Kansas Archaeology 11
Love Experts 41
10:25 Dick Cavett 19
10:26 Johnny Carney 4, 27
Streets Of San Francisco 5
ABC News 11
Rockford Files 13
Star Trek 41
10:01 Nene 2, 9
10:02 Dick Cavett 11
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
11:30 Adam 122
Man From U.N.C.L.E. 9
Ironse 9
Fordham Gordon 41
11:40 McMilan & Wife 13
A. M.
12:00 News 2
Tomorrow 4, 27
Wrestling 41
12:30 Story Of Jesus 2
Movie—"But I Don’t Want To Get
Married"
Movie—"The V.I.P.'s"
12:40 Movie 4
12:45 Movie—"Kid Dynamite" 41
12:50 Art Linkletter 5
12:50 Dick Van Dyke 41
12:50 Andy Griffith 41
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news and weather
8
Monday, December 4, 1978
University Dally Kansan
OUR CLOSE OUT SALE AT THE COUNTRY HOUSE CONTINUES WITH FURTHER REDUCTIONS
Pendleton Sportswear...20% off
John Meyer, Emily & Pandora Sportswear... 25% off
Coats ... 25% off
Blouses ... 20% off
Sweaters... 20% off
Dresses... 25% off
All Accessories... 20% off
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Values to $38.00 now $4.99 ea.
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Rampaging Chiefs beat Buffalo, 14-10
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UOI)—Mike Livingston tight hit and Walter White with a 3-yard touchdown pass on the final play of the third quarter yesterday to give the Kansas City Chiefs a 14-10 victory over the Buffalo Bills.
Eddy Patton set up the score with a 42-
yard kick return follow a 22-yard field goal by Tom Dempsey that put the
Bills ahead 10-7.
The Chiefs used a 15-yard penalty against Buffalo for a late hit and a 14-yard pass from livingstone to Henry. White first touchdown of the season.
THE YOUNG Kansas City defense intercepted three Joe Ferguson passes and also recovered two fumbles to the Chiefs up their record to 4-0 SAFety Gary Barbaro intercepted of the Chiefs into a fumble at Buffalo with an identical record.
Kansas City also scored on a 17-yard first-quarter run by Ted McKnight. Buffalo tied it 17 in the second quarter on a 40-yard pass from Ferguson to
Frank Lewis and took the lead on Dempsey's ninth field goal of the season with 3:22 left in the third period.
Kansas City had a golden opportunity less than a minute into the game when Curtis Brown fumbled the ball at the Buffalo 23 on the second play. Gary Green fell on it. The Chiefs moved the 4-yard line in seven plays but Jan Anderson's 21-yard find goal, try was blocked by rookie linebacker Lucas Sanford.
A 27-YARD Rusty Jackson punt capped the Bills' second possession to give the Chiefs the ball at the Buffalo 42. Kansas City did not muff that opener on Sunday, but it ended up the 17 yards around left for his sixth touchdown to cap the seven-play drive.
Mario Clark intercepted a Livingston pass midway through the second quarter to give the Bills the ball at their own 17. Ferguson marched them 85 yards for the score. The Buffalo quarter completed four passes in 2 yards in the drive.
HARLEY/DAVIDSON
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1811 West 6th Street
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The men's swim team finished either first or second in 10 of 12 events to win the Big Eight Relays Friday and Saturday in Norman, Okla.
KU men's team dominates pool in Big Eight Relavs
KU won three events and finished second in seven more to roll up 120 points. Iowa State was second with 84 points and Missouri third with 83.
"We won because we were first or second in all but two relays," Bill Spahn, men's swim coach, said yesterday. "We were trying to be strong in all events, and the other teams tried to load a few relays to try to win."
KU won last year's meet, but only by 20 points. Spaah said he thought that winning by 36 points this year showed the team's improved depth.
"This meet gave us a chance to see how we stacked up against the other teams in
depth," he said. "We do have a lot of depth compared with the other teams."
300-yard butterfly—1, Sauer, Crampon,
Graves, 2.377; 3.074-90 yard breaststroke—1,
Graves, Flaska, Blankenship, 3.022; 1-
meter dive—1, Anagnus, Anselmi,
points; 400-yard dive—1, Anselmi,
points; 400-yard dive—1, Anselmi,
points; 3.365; 1400-yard freestyle—2,
Killen, Collins, Bakkier-
Arkema, Graves, 13.089; 200-yard medley-
gray, Blankenship, Miller, Messer,
Jenkins, Gray, Rowland, 1.265; 3-
meter dive—2, Annagus, Anselmi,
378.47 points; 600-yard freestyle—2, Killen Docking,
Bakkier-Arkema, Miller, Rowe,
Jenkins, Gray, Rowland, 1.265;
3-meter dive—2, Annagus, Anselmi,
24.53; and 400-yard freestyle—3, Gray,
Bakkier-Arkema, Barnes, 3.14.5.
Women place 3rd in meet
Janet Lindstrom won four events to lead the women's swim team to a third-place finish out of 10 teams at the Nebraska Invitational Friday and Saturday in Lincoln.
team like them. Our girls swam really strong and did a really good job."
Florida State won the meet with 799 points followed by Wisconsin with 688 and KU with 603.
Lindstrom and Lanny Schaffer were the only individual winners for KU. Lindstrom won the 100- 200, 500- and 1,650-yard races, while Lindstrom won the 100-yard and 200-yard backstakes.
"Florida State is a very excellent team," Gary Kempel, women swim coach, said. "We have one of the best programs in the country."
Erin McMorrow placed second in the 50- yard freestyle. Her time of *24.8* was a varsity record. KU also placed three relay teams.
"BOTH WISCONSIN and Florida state were rested and wearing skin suits," Kempf said. "I think that we are a little better than WISCONSIN when conditions are equal.
"We can match Florida State top girl for top girl, but they have a little better depth than us. I think that we showed we are still the top team in the Midwest."
Results for KU were:
A short course in Bonded Bourbon.
BONDED
OLD
GRAND-DAD
100
PROOF
100
PROOF
first lesson:
bonded Bourbon is so unique that it took an act of Congress (in 1897) to establish the standards for Old Grand-Dad and other Bonded whiskeys.
BONDED
OLD GRAND-DAD
100 PROOF
100 PRO
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100 is perfect. Bonded Bourbon must be 100 proof. No more. No less.
Final exam.
You need only one sip to recognize the clearly superior quality and taste of Old Grand-Dad. Cheers!
Old Grand-Dad Bonded is authentic Kentucky sour-mash Bourbon, made with pure limestone water, the finest grains, and aged in new charred-oak barrels.
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Kentuckt, Straight Bourbon Whiskey 100 proof
Bottled in Bond. Old Grand-Dad Distillery Co., Frankfort. Kw 40001.
RUSSIA
100-yard freestyle - 2, McMorrow, :24.8;
100-yard freestyle - 1, Lindstrom, 53.5; 200-yard
freestyle - 1, Lindstrom, 1,537.7; 500-yard
freestyle - 1, Lindstrom, 4,59; 1,560-yard
freestyle - 1, Lindstrom, 173.25; 100-yard
backstroke - 1, Schaffer, 1,008.2; 100-yard
backstroke - 1, Schaffer, 2,648; 100-yard
freestyle relay - 2, McMorrow, :39.0;
100-yard freestyle Lance, 1,39.0; 100-yard
freestyle relay - 3, Gladney, Nohnek,
McMorrow, Schaffer, Lindstrom, 3:39;
400-yard medley relay - 2, Schaffer, Linda
Savidge, Lindstrom, McMorrow.
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"I thought we'd need them for the apartment."
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62
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Monday. December 4. 1978
g
Engineering schools gain women
By ROBIN ROBERT!
Engineering has become much more attractive to women and minorities because of special programs in recent years, according to Carol Shaw, assistant dean of engineering at Dayton University.
Staff Reporter
Shaw, who is nationally known for her work in recruiting women and minorities to engineering study, spoke to about 40 university and junior college professors and administrators in Nichols Hall Friday.
SHAW SAID her work began after David C. Craft, dean of engineering at KU and former dean of engineering at Dayton, told her that more women were needed in engineering studies.
in 1973, she said, there were no women enrolled in Dayton's school of engineering and only 1 percent of all teachers were female.
Two important sociological factors aided in the success of her work, she said.
"There was a sociological change happening in the country, an awareness on the part of women and minorities that they should seek career direction that they had not previously sought," Shaw said.
Another factors was that engineering enrollment was on
TO HELP recruit more women into engineering, Shaw set up career awareness programs for local high schools. The programs consisted of workshops, meetings with industry and arrangement of financial aid.
the decline in 1973, she said. That made universities look around for new groups from which to recruit.
"The problem with high school students is that they have only a vague idea of what they want to do. Many female high school students studying mathematics would have gone into accounting or science—not engineering," she
The result of the programs, she said, was a large increase in the number of women enrolled in engineering at Dayton. Later Shaw started a program to recruit more minority students into engineering. The program, along with federal grants, is by 75 percent of the minority students in engineering at Dayton, she said.
RESIDES THE recruiting programs for high school women and minorities, Shaw has set up programs to recruit older women who had received bachelor's degrees in mathematics or other areas related to engineering.
"Many of these women were drastically under-employed. Some were these secretaries or cooks in restaurants," she said.
To supplement the programs for women and minorities, Shaw also set up a series of workshops (for high school and college) that include learning about
developed the women were able to become engineers and to triple their highest previous salaries.
The increase of women and minorities will not flood the engineering job market, she said.
Shaw said the trend toward recruitment of new population groups would probably affect white males who were not typically in the labor force.
She also said that affirmative action laws had not prevented individual sexism or racism but that she was extremely pleased with the helpfulness and sincerity of men in industry.
shaw said could not expect members of the contingroup in any industry to be enthusiastic about stepping up.
Although Dayton and other schools offer programs and financial aid for women and minorities, Shaw said. There is
University Daily Kansan
OPEN UP TO
DIGNITY NORTHEAST KANSAS
P.O. Box 1074
Lawrence, Kansas 8044
Gavitt Children's
Gavitt Children's
persons.
Auditions also being held for MC.
Auditions for 1979 Rock Chalk Reve IBA Players. Have a prepared song; an accompanist is provided. You will learn and play a dance—so come dressed accordingly. Auditions will be held Monday and Tuesday, Dec 4 and 5, 7-10 p.m., call backs Dec. 6, 7-10 p.m. In the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
--time times time times time
15 words or
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
KANSAN WANT ADS
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads
--time times time times time
15 words or
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
CLASSIFIED RATES
LOVE RECORDS ANNO TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059 15. W. 9th St.
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the UDB business office.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
You will be "victimized" Dec 4 and 5 at an
waffle small ball. No Leisure Suite. 12-6
UNICIPP cards, calendars at Booktote Books,
Libraries, and Adventure A Booktote Books.
12-12
Directed by Curtis
PARTY-TIME 18, ANV TIME, BONE-ED
WILLED 26, SQUILLT, DULAJ, LIGOR
WILLD PRESENT 30, SQUILLT, DULAJ, LIGOR
SALE! New with until Christmas 2012 all 421 artist books available. Includes a latent list and varied assortment to choose from. Up to 30% off regular prices.
Crown Country Skiing Jair, 1-6 with HPER Depalma 8136. Bibc Hike Mirares or Mice Island 8136.
Employment Opportunities
It doesn't matter if you ask or not, now it
makes sense to enroll a child in college.
Fun-filled a day 1 weekday trip. via
Sleepover to Glenwood Springs. Com-
pens to $20. Includes included in
low price of $21. Get more information and
inquiries on Student Union, or write J M Neuchat, Room 220,
Student Union, or write J M Neuchat, Room 220, cla-
mented, a stained, self-addressed return envelope
with $25.
Polarity Therapy Workshops with Susan Hammill.
Polarity Therapy Workshop with Susan Hammill.
* emotional and physical block * Dev. 9 & 10
* social skills * skills for problem solving
RPEAT OF A SELLOUT: Back by popular demand, it's another record-breaking sale at the store. All you need is a $10 price at prices you can't beait anywhere. Get in on a great end of the semester sale. 12-7
The Virtims - New Rock and Roll for a tired
man who definitely small hall decal L4
Leonard Sister
12-6
ENTERTAINMENT
Why Study? See "The Victims" Dec 4 and 5 at 12-6
an awful small hallway
FOR RENT
Extra nice apartment next to campus. Utilities include free Wi-Fi, cell phone service, and air conditioner efficiency (92% - 957). $899-$1,649.
BILL looks for a place to call home! Nathanim has been on the road 10 times and will be the master of the way. Stop by and look over or give us a call at 503-846-2222 and we will be glad to see him! SAMIRH HALL • 1000 Nathalim Street • BELL 843-3059 • BELL 843-3059
Two bedroom apartment - 6-plex. 202 W. 14th,
175 S. 9th, 83001. Free parking. Not
no pets. Cal Main Hotel. Bid# 844-765-0844.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most utilities just beyond KU and near no town. No parking.
FRIENDER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-ING! Studio. 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and large which closes, articling parking. OK KU carmona call 643-844-194 or at 624 Fronter Road, Brandon, MN 55017. Call
OPEN-HOUSE-TOWN HOUSE, 3300 W. 8th Street and lease reduced and留 lease until Aug. 15, 1979. Open house every Sunday breakfast and casino money for a three day vacation in Las Vegas Offer expires 4-19-79. The suite includes balcony, bathroom, barn garage, carpet and draperies, full kitchen appliances, cellar, Call Rm 6197 or拜会 at 842-878-122
Solemate - Modern studio apartment. Ideally located on the 3rd floor of a furnished facility. Availability Jan. to Dec. **180 month rent**
Beautiful new 4-bedroom capecod house available in beautiful 3-bedroom kitchen with new kitchen appliances and neighbor's room. Call for details. (800) 765-3231
2 BR apartment to rent beginning spring semester Park 35. Call 841-8059. 12-4
Need sublease one bedroom apartment at Red Bud Lane. Furnished: 823-931-361, 12-6
Sublease 2, bedroom-2 at story townhouse. Trail-
ridge, 841-8728 after 5. 12-6
Available Jan 1—3 weekend townhouse
Sublease to Aug 6, 5. 1979 Trailridge Trailer Apt. 12. 7
12. 7
Clean Park 25 Apartment, furnished. 2 bedroom.
Clean Park 25 Apartment, furnished. 1 Call for the detail. 81-002-3000
Sublease--Nice, clean 2 bedrooms apartment 2
blocks from Union. Call 841-2801 to reserve.
12-4
Christian Housing, Very close to campus Call
842-6592 between 1-3 p.m. 12-12
Be prepared for second semester. Check out the
website www.greatercity.edu/tech/
Utilities paid and close to campus Call 877-690-3454
Extra nice 2-bedroom apartment in four-plus.
Short walk to campus. Quiz 841-4803. 12-8
To submit a notice to BH Jayakeyah
adрес: 60.487.809, All Attorneys pal
60.487.809
BH Jayakeyah
Rent now! 2 BR furnished. Front, Rug, chequ
for 2nd semitr. Call Julie 611-7957 - 28-04
2 BR apartment unfurnished 10 minute walk to campus $195.00; 851-0217. Available Jan. 1
Studio apartment for rent Utilities paid 842-
8799 12-7
Subliss 3 bedroom-2 story Townhouse. Trail-ridge.
841-3664. 12-8
Rooms and apartments, Call Lynch Realty, 223-7
Ohio, 843-4091
Sublease, 2 bedroom, unfurnished, dishwash,
utilities paid, call 843-0582 12-8
Nice large 4-piece. $165/mo. Near shopping on.
huge availability. Purchase now. B141-831. 12-8
2 BEDROOM Duplex, PARTALLY FURNISHED
2 BEDROOM Duplex, $185 Unit Clean; Call
12-8-8
Sublease -Cory studio apartment- Dec. 15, 15$
a month. In college to campus- Call 641-7844 $12-8
**Sublease:** One bedroom apartment, close to campus,
$145. utilizes paid. Cust 841-6706. 12-a
Sublease. Available February, large one bedroom,
two bathroom on bus route $185 monthly.
842-107-2911
Convenient studio, apartment for sublease. Avail-
lance 1-4 bedrooms. Traitbridge conference
862-893-8495. Ask for details.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator. Sporstbilt
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-7800-2000. W. Gh. 6th.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-7800-2000. W. Gh. 6th.
SunSpace - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
reflective 1024 Glass selection, reasonable
price! 1631 Mass. 844-570-7788
Western Civilization Note—New on sale! Make sense out of this Civilization Note make sense to students. As a studioration 2) For exam preparation. *New Analysis* (2) For exam preparation. *New Analysis* (2) For exam preparation. Critai, Mala Bookstore, and Oread Bookstore. (*f.*
Ferdur Muttingen Bask Glüster with straw, coats,
tweezers, and covers. Good condition.
Ferdur Muttingen Bask Glüster with straw, coats,
tweezers, and covers. Very good condition.
Gords, coats, and covers. Very good condition.
1972 Mercedes 220D 200 Sun roof, stereo, steering
at M453 for at M454.300 mile rate. Attention
at M483 for at M484.300 mile rate.
Girls! The best "T" Shirt In Town. Regularly
$6. Now $49.00 The Airtel 927 Mass.
Swedish Officer's winter coat. Original, white canvas with shepherding lining $50. Jeff Eckert 12-6
SMART PEOPLE DON'T HUW THE HEAT
SMART PEOPLE DON'T HUW THE HEAT
to show how to have a safe home in the House, provided that they are aware of available in the House heating system.
A cure for diese fever—"The Victims" Dec. 4 and
12-6 at an awfully small hall
Shwood model S 710 receiver. Excellent con-
trol. warranty left on parts. 12-6
841-013 before warranty.
Ponder Ridge bigham plate 79 shape, cor. cor. Bradbury
plates 70 shape, cor. cor. Bradbury plates 68 shape,
cor. cor. Bradbury plates 63 shape.
Ponder Ridge bigham plate 425-426, 458-459, 506-
508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517,
518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527,
528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537,
538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547,
548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557,
558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567,
568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577,
578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587,
588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597,
598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607,
608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617,
618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627,
628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637,
638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647,
648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657,
658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667,
668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677,
678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687,
688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697,
698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707,
708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717,
718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727,
728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737,
738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747,
748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757,
758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767,
768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777,
778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787,
788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797,
798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807,
808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817,
818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827,
828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837,
838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847,
848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857,
858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867,
868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877,
878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887,
888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897,
898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907,
908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917,
918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927,
928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937,
938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947,
948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957,
958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967,
968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977,
978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987,
988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997,
998, 999,
1977 Dodge Van. Customized 28 V-8 swivel seat,
factor air. Larger cell details call 861-2550. 6-12-35
www.dodgevans.com
Panasonic FM AM/FM Stores. Receive with
a Panasonic One-year, one-place Excellent Condition,
or a Panasonic Two-year, two-place Excellent Condi-
tion.
Moving: Must sell 1970 Kawasaki 500, 4x4, 8x4,
6387 12-5
For sale: one Teac tapedek, persian rug, tug of drawers, bookcase. More Info: 644-1091-0938
French 27 inch, Bicycle, 10 speed, Excellent condition, $90; car after Harry at 7 p.m. @ 694-824-125
Tools Full set of on hand tape tool—4 tool boxes 2 wheel grinder 4 to floor lift 864-1603
L. MOSSMAN GUITAR . I have a few very
traditional guitars (1251, 1315, 1365 or
original guitar) (1251/1315/1365 or 21/1365 or
any other combination).
JAVELIN: 1794. 8-V, automatic transmission, air-conditioning
+4500. Telephone #3210640058790.
+4500. Telephone #3210640058790.
1975 Portege Grand GRAM - A400 - V8.4 - AMFM 8
travis-664-102, vd.8 to览.
Wait, the first character is '1975'.
The second character is 'Portege'.
The third character is 'Grand'.
The fourth character is 'GRAM'.
The fifth character is 'A400'.
The sixth character is 'V8.4'.
The seventh character is 'AMFM'.
The eighth character is '8'.
The ninth character is 'travis-664-102'.
The tenth character is 'vd.8 to览'.
65 VV with 72 engine. Leaving town, must sell.
45 VV with offer, B42-650 ask for Kit. 12-5
30 VV with offer, B42-650 ask for Kit.
Michigan Street Music offices and services guitar,
bass, drums, percussion, wind instruments (in stock merit m601 quiz d-49, Qual D-49, Qual E-49), vocals, bass guitar, acoustic guitar, have a good selection of instruments and access to a large library with a good selection of instruments. Mon. to Sat., and until 3:35 p.m. 11:30 a.m. Mon. to Sat., and until 3:35 p.m. 11:30 a.m.
1969 Cougar XR7. Very nice car! Call 841-6634.
2010 Cougar XR7. Very nice car! Call 841-6634.
Nordica Foam ski boots 6-7. Size 6-11. $41-$824.
12/7
(Aliware) Concert guitar, with shoulder strap and case, $150. Call 644-8177-100. 7:00-12:00
Pretty, new shearling short lamb short jacket $329.00
stretch, extra features $35 motor) $81-641.12-15-6
extra features $35 motor)
EXTRAVAGANT PLANT SALE Perfect holiday plant sale. Shop from 9 am to 4 pm. Dec. 9, 9 am to 1 am. Call (212) 555-7332.
1970 Cuvrelet bimale, 2 door, 72,000 miles Tires
847-7987 like in New. In good condition.
12-6 847-7987
Excellent book! 2-1/5 JBL speakers $2 each. Also
Dart art. Bass kit % month old $4 each.
841-0914 12-7
Techniker Turntable, manual, duettover & car-
trol condition. $149.00, deck $100,
main condition. 841-0016.
FOUND
Kernwood KX-720 Casette Deck Top Load 841-
8524 12-6
The Victims' are the only hand left that you haven't seen. Dec 4 and 5 at an awful small time.
Calculate i₁ for 111 rn.111. On Nov. 16, Cab
664-8296 or come by WA 8 Strong. ID=22-8
Found at 18th and Louisiana, silver wire frame glass in black case. October birthdate.
Lost calculator on 4th floor of Wessex. It found,
please call Connie at 864-1941. 12-5
Set of keys near 11th and Kentucky Call 812-2192 to identify
PSCHIATRIC AIDS, LICENSSED MIDDLE-AGE TECHNICIANSM. Job will require to apply Applications to director of nursing, Topka State Hospital Phone 313-296-4576. Equal Opportunity Employer. *
wanted迪士顿 day and night. Daytime
wanted Carriage Lamp Supper Club behind
the Carriage Lamp Supper Club behind
OVERKERK JOHRE, Samaritne toll baur. Europee & USA.
Walter Schmidt, Jefe del Comercio. Europee & USA.
Walter Schmidt, Jefe del Comercio. Europee & USA.
MCALLS SIMOS now taking applications for permanent work in our office. We are a friendly, dependable benefactor-type person that values the importance of our company and the benefits for advancement in our growing company. See Hire Desk or call (516) 438-2070. Our phone number is
Student Trainees, Learning Disabilities Research Institute. Full-time graduate students, preferably with experience in the laboratory and analysis. Sipind amount based on experience and grade. Full-time Defer Dec 20. 12-4
Waitress needed 25-30 hrs. per week. No nights.
Dedicated Washroom in
Manhattan, 843-684-8244
From 4 a.m. to closing, weekdays and weekends.
Saturday, 4 p.m., Sunday, day or right shift. Applicants
who do not wish to travel must apply.
Part time day dailymissers must be able to work
in person only. Barely needed: 1328, W 23rd,
1328, H 24th
Part time custodial/maintenance job available.
Need to complete experience help/fulf-
not needed.
A student half-time research assistant position in the University of British Columbia's Project. Bureau of Child Research to assist with data collection from police and court records, include data collection from police and court records in East Kanaan Region. Additional responsibilities include data for computer analysis; data analytics; data management; and data analysis are being asked qualified applicants who have at least 5 years of experience as a data analyst who has had research experience and who has a Master's degree in statistics or a statistical package for data analysis. Special requirements include Correlations, and 1 test is preferred. Some courses in data analysis is also desirable. Must be prepared to approach evaluation. Approximately 6 months of training is required. Appropriate upon qualifications of the applicant. To apply, submit an application by December 12 by Wright. Application deadline December 12 by Wright. Application deadline December 12 by Wright. Affirmative Action Employee. 12-28
JOBSB - CINHUE SIEF RECHERCHET Nr. Personality High shipy Size SEHRMATHEM, Ab Masculine, B. Asienmeier, W. Schwarzer, Bat masculine, C. Warhol-LW, Bat masculine, C. Bat masculine
MEN! WOMEN!
Learning Object Set is filmed 4 years after
the first test. You must have been a student
quizzed with the two test series.
You will be sent a link to the test set
website.
NEED EXTRA XMAS MONKEY Sanitary eating openings for water, wafferines, and baking sheets. Experience in food service necessary and being a guest appearance will suit you. Appearance must be a match. Call A8-6340 for information.
SUMMER JOB, FORSERV Service Rew, where
you manage the following:
Mo. Cu 18 Y E every week; Kaliplim, Moi 300w
Mo. Cu 18 Y E every week; Kaliplim, Moi 300w
Department of Pharmacology and Technology
appointment in 12 months with possibility of ex-
empliance for 12 months. Duties: Conducting behavioral and bio-
psychological assessments; Requires B.S. of equivalent experience in
Formality with biochemical techniques; Laborato-
rial competence with small animal surgery Deadline for applications:
Teenel Department of Pharmacology and Technol-
ogy West Campus, Lawrence K., 60045. Phone 664-789-
3511. Affirmative Action employer. Applications
are due by February 15th. Religion,色情, sex disability, veteran status
Driver to transport child home from University
pre-primary. Mon. Thurs. 11:30 a.m. Call Carolina
Travel Center at 212-764-5888.
Part time early wardery. Must be well eou-
ding and have a clean, clean clothes.
Part time evening. Flexible hours. open on
Tuesday. Flexible hours.
Undergraduate Teaching Assistantship in the Chemistry Department for Spring 1979. Duties include preparation of chemistry lab work for Chemistry 100, 184, 184, 65-65 or c65-67. Each week, about 10 hours per week, with a stipend of approximately $250 and depth of knowledge in chemistry as indicated by courses taken and grades earned in college. Experience as a faculty recommendation. Experience as a faculty recommendation. Department Hall. Before December 12, 1978,Department Hall. After December 12, 1978, department affirmative action employer and encourages applications from women and members of minority groups.
If you constantly dream of becoming an importer, you have a chance? We need intramural basketball in your life. What would be the perfect portage in basketball interest you come up with? Call 644-3546 and ask for Ron. **12.8**
Part time coin laundry and dry cleaning attentior
Apply at Norge Village, 24th Jan. 12-12
LOST
Dress down and dance to "The Victim" at an
entertainment small hall. Dec. 4, and 5.
6 month old eat, black and red collar, with black tiger stripe. Call 841-7867 12-5
Last either at Blake Hall or Carruth, Witmuser
Switch. Witmuser with blue face, Sedimental value.
Witmuser with yellow face.
Lost 1. pair suede mules in Smith, If found,
please call 843-8505 ask for Tracy.
12.
MISCELLANEOUS
Glasses, blue casc, brown wire frame, brown
tinted lenses. 4 weeks ago. Reward 18/817-12
22
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available write
your order on PRINTED MATERIALS at:
Friday (A.M.) to Friday (M.) or Saturday
(AM) to Sunday.
Turn a campus college tavern into a virtual café. In the past, colleges have tended to winternight businesses now to the right side. Here is how to transform a winternight business into a virtual café that makes a lot of money while building equity in your campus. This looks like your kind of deal; but you can build an entire campus café.
The "Victims"? Just ask the police who we are. Apparating at an awful small hall. Do it. Are you ready?
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM Choose and cut your own beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive east on Browns 10 approximately 3 miles to County Rivers 20 approximately 6 miles. Open weekends till Christmas PINE HILL FARM
NOTICE
The "Victim's" Gb Yeah, John. Paul, George and Rings. De 4 and 5 at an awaitship 12-6
Tired of feeding yourself? Naihun Hall is offering, for the first time ever, a boarding plan. 19 days of vacation and three week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop by us or give us a visit at 12:30pm. 12-18 12-34 12-56 12-78
A. WHILE ON THE NITE—a舞 with an ancient Egyptian motif. Wear formal dress from any era. Music from the Worm Wrench Warriors. Vibes of joy and energy. New Hampshire. Tickets $25 at the door. 12-7
J. HOGG, BOOKSeller has just returned from a very successful book buying trip to Denver and will be presenting his knowledge on all the social and natural sciences, philosophy, science and technology. Due to the large number of books bought, we will be working overtime for the next few weeks to complete our fairly rapid pace of books should be appearing at a fairly rapid pace and remember books and fine prints make gifts of leading value. Woo wants you to eat 148 books and remember books and fine prints make gifts of leading value. Woo wants you to eat 148 books and remember books and fine prints make gifts of leading value. Woo wants you to eat 148 books and remember books and fine prints make gifts of leading value.
INFERSIONION GUARTA - Mandolin or Baritone
(3-string) with oboist. (2 strings)
or violin. (1-string) before bass. 1-2 strings
or cello. (1-string) before trumpet.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING AT J. HODD BOOK-
SHELF, 510 W. 34th St., New York, NY 10026,
circumscribed. Open every evening up to 8 p.m.
except holidays.
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT back by popularize the Repeat of a Sequel, but in this case the Renaissance, Baroque, Renaissanc
Gay-Lewis, Switchboard, Counseling and general information. 841-8472. 12-12
EXPERT TUTORS. We tutor MATH 800-700
PHYSICS 800-700 PHYCHISTICS 800-700 QUALIFICATIONS
B.S in Physics, M.A in Math Call 843-9056 for
Physics Chemistry or Computer Science
PERSONAL
Michigan Street Music; 647 Michigan, 843-353-8,
instrumental music and all other
instrumented music.
HARBOR SPECIALS, 6-8 Mon. Tues. and 8-10 Wed.
Friday: $45-$75 Saturday: $35 Sunday:
MARKETS LEADTIME: Night. WEEK: $110 per person
Gay Services of Kansas Support Group. To Join, drow by (SOSR) office # 841-6427. 12-4
Karate, learn from National and International
champions 862-8244
12-4
Monday, Dec. 4 is the last day to turn in rush
registration materials 12-4
Gay services of Kansas general meeting December 20th
2:30 p.m. Kansas Union Jailhawk Room, Spoken
In
To Which We may also convey, The Pantherale Amur.
The old Consumer Affairs Office across from the
old Consumer Affairs Office across from the
After BOISE STATE Celebrate AT THE HAWK
Covin and in set the new Harbour Barracks at
"their" 31ft place of heaven in Lawrence at
270 feet.
The Modi-Ibera band is now accepting auditions for the Voices Festival. Vocationalist Serious Suzuki and Vocationalist Sorry Bison are among the candidates.
The Moffett River bear is now accepting admissions for Canada, vocalizing Spanish inquires only 842.
**book** + GIPT HIPPED OFF **let UMC Security**
**keep a eye on your apartment**
**break in at the door**
Hair Harumesters. The Couple Monster and
the Girl Couple. We saved for You Come by, with a T-bone sensation.
You Come by, with a T-bone sensation.
Thank you, the participants of Operation Friendship. We have enjoyed an excellent semester together. We will be making our learning together possible. Appreciation is expressed to all those who worked on our programs and contributed with reflections, and all the enjoyable conversations. Program for next semester begin! 12-4
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1
10
Monday, December 4, 1978
University Dally Kansan
-
-
Local school breakfasts proposed
By JEWELL WILLHITE
Staff Reporter
Lawrence public schools that once began their mornings with the Pledge of Allegiance might some day open with oatmeal and orange juice.
Efforts are under way on the national, state and local levels that federally sub-站支区 to local areas.
A school breakfast program should be adopted in Lawrence, says John Carland, director of the School Nutrition Project in Topeka. Federal funds are available, he said, and many students are not adequately prepared to learn because they have not eaten
"BREAKFAST IS the most important meal of the day." Carland said.
A survey of 1,200 students at Lawrence High School conducted by the Parents' Advisory Council in November showed that 500 of the students ate breakfast. Eight hundred said they would eat breakfast at school if it were served.
Carrland has been meeting with representatives of Lawrence church and civic organizations since October to organize support for a school breakfast program in Lawrence. He said he planned to present his report on the Lawrence school board at its December meeting.
10 percent of Kansas schools offer breakfast, lunch and a half cup of USDA minimum specifications, which require a half pint of milk, a half cup of fruit or juice and a service of cereal.
Carland says that because many Lawrence students do not eat that kind of breakfast, the schools should provide it for them.
The federal government first entered the breakfast business in 1966, when Congress
Congress expanded its program in 1975, saying "It is the purpose and intent of the Congress that the school breakfast program be made available in all schools where it is needed to provide adequate nutrition for children in attendance."
unanimously passed the Childhood Nutrition Act, sponsored by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff.
THE AMENDMENT states that any student eligible for a free or reduced-price school lunch is automatically entitled to a free or reduced-price school breakfast if the server serves it.
This year, students from a family of four whose income is less than $8,110 receive free school meals. If the income of a family of four is less than $12,660, the children are eligible for reduced-price meals, which means breakfast costs not more than $4.
Both school lunch and breakfast programs are federally subsidized. In 1977, 20 percent of the nation's schools served breakfast and 92 percent served lunch. In 1985, a recommendation that breakfast be mandatory in all schools. The Senate rejected the idea.
"THEY are some schools in Lawrence that need a breakfast program badly," he said. "I know, because of Lawrence schools, said. The junior highs and senior highs need it because of the types of schedules we are running those kids through and because of the students' great work."
She said teenagers needed 3,000 calories a day. Many high school students are at school by 7 a.m. for marching band and athletic practices. These students, many of whom do not eat breakfast, may not eat lunch until 12:30 p.m., she said.
"Many people feel this is a family responsibility," Armstrong said. "There is some resistance in schools due to time scheduling, and it can be difficult to manage. It sets one up says to it, it can do it."
A decision about breakfast programs will
Theft...
From page one
worked. But he said he thought they of fended customers so he removed them.
"Unless you pay someone to watch the video screens all the time, you might lose more money than you'd save." Meyer said. Without the jayne'ss. Rusty's. gawks. 25
Without the camera's, Rusty's caught 25 shooflers in September.
rauey's no longer hires an off-duty policeman to beef up store protection.
Kroger and Dillon's hired off duty policemen to protect their stores. Policemen wander down the aisles in plain cothes and annear to be regular customers.
"I used to hire a friend who was a Lawrence patronman. A leatherman said, he wanted to come to him when they came in he would chat with them. They could just come back and steal when they came."
Local grocers have their own theories about shoplifting practices, but all said it was impossible to pinpoint a time when most of the stealing took place.
ONE GROCER SAID that he thought amateurs stole when his store was crowded and that professional shoplifters came during the early hours of business.
Leatherman said people stole from his store late in the afternoon or evening—the
He said Sunday shoplifters sometimes were very nonhistorical.
"They have on their Sunday best and when they are stealing meat they also open up a box of Baggies and slip the roast inside them to mess up his pocket or "neer," he said.
Most store managers said the hottest
Kansan posts are available
Applications for spring Kansan news and business staffs will be available this afternoon in the School of Journalism office, 105 Fint Hall; the Student Senate Office, suite 180 in the Kansas Union; and the Student Organizations and Activities, 228 Storr Hall.
Completed applications must be returned by 5 p.m. Wednesday to 105 Flint Hall.
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items were health and beauty aids, such as tubes of shampoo, razor blades and aspirin. items to steal, they said, were bat-fishblasts, hairsprays, meat, and cheese.
Meyer said, "One girl stole a box of tampon recently and I caught her and asked to buy it. I found the money needed to buy them (or her), but she didn't take it up on it and didn't say why she stole them."
MEYER SAID he encouraged customers with financial problems to ask that the store offer a discount of marking up merchandise to compensate for stolen goods. He said sometimes he even let women take groceries if they had forgotten their wallets or had run out of them.
Knox said the idea of school breakfasts had been presented to him three or four years ago. A small number of Lawrence students were surveyed at that time to determine if the program were needed, he said.
He said he found this policy to be more profitable.
be made by the Lawrence school board, which will consider the recommendation of Carl Knox, superintendent of Lawrence schools.
"I shop here, too, and I pay the same orices for food as my customers do."
Items stolen often are higher-priced goods that are small enough to slip into pockets, conceal in large purses or drop into collapsed umbrellas.
Some shopfitters, however, do not bother to be inconsious.
Valentine said he had seen a person leave with a shopping cart full of unbaked food. He said the individual tried to take her. Everyone included the cart, valued at about $100.
"We want to hear a full presentation," he said. "We are not closing the door, but are not giving our support until we know more about it."
OTHER COMMON shoplifting tricks are to:
"WE DID NOT recommend to the board that they imitate it," Knox said.
Carland said no schools in Kansas City, Kan., served breakfast. In Wichita 6 percent of the students eat breakfast at school. The program takes to kindergarten eight night schools.
Knox said he was not taking a position on the program.
One grocer said he wished there were a way to determine which items were stolen from the store.
Topeka schools have served breakfast since 1971, Richard Feley, food services director of Topeka schools, said. About 1,000 students in 18 schools participate. Most are from the surrounding areas. About 60 percent either pay nothing or pay a reduced price. Feley said.
- Wear an oversized bra and develop a bustline while shopping.
- Use an oversized purse or one with a false bottom.
The full student price for a Topkea school breakfast is 30 cents. The menu
Leatherman said, however, he was glad there was no way of knowing how much was there.
"If we knew what things were stolen, we'd put them all in one place and watch that aisle," he said. "If I could stop it, I'd be a millionaire overnight."
"There’s no way to tell exactly how much is taken every month, thank God," he said. "I think it’s a matter of money."
"I THINK it's a vital project," Feleay
- Conceal food items in a stroller or in a blanket wrapped around an infant.
Melhout schools have served breakfast for about five years, Kenneth Rundell, school superintendent, said. About 25 percent of the students are most and most of those are elementary students.
said, "I think there'd be a major rebellion if we tried to stop it."
Breakfast at McLouth consists of juice, milk and a cinnamon roll or batter bread prepared by the cooks. Sometimes box cereal is served.
rne argument you get is that it's the parents' responsibility. Rudd said, "But help me, please." As a personnel, it's a good thing. Students may on the bus at 7:15 a.m. Both parents are likely to be at the bus.
Federally funded programs are paid for by everyone paying federal income taxes. Kansas breakfast programs receive no reimbursements, but have paid 30 cents for breakfast, federal funds pay 15 cents. For each reduced-priced breakfast, breakfast costs taxpayers 45.25 cents each.
THE LAWRENCE school enrollment is 7,609. Those who eat lunch at school number 4,775. The full price is paid by 3,807 students. 312牟 a reduced费; and 768 eat free lunch.
If Lawrence students who eat school lunch also eat school breakfasts for a school lunch program, they will be able.
Quinlan Krichels, one of six performers in The Lotte Geslar Pantomime Circus, took time to clean a member of the audience during a Saturday performance in Murphy Hall. The event was organized by the Lotte Geslar Foundation.
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Operation Friendship Building Bridges Between Cultures
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Thank You
We have enjoyed an excellent semester together. A lot of time and effort went into making our learning together possible. Appreciation is expressed to all those who worked on our programs, mailouts, slides, presentations, music, refreshments, and all the enjoyable conversation. Programs for next semester begin January 22.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 89, No. 68
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, December 5, 1978
Fambrough is new head coach
See story page six
Theft, pack rats plague KU inventories
Bv BILL HIGGINS
Staff Reporter
Beneath the basement of Strong Hall in a musty room with a dirt floor, rows and piles of sinks, toilets, cabinets and 180 dolls from the Thayer room, and a maze of steam pipes and electrical conduits.
Similar rooms in the basements of Hoch
auditorium, Watson Library, Fraser House have
other properties that are not properly
protected.
Every item lying in this forksan room supposedly is listed on the University inventory.
Some of the equipment is usable, some is valuable as a source for spare parts and some is worthless.
But much of the University's property is relegated to basements, closets and tunnels, because KU has no access.
THE RESPONSIBILITY for receiving and storing campus property is left to each department within the institution. The responsibility a little differently and the method for salvaging and disposing of property prompts some department heads.
Dwight Regnier, a storekeeper for housing and formerly a security guard for Facilities Operations, quit his job with housing at the end of last July. He left in frustration with KU's property management system.
"I've gone through a lot of buildings on the KU campus," he said. "The waste and theft is so immense that you can't believe it—a lot of it simply isn't reported."
"The University has closets and rooms just loaded
with junk and there's no room to store necessary goods."
Regnier worked as a supply chief and taught supply and logistics for 15 years while serving in the U.S. Marines. He worked nearly a year as storekeeper for housing in the basement of Oliver Hall.
"THERE WAS a laxness in the handling of tax-payees' money," he said. "A lot of the problem was that we had to work with materials that were obsolete or valueless. A lot of worthless material took up a great space of space—and
"Also, there's no salvage control. It's a pipeline of equipment in coming with no opening at the other end."
"A lot of property is lost within the organization, and when that happens, it's hard to correct the error."
Regnier said the University needed a central supply office or some sort of central logistical scheme. He said an audit of University property made by someone outside the University was also needed.
"There has to be some kind of house cleaning from outside, initiated at the top level of the state," he said. "The University will never admit that it is wrong and I don't think it can police itself."
KEITH NITCHER, University director of business affairs, is in charge of KU's property management and inventory. Nitcher disagreed with Reginer's claim that an outside "house cleaning" was needed.
"I think that the University can police itself," Notcher said. "But it depends on the management of this."
"I don't know that any outside action is needed. We do maintain an inventory record, we have spot checks of property records and I think the threat of a fire is insufficient to keep the departmental inventories true.
"We don't make the spot checks often enough—once a year or so—but we concentrate on the items that are most apt to get lost, such as typewriters and calculators.
"We would make more use of it if we had more resources to do it. We do put a lot of responsibility for the work."
NUTCHER SAID that for the past year there had been three auditors for the Lawrence campus and another who had been audited as inventories was only a small part of their job, he said. Nitcher said there probably were departments that
Nitcher said there probably were departments that stored useless equipment.
"But the equipment becomes, for control purposes, the property of each department and each department has the preoperative of whether to keep or to disarm of property."
"I'm sure, around the University, that there are a lot of things saved that are unlisted. There probably is a lot of things missing."
Regnier said that leaving the property management system up to each department also contributed to crime and that much of the crime was in-house.
"We'd call the police when equipment would come up muzzling." "Register said," and nothing would be done.
"THEYWOULD realize that the loss of property
was within the system, and there the investigation would end."
Detective LL. JJ Mullens of the KU Police said, however, that in-house theft was not necessarily a problem.
"In fact," Mullens said, "in-house theta may be easier to solve because the number of suspects is smaller."
Mulena said it was difficult to tell when a theft was in-house and therefore difficult to say how much in-hoovered it was.
However, many KU officials, including Nitcher, policemen and several departmental spokesmen, agree that the theft of University property has become worse in recent years.
MULLENS SAID that with a large institution and so many employees and pieces of equipment, a security system at KU at best could be an inconvenience to a potential thief.
Between October 1977 and October 1987, KU had
$7,638.83 in property to in that same period,
and $205,240.93 in current property.
The University's holdings are indeed large. The university inventory shows that, as of June 1978, KU property was valued at $180,772,765.94. KU is in the largest of 108 state agencies in Kansas.
KU's inventory includes 123,194 separate pieces of eminent, worth about $26 million.
Each item supposedly is checked yearly and recorded in the inventory, which is then sent to the
Mary Frances Coffman, property accountant for
the purchasing office, in in charge of maintaining the University inventory.
Coffman said state law required that any piece of property worth more than $25 and with a life expectancy of more than a year had to be accounted for by the same person. If the value of $25 also must be included in the inventory, she said.
If any piece of property is missing, the department is supposed to notify the police, who will file a report.
COFFMAN CONTROLS the inventory by watching the purchase orders that are handled through the controller's office and adding the items to the inventory.
Police say they can tell when departments are checking their inventories. Sgt. John Walle of KU has an answer: "They don't know when inventory time comes around. Everybody has stuff they can account for so they call us and say it's OK."
Nothing may be thrown away, sold or cannibalized without state annulval.
COFFMAN SAID, "The University frowns upon departments selling anything. Otherwise departments would sell equipment for funds and then request more equipment."
See INVENTORY back page
Legally, however, there is no departmental property. There is no state property, so when or if a departmental property
Ticket prices are in question
By BARB KOENIG Staff Reporter
In October 1980, football and basketball season ticket prices could be reduced.
However, the price of the tickets might increase because additional money is paid off by the fund from the KU Endowment Association for the recent renovation of Memorial
A surcharge of $5 for football and $4 for basketball season tickets was implemented in 1966 to help pay for an expansion of the seating on the east side of Memorial Stadium. The surcharge, which totals $50,000 a year, is scheduled to expire in 1980. After that, the Kansas City Chiefs have to pay $50,000 to the Endowment Association, according to the loan agreement.
Doug Messer, assistant athletic director and business manager, said the new renovation agreement with the acquisition unit unified KUAC to pay $188,000 a year. When the east stadium loan expires, $50,000 will be added for a total of $218,000 a year. In 1983, when the $100,000-a-year west stadium expansion loan is paid off, the department will accumulate according to loan terms, for a total of $228,000 a year until the loan is paid off.
The money for the $50,000 payments, which begin in 1890, supposedly will not come only from ticket sales but from other sources. That means that of ticket sales, conference shares, and
UNDER AN AGREEMENT on the 1966 surcharge between the KUAC Advisory Board and the All-Student Council, the review has not been made before its 1980 expiration date. The review, which has not been made, will determine the surcharge will be carried over.
concession and backrest sales, Messer said.
"It can't come from contributions."
"Messer said, but it can come from any other area or combination of revenue sources." The case is probably the most logical place.
"The Endowment Association says that they don't care how much the ticket surcharge is and how much the ticket premium is, just say 'we want you to buy it at $99.90.'"
"They are using $30,000 as a figure by which our annual payment will be increased by, but it has no reference to where the money is going to come from.
"OUR OBLIGATIONS are to pay certain notes on certain days for so many dollars. The only note we have right now is in to tickets from 1968." Messer said.
Messer said he could not guarantee that the tickets would be reduced by $2. He said he should have paid the loan were reviewed. That, he said, would depend on what was determined in the review, which would be done either by the KKO board, or the board's office.
"The ticket prices may increase but it's not going to mean that it's because of the ticket price changes, things remained equal, theoretically the ticket price would go down $5, but all
Messer said season ticket prices would be determined after 1980 operational expenses and total income were figured.
Football ticket revenues were used as collateral to back the $1.8 million loan. A surcharge already has been placed on student and public tickets this year to cover all of the stallments. The student surcharge is 50 cents a game for each ticket, or $3
Kansas Republicans elect Lady speaker
See TICKETS back page
TOPEKA—Republicans of the Kansas House of Representatives yesterday selected Wendell Della as speaker of the 1979 and 1800 legislative sessions.
Also elected during the day-long meeting of representatives was Rep. Fred Weaver, D-Baxter Springs, who will serve as minority leader.
Special to the Kansan
Lady, from Overland Park, will succeed governor-elect John Carlin as head of the legislative body's lower house.
Lady defeated Rep. Carlos Cooper, R-Bonner Springs, by a 37-12 vote of the Republican party caucus.
Lady was considered the top candidate for speaker two years ago but Democrats gained control of the House for the first time in 64 years. He was given a second chance this year because Republicans won back their majority by taking 69 of
Both parties also elected other house leaders. State Rep. Robert Frey, R-Liberal was chosen as mayor. State Rep. Robert Frey, R-Liberal was elected as assistant majority leader. Speaker Pro Tem for the next two sessions will be Bob Arbuthot, R-Haddam, who was elected as state representative.
125 seats in the November general election.
State Rep. Jok Hodmaner, D-Wichita, was chosen by Democrats for the post of lieutenant governor and joined Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, was chosen to be the Democratic policy leader when the legislature convenes Jan. 6. He will serve as the Democratic membership of the House.
Rounding out the selection of new leaders were State Rep. Don Mainey, chairman of the Senate and State Rep. Loren Holman, TD, who will be the party cause
1890
1
Staff photo by RANDY OLSON
Abandoned
A gray box, marked "Thayer collection—180 dolls," has lain, apparently for as long as 50 years, beneath the shelf of Strong Hall. These dolls, along with some pieces of miniature furniture and other collectibles, are part of the museum collection, according to museum officials. The Thayer collection
is the basis for the Spencer Museum of Art's entire collection. It was donated to KU in 1917 by William B. Trayer of Thayer City, Mo. Dolls from the Thayer collection that have been displayed in the museum's Christmas tree in the central court of the Spencer Art Museum.
Past burglaries cause concern about property
y MARK SPENCE
Staff Reporter
"Right now, we are sitting ducks," said a KU professor who is in the department that matters most to me.
For three weeks, $100,000 worth of equipment has been sitting in a University building almost unprotected, a ripe target for hackers. The university had plagued KU for the past several months.
At the request of the professor and KU police, the professor, equipment and building were not identified to avoid providing clues to would-be burglars.
Because of the value of the equipment, Mulena said, there was concern that she would be unable to work.
"I'm surprised you know about it," Lt. John Mullens, a detective with the KU Police Department, said. "It was going to be talk until we got it ruled down to talk until we got it ruled down to talk."
'I TALKING about people from out of town, too,' he said. 'I would be worth it for you.'
No special security had been planned for the equipment, according to the professor, but recent burglaries had prompted increased concern.
On Sept. 13, and 28, there were large burglars from Jolifte Hall and the Child Museum at Jolifte Hall to purchase $9,500 worth of equipment was taken. According to KU police, there are no leads in the investigation.
These thefts have increased concern throughout the University for the security of equipment. Part of the problem, according to a survey, is that enough attention is focused on security.
"We are aware that there are people at the University who aren't aware of the burglars," Jeanne Longaker, a detective arresteed with the KU police department,said.
MULLENS SAID there were no special security precautions in either of the recent burglaries, which he said were the largest in his seven-year career at KU.
Because of the nature of the equipment, police suspect professional burglaries might occur.
"You would have to have very specific knowledge to use the equipment, or have a
The professor said his department was "very much surprised and stunned" by the thefts because it had never had problems before.
"Before the thefts, security really didn't enter our minds, other than normal security experts."
The building where the $100,000 worth of new equipment was installed is under water.
Donald Whipple, director of architectural services for KU, said security was not a priority in the renovation, which was mainly to accommodate the new equipment.
"MY FILE shows me that the department was not concerned about security until 2015."
Although only a portion of the funds that were requested for the remodeling were approved, the professor said, the only security device requested was bars for the
"I suppose one has to say we were naive," he said. "But you also have to say that in 23 B.C. the Roman conquerors had taken all."
Mullens said the department should have installed security devices before the
See SECURITY back page
2
Tuesday, December 5, 1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Alaskan senator hurt in crash
ANCHORAGE, Alaska—Senior Minority Whip Ted Stevens, R-Akansas, was seriously hurt and his wife, Ann, reportedly was killed yesterday when the private planes they were in crashed at Anchorage International Airport. Shares were in serious but stable condition at a hospital.
Stevens was listed in serious but stable condition at a hospital.
Snowby was another passenger, Tony Malley, former commissioner of the Alaska Commerce, was reported in stable condition at the hospital, but his injuries were not immediately known. It was not known how many others were on board the plane.
Stevens, 50, was re-elected to his second full term in November, winning more than 75 percent of the vote. In his post as pastor, Stevens is the assistant minority leader.
The plane crashed while attempting to land, breaking into four pieces. It was en route from Jumaea, the state capital, to Anchorage.
Iran faces oil field slowdown
TEHIRAN, Iran—Tousands of oil workers launched a new round of slowdown days hoping to topple Shah Mohammed Nazeh Paliwayi by uniting the country in the fight against him.
drying up a prison cell and then it turns to bloody and bloody anti-government protests appeared to be winding down, but an urban guerrilla band attacked a police station in the northern city.
Sources said the new slowdown by many of the 37,000 workers in Iran's southwestern Kuzbari state fields immediately cut Iran's daily oil production from $1.9 billion to $1.4 billion.
25 million barrels of oil, the world's No. 2 petroleum expands, depends on its oil revenues. A 15-day strike by oil workers last month cut the flow of oil and cost down by $6 billion.
Woman named new SF mayor
SAN FRANCISCO—City Supervisor Dianne Feinstein, who tearfully announces the assassination of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Perry, will be in attendance.
One of her first duties will to appoint three city supervisors—one to replace herself, one to replace Milk, and one to replace former supervisor Dan White, who had resigned shortly before the killings and has been charged with the shootings of Monsone and Milk.
Formerly president of the Board of Supervisors, Feinstein has been acting mayor since the Nov. 27 assassinations of Moscone and乳汁 in their City Hall
Feinstein, 15, is the ninth woman in the country to run a city with a population over 100,000. Only women mayors in San Antonio and Phoenix have larger
Utah court stays executions
SALT LAKE CITY—The Utah Supreme Court stayed the double execution of convicted killers Dale Pierce and William Anderson yesterday, less than three months after a judge ordered it to be overturned.
Their attorneys said issues involving race and capital punishment had not been heard. They will be able to make their arguments in appeal before the Supreme Court on Tuesday.
Pierre and Andrews, both black, were convicted of the torture slayings of three persons during a holdout in Quinon four years ago.
The court agreed to hear the cases last week after a District Court judge refused to delay the executions that had been scheduled for sunrise Thursday at 11 a.m.
Court upholds Swine Flu Act
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court yesterday upheld a law that made the government the exclusive target of damage salts from the swine flu vaccination.
The court declined to review an appeal from a Lafayette, La., couple who wanted to sue the manufacturer of the vaccine.
The Swine Flu Act, passed by Congress when the vaccination program appeared jeopardized by manufacturers' inability to obtain adequate liability insurance, stipulated that the government would assume all liability for the program.
The law made the government responsible for injuries or deaths caused by the vaccinations and says the government may later seek to get some of the funds from it.
Trial of sub robbers delayed
ST. LOUIS — A crowded federal court schedule yesterday delayed until tomorrow the trial of two New York men charged with conspiring to steal a
A source said the postponement also might indicate that the government was considering changing the charges against the men from conspiracy against the government.
Defense attorneys have maintained that the men - Edward J. Mendenhall, 24 of Rochester, N.Y., and James W. Cosgrove, 28, of Geneva, N.Y.-had no intention of hijacking the submarine but developed the scheme to swindle $300,000 in front rooftop from a businessman.
The men are accused of plotting to steal the US TSS Treepart from its base at New London, Conn. The charge of wire fraud would result from telephone
Experts investigate derailment
SHIPMAN, Va.—Federal safety investigators examined a recording tape yesterday to try to determine the speed of a Southern Railway train that was running too fast.
About 60 other crewmen and passengers were injured when the South Crescent, on route from Atlanta to Washington, left the tracks about 5:40 a.m.
National Transportation and Safety Board apskemer Ed Slattery said a tape device carried on the train kept a continuous record of the train's speed. He said that an alarm system was installed in all the trains.
Conductor Lee Bailey said Sunday the train was traveling at about 45 mph when it derailed.
Slatterly declined to comment on the cause of the deraliment until the investigation is completed, but he said 7,000 of the 10,000 rail accidents in the country were due to slatter.
Shots fired at steel haulers
The other shooting occurred in Erie County. A police spokesman said a shot, believed to be from a shotgun, was fired from a bridge abutment and left a 2-inch hole in the door of a passing truck. The engine's metal housing shielded the driver from injury.
The drivers of five steel-hailing trucks told police they were on a highway outside Pittsburgh when about 15 pickup trucks converged on the convoy and struck a car.
PITTSBURG - Sniper hits at trucks in two separate incidents yesterday as a strike by dihedral steel haulers in Pennsylvania showed no sign of abating in
Although state police have not directly linked the violence with the strike by the Fraternal Association of Steel Haulers, more than 200 incidents, mostly shootings, rock throwing and fire slashing, have been reported in Pennsylvania since the shutdown began Nov. 11. The union has denied involvement.
Kansan jobs available
Applications for spring Kansan news and business staffs are available at the School of Journalism office, 105 Flint Hall; the Student Senate office, Suite 105 of the Kansas Union; and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Hard Hall.
Completed applications must be returned by 5 p.m. tomorrow to 105 Flint Hall.
Weather
It will be partly云 this morning, becoming increasingly cloudy the afternoon. The high will be in the mid 40s and the low tonight will drop to the mid 30s.
By electing a compromise slate of candidates, members of the Oread Neighborhood Association say they hope to put an end to the feeding between residents and landlords that has plagued the association for more than two months.
property owner, who lives at 710 Indiana St.; Maria Buller, secretary, a tenant at 1565 Kentucky SL., and Walter Brown, a resident, a landlord at 1116 Indiana St.
The new officers are Kathy Clark, president, a tenant at the office, a non-resident
Oread group elects new officers
The four officers were nominated by the ONA Executive Committee in an attempt, the committee said, to represent both the district and landlords of the Orcad neighborhood.
THE OREAD neighborhood is the area east of the KU campus to Massachusetts Street and north of 19th Street to Ninth Street. There were about 100 members present at the meeting, which was held in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The new officers will replace the officers who resigned recently after a one-month term. These administrators were: David Holroyd, president; Dick Lynch, vice
Japan's new leader backs dollar
TOKYO (AP)—Japan's new prime minister, foreseeing continued troubles for the dollar, called yesterday for a tripling of President Carter's $30-billion "defense fund" for buying up surplus dollars around the world.
"We need a fund that is capable of withstanding the effects of speculators," Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira said in an interview.
OHIRA ALSO said he saw little chance that Japan would meet its promise of achieving a 7 percent economic growth rate for the current fiscal year, a goal set by Fukuda at the Bonn summit meeting of Western nowars and Japan last July.
Asked about the possibility of the yen replacing the dollar as the basic currency for world trade, Ohira responded, "Possibilities are all fine, but unless everyone is willing to use the yen, such talk doesn't mean much."
Best of TV's top pop-music show!
Host: Harry Chapin.
Soundstage
Fifth Anniversary Special
it's about what you think it'a about!
"IT'S NOT THE SIZE
THAT COUNTS"
Eve 7:30 & 9:15
Sat-Sun MAT 2:30
TUESDAY 7:00
CHANNEL 11 9BS
Varsity
SCHOOL - August 24, 1963
Gregory Peck Laurence Olivier "THE BOYS FROM BRAZIL"
Midnight Express
R
Eve 7:30 & 8:40
Sat Sun Mat 2:30
Granada
INSTITUTO SEGURIDAD TRAVEL
Eve at Cinema Twin
7:20 & 9:40
Sat Sun 2:30 31st & Iowa
Midnight Express
R
Eve at 2:30 & 8:40
Sat/Sun 2:00
Cinema Twin
31st & 8th
who needs a funny, fabulous love story? YOU DO!
HENRY WINKLER FIELD
HEROES PG
Eve at 2:35 & 8:40
Sat/Sun
Ma 1:35
Hillcrest
JACK NICHOLSON
THE Goin South
with JOHN BELUSHI
Eve 7:30 & 9:35 Sat/Sun 2:00
Cinema Twin
GREASE PG
Eve 7:35 & 8:40
Sat/Sun 2:00
A ROBERT ALTMAN FILM
PG
A WEDDING with Carol Burnett
Eve 7:15 & 9:35
Sat/Sun 1:45
JACK NICHOLSON
in Goin South
with JOHN BELUSH
Eve 7:30 & 8:30 Sat Sun 2:40
Cinema Twin
PG
A
WEDDING
with Carol Brownell
GREASE PG
Eve 7.35
B & A 8.40
B&A 8.40 to 2.05
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
82985N
Face it you've always wanted to fly! Many of us have had the feeling and for some it has never gone away
give you the training you need that you're in luck. Air Force ROTC flight instruction Program (FIP) is available to you. You can design to teach you the basics of flight through飞 lessons in small aircraft at a civil aeronautical center.
The program is an EXTR for cadets who can qualify to become Air Force pilots into Air Force ROTC. Taken during the senior year in college, FIP is the first step for the cadet who is going on to Air Force jet pilot training.
AIR FORCE
ROTC
Gateway to a great way of life.
This is all reserved for the cadet who wants to get his off the ground, with Air Force silver pilot wings.
SOPHOMORES SHOULD APPLY NOW FOR ENTRY AJ JUNIORS IN ROTC FOR FALL 1979.
FOR MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING, ROOM 108 OR CALL 864-4876 FOR MORE INFORMATION.
ATTENTION SOPHOMORES:
KANSAN TV TIMES
This Space For Rent
Soundstage 7:00; 11, 19 Soundstage celebrates an anniversary with highlights from concerts past. A wide spectrum of music will be represented with Blues, Jazz, Rock, Folk, Satire, etc., featured guests will be Phoebe Snow, B.B. King, Johnny Winter, Doobie Broos, Kenny Log�gins, and many more.
ABC News Closeup“*Pachy Healing*”; 9:00; 2 19 This is the subject examined in this report. Believers in the paranormal and nonbelievers layman, who observe it during the hour which observes a psychic class, and a man under hypnosis.
Salute To The Performing Arts 8:00; 5, 13 This program will honor great names in music and dance who throughout their lifetimes have made significant contributions to American culture through the performing arts.
TONIGHT'S
HIGHLIGHTS
EVENING
P.M.
5:30 ABC News 2,9
ABC News 4,27
CBS News 5,13
Brookings A1.
6:00 News 2, 5, 19, 13, 27
Cross Wits 4
MacNeil/Llebrer Report 19
Intermediate Algebra 19
6:30 That Nashville Music 2
*1.98 Beauty Show 4*
Match Game PM 5
Dating Game 9
MacNeil/Lehr Report 11
Cross Wits 13
Kansas City Strip 19
Tyler Moore 27
New York Game 41
7:00 Happy Days 2,9
Grandpa Goes To Washington
27
Paper Chase 5
Soundstage 11, 19
Bionic Woman 13
Tic Tac Dough 41
7:30 Laverne & Shirley 2,9
8:00 Three's Company 2, 9
Movie — "My Husband Is Missing"
Salute to The Performance Arts
5, 13
"Song is Born!"
Movie—A Song Is Born
8:05 Rav Charles At Monreux 19
8:05 Ray Charles At Monroe 19
8:15 Movie "Miracle On 34th Street"
8:30 Taxi2,9
10:00 News 2,4,5,19,32
Introduction to Law
Enforcement 11
Love Experts 41
9:35 Membership Pledge Drive 19
10.15 Dick Cavett 19
10.16 Johnny Carrion 4, 27
Streets 5 San Francisco 5
Mary Tylor Moore 9
ABC News 11
Barnaby Jones 13
Star Trek 41
10:35 ABC News 19
11:00 Bob Newhart 9
Dick Cavett 11
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
11:30 Man from U.N.C.L.E. 5
Movie—"Part Two—Walking
Tall" 9
Flash Gordon 41
11:40 Police Story 13
A.M.
12:00 Tomorrow 4, 27
Phil Silvers 41
12:30 News 2
Movie—"The Scorpio Letters" 5
Best of Groucho 41
1:00 Story Of Jesus 2
News 4
Movie—"A Song Is Born"
2:45 Movie—"Dick Tracy, Detective"
41
3:00 Art Linkletter 5
4:30 Dick Van Dyke 41
4:30 Andy Griffith 41
*Denotes HBO
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news and weather
president; Robert Eggert, treasurer; and
Virginia Munger, secretary.
The former officers resigned on ONA members decided at their Nov. 6 meeting to resign from the job.
ONA members said they decided to hold a competition because the officers were incompetent.
the officers also were criticized by ONA because they were elected by a large landlord but
The first election was called invalid because no bylaws had been established at the time of the election. According to ONA bylaws, must be drawn up before an election.
KIEF'S Records
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films sua
Wednesday, Dec. 6
Samurai:
YOJIMBO
(1961)
Dir. Aira Kurosawa, with Toshihr Milune. The basis for, but much better than, A Flatish of Dollars. Japan/subtitled.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud
Thursday, Dec. 7 UMBERTO D.
Dir. Wittorio de Sica, with Carlo Batista and Alfonso Cavalli, one of the best examples of Italian literature by Cesare Zavarti and de Sica. “British; and flawless.” -Life, 1863.
$1.00 7:30 Woodruff Aud.
Friday & Saturday,
Dec. 8 & 9
Screwball Comedy Double Feature:
BRINGING UP BABY
(1938)
D. Howard Hawks, with Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Charlie Rugles. The epitome of the screwball era.
- with·
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
(1934)
Dir. Frank Capra, with Clark Gable, Cliff Richard, the *music* master's class was the best of all the all of the major Academy Awards, including Bait Best Picture, Watch for the Wow factor.
For both movies:
$1.50 3:30 & 8:00 pm Woodruff Aud.
Monday, Dec. 11
Last of the Film Noir:
TOUCH OF EVIL
(1958)
Dir. Orson Welles, with Orson Welles,
Cherlston Hasten, Joleigh Marle, Lam-
dieh Dirlich, Mercedes McCum-
lan, Jillian Tolley, or James Welles
as an exil warrior of a border town. This print includes 15 minutes of footage originally cut before its theatrical release; this longer version
was produced in the original conception of the film.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 5.1978
3
New law brightens student aid outlook
About 1,100 more KU students will be eligible to receive basic grants next fall because of the recent passage of a middle-income assistance law, Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, said yesterday.
In addition, the new law, the Middle Income Student Assistance Act, allows students with an adjusted family income to obtain federally financed student loans.
"Based on a study by the American Council on Education, basic grant awards will increase by 38 percent, if the program continues to receive grants in 1979-80." Rogers said.
rogers had estimated that 2,100 students received $1.9 million in Basic Education Opportunity Grants this year.
The assistance act was signed into law by President Carter in November. It increases the maximum amount students can take on schoolwork $1,000 and makes students with family
incomes between $15,000 and $25,000 eligible for a grant.
IN ADDITION, the new law requires the government to pay the first nine months of interest after graduation on a guaranteed Student Loan Program.
The government, in the past, would not pay the 7 percent interest on guaranteed loans to students with adjusted family incomes; lenders would not make such loans without government financing, students from families with higher incomes did not have access.
The legislation affecting the loan program is effective immediately. It will be operative in the basic grant program after July 1, 1979.
ROGERS HAD said that about $3 million in guaranteed loans would be awarded to about 2,000 students this year. He said the number of loans awarded to students would increase by 60 percent because of the new law.
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University police yesterday reported that audits did an estimated $375 damage to telephone lines.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Police said a car was turned onto its side in the B-zone parking lot, east of Carnuthr-O'Leary Hall. The owner of the car was from Kansas City, Kan.
The incident caused $250 damage and occurred between 8 a.m. and 12:35 p.m. on Thursday.
A car belonging to a Hutchinson man received $125 damage early Sunday when someone broke its rear window with a rock. A student reported the theft of a shotgun.
A student reported the theft of a shotgun
Police said the theft occurred between
Nov. 26 and Nov. 28. The loss was estimated at
$1,000.
and a cassette tape player from his car, which was parked in the Daisy Field
Lawrence police reported that a KU student's apartment was burglarized
The student, Julie McLemore, Topeka junior, 1012 Emery Road, reported that a burglar stole a turquoise necklace, a brown acetate and $4 from her locked apartment.
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AT THE OREAD BOOKSTORE FOR THESE AND OTHER BOOKS, CALENDARS, POSTERS, CARDS AND UNIQUE HOLIDAY CARDS
LEVEL 3 KANSAS UNION
Continental's Semester Break. Up to 50% off.
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This semester break take advantage of Continental's price break on airfares. We'll take you to the snow in Colorado, the sun on either coast, or the warmth of your family circle. And you'll save enough to live it up once you get there. Fly anyplace Continental flies on the mainland and save up to 50% off regular Coach, depending on when and where you go. Of course, there are some restrictions and you must purchase your tickets in advance.
Even if you get a sudden itch to travel, Continental can save you some scratch without an advance purchase. We have the only system-wide* discount fare without restrictions. It'll save you up to 20% any night, 10% any day that we have seats available.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansas edition editors. Signed columns represent the views of the writers.
DECEMBER 5,1978
Arbitration law needed
Bob Stephan, attorney general-elect,
fresh from his election day jount with
Democrat Curt Schneider, has re-
warded himself and now prepares to
battle the Kansas Legislature over a
long-needed binding arbitration law.
Stephan says he intends to press the Legislature this session for passage of a binding arbitration bill, which would be designed to resolve labor disputes between governmental and public employee groups.
CURRENT KANSAS law makes no provision for settlement of labor disputes when government and public workers are at an impasse. It allows fact-finding and mediation once an agreement is settled, but does not include arbitration.
Because of this, public employee unions, such as teachers, police and firefighter associations, generally favor binding arbitration, saying the current law gives an edge to government during contract talks.
THE IMPORTANCE of the law lies in its ability to prevent lengthy strikes of public workers, such as the one that occurred in Wichita in September with police and firefighters.
According to Stephan's proposal, a three-member arbitration team would be organized when negotiating parties reached an impasse on a contract. Each of the parties—union and government—would select one arbitrator. Those two members would select the third arbitrator.
A binding arbitration law would allow for a quicker settlement of contract disputes, possibly avoiding dangerous consequences of public servant strikes such as one earlier this fall in Memphis, Teun... when riots and arson sections of the city as police and firefighters were striking.
As Stephan says, "It seems so sensible to me, I don't know why there would be any real opposition."
Palestinian resolution key to Mideast peace
BvSTANLEY HOFFMAN
N. Y. Times Feature
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — The treaty that now is being negotiated between Egypt and Israel constitutes an intermediate solution of the Middle Eastern conflict.
The Camp David documents are riddled with ambiguities that concern the Palestinian problem. They will have to be lifted in one of two ways.
The Camp David framework for peace decided the creation of a freely elected "self-governing authority" for the West Bank and Gaza that will have "full autonomy" for five years and negotiate with Israel, Egypt and Jordan the final status of the area, to be submitted to a vote by the representatives of the area's inhabitants.
IMPLICITLY BUT logically the outcome is a Palestinianian entity: either a state submitted only to the kinds of restrictions on its military sovereignty that would have been imposed by the negotiators, or an entity that decides on its own to federate with Jordan or Egypt.
Such an outcome has been feared by many Israelis. But their own government's decision to submit a plan for limited access to Israeli settlements beyond it at Camp David, raises for the first time the possibility of a solution that would meet the essential demands of those Palestinians who have given up the dream of settlement. The lack of whose concern is for security not territory.
However, the other possible outcome is a destruction of the Camp David framework between Palestinians and Palestiniens to play the roles assigned to them. Extremists on both sides reinforce
ONCE PEACE with Egypt is signed, Israeli suspicion that the Camp David agreement is a trap and a prelude to a Palestinian state could encourage the Israeli government to empty it of all substance.
The more radical elements of the Palestine Liberation Organization have already been used against Israel because it sets no date for the end of Israeli occupation, says nothing about borders or the return of the Palestinian population in the power of the transitional authority.
If the peace process does not go on one, can foresee the following effects: Saudi support in Anwar Sadat and preserving its own moderating influence among all the other Arabs united in rejection of what would have become a separate Egyptian-state.
THE UNITED States would be most uncomfortably exposed to Saudi pressure. The Russians would enjoy new opportunities and would become more moral crisis would be likely in an isolated country.
Egypt and the Egyptian-Iranian peace would come under unbelievable strain.
Israeli insecurity would be perpetuated through military occupation of an area with a hostile population that grows much faster than Israel's.
Obviously this outcome has to be avoided, but whether it can be will be determined soon. Under the Camp David agreement, Mr. Obama and his advisers—Jordan whose delegations may include Palestinians—the conditions for establishing the elected self-governing government are clear.
This body will define the scope of the authority's powers by dealing with such vital issues as the future of Israel set forth in the Resolution of Jerusalem to vote in the election, the ownership of state lands, the policing of bridges over the Jordan, the meaning of Jerusalem for Palestinians.
THE ANSWERS to these questions will shape the future of the area both during the first year and in the future. We determine whether the local Palestinians will choose to participate in the elections or to boycott them. And their choice in turn determines whether a comprehensive peace agreement is reached.
Once again it is up to the United States to play a decisive role. Jordan has no interest in taking over the country and becomes clear that the United States seeks the kind of answers that we give the agreement
And while it is futile to expect the PLO to drop its condemnation, it might allow West Bank Palestinians to run for office if opportunities for real self-determination are clarified and if the inhabitants of the West Bank receive the benefits they could gain from the process.
THE CAMP DAVID formula gives Israel a transition period during which the dynamics of peace could lead the public to confront its challenges, in Palestine's self-determination.
It offers the inhabitants of the occupied territories their first experience of self-government and the possibility of developing an indigenous leadership. But more of this will happen unless the conference is modernized now for setting the process in motion.
For the United States, the challenge is even more important than the one President Carter met at Camp David, for it is hard to imagine that a strong concessions is likely to be greatest, especially since the risk of a new Arab-Israeli war has much diminished. But those who advocate delay or benign neglect serve the nation well, and ultimately, that of Israel's security.
Stanley Hoffman, professor of government at Harvard, is a guest speaker.
Peace
BURGER COURT
CONSTITUT
UNITED STAT
High court stacked against press
The Supreme Court refused last week to review the case of Myron Farber, the New York Times reporter jailed for 40 days after refusing to surrender his notes in a murder case.
In doing so, the court laid to rest, at least for the time being, the conflict between two rights: the well-established right of a defendant to a fair trial and the not-vestigated right of a defendant to an Amendment grounds, possible evidence in his possession.
The court usually gives no reasons for refusing to hear a case. But unless Farber's plea was handled in an irregular manner, it can be assumed that at least five defendants were in the case disturbing enough to warrant a review.
Frescuing to hear a case has the effect of affirming the lower-court ruling. The New Jersey Supreme Court uphold the validity of the contempt citation against Patti. In the sentence and the $,000-a-day fine lined earlier, the
The press finds few friends on this Supreme Court.
Some disappointment may have been felt in other newsrooms. But, given the membership of the Supreme Court, the denial was probably the best outcome for the court. It has been argued, the court probably had ruled against Farber.
THE LEGAL history of the Farber case thus ends with no clear resolution of its merits. The Times, of course, would have given two Pulitzer Prizes for a favorable ruling. If, however, if only to recoup the more than $200,000 it paid in fees,
The press finds five friends on this Supreme Court. Mentoring the court's unfriendliness to the press here in many as self-serving, but arguing that the press has subscribed at the hands of the Supreme Court is not extravagant.
Rick Alm
The most stinging decision, in the press' opinion, came earlier this year in the Stanford Daily case, in which the court upheld the right of the police to conduct searches in newsrooms.
AND THERE WERE other setbacks for the press. The court rejected the plea of a California television station that said it was being unconstitutionally denied access to a website known to be former President Nikon's famous water-tolerant shoes.
In the court's overall performance, University of Michigan law professor Vincent Blair detects "a certain understate of resentment against the press, a sort of 'Who do they think they are?' feeling among a few justices."
To be fair, however, the nine men who sit on the highest court have not been unremittingly hostile to the press. Established press rights usually have been protected. However, whenever the press has asked for an expansion of First Amendment rights, the present court has sternly refused.
Farber and the Times were asking for new rights.
Farber and the Times were asking for new rights. THE SUPREME Court has never read the First Amendment as exempting reporters from a trial's compulsory processes. Only a court with a solid belief in the societal necessity of press freedom would be willing to ignore the precedent and a grant the press this new right.
At least three of its members are decidedly unfriendly.
to the interests of the press. Chief Justice Warren Burger, his closest ideological ally, William Rehquist, and Harry Blackman share what amounts to a contempt for the press.
Two other justices, Lewis Powell and Byron White, usually join them in voting against press interests. The anti-press blot is not solid—wild in particular has a soft edge. The Justice Schlossberg forms a bulwark against any expansion of press rights.
The press has friends on the court, of course. William Brennan, Thirringgood Marshall and, to a lesser extent, John F. Kennedy. The press is likely to be willing to grant rights to the press, usually in recognition of the vital role the press plays in a free society.
But the friends are now in the minority.
The press needs that as much as it needs another strike at the Times. But, if anything, the future looks bleaker. The governor's retirement prove true, it appears that Brennan has enough problems, will be the next justices to leave the bench.
AND SO PRESS interests have been losing out at the Supreme Court. Based on the record, the present court would have ruled against Farber, possibly by a 5-4 vote. The decision would do nothing but add to the weight of precedent accumulating against the press during the Burzer court.
The press would lose its two best friends.
The five unfriendly justices, on the other hand, are younger and reported in good health. They figure to be the most likely to cause harm.
Barring any shift in their values, then, it will be a long time before the Supreme Court recognizes, a sweeping change.
To the editor:
Student Senate abridges basic rights
On Nov. 29, 1978, the Student Senate of this University adopted a proposal that can only be characterized as one of the most oppressive actions taken by that body owing inception.
This proposal purports to terminate funding to the Student Bar Association of the University of Kansas School of Law in the event that that organization circulates petitions calling on the governor of Kansas to make the city Green from its site on Jawaharlong Boulevard.
That proposal is absolutely antithetical to the fundamental tenets upon which our democratic form of government stands, and that its failure guarantees contained in the First Amendment.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN letters
We, the undersigned, represent law students on both sides of the issue of whether the statute should be moved. We feel the irresponsible action of the Student body has totally overshadowed that issue by staging at the heart of our constitutional rights.
The Annals of Congress indicate that many members of the Constitutional Congress need a response to the "assembly clause." One representative called it a "self-evident, inalienable right which the people possess; it is certainly a man never would be called in question."
The First Amendment to the Constitution provides "Congress shall make no law, prohibiting the press, or the right of the people to assemble, and to petition the Government for redress."
At first blush it is obvious that the Senate's proposal directly contravenes the rules of government. In 1876, Chief Justice Wailes wrote, "The very idea of a government, republican in form, implies a right on the part of its people, a petition for redress of grievances."
Far from being an innovation of the Founding Fathers, the right to petition was an abstraction from the fabric long before the Revolution. It is first mentioned in the Magna Carta, written in 1215, and was guaranteed in broad form to King Henry III. The Commonwealth in 1690 and by the King in 1890.
In addition to violating our constitutional right to petition, the Senate's action also violates our rights of free speech and press, as they have been since 1790. We hearted of Americans as the air they breath."
Free speech is the first freedom. In the words of Alexander Meklejohn, noted First Amendment scholar, "The unbridled rock on which our government stands."
Free speech is an indispensable corollary of our right to vote. Without the information necessary to make an informed choice that choice would be valueless.
It is not the least bit unusual that the Senate should seek to suppress those views to which it is opposed, it has happened many times in many places. As Oliver Willem Holmes put it, "Persecution for the expression of opinions is perfectly logical."
The Student Senate undoubtedly believes itself to be in the right with regard to the statue, and, so believing, wishes to "sweep away all opposition." Yet long ago our country embarked on an experiment which has continued to this day.
That experiment is predicated upon the proposition that free discussion is an indispensable means to the attainment of political truth, and that the best test of an idea is its ability to "get itself accepted in the competition of the mind." The evidence that press have been recorded a preferred status in the spectrum of our constitutional rights.
The actions of the Student Senate show either total disdain for, or complete ignorance of, this constitutional right, so long revered by the American people. Whichever it may be, it makes little difference.
"The greatest danger to freedom lies not in the existence of men of despotic personality, but in that of men with no personality at all. These will gladiate permanently." The simple, yet not know what is happening, they are perfectly unconscious of any wrong."
Last week, Mike Harper, student body president, categorically refused to call a special meeting to reconsider it. Yesterday Harper promised to send a letter of disapproval concerning the proposal to the secretary of the Student Senate.
However, until the Senate affirms this disapproval at its next meeting in January we have been and continue to be deprived of our rights.
Therefore, in furtherance of our Rights the Student Bar Association and several law students acting pro se filed suit yesterday in the Federal District Court in order to enjoy the Student Senate from enforcing its proposal.
We urge you to support our actions by contacting your student representative and asking about the emergency meeting to repeal the proposal in question. We have no wish to involve the Senate in an extended court battle, we have this violation of our rights remedied.
We emphasize that the issue of the statue is not involved here. What is involved is the right of law students, both for and against the move, to speak out on that issue. Indeed, we have already heard from a member of the community depending on the Senate for funds to speak out on any issue.
What, for example, would distinguish the present situation from withdrawal of funds from the university's educational policy did not reflect the political viewpoint of the Senate? If the Senate's action is allowed to stand, no one should be able to safely exercise its first amendment rights.
In closing, we leave you with the words of James Madison:
"A popular government, with popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is not a powerful institution, perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance; and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power that knowledge gives."
John B. Gage II,
Eudora law student
And three other law students
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Northampton daily August through May and Monday through Thursday for $75.00, plus subscription for $125.00 or $300.00 if subscribed to BET. For Douglas County and BET for subscribed to BET, please visit www.bet.org. Includes two copies in BET for subscribed to BET and one copy in Douglas County and BET for subscribed to BET. In addition, an online catalog is available at www.universityofnorthampton.edu/catalog.
Managing Editor Jerry Sass
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Tuesday, December 5, 1978
5
Harper calls lawsuit a moot case
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
Although the Student Bar Association has a temporary court and has issued a temporary order to students, the Student Senate in court tomorrow, Mike Harper, student body president, remains
"I'm not going to do anything," he said yesterday. "The smart thing for them to do
The SBA and three law students yesterday filed a class action suit in U.S. District Court in Topeka against Harper, Robbie Robin, the lawyer vice president, and all student senators.
According to Jeff Roth, president of the
KANSAN
On Campus
The SBA SUIT is asking for $500 in damages, which is about one dollar for every law student, plus court costs and the filing of a complaint. The group voted in favor of the amendment. The group is also seeking a permanent injunction to prevent the state from issuing its funding if the petitions are circulated.
SBA, the suit was filed in response to an amendment to the Senate revenue code passed by the Senate Wednesday. The amendment stipulated that the SBA would be required to issue if SBA members circulated a petition urging the moving of the Jimmy Green statue.
might or might not do is not grounds for a lawsuit.
However, Harper said the case was most because he had vetoled the amendment.
I have a feeling your brilliant law students will find themselves without a case in the matter.
"The bill has been vetoed, so as far as I am concerned, it's dead," he said. "The only way they can sue us is if the Senate overrides my veto. And what the Senate
ALTHOUGH A SPECIAL SENIOR meeting has been tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, the senator said he did not think voting whether to override the veto merited calling the vote.
TODAY: THE INSTITUTE FOR LEGISLATORS will meet all day in the Kansas Union. The KU HUMAN RIGHTS COALITION will hold a rally at 11:30 a.m. in front of Strong Hall. A talk on the history of human rights covenants will follow in the Sunflower Room of the Union. A SLAIC MATERIALS LECTURE will begin at 3:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. Bogdan Popovic, Yugoslav literary critic, will speak. COLLEGE ASSEMBLY meets at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
The next regular Senate meeting is scheduled for late January.
However, Harper's refusal to call a meeting is the SBAs reason for pursuing the issue.
Events
John Gage, one of the plaintiffs in the suit, said, "Nobody knows for sure the status of the veto is. All that the Senate has indicated to us is that it is an operative amendment until January when the Senate votes again."
TONIGHT: EUPEANE CLUB meets at 6:30 in the International Room of the Union. The African Studies department, as part of Human Rights Week, will sponsor a KANZER CAMPUS trip to "Two Africas in Transition" at 7 in the Council Room of the Union. MATHEMATICS HONORS RECEPTION begins at 8 in the Centennial Room of the Union. A STUDENTS COMPOSITIONS by KU students will begin at 8 Swain Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
would have to be brought against the university. The Regents had to disqualify the Senate as well, a right apportioned.
But Gage said that because the suit was against individual Senate members rather than the Senate as a body, it would not have to involve the University.
"The Senate is an arm of the government that can't be sued, but we can sue individuals acting in their official capacity for nominal damages." he said.
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David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that he wanted to discuss the case with Harper and that he hoped that it would be settled out of court.
Although the amendment technically does not go into effect until fiscal 1979, Gage said, SBA members are worried that the Senate might try to enforce it before that time.
"Whether it is in effect or not, it's on the books," he said. "It's obvious that the amendment is directed toward the petitions that are being circulated now. The intent is there and they can cut our funding at any time, as I understand it.
The amendment's vague status is not the only reason the SBA is continuing the suit.
"AS FAR AS I know, they have us over a barrel."
Harper said a suit involving the Senate
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6
Tuesday, December 5, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Fambrough to replace Moore
Don Fambrough will become the first KU
coach for a season twice when he accords
to the job this morning.
Fambridge, who resigned the post under pressure four years ago, confirmed last night that he had been chosen by KU athletic director Michael Kowalski and members of a special advisory committee.
He will assume the job immediately, he said.
Fambrough, 55, replaces former head coach Bud Wilson, who was fired Nov. 18 in a season.
John Hadd, Moore's quarterback coach, who had said he strongly wanted the head coaching job, will be offered the position of coach. Fambrough said and assistant head coach. Fambrough said.
Famborough in now assistant director of the Wiltshire firm, which raises funds for the charity.
"BOB MARCUM approached me about two weeks ago and asked me whether I would be interested in it," he said. "To have this opportunity is tremendous. It really is."
I guess everyone knows what I think of the University of Kansas and my love for it.
When he resigned, he said he would never leave KU.
Fambrough was not among the candidates interviewed by the committee yesterday, second and third week, according to Regina L. Huller.
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Robinson, student body vice president and a member of the committee, said it had met with only Hadi and John Cooper, who this year will have to speak to head coach of the University of Tulsa.
One other coach, Mike White, offensive line coach of the San Francisco 49ers, had been scheduled to meet with the committee. But apparently after hearing rumors that Farnham had been a favorite of the committee, he decided not to show up.
ROBENSON SAID THE committee had voted unanimously in hearing reports
implications from MNJ.
"He contacted people who had worked with the team, and related the information to Robinson."
Apparently, Fambrough was not among the early favorites for the job. Another applicant—Bo Rein of North Carolina State University's 1% offer and accepted a nominal of his job.
But after that, Fambrough's popularity increased.
"We didn't really pick" Robinson said. "I was up to Marcum."
Farmburgh, whose 1974 team went 4-7 and its last six games, said he was overjoyed. "I am thrilled," he added.
"It's even more exciting this time than the
10
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HE PROMISED A quick start to recruiting, a major concern of the committee and football staff because other schools that retained their coaches have already hit the road to court high school and junior college players.
were interested in it", said Fambrough, who was known as an excellent recruiter. He brought to KU standout performers Nolan Cromwell, Laverne Smith and Terry
first time," he said. "This is it, and we're going to make it work."
Moore, described by his players as aloof, was not successful at in-state recruiting. After the bulk of Fambrough's recruits left, Moore's teams began slumping.
In Moore's four years, the Jayhawks were 7.5-6.3-7-1 and 1-10.
The first thing he will do, Fambrough said, was to build a staff around himself and Hadi. He didn't say which coaches from Moore's staff would be kept.
THEM TLL HAVE to get out and start recruiting—that's important. We can't wait.
Reportedly, one of the attractions of both Hadi and Fambrough were their statements that they had no desire to use the KU job as part of a move to a larger school or professional team.
When Fambrigh received his first appointment as head coach, he said, "This is the job I've always dreamed of getting. I've never wanted to coach at any other school."
The first KU alum to hold the job since Henry Shenk was head coach in 1943-45. Fambrough became the head coach in 1971 after Pepper Rodgers resigned to join the UCLA staff. Fambough had been a KU assistant for 19 under three coaches.
"Recruiting is so important, I'm sure they
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Rose might join Phillies
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Baseball star Pete Rose will sign a four-year contract worth $3 million with the Philadelphia team at a source close to the team last night.
Phillies owner Ruly Carpenter and personnel director Paul Owens refused to confirm the report at basebal's annual winter meetings, but the source said the
8
signing will be announced at a 2 p.m. EST news conference.
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Rose also rejected an offer from the Kansas City Royals.
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Airborne guard
Sprightly Moe Fowler, a head, shoulders and hips above the action, tries to block a downcourt pass by Boise State guard Carl Powell. The Jayhawks bumped the Idahoans 82-48 last night, winning their third game of the season. Fowler and fellow guard Darnell Valentine led KU with eight rebounds apiece.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 5, 1978
7
Jayhawks, still imperfect, ramble past Boise State
By BILL BUZBEE
Snorts Writer
Head basketball coach Ted Owens said last night that he was eager to play Oral Roberts.
That's probably a good thought, because not too many memorable things happened during your life.
Kansas handed boise Boise State its
fifth loss, 82-48, in a game in which KU was
defeated by Oklahoma.
"Again, we were playing in sports," Owens said. "I think the real test for us will be Oral Roberts. They could defeat us if we're not sharp.
"I'm not going to make a judgment on our
"I THINK THAT KU is ranked too high and again, I'm sure that Coach Owens feels the same way." Cnons said. "Maybe a No 10 or No. 12 ranking right now."
However, Boise State's coach, Bus Connor, was more willing than to judge KU.
team until we play that kind of competition."
"Again, it's too early to tell."
Owens, however, said his team had shown some improvement — in places over Shearwater.
Their victory over numa stunts.
Three of the team's players
Darrell Valentine, hit double figures in
reactions.
Valentine hit 10 of 10 free throws and five
Kansas' shooting percentages, however,
were less than inspiring. KU hit 42.5 percent
from the field in the first half and 38.8
in the second half for an overall 40.8
percent.
field goals for 20 points. He was followed by center Willie McKinley, with 15 points, and left center Foster, with 11 points.
"WE PLAYED THEM to a standstill at times and made them shot from shots on the field."
The game started out at a standstill, as neither team scored for the first two minutes. But Kansas, sparked by Mokesi, led with 15 points and advantage into the locker room at halftime.
Owens pulled his starters with five minutes to play, and Boise State cut KU's score.
The Hawks widened their lead in the second half, at times pulling ahead by as much as 15 points.
Valentine said, "People forget we have three sophomores, one firstman and one senior starting. It's not bad for people to expect things from you, but not the world.
"We're not playing like the No. 4 team in the nation because we're not. It's still early in the season."
VALENTINE ADMITTED that KU could have played better, but said she was looking for a role.
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"It's an important week for us," Mokeski said. "I'll tell how to tough them we are. I'll plant trees."
Travel Plans?
"It will be the first game we don't dominate every game." "We don't have to prepare ourselves."
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near the mall. KU and near town. tp.
Phone: 843-5707
REPEAT OF SALLOUT: Back by popular demand, it's another record-breaking sale at the Kaiser Bookstore. Records and tapes gagged with "Banned Books" have a great end of the semester sale. 12-7
Employment Opportunities
Two bedroom apartment, 6-plex, 502 W. 14th;
two bedrooms, 170 W. 14th;
no pets. Call Mark Schmidker, 824-295-7362.
FORRENT
Extra nice apartment next to campus. Uniform,
shelving, carpet, hardwood flooring. If you
are a one mile efficiency, 850-382-6981.
If you are a two mile efficiency, 850-382-6981.
The "Viations": New Rock and Hail for a tired
Leisure suit. Small hair. Dec. 8, 12-6
Leisure Suit
Beautiful new 3 bedroom house residence with new kitchen, new bathrooms, new kitchen appliances, duplex neighborhood and city amenities.
Still looking for a place to call home? Nautimus is the best location for the remainder of the year. Stop by our store and we will be glad to give you all the relief HALL, 1809 Nautimus Drive, 843-5398. Nautimus
Sublease - Modern studio apartment. Ideally situated on the second floor of a beautiful facility. Available Jan. 1, $160/month.
ENTERTAINMENT
Why Study? See "The Victims" Dec. 4 and 5 as an awfully small hall
Need sublease one bedroom apartment at Red
Bid Lane. Furnished. Call 842-5316. 12-6
OPEN-HOUSE-TOWN HOUSE. 3300 W. 10th short-term lease and rented until August 15, 1978. Short-term kitchen, breakfast and casino money for a three-day vacation in Las Vegas. Offer offers 4-1-7-79. The suite includes bathroom, garage, garage and draps, full kitchen appliance, bath, kitchen and call Rm at 842 or becky at 842-8787.
Sublease 2. bedroom - 2 story townhouse Tril-
ridge, 841-7828 after 5.
Available Jan 1—Three hour townhouse
Jan 8–Aug 5, 2019 Traight路警局
841-2922 12-7
Christian Housing. Very close to campus. Call 842-6920 between 1-3 p.m. 12:12
"The Victims" don't care whether or not you
tell them. Dec. 4 and 5 at an after-
night small hall.
12-6
Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in four-plex
Short walk to campus. Quilt: 841-4803. 12-8
Be prepared for second semester! Check out the
study plan and course schedule.
Utilities paid and close to campus. Call 612-740-8395.
Need to sublease! Wonderful 2 HR Jayhawker
709.689.4111 All Utilities paid. Price negotiated
809.689.4111
Rent now! 2 BR unfurnished. Front: Nibs, cheap
for 1 second; Call Julie 6413-7929, 12-9
Studio apartment for rent. Utilities paid 842-
8737 12-7
2 BR apartment furnished, 10 minute walk to
CARRER ISIS $195/month. 83-9127 Available on
phone. No deposit required.
Rooms and apartments. Call Lachy Realty. 2237
Ohio, 843-1601. 12-8
Sublase 3 bedroom-2 story Townhouse, Trail-
ridge, 841-5864, 12-8
Sublease. 2, bedroom, unfurnished, didwash,
utilities paid. $48,000. **12.6**
Nice large 4-plus, $150 ms. Near shopping on bus route. Available now. $181.51. 12:8
BREEDROOM Duplex. PARTIALLY FUNNISHED
E. Lawrence, $185 Ullage; Call after.
12-8
Efficiency apartment for rent 990 monthly - 1-8
utilities. Close campus. 842-3100 after 5-12.
Furnished studio available Jan 1. Presently
available for lease from the showroom that
you are also, $180 plus electricity. 841-275-
373.
Wanted to sublease 2 BR apt. 20th and Ridge
6th floor of the 4-bedroom house.
$190, water paid. 824-749. Keeping 15.
FOR SALE
Subbasse—need 2 female roommates for 2 HR
3 female roommates for 5 HR 95 cach 12€ each
clubs utilities. 841-2677
841-2678
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-760-9000, 9000 mph,
84th st, Fort Worth, TX 76120.
Western Civilization Note—Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Make sense to your class. Choose from the following options 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis on Western Civilization*. Cri, Maiba Rista, and Gread Bookstore. If you want, Cri, Maiba Re
French 21 inch Bicycle, 10 speed Excellent condition $80; car Harry after 7 p.m. 6/84-12/5 12-5
Moving Must sell 1975 Kawauki 500 $425, 941-12
$637
Fender MIDI Bass Guitar with strings, cords, speakers, cardboard and covers. Very good condition; spanders and cards cover
SMART PEOPLE DON'T BUY THE BEST
BETTER. BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK
that better audio in the Audio House, record
your own video on a video recorder.
...
A cure for dice fever—"The Virtines" Dec. 4 and 5 at an awfully small hall
12-6
SunSpaes Sun-splas are our specialty. Non-
Sun-Spaes Sun-splas are our specialty, reasoned,
1021 Mesh 841-570-750
1975 Pontiac Grand Am - 400- 8V2 - AM-FM 8
- 1642- 1042 for v. 6 back.
AM-FM 8
12-5
Girls! The best "T" Shirt In Town? Regularly!
$6.99, $40.90. The Aftie. 327 Mass. 875.
Sherwood model S 7110 receiver. Excellent con-
troll. Your warranty left on part 12-45
841-981-6238
95 VW with 72 engine. Leaving town, must sell 120 or best offer 842-6700 for tom. For 106.
Swedish Officer's winter coat. Original, white
and yellow slingshining liner. Jeff. 845
4284.
1972 Mercedes 220 D Sun roof, stoor, rebuilt
for Mercedes 350D 900m mile warranty.earl
market for at Mark 842 at 18:35am.
Tools Full set of snap on hand tools - 4 tool boxes + wheel printer - 4 toon floor lift
19.27° Doggie Dee Van. Campus customized 318 & 1-4 sv-serial suit
mathematics Van. Campus customized 318 & 1-4 sv-serial suit
mathematics Van.
Pamuntilan FM AM FM Store, Receive with 8-
channels. One year old -老年 Condition.
One month old -中年 Condition.
One year old -老年 Condition.
Prenderhoud, Jimmy (21 stage, ceg, cond Prenderhoud
(30 stage), 6868-4888). Prenderhoud, Jimmy
(Robinson), Michael (30 stage), 842-4888 or
955-4888.
JAVELIN 1974, V-8: automatic transmission, as-
confirmed, power brake power, steering, pneu-
trol, and hydraulic pump.
For sale, one Teacup tapee, persian rug, chest of drawers, bookcase. More info: 864-1019-403
Michigan Street Music calls and services, guitarists, bass players, saxophonist and drummer. To stock Martin 60-29, Guild D-40, Guild D-39, Guild D-28, Guild D-25, Guild D-24, Guild D-23, Guild D-22, Guild D-21, Guild D-20, have a good selection of violin guitars. We also have a good selection of violin cellos. Guild D-19, Guild D-18, Guild D-17, Guild D-16, 305pm, Icus 1C-29, Mon, to Sat, and until 8:30
1969 Cougar XR7. Very nice ear! Call 841-6634.
Nurdlea Foam skl bootz. Size 6-7. Call 841-8524.
(Alarve) Concert guitar, with shoulder straddie, case $150. Call 864-6177-4001 at 7:00. 12-6
Pretty, new shearling hard short lard jacket
with suede trim. Price $395.00. 125
narrow stove, needs $65 motor? $81-84-81-125
1970 Corvette Imagined, 2 doors. 72,000 miles. Three
looks like a life in. New condition. 843-7198.
843-7198
ENTRIVAGYM PLANT SALE Perfect holiday
EXPEDITION CAMPING Dec. 9 m-8 am, Dec. 10 m-1 pm
IAWS
Excellent book! buy 2*$15 JHL speakers $7 each. Also
have D Artist + 8 month fee on $40. D Artist + $10
Technique. Turntable, manual dustcutter & ear-
compressor. Includes costume $100 for heat-
condition. 841-6016
Kernwood KX-720 Cassette Deck Top Load. 841-
8524 12-6
COLOR POTHOLIOS Slides or prints, custom
preservation card M1-725-7224 preserve
preserve 12 months
CAMERAS--ANTIQUES AND CLASSICS. Most notably at $429. Some have beautiful woodwork paintings and other work. 30 to 40 cm cameras, each equipped with Callipers or come by 154 Kentucky. 25. Saturdays 9 a.m. through 5 p.m. call (864) 755-2200.
Leaving town! Peninsula SE-29 30 strokes and
18 inches to speed bicycle w/cable lock. Cail
12-11
GREAT BUY! 1989 Buck Electra, lots of extra,
make offer, call 461-8244 or 86-2458.
1989 Buck Electra, lots of extra,
make offer, call 461-8244 or 86-2458.
FOUND
The "Victims" are the only band left that you haven't seen. Dec 4 and 5 at an awfully small show.
Found at 12th and Louisiana, silver wire frame. Found in back case. October-terf program inside case. In front of case.
Last calculator on 4th floor of Weson. If found,
please call Comie at 861-1441. **19.5**
Wanted dishwashers day and night. Daylight required. Split-level or Carriage Lamp Sump Clubs behind the carriage.
Set of keys near 11th and Kentucky Call
841-2192 to identify
HELP WANTED
German Female shepherd, red collar, NY lag
842-2597 or 864-2566 12.7
PSYCHIATRIC AIDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE
MEN. Applicants should be ages 18 and
males encouraged to apply. Applications
to director of nursing, Topeka State Hospital,
413-296-4258. Equal Opportunity Employer.
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer full time, Europe, S.A., Australia, America, Asia, etc. All fees, $260-$320 monthly,贴近身手,免费。Free job in Aalto University Jelci Center 12月班 KA, Berkeley, CA 94074 12-12
Part time cinnamon laundry and dry cleaning attendants Apply at Norge Village, 24th & Iowa, 12-12
JOBS *CRUISE SHIPS* FREIGHTERS! I experience. high pay See Europe, Hawaii, Australia, so. Am America, Winter, Summer Cars, WORLD-C8-7, B6 61035, Sca, Cct. G8522
Part time custodial maintenance job available
Expenses: Experience not necessary 843-699-127
12.7
Bill Maurer, John O'Dell, Mark Glennman, Kevin McHugh, John Dee, "The Victims" Dest and Cases, 185-93.
MEN! WOMEN!
Part time day dwinduers must be able to work
in person only. 18h in tenure in permanently.
Bandit, 1538 W. 25rd.
Bandit, 1538 W. 25rd.
From 4 pm to closing, weekdays and weekends
Saturday, Monday, day or night shift. Applies
to all employees.
A student half-time research assistant position is offered by the Project, Burden of Child Research to assist with data collection from police and warfare institutions and Kansas region. Additional responsibilities include
NEED EXTRA XMAS MONEY? Sanitary catering has openings for waitresses, waitresses and food service staff. Experience in food service necessary and being a waitress is required. Please appear a mask Call A23 at 82-504 for information.
SUMMER JOBS FORD STREET SERVICE (now where
they were) in Moorhead, MN. Co. Chr. E. Riverbank, Kailahui, Mont. 39801.
Job location: Moorhead, MN.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology
appointment. 12 months with possibility of ex-
citing appointment. 12 months with possibility of ex-
citing appointment. Dulux. Conducting behavioral and bio-
neutrally based assessments. Requirements: BS of equiv experience in医
Familyillance with biochemical techniques, Laber-
nium with biochemical techniques, Small animal surgery. Deadline for application
Treaty Department of Pharmacology and Toxi-
cal Sciences, West Campus, Lawrence, KS 60045 Phone: 86454 Affirmative Action employer. Application are
reserved. Race/religion sex. disability veteran status.
Driver to transport child home from University
of Miami Thurs. 11:30 a.m. Call Cassandra
n. 843-6511
Part time secretary required. Must be well educated and have a Bachelor's degree. Dotted varieties. Flexible hours; salary $41,000-$52,000 per year.
If you constantly dream of becoming an important figure in interim basketball, now you have to be prepared for a new era. If becoming such an important figure is hard, you must accept at Hirscher Services, 208 Robinson, Inc.
Lawrence Open School is filling 4 positions. 2 aides and a fundraiser-taker grant writer, $60,000 thru Aug. 79. Must be CERTA Title Equal Opportunity Employer. 12-5
A student assistant for female quadriplegic student for second semester. Job includes typing text and creating PDF files, assisting with resource etc. Prefer junior or undergraduate. 843-4423 or 843-1011 afternoons and evening.
Part time positions available at Rainforest Montessori Preschool for students who ENJOY Giving with KIDS in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 9+ / Experience teaching in new age classes 8-5 843-6800, 862-7470
LOST
Dress down and dance to "The Virties" at an
awfully small half Dec. 4 and 5. 12.48
6 month old cat, black and red collar, with black
hair. Call 841-7667 12:53
Lost either at Blake Hall or Carruth, Winterset
winter store with blue face Sandalwood sentiment value
(546) 213-9880.
Glassware, blue case, brown wire frame, brown
tinted lenses, 4 weeks, arrear. HBQ: 108,272, 12
MISCELLANEOUS
Turn a college, college tavern into a virtual gallery. Create an interactive business now only to the right person. Here is a simple example of how you can make a virtual gallery while being made for you. The whole business could profit if this through like your kind of deal; call us at (800) 123-4567.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ulder/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A M. to 5 P M Monday, a day, a AM. to 1 P M on Saturday at Mass.
"The Victims?!" Just ask the police who we are Apparent at an awful small hall. Deed it and he does it, you know.
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM Choose and cut your beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive east on Highway K-10 approximately 3 miles to county Road 285. Open weekends till Christmas. FILL HALL FARM
NOTICE
A WHILE ON THE HIKE. A JAME, with an on-air interview, told us about the project he designed by Natalie Behr. He built a home for Natalie by Natalie Behr, designed by Natalie Behr, and built it by Natalie Behr.
"The Victims?" Oh Yeah, John. Paul George
Ringe. Die 4 and 1 at an awfully small
hole.
Tired of feeding yourself? Nalumit Hall is offering a boarding plan for your needles prepared and ready to be prepared can be you if you choose this plan. Stop by HALI 1800 Nalumit Hall, 843-859-12-12
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT back by papyrus decoration
GREEN HOOK of a SELLOUT back by papyrus decoration
THE HINGED HOOK of a SELLOUT back by papyrus decoration
EACH HEART beaten each heart left on the floor
THE BACKS OF THE HEART beaten each heart left on the floor
CINEMATASIA'S SHOPPEW AT J JOHN BOOOK-WORK
CINEMATASIA'S SHOPPEW AT J JOHN BOOOK-WORK
J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER has just returned from from Boston and is travelling to Denver and San Francisco. He spends all of his social and natural sciences, philosophy, history, political science, criticism, art and music classes, and will be working overtime for the next few weeks to be appearing at a fairly rapid pace. Books should be appearing at a fairly rapid pace and remember books like *The Art of Lasting Value* Hood wants you to see at 1401 W. 27th St. in Denver.
INTERMISSION GUITAR, Mandolin or Banjo,
or guitar with bass. Two hours of playing.
or classic style at hour end. 1-5 times per
week. Call (864) 230-2964.
Gas-Lexish Switchboard, Counseling and general information. 841-8472. 12-12
PERSONAL
HARBOR SPECIAL! 4:00 Mon, Tues, and Wed.
$195.00 SALES DAYS NIGHT $295.00 MAIDS DAYS NIGHT $1.00 pickup.
Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan, 833-535-
and services violin, viola and all other
musical instruments.
Gay Services of Kansas general meeting Dec. 5th
3:30 p.m. Union Lawjay Room Room Speaker
Concise in and the new Harbour Barmada at the mouth of heaven in Lawrente the Harbour Lily.
EXPERT TUTORS We tutor MATH 001-700-
002-700, COMS 001-700, SCI 001-700,
and CHEMISTRY 041-QUALIFICATION
B.S. in Physics, M.A. in Math, Call 843-9636
for Physics, Chemistry or Computer Sciences.
Call 843-9636
To Whom it may concern. The Palmetto American Association, the old American Affairs Office from the city of Palmetto, will accept applications.
The Moth-Ear's hertz is now accepting auditions for the instrument music preferred in various Dr. Bard instrument music preferred in various Dr. Bard instruments. Please contact us at info@moth-ear.com.
The Motel Beers band is now accepting auditions only. 842-765-1030, beersbeersaudiences.com, 842-765-1030, 842-765-1030, 842-765-1030, 842-765-1030
Two student season basketball tickets wanted.
Will pay an reasonable price. Call Linda, 858-342-1600.
To Territt at the D A Pt屋, I was temporarily inmate Saturday 6:30) I hope to see you soon.
Unique Christmas gift. ARC Registered Yorkshire.
Mail, $125, faxes, $199, 411-5291.
SINTE KITTER CAFE
fresh food, organic
water, kettle, 100 and Main. open 10 a.m to 9 p.m.
fresh fruit, juice, ice cream.
COLOR POSTPOLISH. Slides or prints, custom processing, professional quality, lowest prices
For Bobby-I'll cling to the warmth of your hand Love, Jeanie 12-5
Well, Mille only 20 miles shopping days till
the strategy project can start. And thanks for the
strategy project can wait. And thanks for the
SERVICES OFFERED
STATISTICAL TUTORING Call 843-9036.
Need help in math or CS7 Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CS7 problem. Can provide a computer solution?
EXPERT TUTORS: we tutor MATH 603-968 for EXPERT TUTORS: we tutor MATH 603-968 for CHEMISTRY 109-656. QUALIFICATIONS BS in Physics, MA in Math, Call 843-968 for CS in Physics or Computer Science Call 843-9241. SAI 843-9241.
I do damned good typing—Peggy. 842-4476. tj
TYPING
DON'T GET HIPPED OFF. Let UMC Security
hiters. Keep an eye on a room or
room apartment over the stairs.
Use the "HIPPED OFF" button.
These, and memorable Year ideas presented
through our programs offer inspiration to
your thinking with precision and smoothness.
They can be adapted to your needs.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980 1f
CONTEMPLATING MEDICAL SCHOOL? WE
CONTEMPLATE MEDICAL SCHOOL?
$26.00 MIDWAX SERVICE. Box
143-157-0000. Phone 1-800-555-9999.
Experienced Typhliter- term papers, tests, mugs,
pencil sharpeners, spellers, spelling corrections,
843- 8535 Mrs. Wright
THEISIS BINDING COPYING--The House of
Quirks' Quick Cup Center is headquarters for
copying and copying in our office. Thank
you help you at 838 Mass, or phone 842-3610. Let
tf
Typher, Editor; IBM PcRite; Quality work.
Assistant; Desert dissertation welcome.
WCL 842-1047-9212
MASTERMINDS PROFESSIONAL TYPING, Qual-
low rate, calls In call to Qual.
3587
Experienced typist will type term papers, resumes,
distributions, etc. 700 a.m. 842-489-8481
resumes,
directions, etc. 706 a page. 844-849
tumors, disasters, etc.
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Repeat customers. Law papers, term papers. MW. 842-0734.
Fast accurate typist. Papers, under 20 pages. I
accept scriptwriting. Written assignments (12-
Roth, Hall, or 5 p.m.)
Reports, these, dissertations, legal form. 24 books, on paper or for less than 20 pages, available at Klenk or Klenk, ed.
Travel needs work now. Quality work necessary.
Travel needs work now. Quality work necessary.
HELLIVA TYPOING JOB - CAROLYN
HELLIVA TYPOING JOB - CAROLYN
*Typing-first-mind* Hawkeye *Typing Service*
*Call* 842-6925 after 5:30 p.m.
12-12
Roommate wants to share 3 bedroom house.
Call 814-607-100 for information.
Call 814-607-100 for information.
12-5
WANTED
Female roommate wanted; share nice 2 BR townhouses in the heart of the city. Available now or spring in mind! 843-195-186.
Roommate spring semester, member 2 BR, 2 bath
$110. +10 | utils. Pauli. 642-8983. 12-5
Roommate wanted 2 BR apartment on bus route
201. Roommate wanted Grad Student,
referred Call: Ted B. 841-6531
*net $110 + u. utilities Paul. 842-6893 12-5*
*House member wanted for 5-member cooperative*
Female roommate, wanted. Furnished apartment to camp in 5 utilities: $73 50 cal for 4 rooms
House member wanted for 5-member cooperative
House 843-2279 for details.
12-4
Wanted: Vgl. 1, Issue 1 October issue of Omii
Wanted: Vgl. 2, Issue 1 November issue of Omii
Your Time: Song by skipped and song by Ms.
Joseph S. Gorilla
**Female roommate at a student:** To share 1 bed
**Female roommate at a graduate:** To share 1 bed
$87 a month. Call 841-8220. 12-5
Need a roommate. $95 monthly, utilities included.
Call Mike. 841-5145
12-6
-室内 roommate wanted for Towers apartment
100$room, 843.5490,
12.00
Female to share nine bedrooms, partially furnished apartment. Starting January $1175 per month.
Roommate spitting servetier or source! Shear 1, 3/4
Bathroom. Gatehouse apartment 2 / BR Paul 3/4
Gatehouse apartment 2 / BR Paul 3/4
Roommate wanted to share clean, furn. house
cleaner; non-smoker 780-5260 Call 812-7458
Phone: 812-7458
Responsible, non-smoking house mat now,
next semester $100 + ½ until 1923-12-5
***
Female christian roommate for spring semester.
Room number: 1023
Work-away on carpool bus: $83. + 1.25 shift
Work-away on taxi: $149.
KF student from Jagat needs a good apartment in New York. Send resume to KF Resume Services at KF Resume Services, Inc., 260 Broadway, New York, NY 10014. Please include the name of the university, your full name, job title, phone number, email address and a resume to KF Resume Services, Inc., 260 Broadway, New York, NY 10014.
Roommate wanted at Park 25 $50 a month rent.
Call Rich or Mick at 841-6902.
12-7
Female roommate wanted to share nite 2 BR
apartment to clean, downsize
and move to 240 sq ft in 294-254 E. Washington Ave.
Female roommate to share beautiful modern girl
room with her brother. Suzy at 841-309 early morning late evening
baby at 841-309 early morning late evening
Roumanian wanted to share clean cleaned 3 RRR
plates in a room with three RRR plates
immediately. Plates 5 / 17 l/uit 845-7885.
Plates 6 / 21 l/uit 845-7885.
Female roommate needed immediately to share bedroom. On bus route. Call Kim 842-7154.
Liberal female to share old, warm, comfortable
beds in a sunny room. 90% paid.
Location: $1150 per month. All utilities paid.
Phone: 877-426-7350.
1-2 bedroom home or apartment in house for
renting. All rooms furnished. Shared
housing with others #345-0088. Keep it
clean and well-maintained.
Two females need third for spring semester.
Two males need third for summer tuition paid Call 642-892-3158.
Ask for nom or Laurel.
Roammate needed for 3 BR apt right behind Fraser-1000 + month / 1/2 utility-cars -88F
Male roommate to want to share paid Jay-hawker荡塘村 apen. Utility paid, own room ZKD. 027-8913-1666.
8
Tuesday, December 5. 1978
University Daily Kansan
Inventory
From page one
dumpes or sells an item, any money obtained goes to the state. Departments normally do this by collecting taxes.
Sales or auctions are rare or nonexistent and some departments pack equipment awaits for delivery.
Departmental spokesmen argue that a lack of secure storage space could contribute to the amount of stolen property at KU.
Doris Belote, business manager for biological sciences, said, "We do have a problem with locked storage space. We don't want it for their equipment but space is scarce."
"CRIME is pretty big here. We were hit pretty hard about a month ago on one floor. Whoever broke in apparently had an involvement, knowledge of the equipment and the building."
Belote said biological sciences stored equipment in Snow, Haworth, McColmian and other locations.
Biological sciences has an inventory worth $2,693,617.63.
Facilities Operations has probably the most widely dispersed property system at KU. Its inventory is worth more than $1,347,000.
Dewey Allaire, associate director of business management for Facilities Operations, said "We do have a storage facility that is much like to have a central storage facility.
"It WOULD be desirable to have all of our goods stored in one place for security, but mostly for maintaining an up-to-date supply system."
Alaina said Facilities Operations stored equipment in numerous buildings on the site.
Strong, Fraser, Watson Library, Memorial
Stadium and buildings on West Campus.
“There's not enough secure storage space and that leads to more items missing,” he said. “And more equipment is coming in, of just, of just, as is happening all over campus.
"Some of our storage is safety stock. We hang on to it because we might need it again."
FOR INSTANCE, we have tile tiles—boy, do we have ceiling tiles—and floor tiles in the basement of Hoch and many of the tiles are not made any more.
'That's why there is a 'mentorious' supply of many old materials on campus.
Alaina said Facilities Operations was constantly searching for more space. He said that if Space was found in basements or other areas, she would use the space until someone else needed it.
John Landgrebe, professor of chemistry and chairman of his department, said, "There's really no place to store old books in the tedious, cumbersome process to get rid of it."
"THEIR'S a Problem with security. We lock our doors at night and yet things happen."
Owen Spits, chief of computer services for the Kansas Geological Survey on West Campus, said his department had trouble securing its $1,129,498 equipment inventory secure.
Spitz said his department had barely enough space to store equipment. However, he said he would not want the equipment right before it would be difficult to use.
He said his department used to have a storekeeper to improve security and check out equipment, but the storekeeper's wages were more than the department lost in
From page one
Security
"we advise people to install security devices on equipment that costs it less," she adds.
Longaker said the police would do a survey of a building or area, when requested by a department, and would make recommendations on how to increase security.
"A lot of times, we don't know who is
there or if they are there, only if the call or
if it is on duty."
THE EQUIPMENT stolen from the Child Research Building was replaced at a cost of $15,000, John Brandt, professor of speech and drama, said.
Although locks have been changed and police natrols in the area increased, Brendt
Police said they had not received a request from the department for a security officer.
--said, "Basically, we are not changing anything that we did before.
"We made the building as secure as we
made. The University knows our
pups."
Brantdid say if the police offered to help, he would accept it, but said, "I don't care what happened."
FINDING THE money, however, has caused delays.
"The University has determined that this is something that has to be done," Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said. "But unless money can be found somewhere in the budgets for the total academic area, it will not be possible from the University equipment fund."
After the Sept. 13 burglary, University officials and the department with the $100,000 of equipment asked the police to do a security survey.
The police report suggested security
Because of the regulations governing the process, Nitcher said, it will be a minimum of 60 days before security equipment arrives.
Nitcher said there were provisions to speed up the process in emergencies. In order to have a situation declared an emergency, he said, the staff work through the KU Purchasing Office.
"I would like it to be done quicker," my professor, said. "Once I know what University administrators have approved, it will help me to expedite the matter as much as possible."
"TO SAY the 1966 agreement is going to be extended to cover the other 1 think is to have to work in a different way."
Tickets
"I don't believe," Harper said, "they ever had an intention to reduce those tickets despite an agreement in 1966. They thought they would forget about it since it was 12 years ago."
"I believe the students acted in good faith in 1966 and put their hard-earned money into action. They only owe an explanation to the student body, I think they owe one to the board members. They should find a pretty darned good reason why it should not be reduced or harmed."
From page one
"Since they handled it this way, there is
season, and the public surcharge is $1 a game for each ticket, or $6 a season.
Mike Harper, student body president, said he doubted KUAC intended to honor the agreement and reduce the ticket price when the bonds of the loan expired.
But the fact remains that $50,000 in 1980,
and $10,000 in 1983, will have to come from
somewhere within the corporation, and
may be to a likely place for additional revenue.
Students Ceramic Sale
Dec 4, 5, & 6
8-5:30
Student Union Lobby
ON THE AIR
96x
STEREO
FM
The 96 request xchange
843-0096
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES
Museum of Natural History
BAMBOO BEAR:
THE GIANT PANDA
Nichter said money had not been authorized for the project, but he and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, would meet to discuss the project early this week.
Bids for equipment of that nature must be made through the state purchase office.
measures, including bricking in the windows of the building and installing special locks and alarms. The total cost of the project was estimated at $9,000.
S
DEC. 6 $1.50 7:30 p.m.
made through the state purchasing office. However, the equipment fund is usually used to purchase new equipment or equipment to replace stolen items.
INSTALLING LOCKS and alarms,
however, could take longer.
no excuse that it should be rescinded. They made a mistake, why can't they admit they made a mistake.
"I don't feel the students should be penalized when the corporation board did not do their homework on previous agreements."
Admiral Car Rental When was the last time you rented a car for
$5.95 per day plus mileage
We have a few late model cars for sale
But, he said, the plan was listed last year at 18th on KU's priority list of 25 needed
2340 Alabama
843-2931
Help is at least five years away. Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning for the Chancellor's office, said a new storage system was planned for West Campus.
"It sounds as if these dolls just weren't rescued again when the museum property was returned to Spooner in the 1960s," she said.
FREE ADMISSION with KU I.D.
SHANKEL SAID the dolls probably were placed beneath Strong in the 1940s when the basement of the old Spooner Museum was made into a barracks for war veterans.
Other aberrations exist as well. The Thayer collection dolls, also underwood Thayer Museum, are in the Spencer Museum, according to Carol Shankel, coordinator of special programs
About the rest of the items lying under Strong, Alaire said, "I don't know who is keeping those things and I don't know when they were out down there."
Zamarrrippa said that in the $10,000 heist the thieves knew exactly where the clues were. He said that the only change made in security was that his department was more careful about it.
"But still," he said, "I'll come in at night and doors are left open."
He said, "Central supply is on the master order and is not only so many products but it only so many products put forting each year."
Apparently the dolls have not been recorded on inventories since that time or are never in stock.
$125 Pitchers with KU I.D.
Tonight at
thefts. Now the department has no storekeeper.
SHENANIGANS
Ed Zamarranza, associate director of child research, said his department also had security problems. Earlier this semester, he said last about $10,000 in research equipment.
"I would hope that it would get funding within five years."
Until then, apparently, the University will will be able to place in places that will be forgotten when a department leaves or a storekeeper retires. The inventory will remain as accurately as each location does.
"Space is very light." Spitz said. "You can't move a new piece of equipment in the room."
Wait, the first word is "Space".
The second word is "is".
The third word is "very".
The fourth word is "light".
The fifth word is "spitz".
The sixth word is "you".
The seventh word is "can't".
The eighth word is "move".
The ninth word is "a".
The tenth word is "new".
The eleventh word is "piece".
The twelfth word is "of".
The thirteenth word is "equipment".
The thirtemiddle word is "in".
The thirteenth word is "the".
The fourteenth word is "room".
The fifteth word is "space".
The sixteenth word is "is".
The seventh word is "very".
The eighth word is "light".
The fifth word is "spitz".
The sixth word is "you".
The seventh word is "can't".
The eightth word is "move".
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece".
The thirtemiddle word is "of".
The thirteenth word is "equipment".
The thirtemiddle word is "in".
The thirteenth word is "the".
The fourteenth word is "space".
The sixteenth word is "is".
The seventh word is "very".
The eighth word is "light".
The fifth word is "spitz".
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece".
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The eightth word is move.
The ninth word is a.
The twentieth word is "piece"
The thirteenth word is "of"
The thirteenth word is "equipment"
The thirtemiddle word is "in"
The thirteenth word is "the"
The fourteenth word is "space"
The sixteenth word is "is"
The seventh word is "very"
The eighth word is "light"
The fifth word is "spitz"
The sixth word is you.
The seventh word is can't.
The八teen
CHILD RESEARCH has $1,147,205.73
worth of equipment in its inventory
TENUE
Tuesday, Dec. 5
Rabbi Weinberg
Campus Beauty Shoppe
9th and Illinois - 9th St.
Shopping Center
Hairstyling
for Men and Women
REDKEN®
IXOVE
Call 843-3034
in the:
1340 Ohio
will lead a discussion on Jewish attitudes toward sex with an emphasis on the "test-tube baby." This provocative meeting takes place
PLUS-Dozens of BEER SIGNS will be given away during the night!
Refreshments will be served
Regionalist Room Kansas Union 8:10 pm
8-10 pm
Refills 40c
Campus Beauty Shoppe
IXOYE Call 843-3034
open Mon. thru Sat.
"Flair-full" of Natural Only $1.00 Take Your Glass Home!
THE HAWK
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THE HAWK PRESENTS—
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"I was just trying to help."
Natural Light Night
TONIGHT, Tuesday, December 5, 6-12 pm Featuring Over 600 "Natural Light" FLAIRED PILSNER Glasses!
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You really can't afford to pay for games and other unnecessary expenses which the regular super-markets have, and you'll enjoy shopping where
YOU CAN BEAT THE HIGH COST OF GROCERIES WITH THE WAREHOUSE PRICES AT
WAY-LO WAREHOUSE FOODS 9th and New Hampshire
"By buying all those locks?"
"I thought we'd need them for the apartment."
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Jayhawker
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All You Can Eat Buffets
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4
Hiring blacks hard for KU
BY CAROLINE TROWBRIDGE
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas, like many other universities across the United States, has had a difficult time finding black faculty and staff members.
In 1976 KU lost six of its black professors, more than 20 percent of its black faculty.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said recently that the University was making efforts to attract blacks to KU.
There are many reasons educational institutions, and particularly KU, have bad problems with black recruitment Solutions to the problems, however, are KU's.
"There is a determined effort on the part of the office of academic affairs to deal with this problem," Dykes said, "and under the direction of Dr. Calgaard. I think the office has done a good job.
THE EFFORT has to permeate the University because most of our faculty searches begin at the departmental it has to be an institution wide effort.
However, Clarence Dilhaming, acting director of affirmative action, said he thought little effort was made in Lawrence and at KU to attract blacks.
"Lawrence is no drawing place for blacks. The city just doesn't demonstrate a commitment."
Ron Calgaard, vice charger for academic affairs, said there were three major reasons KU had difficulty bringing blacks to the University.
"ONE, THERE is a relatively small number of blacks and minority candidates in some academic disciplines," Lawrence said. "Operations and other universities take away candidates. Three, Lawrence can be unattractive in the sense that Lawrence does not have a black community outside the University."
Mary Kay Parks, director of a cultural enrichment program in Kansas City, Kan., works with minorities who are interested in colleges.
"I work with people with interests in going to college anywhere," Parks said. "The idea is broader than recruitment for KU."
Parks said she had helped about 40 young people since the creation of her office in July.
"I have to say that black students do need black faculty members around them," Parks said. "One, to serve as a role model, and two, to add a black perspective to whatever kind of course offered if the department is all white."
HOWEVER, drawing black faculty members to KU traditionally has not been easy.
Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, said recruitment of blacks was different from recruitment of other faculty members.
"This kind of recruitment requires contacts in informal networks and it requires some contact in organizations where staff know each other and bring computers." Adams said.
"There is a commitment, but not enough. The way to undermine a commitment is to call a goal a quota, and already it's dead."
"We fear that there are going to be some cutbacks because of an expected decline of students." Adams said.
ALTHOUGH KU'S enrollment set a record this fall, University administrators recently said enrollment would begin to decline.
"It is incorrect to assume that recruitment of minority professors is the same as recruitment of other faculty members and to insist that the identical
"Most of my colleagues in engineering are very aware of the need for black faculty and other minority faculty. I am confident that true of other faculty members too."
William Hogan, assistant executive vice chairman and associate professor of the College of Engineering, solutions to the problems of bringing blacks to KU had to come from within the university.
"We need an increased awareness of the problem because of national trends and because of our enrollment and how we feel about it, think we've got some work to do in them."
In addition to initial black recruitment problems at KU, the University's location in Kansas and the city of Lawrence have increased recruitment
ALTHOUGH Hogan thinks Lawrence is a fine community, an unmarried black person would be less likely to come to KU than one who is married, he said.
"The subcommittee can be important if it can identify the issues, such as hiring of minority faculty and staff, that are critical to our large number of students," he said.
When you come to Lawrence, Hogan
meet MXR SMITH. beware!
Minority committee has growing pains
George Gomer, Topeka junior and a member of the subcommittee last year, has been appointed to be the single most important body for the advancement and expression of his views.
Staff Reporter
By PHILIP GARCIA
However, because of a recent controversy over the Natalie Caine homecoming concert, a movement to reactivate the subcommittee has started.
In fall 1978, Teddie Tasheff, then student body president, said the Student Senate minor affairs subcommittee. In spring 1979, a tonic stage" after one year of existence.
It it seems the subcommittee, more than two years later, has not yet reached infancy. In fact, the subcommittee has been dormant for the past year.
Since September 1977, the subcommittee, part of the Student Rights Committee, has met only twice and both times—once in September and once in October.
During the same period, the subcommittee has not had an elected chairman. There are no current appointments for positions on the subcommittee.
Leon Brady, City City, Kan., senator and engineering senator, said he had received a letter from the reactivating the subcommittee after a proposal for an advisory council to the city.
ROBINSON SAID any attempt to reactivate the subcommittee would have to be approached with a commitment to make the subcommittee leitimate.
"THE COMMITTEE has been in existence in an organizational sense but not in a participatory sense," Reggie Robinson, former acting chairman of the subcommittee and current student body vice president, said recently.
"Since the subcommittee has been inactive, we have lost so much of the
"Since the subcommittee is a formal committee and is recognized, if we talk about a given problem, the reporter can be right there at committee meetings." Brady said. "The advantage of the committee over a council is that this council can go into other areas of the University and can act in the Council would only function with the Kowalski
concept of how the subcommittee should be set up. "Gomes said, "We have to redevelop it. Hopefully, the Cole controversy has created the interest that will keep the committee going and develop it into an effective body."
BRADY SAID reactivating the subcommittee would provide minority students with a formal, recognized body of knowledge. The committee groups or organizations, particularly with the Kansan. He said he was not aware of the subcommittee four weeks
"I would like to see the committee function where people could come to the committee if they had a problem," he said. "The committee may not provide solution to the problem, but could provide solution when serving as a source to the Kanan.
But he added, "It's going to take a lot of different people—blacks, whites, Chicanos, Indians and women—with a lot of input for the committee to be a succes
"If nobody thinks there is a problem or nobody sees a problem, there is no point in reactiving the committee."
RODNEY DENNIS, then chairman of the subcommittee, had said a lack of unity among minority groups on campus and a lack of organization and functioning of the center.
One of the first stumbling blocks for the subcommittee was its failure to establish and sponsor a Minority Student Advisory Council, as did the subcommittee's initial project.
It seems the subcommittee has had trouble reaching its goals in the past.
"I didn't think it was Rodney's intention to have the center as an umbrella organization. But I could see on down the line when people might say, 'why give money to separate groups and just fund them through the center.'"
Although the center was to have opened in October 1978, the center never has been established.
Robinson said, "When the plans for the minority center became known, a lot of minority students didn't like the way the plans were set up."
Part of the disunity was caused by a fear among the organizations that they would be lumped together and funded through the center, thus losing individual
A second stumbling block for the subcommittee was the lack of an
See RESURRECTED back page
20 13
Center of interest
aggressiveness and self-confidence. During games his voice can be heard above all the others, barking out instructions to help pace the game. See story page two.
Center of Interest
Rovee Miller, player-coach for the Topeka Chairmen, bases his coaching style on
aggressiveness and self-confidence. During games his voice can be heard above all the
others, barking out instructions to help pace the game. See story page two.
Staff photo by BRUCE BANDLE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, December 6. 1978
Vol. 89, No.69
1980 KU budget to be discussed
Rv DERRIECHMANN
Staff Reporter
In the wake of a recommended $4.5 million cut in the University of Kansas fiscal 1980 budget, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said last night that restoration of faculty salary increases would be the top priority when budget hearings convened Tuesday.
James Bibb, state budget director, recommended that KU's budget be trimmed from about $74.5 million to $9.9 million, but Dykes and other Ku officials will attempt to justify KU needs for more funds in tax credit budget bearings with Gov. elect John Carlin.
"Our most basic concern is restoring the money for increases in faculty and staff salaries to bring them up to the highest level possible." Dykes said.
KU requested a 6.5 percent increase in faculty salaries, but Bible recommended no change.
cut a request for a 9.5 percent increase in student wages to 5 percent.
DVKES SAID he expected some money could be restored for wages and salaries, but doubted it would be more than 7 percent of the budget. The contrary wage guidelines of 7 percent increase.
Dykes said the second priority was to maintain KU's request for a 6 percent increase in other operating expenses, which Bibb limited to 5 percent.
"We will try to get as much restored as possible," Dykes said. "We are very concerned about the effects of inflation on our economy." He said the operating expenses of the University."
OTHER KU REQUESTS that Bibl recommended he eliminated were;
+ A $137,986 request for research to assist groundwater management districts and
towns in Michigan.
- A $43,268 request for two new programs
at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
- A $40,996 request for intercollegiate
athletics—most of which would be intended
for college sports.
Dykes said he was particularly concerned with the cut in requested funds for KU athletic programs because this money would be used to comply with Title IX.
Title IX states that "equal athletic opportunity for members of both sexes" must
"If we don't receive funds from the state, the money will have to come from somewhere else in the budget." Dykes said. "Compromise with Title IX is an absolute burden."
ALL NEW CAPITAL improvement funding requests were not included in Bibb's budget recommendation, but he did approve it. He has also building projects already started on campus.
Bibb cut a $1.9 million request for Phase
Two of Lindley Hall renovation and an $800,000 request for a solid waste power
Additional funding requests for renovation of Marvin Hall and Watson Library were approved as well as money for constructing additions to Robinson Gym.
Bibb cut a $1.9 million request to make the campus more accessible to the ban
Dykes said KU's request for remotely built buildings for the handicapped could be justified at the hearings because of a federal law that requires that all buildings be ac-
Bibb also recommended eliminating about $300,000 used to fund KU's Law Enforcement.
After six days of budget hearings the adjusted 1980 budget will be reviewed by the Kansas Legislature. Final budgeted money will be decided in the spring.
Students safeguard art projects
By MARK SPENCER
Staff Reporter
At the west end of the gallery in the Visual Arts Building, there is a large black safe with several photocopies of artwork on the wall above it.
Hove the copies is a letter that states, "We, the undersigned, do hereby proudly display our art. It is a pity that you, the viewer, cannot see our painstaking efforts. Due to lack of security, insurance and proper display facilities, the pieces shown below have been secured in this safe."
The letter was signed by Bill Seely, Lawrence, Glenice Matthews, Perth, Australia, Grace Carmody, Lawrence and Ron Hinton.
The students, who are studying jewelry making and silver-smithing, said yesterday that they were concerned with the safety of their tools.
"There are two doors to the gallery and both of them are open." Seeley, who organized the display, said. "A person could walk in past the security guard, take something, and leave through the other door."
ALTHOUGH THERE is a security guard on duty while the gallery is open, the students said, valuable material goes into their work, and they are constantly looking for safety.
The letter says, "No artist should have to risk their investment of both time and creativity to chance."
There is no alarm system in the gallery and the hinges on the doors leading to the gallery are on the outside, making the doors susceptible to burglaries. Seeeley said. The students said they wanted these problems corrected.
PETER THOMPSON, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts,
should be advised with the students, but money was in short supply.
"I want to do it," he said. "I can't spend the money on that, however, until other priorities are complete.
"I have enough other problems in this building that affect the daily work of students that I can's spend what money is available on."
Thompson said the renovation of Fowler Hall, which will be used for classrooms, was the priority.
He added, however, that he had received cost estimates on an alarm system and hoped money would be allocated for it by July 1.
An extensive alarm system had been planned for the building, but
almost $1 million had to be cut from the plan, including money for the alarm system, because of limited funds. Thomson said.
because of limited time," Thompson said.
"We cut almost everything that we didn't need to teach our classes" , he said.
We were told that a team of engineers had to look at the hinges on the outside of the doors and brought the matter up with the contractor who built the building. He said he was assured that, because the hinges are made from steel, they were very durable.
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.
Graduate students in the school are required to do an exhibit of their thesis work. Since the gallery opened last May, the school has encouraged them to exhibit in the gallery, Seeley said.
Art protests lack of security
SCHOOL
The students said they also were concerned about the lack of display cases for their work.
A CARNET shop is being installed in Fowler as part of the renovation project. The school intends to build its own cases when renovation is completed.
"We have to put off almost all of our specialty furniture until the shop is done," Thompson said.
He added that a full-time cabinet marker was on the staff and by building the cases, the school would save 20 percent of the cost of
The cases probably will be available within two years, Thompson said.
Insurance for works on display also is important, Seeley said. He two examples of work that was damaged in the gallery this year were a large painting and a large mosaic.
A PIECE of work by Craig Holt, Bloomington, Ill., graduate student, was damaged yesterday in the gallery. Holt said that he was not too concerned about the situation, but that he sympathized with the jewelers because of the nature of their work.
State money cannot be used to mount University property. Because of this, Thompson said, it is difficult to find money for in-
Thornton said the exhibit on display during the opening of the Visual Arts Center was insured with money provided by the KUPEA Association.
"If we were to insure the gallery all the time, we would have to find a source of funding that would be put in the Endowment Association," he said. "Frankly, in the foreseeable future, I don't think we will insure faculty and student shows."
"If we have an alarm system on when the gallery is closed and a guard in there when it's open, I would feel it was pretty safe."
2
Wednesdav. December 6, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Capsules From staff and wire reports
Gas prices expected to rise
NEW YORK—Motorists will be paying a cents more for a gallon of gasoline within the city, because of the current tight supply of the fuel, industry officials reported yesterday.
Dan Landberg, publisher of the Landberg Letter, an influential industry newsletter, predicted a 2 or 3-cent increase in most markets before the end of the week. He said the increase would take place on a national level and especially would be seen in rural areas.
The increase is expected to last as long as the supply is tight. The oil companies estimate that the tight supply will last about a month, but some experts say it will be longer. The oil companies and the Energy Department say there is no shortage.
21 crash survivors rescued
WALDEN, Colo. Searchers on snowmobiles rescued 21 persons yesterday, including an infant, who survived the crash landing of a twin-engine commuter plane on a mountainside and spent the night in a near-blizzard. Authorities said one person died in the accident.
The survivors were taken from the crash site 10,000 feet up in the Colorado Rockies on Sno-Cats through a foot of fresh snow. Some rode inside, and others wrapped in down sleeping bags were strapped to the outside of the tractor-like tracked vehicles.
Fiveteen minutes after the Rocky Mountain Airways flight had taken off from Steamboat Springs, the pilot radioed that he was having trouble with ice and snow.
According to Leo Mack, one of the first rescuers at the crash site, the plane's wings had been sheared off and the plane had come to rest beneath a power line.
The nigh voltage transmission line was knocked out, and rescue parties worked their way along the line until they found the plane.
Soaring beef prices predicted
WASHINGTON - Consumers, already hit high by high beef prices this year, will pay an average of 14 percent more for beef in 1979, the Agriculture Department said.
Pork prices in 1979 are expected to average 2 to 5 percent above this year's levels, government economists said.
Overall, food prices next year are expected to rise 6 to 10 percent. The average increase in food prices this year has been 10 percent.
rigger prices will be the result of lower supplies. Officials predict there will be 4 to 6 percent less beef, about half as much veal and nearly the same quantity of lamb and mutton. The declines will not be offset by an anticipated 4 to 6 percent increase in pork production.
Farmers' and ranchers' prices for food are not subject to President Carter's voluntary price guidelines. Officials said raw food prices were exempted because they were affected by weather and other considerations beyond man's control.
Webster to fire 2 FBI agents
WASHINGTON—FBI Director William H. Webster said yesterday that he would fire two FBI agents for their part in conducting alleged illegal surveillance of the radical Weather Underground in the early 1970s, but would take no action against 59 other arens.
In addition to firing two agents, Webster said, he will demote one agent and suspend another for 30 days. All four had supervisory responsibility, Webster
He also said he would reprimand two street agents who also conducted unauthorized surveillance of the Weather Underground.
These announcements were part of the results of an investigation of 88 agents and supervisors accused of involvement in break-ins, wiretaps and mail
The remaining three FBI agents involved in the investigation have retired and cannot be subject to disciplinary action.
Post office expects 1979 gains
HOUSTON—The Postal Service lost $37.4 million in 1978 but hopes to break into the black with a $180 million surplus next year before recording another loss of about $27.5 million.
Bolger said the $797.4 million was less than the originally projected $1.2 billion deficit for the year ending Sept. 30, 1978, and 45 percent less than last quarter.
Bolger held a news conference after the Postal Service Board of Governers approved an immediate 15-month experiment with a new computer-originated mail service and tentatively accepted plans for an expanded overnight delivery service.
The first plan promises two-day delivery of computer-originated mail, much of it expected to be billing, by transmitting from computer to computer at a rapid rate with the documents entering the local mail stream at the receiving end.
Both proposals must be approved by the Postal Rate Commission and are expected to stir opposition from private competitors.
Blue Cross to seek increas
TOPEKA-A The state's largest health care insurer, Kansas Blue Cross-Blue Shield, is expected to file a new rate increase request with Insurance Com-
Blue Cross-Blue Shield's senior vice president, Wayne Johnston, said Monday that the new rate request was expected to be substantially lower than the $2.3 billion for the last year.
Johnston said the company had considered filing a lawsuit against Bell on the basis of its original request, but decided that the aid would consume too much energy.
British request wool protection.
Belgian request cotton, stating British Cross-Block Shield had failed to provide sufficient justification and supporting material for the increases.
The original request would have affected about 376,000 policy holders.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—A commission investigating the government slush-fund scandal released a report yesterday that is certain to plunge the country's economy.
The affair has reached such dimensions that it is referred to as Inagate, after Washington's Watergate scandal, which forced former President Nixon to
The panel, headed by Judge Rudolf Erasmus, found that at least **40 million** in government money was involved in embezzlement, manipulation and cover-
Anti-inflation steps called fair
Erasmus' report absolved Prime Minister Pietter W. Botha, and his predecessor John Vorster, who stepped down in September, of any wrongdoing by the government.
"It isn't so complicated, but it's comprehensive. It is fair, and it will work if we give it a chance." Struass said in response to criticism of the voluntary wage law, which he said would be more difficult to implement.
TOPKEA - Robert Strauss, President Carter's chief inflation officer who is not Carl Paulm in form of trade negotiation and yesterday that the administration has ordered a $1 billion tariff.
Strauss made his remarks before the 60th annual meeting of the Kansas Farm Bureau.
Sirauss said a key element of the anti-inflation program would be the monitoring of food prices at the farm level and at the retail level. He said a drop in food prices could have an effect on the economy.
Weather...
It will be cloudy and cold today with periods of light snow. Temperatures will be the mid 20s with wind from the north at 15 to 20 miles on how snow is likely.
Wheelchair cagers roll nationally
By BILL RIGGINS
Saturday seemed like a bad night for basketball. The roads were raicy, and one of the
Staff Reporter
When the teams came out on the court to warm up, there were few fans in the bleachers at Piper High School in Wyandotte County.
But the basketball was as hot as the weather was cold.
It was a different game for basketball. The teams, the Topeka Chairmen, ranked fifth nationally, and the Kansas City Pioneers, shared the spot with disabled, shoed and pass from wheelchairs.
Wheelchair basketball, started by the veterans Administration in 1650, is now each year one of the four teams in a fourteam league is now the 130-tem National Wheelchair Basketball League.
The exceptions are that the players may stay in the lane under the basket for five seconds instead of three and they must dribble the basketball at least once for every time they push the wheels of the ball. Which whitcairs are considered part of the players.
THE RULES ARE, with two exceptions,
drawn from the National Collegiate Athletic
The games are fast and the officials must be well-versed in the special rules.
Shortly before the Chairman-Pioneers game, a worried-looking official walked to the scoring table and glanced quickly at the NWBA rulebook.
He said he had been officiating wheelchair basketball for about three years.
"ITS ONE OF THE hardest things in the world to officiate. I tell you something," she says, and then know the rules and if you make a mistake, they get pissed off. Those chairs don't feel right.
As the players began off the court to shed their wrappings, he dropped the rule on the way.
The Chairmen started Rod Armstrong and Ted Decker, who are known as the "missile twins" because of their speed on the court, Joe Greze, who organized the team's years ago, Royce Miller, the coach and player of the team, and Chuck Gamball.
His would be a busy night.
When the game began, the Chairman ran a zone defense, which effectively stopped the Pioneers from getting the ball inside. Their offense consisted mostly of getting the ball to Miller, which usually meant two points for the Chairmen.
MEMBERS OF this team say Miller is one of the best players in the country. He's been named to all-star teams for four years and has earned most points (100 scored in a single game).
Miller said part of the Chairman's trouble was that they were looking past Saturday night's game. In two weeks, they play Chicago, ranked third in the country.
The Chairman's shooting was off in the first half and at halftime the score was close.
"Yes, we knew before we came down here we could heat them because they're going to get hot. And when they come halftime, 'Sure they'll get in a foul trouble, but we've got to play Chicago and they're gonna win.'"
"Defensively, we're doing all right. Oftensively, it is just a matter of time until we get there."
Miller was right.
"I have trouble with sways like it's not whether you win or lose but how you play the game."
PROBABLY THE biggest factor in the Chairman's success is that Miller and Greer will be able to make a difference.
They offer good players a job in Topeka,
awrence or Kansas City and give them the
chance to play.
Gay pastor says Bible is misinterpreted
He said other churches often ignored their own gay population or used the Bible
humanoxisulx "Glyer said." "There are only 14 passages in the entire Bible and there are others."
"If Metropolitan Community Church were to cease to exist, there would be nobody who would say to gay people, 'God loves you and you're okay.'"
His second explanation was that certain passages had been translated incorrectly because translators were heterosexual and only in terms of their own experience.
There is only one Christian; Church for homosexuals in Kansas City, Mo., so it has to deal with a wide spectrum of denominations, the Rev. James Glyer said last night in a speech sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas.
HE SAID tradition had often interpreted the passages incorrectly and a closer look would show their real meaning. For example, he said, many people thought the passages were from Gommarir condemned homosexuality, when it really condemned homosexual rape.
Glyer is the pastor of the Metropolitan Community Church, 40th and Harrison streets, an ecumenical church, which he claims incorporates elements of the Catholic, Episcopal, Baptist, Pencecostal and other Christian denominations.
His third explanation was the Bible passages that say homosexuality is not a virtue.
"The Bible doesn't say a great deal about
*more than suitable jobs were not hard to find in employer employees were looking for qualified job openings.*
Glyver said homosexuals needed their own church.
"The Bible also says it's not natural for a woman to have her hair cut or to speak in English," she added. "The Bible doesn't say it."
the Chairmen are supported by donations. All gate receipt money goes to
was written, those things were not natural.
It doesn't apply today."
"We also have a very good reputation in Toopeka," he said.
GLYER SAID the Metropolitan Community Church did all the things any other Christian church did, including funerals, social gatherings, singing and marriage.
Greece said the donation between $200 and $1,100 each year to the Special Olympics
"We're also oriented toward disabled children," Greze said. "We tell them they can grow up to be athletes. They don't have to be spectators."
GREZE, WHO played college basketball for St. Mary's of the Plains in Dodge City, lost the use of both legs in 1965, when a hit in a construction site broke his back.
"The doctors said I wouldn't walk again, but I faked them out," he said.
"After I got hurt, I just picked up a basketball and started shooting," Greze said. "Then when I moved to Topeka, I organized the team."
Although Miller can walk without the assistance of a cane, several years ago his father was paralyzed.
Miller became a player-coach one day when he told his team, which at that time had never won a game, that "if I played, we'd win."
His first game then was against Emporia. It also was the Chairman's first victory.
"But that was just fate," he said. "I didn't make that much difference."
"We're capable of sympathizing with people about their handicap but we don't like to do it." Miller said. "We approach it like, 'Well big dam deal.'"
Miller said he frequently visited people who had recently been disabled to try to understand what was going on.
"Basketball gives you that respect you need."
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3
Ad firm challenges city ordinance
Hoping to avoid a lawsuit by a California-based billboard firm, Lawrence city commissioners decided last night to discuss the future of Lawrence billboards.
The firm, Martin Outdoor Advertising Inc., told the commission that it would take
Berlin to run for presidency of student body
Emphasizing the need for openness and friendliness, Margaret Berlin, Bonner Springs junior, last night became the fourth student running for 197.58 student body president.
The coaliition already has formed an advisory board of students representing a large number of interests, she said. She said the board would remain if she were elected to advise her on issues and to serve as a check on her.
Announcing her candidacy to about 60 supporters at Watkins Scholarship Hall, Berlin, Germany, George Gorme, Topeka junior, will be her running mate on the Porch-Coalition.
Berlin currently is chairman of the Senate Communications Committee.
the city to court if a recently passed sign ordinance banning billboards was enforced.
Tom Murray, a Lawrence attorney representing the Martin Company and its Topeka office, told the commission that he would challenge the ordinance on the grounds that it violated the First and Fourteenth amendments.
Murray also claimed that the ordinance
murray press, because his brother was not entitled to about.
BUT MURRAY told the commission that his firm was anxious to avoid a court battle.
All five billboards currently in the downtown area would be eliminated under Murray's proposal, along with one sign on a building, as a two-panel structure on East 21st Street.
He presented the commission with a compromise proposal that would have eight
Under Murray's proposal, two new billboards would be placed on West Sixth Street, between Michigan and California streets, three would be erected on West 23rd Street, two would be placed on West Street, and one would be on Iowa between Sixth and Ninth streets.
old billboards taken down and eight new
builds in built different locations in the city
THE COMMISSION set Dec. 12 as a tentative date for the billboard study.
KU receives fewer grants
Money awarded to KU researchers has decreased by more than $850,000 compared with the previous year.
A recent report showed KU received 157 research grants—22 fewer than in the first year.
About 100 of these research grants were awarded by the federal government; other grants came from state and private agencies.
Research receipts so far this year total about $7.7 million compared with $8.5 million awarded in the first quarter of fiscal 1978.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police Beat
Richard Backus, Lawrence freshman,
1345 Vermont St., reported that between
9 a.m. Sunday and 4 p.m. Monday,
thieves stole the gas tank, two tires
and one wheel with a tire mounted on it from
his car, which was parked at his home.
Lawrence police yesterday reported that a KU student's car was stripped of $125 in parts Monday.
Compiled by Henry Lockard
Backus valued the two spare tires at $10, the tire and wheel at $55 and the gas tank at $50.
Police said an unidentified man struck Robinson on the head and stole the station's money purse from him at about
David Robinson, an employee of Jayhawk Oil Co. 1306 W. Sixth St., reported that the service station was robbed for $300 Monday night.
Robert Bearse, associate dean of research administration, said yesterday that this was not representative of the entire fiscal year and that research funds still could be more than last year's $3.
10:50 p.m. Robinson was not injured, police said.
Police said the maintenance supervisor at the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 111 E. Ile 18th St., includes two of flags on the building's flare walls.
Police said the flags, a Kansas flag and a U.S. flag, were valued at $60 each. The theft occurred between 5 p.m. Friday and 7 a.m. Saturday, police said.
ON CAMPUS, KU police received few reports yesterday.
Included in those filed was a report of more than $100 damage done to an evergreen tree on West Campus. Police chopped down the tree Monday night.
"Federal funding tends to be cyclic," Bearse said. "It goes up and down."
THEER IS NOT a continuing increase in research dollars," he said.
He said, however, that about one-third to one-half of the total research funds were allocated in the first quarter of any fiscal year.
Because research funds awarded to KU in this fiscal year's first quarter have decreased, Bearsre said, he thinks the database will allocate more money each year throughout the year.
The first quarter of KU's fiscal year is the last quarter of the federal government's
Federal agencies in the past, quickly have gotten rid of remaining funds in their last period so they would be able to justify research needs, he said.
Two years ago the federal government decided to end its fiscal year on Sept. 30 instead of June 30, when KU ends its fiscal year.
Bearse said, "I hope they're learning to stop dumping the money really quickly."
He said he was not happy with the decrease in research funds and would be watching the amount of research funds closely throughout the year.
"You can't argue that the patient is sick, but he might just have an allergy," Bearse said. "It's nothing to be taken too seriously."
In fiscal 1978, research receipts totaled $14.8 million -27 percent more than the year
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KU VETS Meeting
Wednesday December 6
7:00 p.m.
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Kansas Union
Speaker:
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Campus Veterans Representative
Subject: V.A. Benefits
Funded by Student Senate
(not pictured Beverly McCormac)
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
DECEMBER 6. 1978
Good news on Alaska
There was good news from Washington last week as President Carter designated 56 million acres of pristine Alaskan wildlands to be national monuments.
Carter's action is the first serious sign that he is prepared to back up the conservationist rhetoric that marked his presidential campaign, and conservationists immediately proclaimed that Carter "has now replaced Teddy Roosevelt as the greatest conservation president of all time."
Although that statement may be the product of an exuberant imagination, there can be no doubt that Carter's action is a tremendous victory for conservationist forces in Alaska. However, any victory celebrations for conservationists would be premature. There is still work to be done in Alaska.
CARTER USED the Antiquities Act of 1906, an act used only once before by a president, to declare the land national monuments. The 56 million acres counts as the most land set aside for conservation by a president.
Most of those 56 million acres, inhabited by a diverse assortment of wildlife and featuring rolling tundra and snow-capped mountain ranges, were part of the nearly 100 million acres that would have been protected under the Alaskan lands bill that died
Carter was forced to act now because interim congressional protection of Alaskan public lands being considered for parks was to expire on Dec. 18, opening that land for development.
Carter indicated last week that he was aware of this when he said passage of the remainder of the land bill would be the "highest environmental priority of my administration."
Although Carter has proved his sincerity in protecting the wildlands, his actions leave open the possibility that Congress will be bulled to sleep thinking that the ballgame has been won. Nothing could be further from the truth.
If the remaining acres of Alaskan wildlands fall prey to developers, Carter's action would be a very hollow victory. It must be hoped that Congress will follow the president's lead and pass the remainder of the Alaskan land bill early in its next session.
in the Senate shortly before Congress adjourned in October.
Military control of KU called an unlikely notion
BUT HIS ACTION only protected a little more than half of the land covered in the Alaskan bill. Protection of the remainder of the land is essential.
To the editor:
The University Daily Kansas editorial of Nov 28, warning of a proposed takeover of the nation's entire system of higher education department, was certainly an attention-getter.
I can speak only for the Air Force, of course, but I would like to assure each administrator, faculty member and student, that we have no knowledge, there is no plan to take control of KU.
From a more pragmatic standpoint, the current Air Force ROTC enrollment of 65, out of a total of more than 25,000 KU who cannot appear to pose an immediate threat.
The wisdom of the Kansan's policy of unsigned editors is convincingly reinforced when you toss up one of these varieties.
Col. Walter M. Wondrack, USAF Professor of aerospace studies
Cultists should have no place on campus
It is hoped the recent carnage in Guyana will convince some of the erstwhile apathetic student body that those psychological fascists who have been lurking beneath Wescoe Hall all semester have no place on a university campus.
To the editor
Some, no doubt, will cry that freedom of speech is being impinged upon. It seems glaringly apparent, however, that cultists of the Moonies' ilk have little conception of what happens when they relate to the unfortunate whose bodies are presently beeing flown back from Guyana.
No Moonies on campus next semester
London graduate student
KU nuclear reactor poses safety threat
To the editor:
In the Nov. 21 issue of the Kanasa, the article on radioactive waste disposal for the University's reactor raises a perplexing question. The storage area for KU's radioactive waste is approximately half the volume of the container 20 years. What happens in the year 2000 when the present site is full? I presume we simply will start another site.
But this very point defies logic. If with KU's reactor, and all other reactors in this country, we must continually find more and more areas where there are thousands of years, it would seem that eventually these storage areas would be used and land needed for other functions of society.
Through the lifespan of my generation, I would expect these areas to remain small. However, what the situation will be for my grandchildren also converge.
With proposals for hundreds of reactors to be built, each with their own supply of radioactive wastes, I cannot help but ask who is looking out for whom's best interests.
In a related area, the director of KU's nuclear reactor, Russell Messel, recently
KANSAN letters
stated in a Free University class on nuclear power that there was no plan to decompose it.
Reactors generally have a life expectancy of approximately 30 years. After this amount of time, the reactors must be decommissioning. Decommissioning means that they are no longer usable; this is due in part to the build-up of low-level radiation. KU's reactor is more than 15 years old and evidently no plan to decommission it exists. This is typical of the impot and incomplete reactors used for energy field demonstrate in their field.
I for one, sincerely hope that my life, those of future generations, and that of the planet are not left in the hands of these individuals.
Lawrence senior
Bill Beems
Disgruntled student indicts KU education
I wonder what title would best fit this letter. "I want my money back?" No, I really do not have the heart to say that. Maybe the headline "Ralph Nader finds University of Kansas incompetent." Probably not.
To the editor:
I can make two statements about this quote and host it compares with the campus I work on. First, as a goal, everyone is to seek and find the thing called truth. But then that is a proper way to live.
Nalph probably does not care about education. And if he did, his position would probably receive very little support. The student could of course think of it as "KU students rupped out."
Second, the above citation seems to be a total out-and-out lie. If I tried to do what statement in the bulletin says should be thrown, it promptly be thrown out of school for cheating.
"A large part of university life involves getting to know your fellow students and your instructors, discussing with them your goals for the course and seeing the world from many vantage points."
Nixon pathetic as failed politician
For example, a recent KU bulletin states:
There is a lot more I could say about what is wrong at KU, but this letter must be kept short. So I recommend that everybody—and you and me—and read the following essays on education:
In ending, I will say that KU is not alone. There are few schools that are not in the same predicament as KU is. But KU is going to wait until someone else takes that lead and becomes fashionable to change? Is KU going to be jumping on the band wagon or pulling it?
The news accounts told of protesters 'pounding their fists' on the black linemusine, 'shouting obscences', 'chanting in unison', 'flinging eggs', 'waving placards' and at one point 'demonstrators knocked off the helmets of a cordon of British policemen and pushed forward.'
It was all too familiar.
(2) "The Abolition of Man" by C.S. Lewis.
(3) "What You're really Learning at College" by Myron B. Bloy Jr. in "His",
December 1978.
Nieman and Ann Nixon had opted into the quiet town of Oxford, England, Nikon had sent a speech to the Oxford Union debating society as part of a short European tour designed to let him relieve the days of surges of outrages and foreign diplomacy.
The problem came when about 500 demonstrators, both American and English, showed up to let Nikon know what happened.
Richard Nixon was back in town.
y
1) "Screwtape Proposes a Toast" by C.S. Lewis.
NOT SURPRISEINGLY, they don't think there is. That isn't surprising because they always deal with issues that ability to polarize the public to degrees rarely matched by other American politicians. From his early days as a Red-baiting California congressman to his final disregardful days in the White House, Nikon has masterfully driven people to manic
John Sheffield
But for many people, myself included, Nixon was a symbol. As the war in Vietnam wore on, as the war over America had ended, we were wore on, Nixon took on the role of the gang leader for the bad guys, methodically working his will toward
John Sheffield
Osawatomie iunior
For some odd reason, some people just couldn't seem to stomach the胃. But what was even older still was the heart. It was still as big as it was when I was a kid.
A. S. G. M. A. R. S. P. R. S. P
TO PEOPLE who shared that view of Nixon, a good majority of them win. Nixon became a symbol of the Republican Party's victory in 1968.
To make matters even more sublime for hard-core
Nixon-haters, "Tricky Daisy" has been a
willing success with its obscene ones) was a willing
John
Whitesides
symbol. Traveling the country with his sidekick Spiro, Nixon seemed to go out of air to help iniure his enemies.
What was perhaps most infuriating about Nixon was that no matter what horrible thing he might say or do next, there was always an unlimited supply of people who were convinced he could do no wrong.
This lesson was learned quickly during the 1972 campaign, as the American public, and with rare but notable exceptions, the American press, ignored a slow news story that came to be known as Watergate.
But the crowd in England last week seemed unwilling, or unable, to distinguish between the two men, and for a few brief hours the old passions flared again. And that's why the police probably had better things to do than fan a long-dead fire.
ONE OF MY most chilling memories from an otherwise misspent day is the iDay spent stalking the corners of Five Points in downtown Atlanta, Ga., handing out pamphlets about the dangers of Wategate to disinterested Nixon admirers.
It was October 1972, and the occasion was a ticker-tape parade for the president along Atlanta's Peachtree Street. Although it was definitely a hard-sell audience, we had hoped to shed some light on Nixon's character for those who obviously, in our minds at least, had not given him enough thought.
Instead, our efforts were met with a shocking series of rude grunts and obscene comments (these were Republicans, mind you!), and our leaflets wound up littering the around us.
Nixon's motorcade was preceded by hordes of young girls with freshly scrubbed, cherubic faces who were dressed in red, white and blue and chanting "Four more years", an ill-fated political slogan if ever there was one.
Across the street the windows of the local flophouses were filling with interested winos and transients, all straining to get a glimpse.
Later, Lerre estimated the crowd along Peachtree Street to be about 70,000 strong. The Atlanta police said no more than 70,000 could fit into the area. But whatever the crowd count, Nixon had indeed, for at least that one riotous moment, seemed to represent everything going on in American society. And I wasn't the only one who felt.
AS NIXON CAME into view the sky was full of confeiters being blown from the rooftops by gigantic fans that had been rented by the Committee to Re-elect the President. Nixon and his wife, Pat, were standing in their car, waving and wearing slightly smiles that could have stopped them for 100 feet. Nixon looked like the definition of treacherous.
A knot of demonstrators chanting anti-Nixon slogans pressed forward, only to be pushed back by the police. Nixon continued to smile and wave, while the little girls in red, white and blue continued to clam "Four more
But whatever quality Nixon possessed that made him the focal point of so much hatred and anger, it was dissipated by Watergate. By August 1974, Nixon resigned as president after every bit of the man who had inspired so much hatred.
Although the laws of nature dictate that we must all grow older, there is no reason for us to also grow bitter. We do not have a right to be bitter.
POLITICS
'Tailor-made' punishments fit crimes
Judges across the country are finally starting to make sense. They're seeing now that stealing a box of raisins is not the same as driving while intoxicated.
In other words, they're making punishment fit the crime and coming up with individual, innovative punishment for crimes which jail sentences just don't make sense.
And by all indications, the judges are right on target—so far. Such sentences are being practiced in several foreign countries and in states, including New York and California.
Take a look at a couple of 'tailor-made'
matter. Repair reported recently by U.S.
News Corp.
A 19-year-old drunken driver who was accused of manslaughter was ordered to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and to spend one day a week for three years working in a hospital emergency room. The patient is the first hand the results of people like him."
The rationale behind these sentences was on what. What good would it have done to put these projects together, and then them to community service projects, they pay for the crime, and the community
A PRIEST who was arrested for trying to shoplift religious books was ordered to counsel young adults who had been convicted of serious crimes.
"The act of restitution should serve not only to restore the offender's sense of honor, but also to give society an even more crucial, society's sense of the offender as well, in a way that it can do for society."
Philip Brickman, associate professor of psychology at Northern University, put the question to Mr. Lowe.
THE IDEA IS one, Brickman says, that has appeal both for liberals and conservatives. It appeals to liberals who like the idea that the penalty involves something valuable. It appeals to conservatives, and It appeals to conservatives, who like the idea that the penalty involves holding the
Allen Holder
offenders responsible for their actions and making them pay for their crimes.
The idea, of course, is not a new one. Parents use the same idea when they punish their children. They can either whip the children and ground them for a period of time or they can make them perform extra household chores.
It is painfully apparent, however, that the grounding and whipping has not worked. And when all else fails, almost anything will be tried.
But the idea of making the punishment fit the situation, belong in that "almost nothing" category2, is
WILL A COMMUNITY benefit more from the jailing of a doctor who was found guilty of simple assault or from the cancer seminars he is sentenced to give?
The idea, however, can be carried too far. Making the punishment fit the crime can be seen as an adaptation of the Bible verse, "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth." But that verse also has been used by those who support capital punishment.
Obviously, such an idea in criminal punishment can't work universally. The punishment for violent crimes, such as rape, cannot be altered to the extreme of an offender paying only by working in a rape support agency.
But in many instances, alternative punishment can work better than prison sentences. And in these days of Proposition 13, taxpayers should be happy to know that they're also saving money by instituting innovation in punishment.
U. S. News reports that it now costs up to $26,000 annually to keep an offender in prison. By changing the structure of sentences, would-be inmates can still support
themselves and their families, who also would be supported by taxayers.
But there are more savings. A dentist was sentenced to fix the teeth of the poor and elderly at his own expense one day a week at how much did that save the taxpayer?
Obviously, saving money is not the goal of criminal penalties. Deterring crime and
rehabilitating criminals is. And so far, it looks like its trend-setting alternative to working in the law.
Of course, it's not a cure-all and its success failures are yet to be seen. But it’s worth noting that
Keeping an intelligent, productive person behind bars for a small crime doesn't make much sense. Making him work off his crime does.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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Newsroom-864-1410
Business Office-864-1438
Pontified at the University of Kansas at Kearney Alumni through Miss and Monday through Thursday of June 4, 2015. Admission is free. A fee of $35 is required for each student. In lieu of the fee, a deposit of $75 is required for each student. To register, visit www.ku.edu/usr/careers/korea/index.html or call (800) 624-1248. The annual fee includes the following: tuition and fees for the academic year; room & board; books, supplies, equipment, and other miscellaneous expenses; meals for six weeks during the academic year; and any other required fees.
Monarch Editor Jerry Sass
Morgan Stanley Steve Fraterl
Editorial Editor Barry麦
Campaign Editor Brian Bowyer
Associate Campus Editor Brian Settle
Associate Campus Editors Matt McKenna
Assistant Editor Leon Urhun
Associate Sports Editor Leon Urhun
Associate Sports Editor Leon Urhun
Phone Editor Laurie Daniel, Carol Hunter, Paula Southlander
Makeup Editors Pam Ecky, Mary McKenna
Makeup Editors Mary McKenna
Editorial Writers Dirk Ala, Aleih Blender, Nina Huqiada
Photographers Beau Bondie Trish Lewis, Anil Kozny
Editorial Carbonati Bob Beer, Tom Routemark, John Trautmack
Editorial Carbonati Dave Miller
Linda Word, Marge
Don Green
Assistant Business Manager
Xaren Wendriff
Associate Business Manager
Bert Miller
Advertising Manager
Promotional Manager
Mel South, Alton Blair
Assistant Promotional Managers
Terrence Gretner
Classified Manager
Leele Chandler
Assistant Manager
Vince Coutis
Teamhands Manager
Bruce Dart
Photographer
Steve Folman, Liz Hotchkin
Artist
General Manager
Advertising Advisor
General Manager Rick Musser
Wednesdav. December 6.1978
University Daily Kansan
5
State charged with avoiding debt
By DAN WINTER
STAN REPORTER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A spokesman for a Kansas City, Mo., construction firm chirped the state of Kansas yesterday with trying to impress the company at a state owe it.
The spokesman, Bernard Gram, said the state was trying to get out of paying the money by saying that his company, Thomas Construction Co., was responsible for alleged construction deficiencies at Orland College at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The charge came after testimony Thursday by a special prosecutor hired by the state to study alleged deficiencies in state buildings.
The prosecutor, James Eisenbrand,
Overland Park, told the special legislative committee on building construction that a
building near the site of a former
that the building was structurally unsewed.
THAT TESTIMONY has added to the long-standing arguments between the state and contractors about Med Center construction.
In a prepared statement, Gram said his company had performed all of its work on the building with the state's approval. He said that after the work was completed, a team from the district architect's office inspected the building and deemed it in
suc-
it it's
person
make
prime
compliance with the state's plans and specifications.
r, it ve to
'Now, after two years following the completion of the project, the state, for the first time, is making complaints that come as a complete surprise to us. Thomas has, in fact, taken an active role against the state with regard to this project, and apparently the recent ill-founded complaints by the state are nothing more than an attempt on the part of the state to contrain a counterclimber in an effort to avoid the death of him and thereby delay the Thomas," Gram said in the statement.
EISENBRANDT TOLD the committee that problems in the building included sloping floors, fire code violations and problems with the building's elevators.
Eisenbann said he had hired a consulting firm to make a complete study of the deficiencies. That firm is the same one that helped the state of Louisiana recover $42 million in damages from contractors and constructed the New Orleans Superdome.
This is not the first time that the state has
been the alleged defendant to the
company in Ecuador's enforcement suit.
Eisenbrandt's testimony was preceded by a letter sent to the construction company in October threatening legal action if he could correct certain deficiencies within 60 days.
GRAM SAID that since then, the state had
backed off of several its charges. Apparently, he said, the state discovered that several of its charges were not the fault of Thomas Co.
"In fact," Gram said, "the state itself now admits that several of its complaints and charges which it made against our work and our company were improper."
Vincent Cool, acting state architect, said other contractors were being held responsible by the state for the alleged theft of equipment. Cool did not name the other companies.
Thomas Co. and two other contracting firms, Trug-Nichols Inc., Kansas City, Kan, and Evans Electrical Construction Company, were awarded from the state in 1977 to compensate for money they spent because of inaccurate architectural drawings. The 1978 Kansas Legislature postponed payment of the company because of the companies received payment.
LAST DECEMBER, the state filed suit against the architectural firm of Marshall and Brown-Silderix for $20,000 to cover damages the state said it had incurred when it had to repay the contracting firms for damage caused by the negligence in drawing the building's plans.
Orr-Major was the focal point of a 1974 state architectural kickback case in which 24 defendants were indicted for bribery conspiracy.
KANSAN
On Campus
Events
TODAY: WEDNESDAY FORUM "WE will at 11:45 a.m. to 12:04 a.m. Audience. An American Civil Liberties Union representative will discuss incidents in Skokie. CENTRE CHARMEN will attend 3:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT! There will be a CARLILLON RECITAL by Albert Gerken at 7, KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in Pinebars Bldg. at 8, University of Michigan at 7 in the Walnut Room of the Union. PRE-NURSING CLUB will meet at 7 in the Council Room of the Union. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Pine Bldg. at 8, University of Michigan. RADIOACTIVE FREE KANSAS will meet at 7:30 in the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. FACULTY RECITAL by Charles Hogs, double bassist, and Swarthout Hall of Muhwall Hall.
TOMORROW: UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in Room 105 of Blake Hall. GERMAN SINGING CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. STUDENT SENIENCE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. SUABRIDGE will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. ENGLISH LECTURE at 8 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. Casraige will speak on "Trends in Hardy Biography." A CLASSICS RECEPTION will be held at 8:30 p.m. in the English Room of the Union.
ONIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK
TONIGHT IS
Granada
(012) 31 - 5699 / 012 31 - 8749
Tonight 7:30 & 9:40
ENDS STURSDAY
"THE BOYS FROM BRAZIL"
Varsity
Dec 12 - December 17, 2003
Tonight 7:30 & 8:15
Sat 9:30 2:30
"IT'S NOT THE SIZE THAT COUNTS"
Hillcrest
Robert Altman's "A WEDDING"
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
PG WEDDING
Henry Winkler Sally Fields
Cinema Twim
Richard Burton
Cinema Twin
31st & Iowa
Tonight 7:30 & 9:30
Sat Sun 2:30
Tonight! 7:15 & 8:40
Sat/Sun! 1:45 PG "EQUUS"
Tonlight 7:20 & 9:40
ENDS THURSDAY R
"HEROES"
Tonight 7:30 & 9:35
ENDS THURSDAY PG
EXPRESS"
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT
Tonight7:20 & 9:40
ENDS THURSDAY
"GOIN'
"MIDNIGHT
SOUTH"
THE
ROCKY
HORROR
PICTURE
SHOW
Hillcrest
Box opens 11:45 Show time 12:15
SHOWCASE WEDNESDAY
!!SURPRISE NIGHT!!
FREE ALL NIGHT!
Plus $1.50 Pitchers and $1.00 Texas set-ups
ALL MATERIALS
This Weekend:
The Lawrence Opera House
7th & Mass
KOKO TAYLOR &
HER BLUES MACHINE
ALL NITE!!
FRENCH
French
A Baking Man Working With Cheese Boxes.
EXTRAVAGANT
PLANT
SALE
Schweider Retail Liquor Store
1610 W. 23rd
(Next to Pizza Hut)
We have an outstanding selection of imported and California wines.
EXTRAVAGANT PLANT SALE
at KANSAS UNIVERSITY
located in the
K.U. UNION BALLROOM
in
DECEMBER 3rd — Sunday —
2:00 PM to 8:00 PM
DECEMBER 4th thru DECEMBER 7th
Monday to Thursday
9:00 AM to 8:00 PM
DECEMBER 8th — Friday —
9:00 AM to 1:00 PM
served by
INTERCOLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION
FOR WOMEN STUDENTS
1979 Convention Committee
Free Weather Protection Provided For All Plants
Hanging and standing plants at REDUCED PRICES
Visa and Mastercharge Accepted
EXTRAVAGANT
PLANT
SALE
at
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
located in the
K.U. UNION BALLROOM
on
DECEMBER 3rd — Sunday —
9:00 PM to 8:00 PM
DECEMBER 4th thru DECEMBER 7th
Monday to Thursday
9:00 AM to 8:00 PM
DECEMBER 8th — Friday —
9:00 AM to 1:00 PM
granted by
INTERCOLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION
FOR WOMEN STUDENTS
1972 Convention Committee
Free Weather Protection Provided For All Plants
Hanging and standing plants at
REDUCED PRICES
Visa and Mastercharge Accepted
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
REDUCED PRICES
Visa and Mastercharge Accepted
1978 BESTWARDS • BESTFRIDGE • BESTSTORE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
1978
BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66011
914-874-3011
10-8 MON-SAT
12-5 SUN
+ + + + +
GIFTS THEY'LL REMEMBER
IFTS FROM HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON
THEY'LL REMEMBER
AT THE OREAD BOOKSTORE FOR THESE AND OTHER BOOKS, CALENDARS, POSTERS, CARDS AND UNICEF HOLIDAY CARDS
LEVEL 3 KANSAS UNION
THE
COUNTRY
DIARY OF AN
EDWARDMAN
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FOR THESE AND OTHER
BOOKS, CALENDARS, POSTERS,
CARDS AND UNIVERSITY HOLIDAY
CARDS
LEVEL 3 KANSAS UNION
OREAD
BOOK
SHOP
SCW INC
Campus Beauty Shoppe
9th and Illinois - 9th St.
Shopping Center
Hairstyling
for Men and Women
REDKEN
IXOYE Call 843-3034
IXOYEX Call 843-3034
open Mon. thru Sat
KIEF'S Record
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza
NOTICE:
Name: N. Muir
Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Fri. Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
Hillel Presents
CAT BALLOU
Starring Lee Marvin
Friday, Dec. 8th
9:30 pm
Saturday, Dec. 9th
7:00 & 9:00 pm
Dyche Auditorium (Next to Union)
$1.00 members
$1.50 non-members
Wednesday, Dec. 6
Samurai:
YOJIMBO
(1961)
D. Aikra Kurosawa, with Toshiru Mifune. The basis for, but much better than, A Fistful of Dollars. Japan/subtitled.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
(1952)
Thursday, Dec. 7
UMBERTO D.
$1.00 7:30
D. diritoro de Sica, with Carlo Batista, Dir. wittorio de Sica, with examples of italian neo-realism. Written by Cesare Battian and de Sica "Brittani and zawiwitl." - Life.
Friday & Saturday Dec. 8 & 9
Screwball Comedy Double Feature:
BRINGING UP BABY
(1938)
Dir. Howard Hawks, with Katherine Hebepn, Cary Grant, Charlie Ruggles. The epitome of the screwball era.
with
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
(1934)
Dr. Frank Capra, with Clark Gibble,
Claudette Capriol, Capriol's master
winner of the Academy Award, wins all of the major Academy Awards, including Bictit Bild, Watch for the
For both movies:
$1.50 3:30 & 8:00 pm Woodruff Aud.
Monday, Dec. 11
Last of the Film Noir:
TOUCH OF EVIL
(1958)
Dir. Orson Welles, with Orson Welles,
Cherlston Heston, Jon Leigh, Marlene
Dietrich, Mercedes McCambridge,
Robert Cunningham on an evil shifter of a border town. This print includes 15 minutes of footage originally cut before its theatrical release; this longer version
has been edited to make it the original conception of the film.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Place a Kansas want ad
Call 864-4358
Weekday
The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
December 6,1978
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"Once I am not responsible anymore for patient care, I let myself get tired. When I am taking care of patients, I can generate enough adrenalin to be fairly awake and do the right thing."
Lida Osbern, a second-year resident in internal medicine, prepares to start the patient's heartbeat by sending electric volts through his body. Although the defibrillation did not work, a shot of adrenaline started the heart beating on its own.
Marathon Medicine
LEA DAVENAL
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE
Osbern is one of five doctors in the University of Kansas Medical Center emergency room. Osbern works a 24-hour shift every other day.
9:30 a.m. A gunry carrying a Code Blue heart attack patient is runched down the hall. A pump forces the man's chest to rise and fall, rise and fall. His face is blue. His eyes are closed.
Lida Osbern, second year internal medicine resident, goes to work.
"How long has he been out?" she asks.
How long has he been out and the users
"About five minutes," an attendant replies.
Osborn puts a stethoscope to his chest, hoping to hear a heartbeat. It isn't there. An electrocardiograph records heart action forced by the pump.
Another machine with a tiny blue-white light showing every heartbeat is hooked up. Defibilator buttons are on the keyboard.
"Everybody get back," she said. She zipped his beard, arched and fell on the table. Still no response.
A large syringe of adrenaline is prepared. The needle is eased into the chest. The liquid is inhaled.
"We've got a pulse," a nurse says.
"Oh great." Osbern says smiling.
The heart is now beating on its own. It looks as if the man will live.
"Well that's fun when you can bring someone back from death," Olsen said, stepping away from the desk.
Osbern walks to the man's side.
"Sir, can you hear me? Can you hear me?" You're at a UCI Medical Center and you had another patient.
The man had collapsed on a street and fellow workers started cardiopulmonary resuscitation. He was transported to the hospital.
Osbern walks out into the hall. The patient's wife is awaiting news.
"When we clean him up a little bit, we'll let you move us down cedarhill," he reassures us.
"When we clean him up a little more, he sometimes says reassuringly, 'The woman smiles. "I’d appreciate that," she
"It it used to scare me to death, but I've run enough codes now that there are certain things you try and you keep trying until you get something that works," she said.
"I think that a Code Blue is probably the most challenging, but that is what I like the best—acutely ill patients where you have to decide what is wrong with them and get them quickly taken care of. I'm not sure and my initial impression and any emergency treatment it's turned over to the ward."
The procedure Osbern has performed is just a part of her 24-hour shift in the Med Center.
Although Osher deals with life and death every day, she said the death of a patient still had a
"It's especially hard on services like renal and hematology, where the people will never get better, the same as with our current patient, and when I lose one, I go through a grief reaction and cry with the family."
"A lot of times if people appease caulled and
with them emotions, they help them deal with
with their own emotions.
"The most frustrating thing about working the emergency room is treating e.r. (emergency room) abusers who use the e.r. service for the common cold and flu simply because its easier than finding a private physician to follow them through all their problems.
"Conversely, the most rewarding part is when it is a problem that can be cured with certain medicine or certain treatments to where they are feeling better within a short period of time, such as surgery."
5:30 p.m. A man with an oxygen mask comes in. He is suffering from pulmonary emboli, or blood clots, in his lungs. His breathing is raspy. His head turns from side to side, a pained look on his face. He's dehydrated, and his chest is correct. Heparin, a blood thinner, is given. The man is transferred to an intensive care unit.
Dinner time. Osbern munches on a cold Wendy's hamburger. A moment of rest.
Ballet lessons once a week provide a release that Osborn says she can never do without.
"I look forward to that one hour so much and I don't miss it for anything," she said.
Although time is limited for the 28-year-old resident, her husband had adjusted to her caring career.
"I think the husband of a woman in medicine has one eye with a strong goe," she said. He had no other eyes.
**Davis:** Yes, he did.
The flow of patients slows down. A movie comes on the television. Clad in green garb, she lay's on her bed.
She said, "I need at least one hour of sleep and if I don't get at least one, preferably two hours, I get to the point where I am really draggy. When I am taking care of patients, I can generate enough adrenaline to be fairly awake and do the right thing." She said, "You can anymore for patient care, I let myself get tired. Sometimes I am so tired I don't eat. And I love to eat."
An old man comes in wheezing, with a sack of an medicine under his arm. Osbern listens to his chest with a stethoscope. X-rays are taken. The man chatters away. Osbern patiently listens, even though it’s 3 a.m. An ear infection he has left, the man is prescribed and the man is left, still chattering, in the waiting room.
Osbern dragged back to bed for a couple more hours of precious sleep.
7: 30 a.m. Only half an hour left. Osborn is awake and checking on the status of the Code Blue
The report is good. His pupils react to light. He is moving around. His condition is improved. It still is not known how much brain damage he has. He was struck by Oksen, have made it through the worst part.
1234567890
Oobern and another resident smile over electrocardiogram results, which show a normal heartbeat. Moments earlier, the man had no heartbeat and no pulse.
Story by Barb Koenig Photos by Trish Lewis
Wednesday, December 6, 1978
Fambrough happy for second shot
7
Sports Editor
By LEON UNRUH
The trick to becoming KU's head football coach for a second time was clear to Don Benson.
"I'm so much smarter now," he said yesterday after signing a four-year contract with the team.
"I found out how you get these jobs. First of all, you get on the selection committee and blackball everybody but yourself," he said.
Fambroug, assistant director of the Williams Fund, was a member of the committee to find a replacement for former head coach Bud Moore. Moore, who replaced Fambroug in 1974, was fired from the one-year contract in mid-November.
Farnbrough, 56, had been the head football coach from 1971. He resigned after then-national leader Rory McIlroy.
tend his contract, which had a year left. In
tend, Bambrough accepted under three athletics.
ABOUT TWO weeks ago, Fambrough said at a press conference yesterday morning, athletic director Bob Marcum asked him to run the race for Marcum with a mindful of candidates.
"He looked on me and asked whether I'd ever considered getting back into coaching, I said, 'Yes, if you give me 50 blue chip players.' "Fambrough said
Then he saw Marcum was serious.
"I said, You gotta be kidding," I said. "I am not going to talk about it, and got up and went for a walk."
The committee's first choice, Bo Rein of North Carolina State, turnover the offer later.
Marcum later told the committee that the best remaining candidate among the re-commissioned candidates is Larry Hickman.
Fambrough attended the Monday meeting, but left about halfway through. Several hours later, the committee notified him that he had been chosen.
"IVE BEEN like a fish out of water for the last four years," he said. "I tried to put it on the table."
All of the 22 former KU players now play professionally were recruited by or purchased by
Since resigning as coach, he raised money for the athletic department. Recognized for his recruiting ability, he was asked by the University of Texas to teach it. It was the best recruitry year Moore had.
He didn't say yesterday which of Moore's coaches would remain for his own staff, but indicated that speculation that quarterback coach John Hadi would be among them as assistant head coach and offensive coordinator was correct.
"I noticed in the paper where John said he
PACIFIC ASIA CONFERENCE ON POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC REFORM IN THE RUMANIAN UNION
Happy start
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
Answering questions with a wif, the head football coach Don Fambrough draws a grin from Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and
laughter from athletic director Bob Marcum. Fambrough signed a four-year contract yesterday at a press conference.
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Hillel Presents
CAT BALLOU
Starring Lee Marvin
Friday, Dec. 8th
9:30 pm
Saturday, Dec. 9th
7:00 & 9:00 pm
Dyche Auditorium
(Next to Union)
$1.00 members
$1.50 non-members
Holiday Inn
Steak House
More than just a place to eat, the Holiday
inn's new Steak House is a place to en-
joy yourself. Featuring Steaks, Prime Rib
and Sea Food in a setting reminiscent of
an old English pub. Each entree includes
a garden-fresh salad steak fries,
homemade gravy, homemade bread and
whipped butter. Cold beer and your
choice of beverages are available. Come
by soon for a lot of good food and a little
favor.
Catfish Dinner...$6.95
Shrimp Dinner...$4.95
% Fried Chicken...$4.95
Top Sirloin (10 oz.)...$6.95
Ribeye Steak (14 oz.) $10.50
K.C. Strip (14 oz.)...$8.95
Filet (8 oz.)...$7.95
Prime Rib (20 oz.)...$9.95
SERVING
5 - 10 p.m. DAILY
23rd & Iowa
843-9100
haddn't talked to Don Fambrough, and he made that statement at my house. Fam
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"I DON'T know, maybe he was talking to my wife, Del, but I thought he was talking to me. I have an announcement about John and day or two, and if it be one you'll ally enjoy."
University Daily Kansan
Fambrough said he didn't expect any problems with Hadi, who had said he might leave if he didn't get hired as head coach. Fambrough was on his way to Fambrough a 19 years as assistant coach.
"You know, raised him," he said. "If he gets out of line, I spiked him."
With Hail plotting the offense, Fambrough said, the Jayhawks could expect to return to the pass-filled days reminiscent of David Jaynes.
Fambrough, an easygoing guy, had been described as not being enough of a disciplinarian. Things will be different, he said, from Moore's days, during which a number of players quit the team and complained of bad morale and Moore's aloofness.
"Oh, man," he beounced, "will we throw
the ball? But we will run a draw play
occasionally."
"It's easy to run players off," he said.
"That's the easy way. I believe it's my job to help the kids. If I can help these kids, I'll go as far as I can."
Players surprised at coaching choice
Several players had been recruited by Fambrough and had played under him. Most knew that he was an effective recruiter and that he might help a team as decimated by injuries as this year's Jawhacks were.
The appointment of Don Fambrighas as head football coach yesterday surprised a lot of people, including members of the football team.
Linebacker Monty Carbonell said, "I know he's a good recruiter. The situation we've been in with injuries — we'll need to find out if anyone else is one of some of the old guys to be coming back."
Like other players, Carbonell, a junior, said he was surprised that John Hald, former head coach Bud Moore's quarterback back, hadn't been chosen.
"THOUGH HADL had a good chance of getting it, I'm glad he's staying on."
--at the
Brian Bethke, a senior quarterback who was red-shirted this year, said Monday, "I didn't know until today that he was one of the guys. I knew there were a lot of candidates."
REPEAT OF A
SELL OUT!
IT'S ANOTHER . . .
PRICES CAN'T
BE BEAT!
Record Breaking Sale
CLASSICALS
Record & Track & Cappella Times
RECORDS
1.99
2.99
TAKES
2.99
3.99
RECORD & TAPE
RIDI!
PREMIUM
1.99
4.99
BACK BY POPULAR
DEMAND!
PRICES CAN'T
BE BEAT!
CLASSICALS
Record B, Track E, Cassette F
BAND OF THE FUTURE
GREAT DIVISION
A TAPE
RECORD & TAPE
RIOT!
MUSIC BY
100
PERCENTS
400
MASTERS CAME
IN
2017
SMALLLY FUCKED
190
10 TO
480
MIDDLE LABEL
320
MIDDLE LABEL
1.
MORE GREAT STEREO RECORDS
AND TAPES AT RECORD-BREAKING
PRICES! GET 'EM WHILE THEY
LAST! THIS WEEK ONLY!
PRESENTED BY MASTERPIECE REBORN
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
WE ARE THE ONLY BOOKSTORE THAT SHARES ITS PROFITS WITH KU STUDENT1
---
BOB'S IMPORT SERVICE
545 Minnesota
841-2123
Import Car Alternative
Open 8:00-5:00
Monday thru Friday
TV TIMES
Bing *Crosby—The Christmas Years* 8:00; 13, 13 Highlights from Bing *Christmas* a national Christmas show which were televised from 1961 until Bing's death in 1977.
TV
This Space For Rent
TONIGHT'S HIGHLIGHTS
Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer 5, 13 Burl Ives narrates this classic animated musical adventure about the shy Reindeer, who has fed Santa Claus's Christmas village to escape the ridicule caused by his nose.
Couteau Odyssey 7:09 11 In their first documentary of the season, Jacques Couteau and his son Philippe try to unravel his sons' surrounding Easter Island, a tiny Chilean possession isolated in the South Pacific.
P.M
EVENING
5:30 ABC News 2, 9
NBC News 4, 27
CBS News 5, 13
Rookies 41
6:00 News 2, 5, 9, 13, 27
Mack Willey 4
MacNeil/Learn Report 19
6:30 Pop Goes The Country 2
Gong Show 4
Price Is Right 5
Dating Game 9
Right To Keep and Bear Arms 13
Kansas City Strip 19
Mary Tyler Moore 27
Newlywed Game 41
7:00 Eight Is Enough 2, 9
Dick Clark's Live Wednesday 4,
27
Rudolph The Red Nosed
Reindeer 5, 13
Cousenai 11, 19
Tic Tac Dough 41
7:65 Cousteau Odyssey 19
7:30 Joker's Wild 41
8:00 Charlie A King's 2, 9
Movie—the Steel Cowboy" 4, 17
Bing Crosby 5, 13
Ray Charles At Montreux 11
Movie—"The Dion Brothers" 41
8:15 Edge Of Cold 19
9:00 Vegas 2, 4
Alhany Cash 5, 13
10:00 News 2, 4, 5, 9, 13, 27
Kansas Academy 11
Love Experts 41
10:15 Dick Cavett 19
10:30 Police Woman 2
Johann Carson 4, 27
Streets Of San Francisco 5
Mary Tyler Moore 9
Alan New 11
Movie - The Love Bout" 13
Star Trek 41
10:35 ABC News 19
11:00 Bob Newhart 9
Dick Cavett 11
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
11:30 Man from U.N.C.L.E. 5
Police Woman 9
Flash Gordon 41
11:40 S.W.A.T.2
A.M.
12:00 Tomorrow 4, 27
Philil Sivers 41
12:30 Movie "Of Human Bondage" 5
Koakij 13
Best Of Groucho 41
12:40 S.W.A.T. 9
1:00 Movie "The Great Ziegfeld" 41
1:30 Art Linkletter 5
4:00 Dick Van Dyke 41
5:00 Andy Griffith 41
*Denotes HBO
Cable channel 10 has continuous news & weather
-
8
Wednesday, December 6, 1978
University Dafly Kansan
Admiral Car Rental
When was the last time you rented a car for
$5.95 per day
plus mileage
We have a few late model cars for sale
2340 Alabama
813-2931
Students Ceramic Sale
Dec 4, 5, & 6
8-5:30
Student Union Lobby
For your holiday gift giving
Portfolios-Lamps-Drawing Tables-Easels-Magic Marker Sets-Osmiroid Italic & Drawing Pen Sets. Oil, Acrylic, or Watercolor Sets Prepackaged or Custom Select Your Own.
Open All Day Saturday
pen&,inc.
art supplies
623 vermont 841-1777
W
The men's basketball team fell a notch to fifth place in the Associated Press weekly rankings. Duke, the season leader, was followed by UCLA, Notre Dame and Michigan State, which replaced Kansas as No. 4.
Michigan State bumps 'Hawks
By the Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press college basketball poll, with first place voters in pares season records and total points are below. Points based on 2019-18 **14-5-31-14-5-31**
1. Duke (84) 40 1,353
2. UCLA (7) 40 1,172
3. UCLA (7) 40 1,172
4. Michigan State 14 881
5. Michigan State 14 881
6. Michigan 14 794
7. Lehigh Valley 777
8. St. Louis St 31 777
9. Syracuse 647
10. Syracuse 647
11. Southern Cal 526
11. Southern Cal 526
11. Texas 31 455
14. North Carolina 375
15. Sweetwater Vegan 375
16. Marquette 324
16. Marquette 324
17. Ruggers 116
17. Ruggers 116
18. Georgetown, D.C 58
TONIGHT IS
Pitcher Night
AT THE HAWK
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
Face it you've always wanted to fly! Many of us have had the feeling and for some it has never gone away
N30929
If you have that feeling, then you're in luck Air Force ROTC Flight Instruction Program (FIP) is available to you. If it designed to teach the basics of flight through flight lessons in small aircraft at a civilian operated facility.
The program is an EXTRA for cadets who can qualify to become Air Force Pilots into Air Force ROTC, transferring from year in college. FIP is the first step for the cadet who is going on to Air Force jet pilot training (first graduating).
AIR FORCE
ROTC
This is all reserved for the caddi who wants to get
the wings. Check the group, with River Silver pilot
wings. Check
Gateway to a great way of life.
ATTENTION SOPHOMORES:
SOPHOMORES SHOULD APPLY NOW FOR ENTRY AS JUNIORS IN ROTC FOR FALL 1979.
MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING, ROOM 108 OR CALL 844-8476 FOR MORE INFORMATION.
The South's Gonna Do It Again!
THE CHARLIE BAND DANIELS
WITH A SPECIAL GUEST PERFORMANCE BY Billy Spears & His Band
THE BAND
TOMORROW NIGHT 9:00 pm
Hoch Auditorium
$6. and $7.
Tickets available at the SUA Box Office. Also at Kief's, Caper's in K.C., The Record Store in Manhattan. Liberty Sound in St. Joseph, Mother Earth in Topeka. Tiger's, and David's in Emporia.
Jayhawks boosted by freebies
Clutch free throw shooting, which before had eluded Kansas, saved the Jayhawks last night and lifted them to an 84-83 victory over the Cavaliers. Then men's basketball in Allen Field House.
By NANCY DRESSLER Associate Sports Editor
KU saw a consistent 12- to 15-point lead dwindle in the final 9½ minutes because of an interruption by CMS guards Laura Clark, Christy Lewis and Mary Jo Post. Their 16 points in a closing furry would have been enough to wipe out the final score, but KU free throws in the final 27 seconds.
"In the two games we've lost, it's been our free throws that it lost for us," KU coach Marian Washington said. "Tonight, it was free throws that it won for us."
The CMS barrage began with KU on top, 68-82, with 10-12 remaining. During the next two minutes, the Jennies outscored KU seven no points to pull within nine.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
KU FORWARD Cyrell Burnet connected with 8:11 left, stretching the lead to 70-59. But an eight-point spurt by CMS forward Kathy Anderson, sister of Missouri Andersen kept CMS alive and played it within 72-67, with six minutes left to play.
Sports
Burnett connected once more before fouling out with 4.29 to play. She left the table with 1.85.
KU's Adrian Mitchell scored to move the Jayhawks' lead to 10, 68-73, before CMS made its final charge. Three quick baskets made it a one-point game with just 2:24 to go. The Jennies went ahead on a basket by Post with 1.31 remaining.
Kanaas missed its first chance to regain the lead when Kathy Patterson missed the first shot. The second shot by Clark with :53 left. But Lynette Woodard grabbed the shot and put it in to it
KU CENTER Shyra Holden, who had her best offensive game of the season with 22 points, fouled out with: 39 left. The Jennies' Margaret Nielsen stepped to the line and calmly sank two free throws to give CMS an 83-82 edge.
But KU came through with three free throws, two by Patterson and one by Mitchell.
KU coach Marian Washington, who has not been pleasurable with all of her team's four victories because of its tendency to play slowly, admitted the victory was *grapkyp*
CMS failed to insure in its final bid with 34 when KU's Pat Mason intercepted an in-depth attempt by the Spartan.
"I'm pleased we won because the kids hung in there," she said. "If I were to criticize anything about the game, I'd say our defense was very weak tonight."
BOTH KU AND CMS used man-to-man and zone defenses. The teams were forced into using the zones in the second half after each got into foul trouble. A total of 54 fouls
were called in the game and three players fouled out, two of them from KU.
*washington said the CMS zone forced KU into outside shots. These were handled primarily by Burnett, who went 5-for-7 in the second half.*
She said CMS was a physical team and so caused the great number of fouls, which resulted in four assists.
| | PG | FT | REF | PB | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Carpenter | 6 | 9 | 10 | 2 | 13 |
| Anderson | 8 | 15 | 10 | 4 | 12 |
| Nielsen | 10 | 7.12 | 15 | 4 | 9 |
| Nickel | 8 | 1.6 | 14 | 3 | 8 |
| Harshberger | 10 | 6.3 | 9 | 3 | 14 |
| Junkin | 6 | 1.2 | 9 | 3 | 14 |
| Hulka | 6 | 1.2 | 9 | 1 | 2 |
| Lewis | 7.12 | 1.2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Poet | 8 | 1.0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| McCarthy | 0 | 1.2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Pathey | 6 | 1.2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Variable | 31-11 | 27-15 | 42 | 36 | 26 |
Mittchell 10 10 FT REB TE PP TK
Woodward -18 -6 12 17 13 18
Holden -8-18 -6-18 12 12 52
Patterson -1-2 -6-0 12 1 22
Patterson -1-2 -6-0 12 1 22
Mason -3-1 -1-3 2 2 4
Burrell -3-1 -1-3 2 2 5
Sorenson -1-1 -1-3 2 2 5
Knox -0 -0 0 0 0
Knox -0 -0 0 0 0
Totals 37-89 112-51 51 28 05
Kansas ... 45 40 - 85
CMS ... 44 40 - 83
KU 14.1 Pool Tournament SAT, Dec. 9, 1:00 PM KU Student Union
Each match to 75 points Double elimination
Entry Fee: $3.00/Sign-up sheet at Jay Bowl
(All entries must be in by 6:00 PM Friday, Dec. 8; no limit on number of entries 1ST and 2ND place finishers will travel to Warrensburg, Mo. in February to play in the national 14.1 tournament.
This tournament is restricted to full-time students, undergraduates and graduates.
---
SOUND-SATIONS YOUR FAVORITE ARTISTS
LUXURY YOU CAN AFFORD
Joe Cocker
avid gates
JOE COCKER
Luxury You Can Afford
LUXURY YOU CAN AFFORD
Joe Cocker
Linda Ronstadt
LIVING IN THE U.S.A.
david gates
goodbye girl
LINDA RONSTADT
Living In The U.S.A
DAVID GATES
The Goodbye Girl
elektra asylum
4.97 LP
5.17 TP
Linda Ronstadt
LIVING IN THE U.S.A.
LI
LI
elekura asylum
Sale prices good until Sunday Dec. 10
GIBSONS DISCOUNT CENTER
2525 IOWA
HARLEY/DAVIDSON HONDA
Wednesday, December 6, 1978
Horizons
9
1811 West 6th Street
843-3333
Aperes Air Fares/Youth Fares/Eurail and Student
Passes/Air Rentals/Hotel and Amtrak Reserva
Phone 843-1211
K.U. Union
mine out here too
Maupint travel service
unique jewelry middle eastern records costumes & supplies
Travel Plans?
for your dancing friends
open Mon-Sat 12-4 p.m. 841-7066
105 East 8th St. corner of 8th & Mass.
Points East for unusual gift ideas
KANSAN WANT ADS
Assistance, goods, services and employment
Association, community service and employment
Association, community service and employment
Association, community service and employment
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times time times
15 words or
line $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Rank additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ERRORS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The IDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect injections. No allowances will be made when the error does not matter affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Three ads can be placed in person or by calling the UGR business office at 864-2382.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
PARTY_TIME IS ANY TIME. Beenvg
WILLPROD WILLED PROD EUDALY LIGOR
WILLED PROD EUDALY LIGOR
864-4358
UNICEF cards, calendars at Oread Bookstore,
and Adventure A Bookstore 10
it then灭绝.
You will be "optimized" Dec. 4 and 5 at an awfully small hall. No Leisure Suite. 12-8
SALE—from now until Christmas, all 913 art品
have a large and varied assortment to display. Furni-
tures include artwork from the artist's own collection.
Polarity Therapy Workshop with Susan Hanil-
milow. Therapy workshop on emotional and physical bluees. Dec 9 & 10. Saturdays from 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. at the University of California, Berkeley.
It doesn't matter if you owl or not, nor is it生死一念. You can book a day in Oakland or day in Cleveland at daykilled trik in Tilpira Slipper Film in Cinemawood Springs. Cole Jan. 18 from 10am to 4pm for the low price of $27. Get more information and view the stock image at StudentUnion.org, write J.M. Newhill Room 200, 325 N. 9th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201, a changed, self-addressed return envelope with a postmark from Oakland.
REFEPCAT OF A SILLAUT! Back by popular demand, this charming, beautiful silvery hand-knife is made of steel, of plating, you can't help but love it. Get it now at www.sillaut.com or call 800-254-3161.
Employment Opportunities
The Victims' - New Rock - Hall Roll for aired
the weekend. The small hall, Reel 20, of Leaf
Suits. 12-6
December Business Grade. We have openings for graduating Business Administration majors payable to the University of Oklahoma and companies we represent. Why stand in line to receive your job? Call Us at 329-1250. Or call us at 329-1250. Or call us at 329-1250. Or call us at 329-1250.
ENTERTAINMENT
December Engineering Grads. We have openings for Master's and Bachelor's degrees and our fees are paid by the company. We require a current resume, a copy of our curriculum, a view by appointment. Courtney W. Crawford 2431 after 6:30 p.m. call in Lawerence 2431 after 8:30 p.m.
Why Study? See "The Victims" Dec. 4 and 5 at 12-6 an awkward small hall.
FOR RENT
Extra nice apartment, next to campus. Utilities
available. Free parking. 202-873-9258, 872-859-9258,
extra one man affection, 872-859-9258.
Available: Jan 1–three Feb
at August 5, 1979 Traitdge Rifle
841-2695 13-7
Apartment and room furnished, parking, most rooms furnished, and near two lions. Phone 843-5767.
Need assistance one bedroom apartment at Bed
Bud Lane. Furnished. 642-825-312
12-6
OPEN-HOUSE-TOWN HOUSE, 3300 W. 8th Street and reduced rent until Aug. 15, 1975.
breakfast and dinner for a three day breakfast and casino money for a three day breakfast and casino money for a three day breakfast and casino money for a three day breakdown.
two houses feature two repaint rooms, 174 sq ft. carpet, garages and drapes, full kitchen, dining area, call Caron at 827-687-1097 or becky at 842-878-787. 12-12
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW HENRY
BRIEF, 108 East Kingston Road, Inlanded and
unfinished from 178 to 190. Ou KU Bu
INDOOR HEATED FOOD 124 Frontier Road.
Next door to Rushley's Apt. 244 Frontier Road.
Two bedroom apartment. 4舍25 $ 10 W. 14th.
9舍32 $ 8 W. 16th.
In three parts. Call Mark Schneider, 82-414-
Sahubhajan Modi's maternity apartment, ideally situated in the Sahubhajan Modi residential complex, is available. Available 1, $180 monthly, 2, $360 monthly, 3, $540 monthly.
beautiful new 4 bedroom house available in
New York, NY. Kitchen, appliances, a kitchen
washer/dryer, laundry room, yard
space. Call today!
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimahm
reminds us of the opening of hotels for the remainder
of the year. We give a call at 843-8500 and we will be glad
to give you a place in the Naimahm HALL, 1860 Naimahm
Drive, 843-8500.
Subluse 2 bedroom--2 story townhouse. Trilidge, 841.-872 after 5. I 12-6
Christian Housing, Very close to campus. Call 842-6502 between 1-3 p.m. 12-12
"The Victims" don't care whether or not you
hall ball. They see 4 and 5 at an attack.
12-6
Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in Fourplex
Short walk to campus. Quail 841-4803 12-8
be prepared for second semester. Check out the
website at http://www.vocab.edu/courses/
$Patterson's paid and close to campus. Call 863-241-
7500.
to add sublease. Wonderful 2 BH Jayhawkower plant. All utilities paid. Price negotiated.
Rent now! 2 BR unfurnished. Front Rd.甜餐,
for 2nd bed. Call semester. Salon Jule 19-17-89
303-624-1500
2. BR apartment infirmized 10 minute walk to
camp. $195 month. 945-0127. Available Jan. 11.
Studio apartment for rent. Utilities paid 842-
8737 12-7
Sublease 3 bedroom—2 story Townhouse Trail-
ridge. 841-5864. 12-8
Brews and apartments. Call Lynch Realty 2257
804-643-1001
**12-8**
**9-12**
Sublease, 2 bedroom, unfurnished, dishwasher,
utility paid, call 843-0582 12-8
2 BEDROOM Duplex. PARTIALLY FUNNISHED
2 LEBERG $185, UBILISL. Utilize灯 5:30
p.m.
Sublease - Cory studio apartment - Dec 15, 12:00 a.m. In college to campus - Cell- M414738
Subblaster - Copy video apparatus
Bulldozer - Copy video apparatus (B14-3258) 12-9
Subblaster. One bedroom apartment, 12-9
Subblaster. One bedroom apartment, 12-9
Sublease. Available February, large one bedroom
flat, available 25% of, on his rent $183/month
at 942-0712-6585.
Convenient studio apartment for sublease Available Jan 1, on bus route. Trailridge computer center. 205-698-3427.
Efficiency apartment for rent $300 amount
Utilities: College to campus, $1830 after 5 years
Furnished studio available Jan 1. Presently
available as an Econ Studio for $29,950.
that you are also $38 plus electricity. 841-372-7272.
Wanted to sublease 2 BR apt 24th and Rice Court suite, located through Maurya, water paid $827-549.
Sublune - need 2 female roommates for 2 BR apartment at Jawwara Tower. $95/month. 12-18 weeks.
*SINGLE ROOM*
$7,000/month.
Sublease: 1 bedroom apartment, available
Frontier Ridge, on bus route. Call 841-5973-1212
Sublease - Quit, furnished, two room efficiency only $160 All utilities paid 842-6737 Keep it
Sublease. Jan. 1, a bedroom apartment. Further
payment is required cheaper than new lease. Will
pay $25 of deposit for each month.
He must sublease two bedrooms apartment from campus. $219/month. Call 841-600-3786. Send resume to Katie Ebert, 841-600-3786.
Bedroom: Poll house privilges starting Jan to
Enter game. Play the card game called 'Poker'.
Call 845-723-12-12
SPACIOS, LIGHT QUIT one bedroom, Health
Aid available. Available 7 APRIL.
841-7841
Parm Rent-3 bedroom duplex at 1833 Mizunori,
South side of北 RUF 2600 apartment 12-12
641-2107
COUPLER - Suspense as a bug in 4 bedrooms 4-bedroom units. BEDROOMS 1/2 & 1/3 expenses 841 +6750 12-12-12
2 room apartment with 841-6791 for 7 o'clock. 12-10
Utilities paid Call 841-6791 at 7 o'clock.
Getting packed! Most outfits: jacket/bedrobe,
pajamas, slippers/booties, sweater/hoodie.
Arrived in daylight. May be brought by
passage. May—last month rent to the
home.
2 bedroom, unfurnished, water paid, close to
hospital and shop $190, 842-1977 12-7
SPACIENCE three bedrooms furnished apartment
five bathrooms, two fireplaces, large pool
Non-smoking gabled walk preferred
40%
Western Civilization Notes-Now on sale! Make
a mark in your book. Be prepared for exam.
then—1) As study guide 2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis*
of Western Civilization* available now at Town
Center Library.
Sherwood model S 7110 receiver. Excellent condition, one year warranty left on parts. Call (866) 524-3935.
FOR SALE
Fender Monger Bass Guitar with strings, cables, and speakers, covers, and covers. Very good condition. Speakers, cables
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
manufacture charge and change equipment.
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 2006 w. 4 h. 90 kW.
90 kW.
SMART, PROPLIK OGUNT HUNY THE REST
SAINT, PROPLIK OGUNT HUNY THE REST
bedrook available in the Audio House record-
ing studio.
Michigan State Muskell toe and service gaiters, MI. Send resume to Michigan State University in stock Martin blazer 54-961 Guild D4-248 Guild D4-249 Guild D4-307 Guild D4-311 Guild D4-312 Guild D4-313 have a good attention of violin and accordion skills and have a good attention of violin and accordion skills. Open 11 am, Monday to Saturday, until 8:30 pm.
Girls! The best "T" Shirt In Town! Regularly
$6. Now $49. The Aint. 272 Mass.
JAVELIN. 1974, V-8: automatic transmission, air-conditioned, power brakes, power steering, steering, turbocharger.
SunSperms - Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-
contact detection and selection, reasonable
1024 *1024* 841-3570
www.sunsperms.com
1972 Mercedes 220 D Sun run, stereo, rebuilt
at Mercedes-Benz 350D mile warranty AM
at Mercedes-Benz at 843-2600
1970 Cravetroft Impala. 8 floor, 72,000 units. Tireless
capability like new. In good condition. 35'
price.
A cure for fever—"The Victims." Dec. 4 and 12 at an awfully small hall
1969 Cougar XR7. Very nice car! Call 841-6634
-12
(Alvares) Concert guitar, with shoulder strap and case; $150. Call 864-617-9100. 7:00 a.m.
ENTHRAVAGANT PLANT SALE. Perfect holiday
venture. New plant at 12th floor. Dec. 8 to
1-1 am, 4-8 pm. Dec. 9 to 1-1 am,
4-8 pm.
Nordica Foam ski boots. Size 6-7. Call 841-8224.
Excellent boy! 2-1-5 JL speakers $3 each
Excellent girl! 4 artist bass, 6 month old guitar
814-0814
12-7
12-7
Kewrow KX-720 Cassette Deck Top Load. 841.
8524 12-6
Technique Turntable, manual, duetteree & ear-
tirer equipment. Deck price, $128.00
condition 641-601K
COLOR PORTFOLIO, Slides or prints, custom
processing, professional quality, lowest价
程
CAMERA'S-ANTIQUE'S AND CLASSICS. Most models have a $50, some have a $75, and many have an additional $20. Stereo cameras like the Stereo 915 mini camera also equipment Call us at (844) 673-3722 or come by 1547 Kirkton #2. Saturday 9 am to 5 pm.
Leaving town: Pomonaia SR-20 36 stree and
lawn in spared bicycle w/bicycle lice. Call
12-11-48
GREAT BUY! 1606 Budc Kitchen & Hotel, lots of extra:
call Make, call 961-2849 or 961-2848 or 12-11-
Boxed Set -The Best of Marvel Comics The
Malia Book Shop 12-8
Impaired, Germaine Hudson's house is blighted court. context.
Missouri, Missouri, June 12, 10-36, 12-12
at the Joe Jay Theater
The World of Dionysian and Dionysian's
age; at great Christmas presents. 12-8
Book Sleeve
For Sale Realistic TB-301 - 8 track tape recorder-
6.5 inch Tape, 2.5 inch Cassette, 40mm ABS
All Assisted tapes: 843-7397
All Adhesive tapes: 843-7398
The perfect gift for your lazy friend. "The Nan-
Runner's Book" at Mall's Books Shop. 12-8
Trac A-1705, Carnegie $100 Must sell Hardly
823-6493 12-8
Positively, the loved prices in Kansas City for Stover House—$150,000, $165,000, $175,000, $200,000, $235,000, $300,000, $345,000, $390,000, $445,000, $500,000, $550,000, $600,000, $650,000, $700,000, $750,000, $800,000, $850,000, $900,000, $950,000, $1000,000, $1050,000, $1100,000, $1150,000, $1200,000, $1250,000, $1300,000, $1350,000, $1400,000, $1450,000, $1500,000, $1550,000, $1600,000, $1650,000, $1700,000, $1750,000, $1800,000, $1850,000, $1900,000, $1950,000, $2000,000, $2050,000, $2100,000, $2150,000, $2200,000, $2250,000, $2300,000, $2350,000, $2400,000, $2450,000, $2500,000, $2550,000, $2600,000, $2650,000, $2700,000, $2750,000, $2800,000, $2850,000, $2900,000, $2950,000, $3000,000, $3050,000, $3100,000, $3150,000, $3200,000, $3250,000, $3300,000, $3350,000, $3400,000, $3450,000, $3500,000, $3550,000, $3600,000, $3650,000, $3700,000, $3750,000, $3800,000, $3850,000, $3900,000, $3950,000, $4000,000, $4050,000, $4100,000, $4150,000, $4200,000, $4250,000, $4300,000, $4350,000, $4400,000, $4450,000, $4500,000, $4550,000, $4600,000, $4650,000, $4700,000, $4750,000, $4800,000, $4850,000, $4900,000, $4950,000, $5000,000, $5050,000, $5100,000, $5150,000, $5200,000, $5250,000, $5300,000, $5350,000, $5400,000, $5450,000, $5500,000, $5550,000, $5600,000, $5650,000, $5700,000, $5750,000, $5800,000, $5850,000, $5900,000, $5950,000, $6000,000, $6050,000, $6100,000, $6150,000, $6200,000, $6250,000, $6300,000, $6350,000, $6400,000, $6450,000, $6500,000, $6550,000, $6600,000, $6650,000, $6700,000, $6750,000, $6800,000, $6850,000, $6900,000, $6950,000, $7000,000, $7050,000, $7100,000, $7150,000, $7200,000, $7250,000, $7300,000, $7350,000,
Give a gift that will GROW in value: antique-
houser style kitchen cupboard; while trolle-
ding machine; complete attachment; rebuilt
dining room table; complete end tables; re-
build glass top. 842-723-6100. 12-8
FOUND
The Victims" are the only band left that you haven't seen. Dec 4 and 5 at an awful smell
Found at 12th and Louisiana, silver wire frame
in black case. October-test program loaded.
For detailed instructions, call 800-346-3951.
Set of keys near 11th and Kentucky Call 841-2192 to identify.
Pernale, German, shepherd, red collar, NY tag
822-1507 or 843-2566
*
VERGEAS JOBS - Summer full time, Europe, S.A., America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$120 monthly Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free Travel, KA. Berkeley, CA 94704, KA. Berkeley, CA 94704
PSYCHIATRIC ADDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE
PERSONS. Please refer to the Instructor's
milestone encouraged to apply Application apply
to director of nursing, Topka State Hospital.
Phone 913-2450-4576. Opportunity En-
gagement.
Wanted allowances day and night. Daytime
Wanted allowances day and night. Daytime
The Carriage Late Suit Units inside the
Carriage Late Suit Units inside the
JOB5. CRUISE SHIPS! FREIGHTERS! No experience. High pay see Europe, Hawaii, Australia. So. America. Winter. Summer World WORLD C 87, Box 10353, Ca. Sq. 85253.
Part time custodial/mainttenance job available to compensate for cuts. Experience helpful in:
operating office equipment.
Part time day washrooms must be able to work
Monday Friday. Apply in person only. Bare
feet required. No smoking.
Bill Maurer, John O'Dell, Mark Gilman, Kevin
Stern, and Nicholas Schroeder. Dec. 12-
4 afterschool email hall
Driver to transport child home from University preschool-Mon-Tues 11:30 a.m. Call Gallard Center
Kanane City, NY. swim shirter X-1xen clear swimming
clothes and gear for the season. Free shipping on
receipts. Washline machine, dryer, ice maker,
Bathmate, Rainshower toilet, Oxi, Balmain浴室,
Mirror, Vacuum Cleaner, Water Filter
A student half-time research assistant position is offered by the University of Kansas to support a project. Bureau of Child Research is an organization that includes data collection from police and court records, data collection from the Kansas Institute for Children's Health, additional responsibilities of data for computer analysis, data analysis on data collected in a case, and working qualified applicants who have at least a bachelor's degree in a related field. Who has had research experience and who has a bachelor's degree in data analysis? Special examination packages for data analysis. Specification of statistical packages for data analysis. Statistical correlations and t tests is preferred. Some statistics packages for data analysis. Specification of statistical packages for data analysis. Statistical correlations and t tests is preferred. Some statistics
MEN! WOMEN!
NEED EXTRA XMAS MONEY? Secretary catering opensings for water, toilet & laundry cleaning. Christmas parties. Experience in food service; necessary and being prepared to serve guests. Appearance a must. Call Ace at 803-456 or visit www.acebath.com.
Part time coin laundry and clean attendance.
Apply at Norge Village, 24th Avenue, 12-12.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Appointment: 12 months with possibility of ex-
pansion appointment. 12 months with possibility of ex-
pansion month. Duties Conducting behavioral and biota-
nic requirements. B.S. or equivalent experience in
Requirements: B.S. or equivalent experience in
Familiarity with bioethical techniques. Labora-
tory experience with small animal surgery for applica-
tions. Travel Department of Pharmacology and Toxi-
cology West Campus, Lawrence, K. 60053 Phone 844-759-2500
Affirmative Action employer Application are re-
quired. Race religion, sex, disability veteran status,
employment history.
Part time secretary wanted. Must be well equipped, have computer skills, and know office variety. Possible hourly jobs open. 800-271-6835.
If you constantly dream of becoming an important figure in intramural basketball, now you can play for the national team with officials for next term. If becoming such an institution is at least a priority at Restoration Services, 208 Robinson, or another location, then you should be happy.
A student assistant for female quadriplegic students for second semester. Jotting types of research papers, preparing reports, helping with research, etc. Prefer junior or senior positions. 842-3431 or 842-3430 evenings! 12-11
Part time positions available at Rainbow Montessori Preschool for students who ENJOY WORKING with their BFHEN age 21-7; Equip them with computers, a notebook and Call Lianna B. 8-5 833-600-8335 833-7470
31 Big Hoy is now taking applications for full and past time帮 Apply in. 260 Iowa
SUMMER JOBS FORSTER SERVICE How, where,
when, when?
Mc Co 1980 K. E. Vegriggen, Kalispell; Mc 1990
N.J. C. R. G. Hunt, Calgary; Mc 2000
Drivers need must be 18 years or older. Must have a valid driver's license prior to arriving in prison after 4 pts.拍品 Co. 145 W. 36th St. New York, NY 10027.
Part time lumber store clerk. Would prefer grad
dept or B-school major. Apply in person at
the job site.
Administrative Assistant, Office of Instructional
Administration. Prior to appointment, ability required. Familiarity with University Procedures preferred; 1 year time beginning January 1. Req. Bach's Degree in Business Administration or 2 years in Rauley Hali Application deadline December 31.
Position opening. Assistant director of facilities management in Architecture or Engineering, two years of experience in the administration as architect or owner representative; position offered to applicants with a Bachelor's degree. Exposure of prior excellent performance and availability immediately. For further information, contact Facilities Planning, University of Kansas, Box 14026, St. Louis, MO 63130. Resume and resume must be received on or before February 15th. Applicants who are equally Ongoing, Affirmative Action Employer.
LOST
Dress down and dance to "The Victims" at an
woolly small hall Dec. 4 and 5. 12-6
Drew down, and chose to "The waltell at at,
Martha's Glasses, blue bracelet, brown frame, brown
Glasses, blue bracelet, brown frame, brown
Glasses, blue bracelet, brown frame, brown
Last one pair of gold pierced earrings. Reward
included, one British penny. 43.8141
$25 REWARD: Information leading to arrest or
receiving - 2 VISION DAVID MAKPEN SPEAKERS STO-
LEN FREER BLACK HUCK IN L.M.H employ
842-297-366 x 4' x 4'" Candidates - 12
842-297-366. Keep trying.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 A.M. to 9 M.B., Monday, 7 a.m., 7 A.M. to 1:1 M., on Saturday at 10 a.m. at Mass.
MISCELLANEOUS
The Victims?" Just ask the police who we are Apparring at an early small hall. Do you know where this is?
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Carve and cut your own beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive east on Hwy 10-10 approximately 3 miles to County Fair. Open weekends till Christmas. PINE HILL FARM
NOTICE
Planning a model Wintikids will pay cash for your good used furniture, antique Call 842-397-0150.
A WHILE ON THE NILE - a dance with an ancient Egyptian nobilty Wear formal dress from any area Musie from the Worm Wrench Wrangler Collection. See New Hampshire Tickets $2.50 at the door. 12-7
INTERNSISSION GUITAR, Mandolin or Bassist
(50-70hrs per week) 1-hour introductory session,
4-hour guitar lesson, 1.2 hour teaching session,
or classical piano lesson (1.2 hr).
Third of feeding yourself? Naihuma Hall is offering, for the first time over a boarding plan. 30 students will be fed twice a week. Each week can be yours if you choose this plan. Shop and see us or give us a call. NAIHUMA Hall 1234-858-6789
J HODD, BOOKSELLER has just returned from two year success. She is one of the youngest students in Schoolbay books were brought on all the social and natural sciences, philosophy, history, political science, civilization and art and rejuvenation courses. We will be working overtime for the next two weeks to be appearing at a fairly rapid pace. Books should be appearing at a fairly rapid pace and remember books and fine prints make gifts of lasting value. Woo wants to see you at 160 and 180.
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT? back by popular demand, it's an incredibly recordbreaking site at the center of the internet. You can locate it on your computer if you can that anywhere. Get in on the fun with *The Victim*: Oy Yesh, Yo John, Paul George.
"The Victims?" Oh Yeah, Johns, Paul, George
and Dee. Dec 4 and 5 at an easily welcoming
venue.
PERSONAL
Gav-Leshaw Switchboard Counseling and general information. 841-8427 12-12
EXPERT TUTORS We tutor MATH 000-700-
PHYSICS U 800-6500 COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-200-
SOCIETIES U 800-6500 BS in Physics, M.A in Math Call 843-906-3
BS or Computer Science. Call 843-524-311
HARBOR SPECIALS. 4:15 Mon, Tues, and 6:30
Mon. $20.00. Harbor Walking Tour.
MAIDS MOUNTAIN NIGHT. Wed. $10.00 per person.
Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan, 835-3035,
guitar solos and alliances
string instruments in duets
Alexander's Flowers
826 IOWA 842 1320
Our Speciality -
Christmas Consumes at
in and in by the new Harbour Battalts at
the piece of heaven in Lawrences 12
Harbour Battles.
To Whom It may concern. The Panhandle Acute Ascension. The Old American Affairs Office, from the old Clemens A. Officer services from the Old American Affairs Office.
The Mott-Below band is now accepting auditions for the Mott-Below instrumentation. You've performed Strikes in a variety of settings and genres, including acoustic guitars.
The Motel Beers band is now accepting auditions
for the Music Festival. Auditions only require:
803, 843, 913, 841, 921
Jan I.飞 the party was great but where my妹妹! it's OK, Phi Kaira Tan they would be proud. It was a great party, and I felt very happy.
To Terrell at the A D P屋, I was temporarily
hanging out at Knicks' bar. I hope to see you next
week.
Two student season basketball tickets wanted
you any cashmoney. Call Linda 82-74-3770
Unique Christmas gift ARC Registered Yorkshire.
Male, $125; Female, $150- $191.59
COLOR POSITIVO slides or prints, custom
processing, professional quality, lowest prices,
reduced cost.
SISTER KETTLE CAFE fresh food, organic
water spring 140 and Max open 10 am to 6 pm
(8am-5pm)
Many good seats available for Mon, Dec. 11
Midnight Dinner. Call NUA 604-3877
www.nua.com
DEHARBOURIZATION "The consumption of
mass quantities of alcohol until total loss of base
physical self-awareness, attainable only at
the specific Litter." CHECK THE
SPECIALS!
12-12
- **Ski Breckenridge, Keystone, Cupper Mountain and Aspen Junction**
* **Dayslight Plaza on luxury townhouses**
* **Round trip bus transportation**
* **Free wine and cheese picnic**
* **Free lift tickets** (more cost to travel)
SKI THE SUMMIT, MAR. 10-17
ALL FOR $192
Sign-up deadline, Jan. 22
Contact SUA Office
SUN TRIAL
Don't forget to pay your bill. Remember what happened to Pier 1 Illuminator Z.L.F.
Midfield Dental is sold-out for Sat., Dec. 9 and Sunday, Dec. 10. 12-7
Yes! The HUNGALO survived the "New Jim" attack. This is a very well structured damage that Yolfa Kafir & SKOJ were able to overcome.
SHIFT The California Social Learning Center's Correspondence Program is designed by a university-based team of highly qualified educators to become more open, assertive and successful in establishing exciting rewarding relationships with students. Our curriculum is an unstoried envelope, just send a postcard and we'll send you a virtual conference. Shift, Suite 215, Beverly Hills CA 90211
Yet another disappointing football season? No Way! George Allen for Head Coach. 12-12.
Gay Nurses of Kansas are gay rights "Highlights" in the city. Hugh House, Fargo, N.D.; Speaker Mike Miller, Fort Wayne, N.C.; Speaker Mike Miller, Fort Wayne, N.C.;
For Bobby-TLI do anything to help you understand Love, Jeanie 12-6
NOSTER KRITTE CAFE
A FOR A HAPPY,
DAYS, HIHS & MASSS, OPEN 10 a.m.
to 9 p.m.
Do you have a favorite pair of curtains that you would like to reimburse. I need one for sitting in the room.
STATISTICAL TUTORING Call 843-9036
To whisper stole my vest at the Hawk Will you please send me my letter and my keys IMD pass you.
Theses and manuscript. Your ideas presented forcefully and effectively in correct grammar structure. The finished work will reflect precision with precision and smoothness. Evenings 842-1231. 12-8
SERVICES OFFERED
CONTEMPLATING MEDICAL SCHOOLS $6000
CONTEMPLATING MEDICAL SCHOOLS $6000
information $2.99 MIDFAX SERVICES, Box
14735 NW 4TH ST
information $2.99 MIDFAX SERVICES, Box
14735 NW 4TH ST
Need help in math or CS? Be a tutor who can help you with your Math or CS problem. Can you help me solve the math problems?
EXPERT TUTORS. we tutor MATH 600-700-
1495 for CALIFORNIA AND CHIMERY 180-600, QUALIFICATIONS
B.S. in Physics M.A. in Math Call 843-9036 for
Chemistry or Computer Science Call 843-5241 for MATH
DON'T HIT THE RIPPED OFF. Let UMIC Security
guard it against graffiti (agreement 12/18).
Phone 800-753-4946 for more info.
TYPING
I do damned good typing—Peggy. 842-4476. 15
Typist Editor IBM PPC Elite Quality work. Write thesis dissertation welcome email 842-1237 842-1237
PROFESSIONAL TYING SERVICE, 841-2980
THEISM BINDING COPYING - The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawsuits. Let us help you at 828 Mason, or phone 425-310-7816.
Experienced typist, will type term papers, resumes, dissertations, etc. The a paper: 824-8498.
Experienced Typist - term papers, thesis, mla,
electronic IBM艾宝 Proofreading, spelling corrector,
proofreading, proofreading
**MANTENIRMS PROFESSIONAL TYPING Qual-**
**water-how rates. Call us any time 387**
**3387**
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Hired personnel. Law papers, born papers. Mr.
John T. Mullen.
I DO A HELLLU TYPEP JOB CAROLYN.
842-1279
12-6
fast accurate typed. Paperback and 20 jacket.
night flight. Thought, destination飞翔.
Booklet. 12-12.
Need a roommate. BOS monthly, utilities included.
Call Mike, M41-5345. 12-6
Reports, duress, dissertations, legal form, 24 hour service assistance for less than 20 page documents.
Typping-first kind, Hawkeye Typping Service.
N82-84759 1:50 a.m. 12:12
Female to share size twin bedrooms, partially furnished with built-ins, storage closets, 12-6 ft. ceiling plus sitter. Call 841-7986.
Roommate spring surrounded en suite. Share 3.1/2 ft. of bedroom and walk-in closet. Guesthouse apartment 2 floor. Paul 841-7986.
Roommate with built-ins, storage closets, 12-6 ft. ceiling plus sitter. Call 841-7986.
Pompea roommate wanted for Towne apartment
$100 monthly 842-569-300
12-8
1
Female roommate to share furnished ad house with good amenities. Room with private lavatory. Room with private bath.
HOUSE member wanted for $-8 member cooperative.
Call 843-2278 for details.
12-6
WANTED
Recombine wanted to share clean, turn house
off. Call 822-350-7469; no money $55 per hour;
Formal婧婴 roommate for spring semester.
Room is 22'x15'x10'. Room is to-wall cardboard on bus route $33. 2'/12' cell
in room. Flat rate. No deposit required.
Female enrollee wanted to share 2 BR
agit - close to campus, didwater, A $155
BAG - close to campus, didwater, A $155
Roommate wanted at Park 25. $80 a month rent.
Call Bick or Mike at 816-1401. 12-7
Female roommate to share beautiful modern bed,
large closet, & walk-in closet. Sat at 8:31-6:39 early morning, late evening.
Sat at 8:31-6:39 early morning, late evening.
Roommate wanted to share clean furnished 3 BR house close to Preston. Prefect name/availability. Travel included.
Female nominate needed immediately to share 2nd floor apartment. On ban call. Call Kine 877-354-2120.
Lifesize female to share age, ward, roommate/bathroom
shacks or unit. $159.00 MW, AVAILABLE; paid 30% of
cost to union. $219.00 MW, AVAILABLE; paid 60% of
cost to union.
Male roommate, stair 2 bedroom apartment $240,
mn, plus small electric kit #c131-6082 $12-8
12 Bedroom house of apartments in house for rent in New York City, NY. Share a room with other 738-755-7699 (Telephone).
Two females need seed for spring semester.
Need information from counsel. Call 842-647-8750.
Ask for knit or lace.
Residents wanted to share two bedrooms marmorated with
electric kitchen, dishwashers, bathroom #8111,
8112, #8113, #8114.
Male roommate wants to share furnished Jay-
hawk Towers tents. Utility paid, own room for
360. Rent is $150 a month.
Roommate passed immediately. Excapping male,
wife, children. Comes by 81 McDonalds (6-30-98) for
meal.
or 1 or 2 female roommates. Jaiyawhak
Towers, $95/mo. utilities paid - Cal-Mel
Machines, $30
Pennsault female inmate for large, three bedroom honeysuckle
house. Beneath route 78 monthly utilities.
Affiliates 924-9100 12-12
Roommate wanted. Spring semester share 2 bedrooms, 3 bedroom apartments $160 per month. Bachelor's degree required.
2 male room duplex; $83 + 1/3 utility room;
room duplex, w. wcarrying, dwashower, C/A;
room duplex, w. wcarrying, dwashower, C/A;
PART-TIME COOK WANTED to prepare two
breakfasts to begin in January Good Day You 829-760-
3411
2 roommates for JaylaHawker Towers
2 apartments 2 bedrooms, all utilities paid
12/12
Clean, non-smoking roommate wanted.
Wanted, Walking assistant from 12:30
Call: 841-7678
Tenant to rent bedroom,床房 bachelor privileges
for room and bathroom facilities $20/month, 1-3 bathrooms
facilities $50/month, 1-3 bathrooms Citi
Christian roommate wanted for spring semester in a large furnished upstairs 2 bedroom apartment. $85-$100 month per person including usual roommate package (Call Pin, Fhil, 614)- 843-356乘晚餐 12:12
2
Thursday, December 7, 1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Foreigners flee troubled Iran
TEHRAN, Iran—Hundreds of U.S. dependents left Iran yesterday, joining the growing exodus of foreign workers fleeing the anti-government violence that has enveloped the country. Oil production continued to tumble because of the crippling three-day strike by Iranian workers.
Meanwhile, reliable sources reported that Iran's political opposition leader, Karmil Sanjiby of the National Front, had been released from detention last night. The report gave rise to speculation that the 71-year-old Sanjaby, who was a senior ally of Iran, 8, had been freed to help form a coalition government to stem the street violence.
About 45,000 Americans and 110,000 other foreigners were in Iran last January when religious demonstrators opposed to the shah's modernization reforms and political foes seeking reforms in his authoritarian rule took to the streets.
Unleaded gas may be rationed
WASHINGTON--Alfred Kahn, President Jimmy Carter's chief inflation and yieldestimate management firm, soon have to choose between raising the interest rate or cutting it.
In testimony before the congressional Joint Economic Committee, Kahn said that in his opinion the reason for the spot shortages of unleaded gasoline—which most late-model cars require—was the continuation of government controls over the price of gasoline and other fuels.
"In the long run I believe the government has to let the price of energy go up," he said.
Speaking to reporters later, Kalm said that the gasoline shortage could be relieved by a 100 percent increase in the price of unleaded fuel or consumer electricity.
AF to reconsider aaus' cases
WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court yesterday ordered the Air Force to reopen the case in Matovich, who was discharged in 1975 after being the victim of a homicide.
In an opinion written by Judge Oscar H. Davis, the appeals court said it did not challenge the right of the Air Force to discharge homosexuals.
But Davis said that the Air Force had failed to give a specific reason why Matthias should not come and fall under an exemption that allows some baggage handling by the air force.
The appeals court, in a companion case, also ordered the Navy to review its discharge of Vernon E. Berg III, a navy enlistant, who acknowledged being a prisoner.
Matiovich's discharge nationwide protests from the gay community. Matliovich, now living in San Francisco, became a prominent spokesman for the movement.
Rep. Jeffries outspent Keys
TOPEKA-Congressman-elect Jim Jeffries spent more than twice on his campaign as the 2nd district opponent, Martha Keys, D-Kan.
By comparison, Keys reported spending $132,425 and receiving $117,316.
In reports filed yesterday with the Secretary of State, Jeffries showed expenditures for the year of $280,916 and receipts of $281,122.
The Republican congressman-elect reported spending $50,398 of his total after Oct. 24, while Keys reported expenditures of $51,742 during the same period. The campaign report filed yesterday covered the period from Oct. 24 through Nov. 27.
In addition to outspending Keys for the entire campaign, Jeffries reported far more donations from private individuals and political action committees, which
Men arraigned in sub case
ST. LOUIS—The government yesterday reduced charges against two men arrested for allegedly plotting to steal a nuclear submarine.
Edward Mendhenall, 24, of Rochester, N.Y., and James W. Cosgrove, 26, of Geneva, N.Y., had been scheduled to go on trial yesterday on charges of conspiring to steal the US Trepang. However, the trial was postponed, and the charge was changed later in the day to wire fraud.
The two then appeared before U.S. District Judge H. Meredith for arrangment on the wire fraud charge. They pled innocent to the lesser charge. The judge rejected the case.
Attorneys for the two men suggested the two developed the scheme to swindle $300,000 in front money from a St. Louis businessman. The charge of wire fraud was estimated at $400,000.
TOPEKA - the next chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee will be veterinary western Kansas legislator Mike Hayden, State Rep. Wendell Dellay.
Lady said his selection of Hayden for the top job was based on his belief that Hayden has the ability to remain compassionate, while protecting the public from harm.
The Ways and Means panel handles virtually all of the financially-related legislation going through the Kansas Legislature. The committee chairman is a
The speaker-elect explained he was announcing the appointment today to give Hayden more time to prepare for the upcoming legislative session which
Bennett seeks aid for counties
Hayden, 34, is from Atwood and was re-elected in November to his fourth
in the house. His district is composed of Cheyenne, Rawls, Decatur and
Saunders.
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett yesterday requested a disaster declaration for 52 western Kansas counties that suffered more than $2.1 million in losses (http://www.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett yesterday requested a disaster declaration for 52 western Kansas counties that suffered more than $2.1 million in losses)
In a letter to Francis Tobin, the regional director of the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration, Bennett said the majority of the damage was caused by flooding.
He said the co-ops sustained more than $98,570 in power lines and pole damage, $93,065 in direct restoration labor costs and $27,303 in loss revenue for a total five-day loss of $2.13 million. He added that the Kansas Department of Transportation suffered a $400 loss with the collapse of a radio tower.
DC-6 crash in Omaha kills 7
A federal disaster declaration would make the co-ops eligible for low-interest loans to aid them in recovery.
OMAHA, Neb. — A Mexicana Airlines DC-6 exploded and crashed into a Missouri River lake at the end of a runway as it was taking off yesterday, killing two people.
Early reports indicated the plane might have been carrying members of a Mexican delegation who had toured irrigation manufacturing plants in Mexico.
Larned escapee still at large
Witnesses said the plane exploded when it was about 50 feet in the air and then crashed into the side of the levee.
Parts of the aircraft were scattered about 100 feet. Many pieces were burning two hours after the crash.
Don Burns, western region director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, has agents had no idea which direction Glenald Rider, 29, might have taken when he was arrested.
LARNED-Authorities yesterday were uncertain where to look for a confessed murderer who escaped from the Larned State Hospital.
"We're notifying law enforcement at all locations where we suspect he may have headed," Burns said, but he called the actions normal procedure.
A reported sighting of Rider early yesterday led police in Independence, Mo., to place a motel along Interstate 70 under surveillance. However, during the afternoon, police, who had been uncertain about the validity of their information, said it appeared Rider was not there.
Weather...
Weather will be cloudy and cold today. There is an 80 percent chance of snow. Temperatures will be in the 20s dropping to 10 above tonight. Snow accumulation will be 1-3 inches. A traveler's advisory is out.
Schneider Retail Liquor Store
1610 W. 23rd
(Next to Pizza Hut)
We have an outstanding selection
of imported and California wines.
Schneider Retail Liquor Store
1610 W. 23rd
(Next to Pizza Hut)
We have an outstanding selection of imported and California wines.
Upstairs,
Downstairs...
for all around the house
ZENITH
The AVALON • K1720W
17"
Just the set for family room, den, bedroom or to take away to school.
Compact Gold TV with cabinet beautifully finished in simulated grained American walnut on top and ends with accents of brushed Nickel-Gold color highlighting the front.
$349.95
CHROMACOLOR II
The quality goes in before the name goes on*
Grogg Tire
814 W. 23rd.
842-5451
10
Upstairs,
Downstairs...
for all around
the house
ZENITH®
The AVALON • K1720W
17"
Just the set for family
room, den, bedroom to
take away to school
Compact Color TV with
rainforest beautifully
finished in simulated
grained American Walnut
on top and ends with
accents of brushed Nickel-
Gold color highlighting
the font
$349.**
CHROMACOLOR II
The quality goes in before the name goes on*
Gregg Tire
814 W. 23rd.
842-5451
REPEAT OF A
SELL OUT!
IT'S ANOTHER . . .
PRICES CAN'T
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Thursday, December 7, 1978
University Dally Kansan
3
Sabbatical ideas sought
By JAKE THOMPSON
Staff Reporter
Following approval of its most recent sabbatical leave proposal, the Faculty Executive Committee decided yesterday to ask three administrators for informal suggestions and comments on the document.
The action is the latest attempt in a two-and-a-half year struggle to change the way children learn.
Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction and FacEx chairman, said the committee would ask administrators to review the proposal in meeting the proposal to the University Council.
The sabbatical leave proposal will be sent this week to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, R. Caligauri, vice president of the university and Mike Davis, University general counsel.
Swartz said FaceEx would ask Shankel, Calgaard and Davis for a response to the proposal, either in writing or at a meeting. They will be able to do that after it before making a formal proposal.
FACEX HAS been working on the proposal since Oct. 12, when it formed a committee to review the proposal.
The subcommittee members, F. Hutton Barron, professor of business, and T.P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics, proposed guidelines the following week that have been refined into the proposal the administrators will receive.
"We've done all that we're able to do for now," Swartz said.
Several members chuckled and clapped when Barron asked for Fackel's approval. "Well, it's really great," he said.
"I think the subcommittee should be commended for its fine efforts," Barron
FacEx spent many of its sessions since Oct. 12 defining differences between faculty members who would be considered definitely meritorious and exceptionally meritorious in their individual sabbatical leave requests.
That represents a change in criteria for evaluating sabbatical leave candidates from those now used by the University Committee on Sabbatical Leaves.
BEFORE FACEEX'S discussion of the sabbatical leave proposal, the Senate Executive Committee discussed a letter from James Seaver, professor of history and chairman of the Senate Libraries Committee.
Currently, 4 percent of the faculty are awarded sabbaticals each year.
Seaver's letter announced that the Library Committee had approved a revised KU Libraries Lending Code and had approved a motion opposing the moving of the art library to the new Spencer Art Museum.
The second motion reaffirmed a vote last year to oppose moving the art library. Both motions will be discussed in today's council meeting. SenEx members said.
Mark Bernstein, Lawrence graduate student and Library Committee member, said the library committee opposed the administration's plan to move the library.
barnstein said she the administration did not respond to the Library Committee's feelings.
TUCSON, Artiz. (AP)—Gov. Robert F. Bennett said that disenchancement over higher education's ability to solve society's problems has spawned a challenge to the academic world's long-held claim on large amounts of public funding.
College funds called endangered
He said that higher education was going to have to do a better job of selling itself to the practical politicians, whose constituents no longer were convinced of the value of pouring vast sums into colleges and universities.
Those beautiful days when academicians could hide behind their ivory towers and contemplate their great thoughts are long since gone," Bennett said in remarks prepared for a conference here on financing of post-secondary education.
THE CONFERENCE was sponsored by the University of Arizona at the Education Campus.
Those interested in higher education must spend much of their time now "fighting for jobs," and those who are interested in transportation dollars, and fighting those who may be interested in employment dollars, and so on down the line. Bennett said
"One of the biggest fights looming on the
TOKYO (AP)—Twenty Japanese tankers, carrying a total of 1.5 billion gallons of Arab oil, are sitting motionless in the Pacific near Two Jima. They are a floating stockpile, intended to assure that the油 of owl, vital to Japan's industry, doesn't dry up.
Japan maintains storage flotilla of oil reserves
The tankers have only one order from the Japanese government: Stay in a 252-square-mile area south of Japan until needed. The nearest ship is about 600 miles from Tokyo. There have been since September 1, with their engines running just enough to back the currents.
"The tanker reserve, as we call it, uses idle tankers and is part of the official program to increase Japan's emergency oil reserve to 20 million tons 6 billion gallons by year 1985," said Kazuo Takayama, chief planning of the Japan National Oil Corp.
Japan uses about 220 million gallons of oil a day.
There is not enough storage space on land to hold the reserves the country thinks it will.
"It's one way to increase oil imports and cut Japan's trade surplus. Takama says.
"Whenever a typhoon approaches, the tankers are ordered to take refuge in them."
Alarmed at world criticism of its huge trade surplus, $11 billion last year, Japan started an emergency import program, and the importation of oil to be stored in tankers.
The crews, averaging 30 per tanker, are changed every three months.
Tankers are also instructed to keep about 20 miles away from each other to avoid accidental collisions.
Takayama said the corporation is not worried about the crews' reaction to poisoning.
"one round voyage to the Middle East takes one month, anyway," he said.
he asked about female crew members, he said, bursting into laughter, "Of course, this was a joke."
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KANSAN TV TIMES
Benjil 'Very Own Christmas Story' 7:00; 2.9 The loveable pooch makes a Christmas jount to Switzerland where he learns that countries all over the world have their own names for Santa Claus. Kris Kringle meets Benji who sees out of spirits for his merry mission this year.
TONIGHT'S
HIGHLIGHTS
All Star Tribute To Jimmy Stewart 9:00; 13. The Oscar winning actor is saluted at a black tie Hollywood party with comedy, songs and remembrances by Hondo Taylor, Taylor, Henry Fonda, Carol Burnett, Jones, and Fred MacMurray.
This space for rent. 864-4358
Pink Panther's Christmas 7:30, 2, 9, 13 Down and out in Central Park, the starving and half frozen feline can't even get arrested and that's only one reason for the disaster. His disaster-brid bid to get some of his old Christmas both in and on him.
EVENING
P. M.
5:30 ABC News 2,9
NCNews 4,27
CBS News 5,13
Rookies 41
6:30 Porter Wagner 2
Hollywood Squares 4
Sha Na Na 5
Dating Game 9
MacNeil/Lehr Report 11
Craven World 13
Kansas City Strip 19
Mary Tyler Moore 27
Newlywed Game 41
6:00 News 2, 5, 9, 13, 27
Cross Wits 4
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
7:00 Benji's Own Christmas Story 2
9,13
Project U.F.O.4, 27
Waltions 5
Once Upon A Classic 11
Tic Tac Dough 41
7:30 Pink Panther's Christmas 2,9
So The Story Goes 11
Joker's Wild 41
7:05 Nova19
8:00 Barney Miller 2, 9
Quincy 4, 27
Country Christmas 5, 13
Callahan 1, 16
"Mary"—128 Men" 41
8:15 Movie—"Monty Python and the Holy Grail" 19
8:00 Soap 2,9
9:00 Family 2,9
David Cassidy - Man Under
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All Star Tribute To Jimmy
Stewart 5,13
Celebrity Concert 27
10:00 News 2,4,5,9,13,27
Love Experts 41
Dick Cavett 19
11:00 Bob Newhart 9
Dick Cavett 11
MacNeil/Llehrer Report 19
Columbo 13
10:30 Starky & Hutch 2
Johnny Carson 4, 27
Streets of San Francisco 5
Mary Tyler Moore 9
ABC News 11, 19
M "A*S"H!13
M "A*S"H!13
11:30 Man From U.N.C.L.E. 5
Startsy & Hutch 9
Flash Gordon 41
11:40 S.W.A.T.2
said in the highly competitive fight for scarcity, collar staff courage to address climate change and other challenges.
A.M.
Practical politicians, he said, would have to walk a tightrope of reflecting the desires of their constituents while at the same time selling the cause of higher education.
It also is the job of the academicians to do their own selling job. Bennett said.
12:00 Tomorrow 4, 27
Phil Silvers 41
12:30 Movie—"Bella Are Ringing"
Best of Groucho 41
12:50 W. Arm 9, 9
12:50 News 2
12:50 New 4
Movie—"12 Angry Men" 41
12:50 Story Of Jesus 2
12:50 News 5
12:50 Anna Karenin" 41
12:50 Art Linkletter 5
12:50 Dick Van Dyke 41
12:50 Andy Griffith 4
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news and weather
horizon for education is really the fight between the dollars that must go to vocational education and the dollars that must go to improve higher education.
"We are passing through, in my opinion, a time when you will find that those who want the dollars now being allocated to education will be the first to shout their disenchantment about higher education's failure to solve many of the crises that confront our nation," he said. "We are being told to be talking about alternative allocation of dollars in order to satisfy these problems."
BENNETT SAID he is in "that relatively small cavalry of characters that believes we are the greatest thing."
"I know that in many instances people who are involved in the academic world believe that politics is beneath them. They believe that for the most part the public should accept the importance and treasure the value of what they're doing.
"But that time has long since passed."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
DECEMBER 7,1978
KUAC rumbling again
Familiar rumblings seem to be coming from the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. And if KUAC's past is any indication, these rumblings can only mean bad news for University of Kansas students.
At issue is the price of football and basketball season tickets, which could be reduced in October 1980, when a ticket surcharge agreement made in 1966 will expire.
However, a price decrease seems unlikely because KUAC will need additional money in 1980 to pay off a $1.8 million loan from the Kansas University Endowment Association for the recent renovation of Memorial Stadium.
THE SURCHARGE, which totals $50,000 a year, was added to help pay for expansion of seating on the stadium's east side. Under the surcharge agreement between the KUAC Advisory Board and the All-Student Council, season tickets were increased $4 for basketball and $5 for football.
It was presumed that when the east stadium loan expired the surcharge would be dropped. But according to the 1966 agreement, the surcharge is subject to a review to determine whether it will be continued.
KUAC, under its agreement with the Endowment Association, must pay $50,000 in additional yearly payments when the 1966 loan expires, from $168,000 to $218,000.
Then in 1983, when a $10,000-a-year loan for expansion of the stadium's west side expires, KUAC's payment increases by $10,000 a year, for a total
of $228,000 a year until the loan is paid off.
THERE'S THE RUB. Somewhere within the secretive confines of KUAC,
$50,000 in 1980 and $10,000 in 1983 must be found to meet loan obligations.
Although KUAC officials say they do not know where the money will come from, they say it can come from ticket sales, which, according to Doug Messer, assistant athletic director and business manager, "is probably the most logical place."
But, Messer says, season ticket prices will depend upon the results of reviewing the 1966 agreement and upon operational expenses and revenues. To say the surcharge will be extended to cover the new loan, he says is misleading.
YET, CONSIDERING the terms of KUAC's loan agreement with the Endowment Association, one finds it easy to accept Mike Harper's view of the surcharge agreement.
Harper, student body president,
said, "I don't believe they ever had an
intention to reduce those tickets
despite an agreement in 1966. They
thought we would forget about it since
it was 12 years ago."
Whether Harper's assessment is right remains to be seen, but KUAC still has time to fulfill its obligation to students and eliminate the surcharge.
Whatever its decision, KUAC, for the sake of establishing open, honest relations with students, owes the studentry an explanation of its actions. Despite the rumblings, one hopes the news won't be bad this time.
Red tapeworms bungle their own reform effort
One of the most popular recent targets for political critics has been "big government", a rather elusive term that logically would apply equally well to both bureaucratic rest and military blasted military budget, although it is seldom used that indiscriminately.
Unfortunately, as with most governmental efforts, those agencies have botched
Nevertheless, some government agencies are showing signs of feeling the sting of criticism, and at least two have taken steps to reduce paperwork and increasing efficiency.
Not that these actions were well conceived in the first place. It's just that this time government has managed to carry out poorly conceived ideas poorly.
THE U.S. DEPARTMENT of Labor was quick to respond to the call for a less burdensome federal machine. Sensing that it would be more efficient, the department managed, in one gloomy, bold move, to significantly ease paper problems for the Veterans Administration while drastically reducing the unemployment rate among Vietnam War veterans.
What the Labor Department did was very simple indeed. In October 1977, it proclaimed that anyone separated from the military for more than 48 months would not be considered a Vietnam veteran, regardless of when they might have served.
Imagine the possibilities. Why, the House Veterans Affairs Committee pointed out that on September 30, 1977, there were 30,367 unemployed Vietnam veterans in Texas and 28,131 in Arkansas, ruling went into effect, there were only 10,483, a reduction of nearly 66 percent.
IT WAS A miracle of modern government.
But that was only the beginning. Although reducing unemployment by sleight-of-hand might be good enough for the Department of Labor, the FBI decided long ago that its own bureaucracy was getting way out of hand. And many people were bulking. It was time for decisive action.
Unfortunately, the bulging files were not the reason why it was time for decisive action. A better explanation is found in the fact that in 1975 Congress broadened the Freedom of Information Act, giving citizens access to federal documents unless the law would present a compelling reason for keeping those documents under wraps.
Faced with the prospect of hordes of snoopy citizens barging into headquarters
John Whitesides
demanding a peek at old records, the FBI decided was time to do a little cleaning.
So, in April 1978, the FBI instructed its field offices to destroy all records of cases that had been closed for more than 10 years. By October 1977, the FBI had decided that all records closed for the FBI had decided that it be even better shredding machine fodder.
AS THE FB explained, it was simply following "good business management." As its critics charged, it was simply "covering its tracks."
Whatever the reason, the FBI was cutting down on red tape and bulging files. It was.
Except that now the FBI is discovering that its little plan may have backfired. Although the plan headed off possible citizen inquiries, the FBI has now managed to stop its own investigations before the investigations can even be started.
Reform is not an easy task, and its unintended consequences often are just as bad as the problems that inspired the reform in the first place. But when the reform is reformed are shady, as in the FBI's case, you can bet the results will be disastrous.
As one befuddled agent told the Wall Street Journal:
"We were looking for a guy in here the northern Virginia area. You say, 'Well, look for old what's-his-name who was running with him.' But no one remembered old what's-his-name's name, and the file's gone."
Maybe big government is a blessing. All the crooks and misguided fools sometimes manage to be strangled by the tortured web of bureaucratic regulations.
Triplicate forms and bureaucratic bungling are an unnecessary evil of our present-day government. But never underestimate the ability of that government to abuse those very actions designed to wipe out those evils.
Pity the rank-and-file FBI man—the administration has done it to him again.
But then again, maybe we could just get rid of all the crooks and fools.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60045 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months. First-class postage is $2.95 per subscription. County. Student subscriptions are $624 a semester, used to student activity fee.
Editor
Steve Frazier
Business Manager
Don Green
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Advisor Chuek Chowins
Taxes need inflation adjustment
"God-awful."
That's how Alfred Kahn, chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, described the problem his boss, President Carter, has vowed to lick, even at the risk of being a one-term president.
It grew more omnivorous for Carter last week. Price, who announced, were riving 2 percent faster than anyone else in the league.
The problem is inflation.
Until then, all the president's men, including Secretary of the Treasury W. Michael Blumenthal, insisted the inflation rate was hovering at 8 percent. But Kahn but not Blumenthal inflation rate at 10 percent, the highest level since 1974.
"I would maintain the fight against inflation," the president said. "I believe this is exactly what the American people want. Instead of being an unpopular act, I think it would be a popular act to maintain it."
Still, two days later. Carter renewed his vow.
Rick Alm
BUT IT WILL remain popular only as long as Americans understand how inflation impoverishes them. Paychecks will buy 10 percent less this year. And the 8 percent increase over last year has been more than wiped out by the rise in prices.
The income tax laws were written for an economy with little or no inflation. That economy no longer exists. Consumer prices have risen about 56 percent since 1972, and incomes have been chasing the rising prices.
And after income tax bills arrive next year, it will look even bleaker.
income. As a family's income increases, the family moves into a higher tax bracket and must pay a larger percentage of their income.
This hits taxpayers hardest in times of high inflation. Their higher income buys fewer goods and services, but more of their income goes to taxes. After a raise matched by inflation, they cannot afford to buy as much as before.
INFLATION'S DISTORTION of the impact of income taxes hits some taxpayers particularly hard. Those with many dependents lose more because the value of their standard deductions declines with the value of the dollar. Those who depend on income from savings often are forced to pay tax rates of more than 100 percent.
TAKE, FOR example, the hypothetical four-member families common to most government statistical matter. The average income for a family of $1,385 income taxes last year. This year, their income will be $16,295 – 4 percent more than last year – but their tax will be $15,788.
That's double jeopardy-income taxes in inflationary times.
As taxes rob purchase power, moreover, demands for higher wage increases mount. Higher wages add to producers' costs and contribute to inflation, making the problem worse.
The "bracket rate" problem can be erased by indexing tax rates to inflation. When prices rise 10 percent, the tax brackets would be adjusted upward to compensate. Standard deductions and personal exemptions would rise automatically with the change in the consumer price index.
Their paychecks bought 2 percent less than last year. And on top of that, they paid $261 more to the federal government. If their income kept pace with inflation, rising to $1,650, they would still lose $272 to taxes.
The purchasing power of family incomes rose at an annual average of 1.6 percent during a 20-year period ending in the recession of 1974. With today's inflation rate, it is still significantly less than that in year to make the real wage earns a typical of the past year.
The family would earn $17,400; but it still lost purchasing power because the tax increase of $25 more than $16 could have been avoided.
Taxpayers would not pay taxes on inflation.
A simply remedy exists.
The Treasurv gets rich off inflation.
TAX INDEXING solves another problem. The biggest beneficiary of inflation is the federal government because, as prices and wages rise, tax receipts increase. But increases increase faster than inflation because of the progressive tax rates: in the above example, when inflation rose 10 percent, taxes rose 19 percent.
Income taxes indexed to prices would end the profit the federal government realizes from inflation. Tax receipts would rise only when real income increased—or when Congress raised taxes by voting.
And Congress escapes the responsibility of voting on a tax increase.
Without tax indexing, the Kahn's "god-awful" situation can only get worse.
WHERE'S MOM GOING?
INTO TOWN TO BUY A FEW GROCERIES!
12
2-0105
To the editor:
'Children of democracy' for tyranny
Curious events reveal themselves in the press these days. Thousands of Red Chinese demonstrate for free speech, and their tyrants not their heads in agreement.
A few KU students ask to move a statue, and their elected representatives renmorestate and enact a law to prohibit those statues from moving about moving the statue (Kansan, Nov. 30).
The children of tyranny for democracy?
The children of democracy for tyranny? It certainly is puzzling, but perhaps we proles don't understand.
It must be that the Student Senate is actually preserving freedom, and we are ignorant of their attempt. The legislation restricting the speech of the members of the Student Bar Association is protecting the view of the "representative majority" from the scurrilous views of the "unrepresentative minority."
In their effort to protect the student majority, our sometimes student leaders would do well to read "Democracy in America," by Alexia De Tocqueville, the founder of the amendments thereto, and "Beyond Freedom and Dignity," by B.F. Skinner.
These reading carefully point out the errors of the student senators' thinking (7). They have been clarified when they took Western Civilization, for the readings are required for the course. No doubt, our leaders went Western Civilization on the grounds the course was right.
Assenting to the principle, a corollary emerges: No four-legged animals, Student Bar Association members, may speak to the great two-legged animal who strides in Topeka—the governor. Enough of this silliness.
Apparently, our porcine leaders (literary allusion to "Animal Farm") subscribe to the principle: All students are equal, but some students are more equal than others.
Meanwhile, the demonstrations for free speech go on in China, and at the University of Pennsylvania.
Dennis Embry
Lawrence graduate student
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Red Lion ambiance parallels Jonestown
"You see," said Mr. Lion, "there are any regulars who order the special without the crude necessity of choice and so deserve extra-large sizes of pecan pie (please say Thank you, Bill," as you leave), and there is a reason to treatenewt to take the seats of my regulars."
"You see," said Mr. Jones, "there are we know who how to save the world and don't have to think about it (please call me Dad). You know who to be with (and who will, wore yet, try to persecute us."
No make mistake, the appeal of Mr. Lion's
Cafe Show, reported in the Kansas De, 11
Friday.
I've witnessed the Red Lion Cafe Show,
the shit all rumored humiliated, the regulars
that are so bad.
Roger Martin Assistant instructor of English
Suit against Senate no laughing matter
To the editor:
"I'm having a good time with it," "it's hilarious," "a lame brain idea." What has caused Mike Harper, president of the student body, to chuckle so?
The fumint joke of Harper's life is none other than the filing of a lawsuit against the Student Senate and Harper. I can only guess that the suit is hilarious because of its allegation: The Senate deprived students of their constitutional rights by forbidding them from petitioning the governor concerned in political issue the Senate wished to furnish.
Or perhaps it is hilarious because Jeff Roth, president of the Student Bar Association, "stormed" into Mr. Harper's office asking that the Senate take immediate action to correct this constitutional infringement.
Whether our president sees humor in the protest or the constitutional infringement or in the challenging of his most high authority, he is wrong.
Our elected officials have a duty not only to enact constitutional laws, but to be sensitive to the political complaints of their constituents. Laughter by a legislator or speaker is an expression of unconstitutional laws smacks of contempt for both our Constitution and our people.
I question Mr. Harper's fitness for public office in view of such manifestations of公敌.
John Olson Lawrence law student
Fan says gladiators better than gridiron
Now that Dam Fambruch has been named as head football coach and recruiting will begin, I think it is time for the University of Kansas to take stock of its football program. "I will look at it," he leads me to speculate on introducing a new spectator sport at KU.
To the editor:
For sheer spectacle, violence and mass appeal, the sports of today cannot compare with the sports of the past. That the University should unite with other sports powerhouses—Wichita State University and Fort Hays State University being the first two I could think of—and as much as possible, they will do.
Romans turned out by thousands every day to see the gladiators, and I think that the average football fan is not far removed from the Roman. So there is already an audience.
Chancellor" by the crowds. Scandally clown lead the contestants in the arena and present them to the crowd. To further entertain the audience, they should be permitted on the stadium grounds.
It is a Saturday. The fans are streaming into Memorial Stadium, and then to the blare of trumpets, the chancellor, in the role of Caesar, enters to the thundering of "Hail
At this point, though, the considerations of the modern era must take over. In order not to murder each contestant, blunt clubs should be used in the boxing swords. And the object would be to knock your opponent out instead of killing him, much the same as in modern boxing, which requires less violence.
Each contestant would have no padding, but would wear a protector for his teeth. He would have a small shield, and if desired, a small net to tris his onpont.
Gladiatorial contests would cost less than the current football program but include more violence, which the modern football fan really wants to see, according to studies.
At the same time it would revive an appreciation for classical antiquity. Besides, Kansas certainly couldn't do worse in rival contest than it is doing in football.
Clifford Ratner Jr.
Wichita sophomore
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after publication, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, December 7, 1978
University police yesterday reported that a student's car was stolen and that the School of Business office in Summerfield Hall was broken into.
POLICE said a student resident of GSP Hall,
500 W. 11th St., reported the theft of her 1971
Toyota from the park's parking lot between
2:30 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday.
Police said the student valued the car at $750.
KU School of Business employees at the helm $246 Dataphone from 202 Sturn Hall
The theft occurred between 4:45 p.m.
Saturday and 9 a.m. Tuesday. How the
office was broken into was unknown police
said.
Wilma Bowline, instructor in speech and drama, reported that her car received $125 in damage when someone apparently tried to break into it Saturday.
Douglas County is making little progress on its plan to form an emergency preparedness board, Travis Brann, director of the county's Civil Defense Department, said yesterday.
Little progress made on board for emergencies
Brunn told the Douglas County commissioners that the proposal, which called for an emergency preparedness board with representatives from the county, Lawrence. Lawrence said the county, Durham, Davenport, had received a call at the Lawrence City Commission meeting Tuesday night.
Brann said the City Commission would not accept the proposal with the provision that two city commissioners represent Lawrence. Bran said the city commission must be able to substitute a city staff member for a city commissioner on the board.
The commission also decided yesterday to place a bicentennial bell, donated to the county by two local sculptors, in the rotunda of the Douglas County Courthouse.
Peter Whitenight, County Commission chairman, said he thought the rotunda would be the best place for the bell because it would be more accessible to the public.
Four possible locations, including the county commission meeting room, the lawn between the courthouse and the Judicial and Law Enforcement Building, and a balcony outside of the courthouse, were recommended for the bell.
My eyes are a weary red,
My jeans have worn a hole in behind (you can't see it by turning the page).
And my pocketbook is thin from inflated bills and too much party.
What will I do?
Mike
(a simulated picture)
I need a new pair of jeans (my bands are in my pocket to keep myself warm).
Think I'll dress over to Jeans for Beams,
where I can buy dark denim for just $10.25,
or a sweatshirt for only $5.50.
Police Beat
Jeans for Jeans sales quality clothing at a cheap price. Granted, the店 isn't fancy, (those guys won't even replace the carpet), but who cares?
Compiled by Henry Lockard
jeans for beans shirts and skirts 1903 MAXIMUM
Police said the car was parked in the Visual Arts building's service drive between 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. when it was damaged. Police said the driver's door showed marks indicating that someone had prized it with a metal object.
Lawrence police yesterday reported that Joe Branman, Alquero N.P., M.N., senior. 2449 Winterbrook drive, reported that vandals did $150 damage to his car.
POLICE SAID Bramans' car was parked in a block of Alabama street on Decem-ber 23, 2014.
Other reports reported by Lawrence police included a burglary and two thefts.
Robert Oyster, owner of Fantasy Four, 405
New Hampshire St., reported that $440.25
Oyler said two concert lights valued at $120 each, a microphone and stand valued at $100.25 and a speaker cabinet valued at $200 also were stolen in the burglary.
worth of stereo equipment was stolen Monday night or Tuesday morning.
A Stillwell man reported the theft
tuesday of a $500 Brittany Spaniel dog from
the Brooklyn Zoo.
Police said the building's garage window had been broken out.
POLICE SAID the dog was taken from its chain which had been secured to the man's hand.
Also reported stolen were two snow trees from a car, which was parked at 1201 Townsend Drive.
Report calls Kansas taxes unfair
By TIM SHEEHY Staff Reporter
relationship between income and the percentage of taxes paid to state and local
The tax structure of Kansas is regressive. It inequitable a University of Kansas business school and a state group of state legislators gathered yesterday for the annual KU Institutes for tax planning.
In a report prepared for an interim committee on taxation and presented to the legislators at the Kansas Union, Darwin Daicoff, professor of economics, said that both state and local taxes placed a greater burden on those least able to nav.
In Diacoff's report, taxpayers were categorized according to their income and the percentage of income they paid in taxes.
FOR EXAMPLE, according to Diafoe's computations of the "effective tax rate," persons who earn under $3,000 annually pay 27 percent of their income in state and local taxes, while those earning $8,000-$9,990 pay 11.75 percent of their income.
According to Daicoff, there is an inverse
Also appearing with Daicoff before the legislators were members of the Special Committee on Assessment and Taxation. The committee has been studying the state of reissuing property across the state of remove inequities in the property tax.
If the committee decides a new assessment is a good idea and the Legislature agrees, re-evaluation would
probably begin next year and be completed in 1983.
DAIOCFF'S REPORT also concluded that rural areas bear the least burden of taxation in relation to population, but bear the larger burden in terms of income.
Diaffco told the legislators that many of the solutions for eliminating the high degree of regressivity and inequities would not be politically expedient.
"We have talked a lot about revising taxes and eliminating inequities in our tax system," Daicoff said. "Let's be realistic. In some cases, utilities in the state are five times their share of what they should. Are we going to give them a break?"
Daicoff told the legislators they might also look at other taxes.
Enter the House of Cathay
Cathay is one of Lawrence's most distinctive restaurants, serving the finest in Chinese food and cuisine. At Cathay you will delight in the delicate aromas of fresh fish, the fine hard-cooked dishes from Central China, or engourish yourself on the rich natural flavor of foods from Bodiam China. Visit Cathay and explore new worlds of dining pleasure.
The Cathay Restaurant
Open every Wednesday
Lunch 11:20-3:00
Dinner 4:30-10:30
Closed Tuesdays
Cataly not limited evening
in the Halls Plaza Hotel Center, 29th & Iowa
863 4976
We're On Our Way... To Hillel's Bagle & Lox Brunch Paul Friedman speaks on "Jewish Students and their relationships" Sunday, Dec. 10, 12:30 pm Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive (across from Hillcrest) $1 members $2 non-members
THE LIFE STORY OF THE GRADUATE
Now comes Miller time.
er time.
Miller
Burga Doppio
© 1977 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
6
Thursday, December 7, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Ortman aims at all-around record
Sports Writer
By STEVE SELL
Ron Ottman is used to being the best when it comes to gymnastics and being the best at the Olympics.
The all-around is a composite scoring of six gymnastic events.
Once Ortman conquers the pommel horse event, he will be probably the best gymnast at KU. He is a good bet to surpass KU's gymnasts all-around record of $23.00.
Ortman, a sophomore, already rates from very good to excellent with his best scores in the all-around's other five events: still rings, 8.8, long-horse vaillant, 8.8; floor exercise, 8.85; horizontal bars, 8.55; and parallel bars, 8.3.
But the pommel horse, the most difficult event in gymnastics, has thus far kept him from setting the all-around marsh. His best performance was held down his best all-around total to 49.88.
"I have had some trouble on the pennel horse, but I have been working on it very hard in practice and I think I am coming around." Ortman said recently.
ORTMAN TEAMS up with another sophomore, Brad Boechr, to give Ku a solid one-two punch in the all-around event, according to coach Bob Lockwood.
Lockwood agrees that Ortman needs polish in the pommel horse event to become one of the better all-around performers in the Big Eight.
"Both Ron and Brad are sophomores and with a little more time will probably surpass the school record," Lockwood said. "They give us a solid foundation to build on."
"The pommel horse requires a lot of work, but Ron is very dedicated," Lockwood said. "He does very well in the other events and I think in time he will do well in the pommel
THE ALL-AROUND队 was associated with Orthman in high school. At Addison, III., Trail High School, he was captain. In 1965, he led the Illinois state team. He was also the all-around state team.
sua films
(1952)
Thursday, Dec. 7
UMBERTO D.
Dir. Vitritor de Sica, with Carlo Battolini Màl Pich Maïs (Pich), one of the best artists in Corsica, born by Cesare Zavatelli and de Sica. “Bittani and flawless” — Life. It
Woodruff Aud.
$1.00 7:30
Friday & Saturday,
Dec. 8 & 9
Screwball Comedy Double Feature:
BRINGING UP BABY
(1938)
Dir. Howard Hawks, with Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Charlie Ruggles. The epitome of the screwball era.
with
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
(1934)
Dr. Frank Capra, with Clark Gable, and James Coburn, with Matthew piece, this was the first film win all of the major Academy Awards, including BEST Picture, WATCHED for the first time.
For both movies:
$1.50 3:30 & 8:00 pm Woodruff Aud.
Monday, Dec. 11
Last of the Film Noir:
TOUCH OF EVIL
(1958)
Dir. Orson Welles, with Orson Welles, Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Marlene Dierick, Mercedes McCann, Steven Spielberg and Welles as an evil sheriff of a border town. This print includes 15 minutes of footage originally cut before its theatrical release; this longer version was adapted from Welles' 'original conception of the film.'
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Wednesday, Dec. 13
Humphrey Bogart:
TREASURE OF
THE SIERRA MADRE
(1948)
Sports
Dir. John Huston, with Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt, Bruce Bennett, Alain Bedouy, Macintosh MacLeane, Robert Blake. An excellent movie about greed and what grief does to people's souls.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Ortman came to KU on the recommendation of another Addison High graduate, Bill Harms, now the captain of the KU team.
champion and was selected as Addison Trail 't rall the athlete his senior year.
"Bill showed me around the campus and I was impressed right away," Ortman said. "And when I talked to Coach Lockwood, he told me the kind of program he wanted to build at KU and it was the kind I wanted to be a part of."
KU's young team probably will not be a contender for top honors in the Big Eight this year against such powerhouses as national champions Oklahoma, Nebraska and Iowa State, but fourth place is very much a possibility for the Jayhawks.
"OKLAHOMA, NEBRASKA and Iowa State are all very good." Ortmann said. "Our goal is to beat Colorado, because they are probably our closest rival."
The season, though early, has not gone the way Ortman wanted it to.
"I WASN'T really prepared for the Big Eight Invitational," he said. "It wasn't a very good meet for me, but there were a few bright moments."
Kansas finished fifth in that tournament.
Kansas finished fifth in that tournament. The Midwest Open Invitation, held in Chicago over the Thanksgiving holiday, through no one from KU advanced to the finals.
And Ron Ortman's finish in the all-around probably will depend on his performance in the second round.
"It will be like the Midwest Open," he
added. "There should be a lot of good compa-
nies."
"I had a really good horizontal bar routine going until I felt off "Ottman said. "But it was very difficult." Ottman is looking forward to the Rocky Mountain Open in Fort Collins, Colorado.
Rugby tour highlights best season
By MICHELLE BROWN
Sports Writer
Fifteen years have passed since KU's Rugby Club was formed, and the top is finally in sight. At the close of its fall season, the club could account for a nearly perfect season record of 17-3, the best record ever by a KU team.
On KU's list of wins are the Kaw Valley Cup Tournament title and the First Lady's Cup. The cup was presented to KU by the governor's wife, Olivia Bennett, for being this year's winners of the annual KU-K State rugby game last month.
The KU ruggers lost to only two teams this season in Kansas City Blues, and the St. Louis Raptors.
THE HIGHLIGHT of the season for team members David Hay and Kay Roger Walter was their second playoff team, in the tournament, in the tournament, the most prestigious in the Midwest, KU downed four teams, including favorited Desmond Browning, before losing to the Blues in the finals.
"No one expects a college team to do that well in this tournament," said Walter. "Des Moines is a top power and favored to play it. I don't think why we were so excited to get that far."
Hay said, "That was definitely the height of our stairs. We went on to win most of our other stars."
KU did uo on, losing only one more game—to the Ramblers. The semifinal game was decided on a dropletk after nine time and two overtimes had ended in ties.
THE FALL SEASON is over and the spring season won't begin until late March.
but the club isn't taking a break yet. On Dec.
30, the team leaves for a tour in Scotland
and Ireland, where it will play teams from
each country.
The tours were arranged by former KU architecture professor Allen Chapman, now at K-State, but still a "member" of the KU team and one of its biggest promoters.
Chapman, originally from Cornwall, helped organize the club by drawing up its constitution. He then planned the tour to England, making arrangements for the team while on his honeymoon the summer before the trip.
The team has asked several members from other teams in their region to fill in at KU's weaker positions and for KU players who could not make the trip.
The tour is the second of its kind for the k-队 team. Two years ago, it traveled to the United States.
"The quality of rugby is improving here. We're trying to keep up our club by constantly recruiting. We even have a table in the field house during enrollment."
"The tour will help develop and promote rugby," said Hay, the tour's team captain.
"In England, it's a different kind of game," he said. "Rugby is their most important sport. It's patronized by the people; it has an appeal to them. They have clubbues and everything."
WALTER WAS ANSI good for team members to see and experience rugby in England.
Rugby is a social sport and the tour will have its share of socializing in addition to the games. After each game, both teams get together for beer and talk in the clubhouse.
"That's the neat aspect about this sport," Walter said. "We'll all know and sing the same songs because they're traditional. We'll have some late nights, too, because the whole town shows up and buys you a drink."
THE TEAM WILL begin its tour in Scotland, where it will participate in Hogmanay, a four-day celebration of Scotland's most important holiday. The team will stay in Scotland a week and play 8 to 10 games.
KU will play a game in Scotland's national pitch, Murray Field, against a 19-year-old club, the Edinburgh Wanderers. The field is 80 yards wide and its arena seats 80,000 to 100,000 people.
KU will also play games against Haddinton and Howe of Fife.
The team will then spend a week in
Collegians, Old Believers or Old Wesley.
Old Believers old Wesley.
Hay said that although no team here compares to those in Scotland and Ireland, he expected KU to have a chance of winning some games.
"We have some good players going," he said. "Last time, we only lost one game here."
Walter said, "The tour is also one of good will. People are going to hear 'Kansas' and recognize it as a state. State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, is president of our club and the spokesman for our tour. He'll take a message from the governor. We'll speak to dignitaries from Scotland and Ireland. Last week we met a member of parliament from Cornwall."
The team will return to Kansas January 15 after playing 16 to 20 games on the tour.
100
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
Ron Ortman stands beside on the parallel bars during a workout. The KU gymnasium has the best mark this season for the Jayhawk in all-around competition and has set his record for most consecutive jumps in one game.
Concentration
Army head football coach fired
NEW YORK (AP)--Homer Smith was
just as Army's head football coach
taught his children to play.
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season in five years and losing four of five games to archival Navw.
In a tense announcement, the Public Affairs Office of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., disclosed that the contract of the 47-year-old Smith would not be renewed. Smith compiled a 21-33-1 record as Army's 27th head coach.
Raymond P. Murphy, Army's athletic director, said that for a new coach he should immediately
THE WEST Point announcement said Smith had informed academy officials that he did not expect to continue as coach. There was no explanation of that statement.
Smith, whose original four-year contract expired last season, was given a one-year extension after army posted a 7-4 record in 1977 and defeated Navy 17-4, capping the Cadets' first winning campaign in five years and their best record since 1980. Following his retirement from the Coach of the Year by the Football Writers Association of New York.
Granada
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ENDS THURSDAY
R BRAZIL"
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Sat Sun 2:30
R COUNTS"
THE Hillcrest
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Sat Sun 1:55
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"A WEDDING"
THE Hillcrest
TONIGHT 7:15 & 9:40
Sat Sun 1:45
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Richard Burton
"EQUUS"
THE Hillcrest
TONIGHT 7:30 & 9:35
ENDS THURSDAY
PG
Henry Winkler
Sally Flade
"HEROES"
Cinema Twin
TONIGHT 7:20 & 9:40
ENDS THURSDAY
R
MIDNIGHT
EXPRESS"
Cinema Twin
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Sat Sun 2:30
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Jack Nicholson
"GOIN'
SOUTH"
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
Hillcrest
Box opens 11:45
Showtime 13:18
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, December 7, 1978
7
Jayhawks' performances not yet up to cage ranking
The men's basketball team is 3-4. The Associated Press ranks it 8th in the nation.
Apparently not. Not now, coaches and players are quick to add, not yet.
Take Boise State coach Bus Connor. His Broncos, have lost 82-68 to the "Hawks on Monday, have also lost by 20 to UCLA and California-Fullerton. UCLA is No. 2 nationally and Cal-Fullerton was last year's Cinderella team in the NCAA.
With those three games in mind, Connion questioned KU's upper-echelon ranking.
"I think it's way too high," Conn said.
If UCLA is 2. Now, . . . If you say KU is
3. Now, . . . If you say WSU is
4. Now, . . . If you say UNC is
Kansas, he said, is overrated because of its famous guard, Darnell Valentine. It isn't hard to agree. Except for Valentine, senior Paul Mokesi and maybe sophomore Moe KU hasn't developed enough of its talent to be anywhere near championship caliber.
KU cagers televised
The KU-Kentucky game from Rupa Area in Lexington, KY, will be waived at 6:30 p.m. Saturday on a state-wide network that in-ventured in Topeka and KMIC in Kansas City.
The second game, on Dec. 21 at USC in Los Angeles, begins at 10 p.m. Central time. That game will be televised nationally on Home Box Office.
The third TV game is against San Diego on Friday, 23. It will begin at 10:15 p.m. on the show.
Rose contract sign of expense of free agents
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The economic vibrations of Pete Rose's $3.2 million free agent contract with the Philadelphia Phillies continued to send shudders through the baseball establishment at winter meetings yesterday.
And the team most likely to feel the fallout first is the Pittsburgh Pirates, who are still negotiating with Dave Parker, the National League's Most Valuable Player for 1978.
Parker will be in his contract option year in 1979 if the Pirates are unable to sign him, and that would mean they could lose him on a free agent market that seems intent on climbing higher and higher, despite the warnings of Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
AT THE press conference which unveiled nose as baseball's highest-salaried player, he was some discussion of the hurry got from sweet treats. Grown up sweepstakes. Among them, said Rose, was the offer of a brood mare from the Darby family to abbreviate family, which also own the Pirates.
That piece of intelligence must have fascinated Parker, who, at 27, figured he should be worth at least as much to the team. He offered a player 10 years older than him.
REPORTS SWEPT the convention Wednesday that Parker had taken a new approach to the negotiations with the Galbraeths, which still are continuing. Pittsburgh had hoped to conclude the talks Thanksgiving Day, but Parker and his team were in no hurry, preferring to wait and see what kind of package Rose received.
Reich, who was at the meetings, said the report that Parker was asking for the same package that the Galbraeths had offered to him. He was with the Pirates would continue Wednesday.
BUT THE attorney acknowledged that the lose deal would have a tremendous effect on him.
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LAST MONDAY when KU was No. 4; before Michigan State bumped them down, Valentine said, "We're not playing like the 4. team in the nation because we're not."
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At the start of the year, Coach Ted Owens asks that Ken Koenigs, Ctl. John Johnson, John Dykes and the rest should be inspected that the Jayhawks opened the season ranked higher than their No. 8.
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The Jayhawks certainly have the talent to be great, and their attitudes toward each other are marked with selflessness. But, Owens has said, they're playing just well enough to beat the easy teams on the early schedule.
KU just can't be that much better a team when it is starting three sophomores, a senior and a freshman. Last year it was three seniors, a junior and a freshman.
"I THINK they have an excellent chance of being there by the time they play together for quite a while," Connor said. "I think that them is going to be answered Saturday night."
And is there anything like Saturday night in Lexington, Ky., playing Joe B. Hall's
But the first test isn't No. 14 Kentucky. It's tonight against Oak River University, a 1-2 team. ORU is faster and more physical than the other teams KU has played. And it may be capable of taking advantage of KU's defense and its sometimes easyening defense.
Wildcats? Nope, Kentucky beat KU, with its foul problems, last year and on went to on the NCAA title. Monday, it beat West Texas State 121-47.
The time has come for the Jayhawks to quit playing as if they were in a daze. As forward Chester Giles said, "These are the teams we gotta kill."
ALTHOUGH ORU may not be the toughest team on KU's schedule, the Jayhawks can't afford to play as ininstantly as they have in their first four games.
The last three were uninspired, and the tans could tell it. The players certainly knew
Perhaps it's just that some of us are slightly skeptical of a winner after despairing over this year's sad escapades on the football field.
There are a lot of people who want to believe that KU deserves to be ranked near the top. Look at the full stands in Allen Field and see the number of games that will be televised.
But the honor of joy deserving that ranking will have to wait until the Jayhawks prove themselves against, as Owens said, their physical talent to defeat us if we aren't sharp."
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8
Thursday, December 7, 1978
University Daily Kansan
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Also at Kief's, Caper's in KC. The Record Store in Manhattan.
Liberty Sound in St. Joseph. Mother Earth in Topeka.
Tiger's, and David's in Emporia.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, December 7.1978
9
Billy Spears
Spears, fiddle to return to stage
By MELISSA THOMPSON
Staff Writer
Billy Spears' house still looks like the house of a musician, even if he hasn't played his fiddle in more than four months.
In one room, there are microphone stands, a set of drums, guitar cases and lots of electrical wires.
In the living room, next to the fireplace, there's a worm fiddle. The father got it in a trade for a pair of packing mules in howling Glowing.
After about four months of standing in the corner, that fiddler will again see the lights of a concert stage. It probably won't play, but
June 19, Spears will make his first concert appearance since June 25 and is in a diving accident on Aug. 4 that initially left him pumped.
WHAT COULD be a maudiln story about a tragically injured entertainer's comeback isn't. Instead, Spears has the air of someone slightly embarrassed by all the attention he has gotten, someone who has patiently worked to regain the use of his body.
Recently, he lounged as much as his metal neck brace would allow and talked about the thoughts and feelings he'd had during
"I'm pretty patient," Spears said, "but there for a while it was pretty scary. 'It's like you’re in prison in your own body.'"
Now, he's on his feet and the therapy is mostly up to him.
For two months, Spears said, he was in traction. Then, he was allowed to walk using a walker.
"I just get up and keep movin' all day long. That's the only thing there is to do."
OCCASIONALLY I would get up and stretch, swinging his arms in circles, bumping his boots loudly on the feet as he walked around.
Even learning to walk normally was unusual.
"I put these boots on and it was a whole different trip trying to walk," Spears said. He chuckled dryly.
Spears' wife, Doris, said she regarded the injury and the lengthy convalescence as a forced vacation from the road.
"Maybe he just needed a good rest," she said. "Maybe this is his way—it's awful to put it that way—and maybe it's his way of dealing with it."
She said the recovery wasn't complete and wasn't easy.
Obtained his daily dose of vitamin C.
IN ABOUT a week, Spears said, his doctors are to examine him again and possibly replace his stiff arm brace with a soft collar.
He said he still felt apprehensive about moving his neck, even though he was sure that the fracture was healed.
"I don't know just how far I can bend the damn thing right now," he said.
He admitted that sometimes he was frustrated with his slow recovery.
"I've been real healthy all my life and when something like this happens to you, you're remembering what it's like to be real normal," Spears said. "The progress, . . . well, you have a hard time even seeing it."
Music has been part of his psychological recovery. Spears said he had been listening to a lot and has been running his tunes through his
He strode over the fireplace and picked up his fiddle. Holding it to the window's light, he demonstrated the movement that he had regained in his fingers. His fingers, pale and somewhat swollen, flick lightly over the fiddle strumes.
HE KEEPES his fiddle around as a visual reminder of what he's working toward, he said.
"I keep it out just in case everything comes back at once."
His wife said Spears' doctors had been careful not to make any guarantees about how much of his dexterity will return.
"Chances are he will be back to where he was before he was hurt," she said.
Spears interrupted her and said that he was a little more certain.
"I'll play my fiddle again." he drew.
Being signed as the opening act for the Charlie Daniels Band concert tonight has been good mental therapy for Spears, he said.
"IVE BAD quite a few phone calls asking me if the paper was right."
Spears said he would probably sing only a few songs in the first moments of his band's set. However, he will not be doing any fid-
It's been hard for Spears to remember his limitations during the past few days of rehearsals, his wife said. He and his band were rehearing one evening, and Spears, standing there in his rumped pajamas, forgot himself.
"The guys were practicing," she said, and Spears had his fiddle in his hand, and he was walking in, and I guess it hит all of a man.
"You know, What am I doing with this fiddle? I can't play" "she said. He started scratching his head. It was kind of funny to see him."
SPEARS SAID he didn't think his fans would expect him to be playing the fiddle. They'll be just wanting to see what kind of shape
And even though he'll only be singing a few songs, he said he had no qualms.
"Nervous? Naw." he drawled. "I think it'll turn out real well. I'll get to see a lot of people. Probably be good for me."
Westergren motion to be heard
A motion for a new trial in the Eugene E. germen murder case will be heard today.
DONNELLY ALSO said he thought there was sufficient evidence to link the attempt.
evidence in support of Westergren's character, and therefore, the prosecution should not have been allowed to present evidence against his client's character.
Jerry Donnelley, Westerguerin's court-appointed defense attorney, filed the motion Nov. 15 after Westerguerin, 51, was convicted of murdering an elderly woman woman.
assistant district attorney, maintained that Westergreen's confession gave too many details of the murder and attempt; rape for him not to have been involved.
Donnelly was unavailable for comment, but he said last month that he was not optimistic regarding Westergren's chances of receiving a new trial.
ATTENTION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING MAJORS!
But Harry Warren, Douglas County
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Franklin County Judge Floyd H. Coffman heard the trial at Donnelly's request be heard in the district judges had had previous dealing with the man found Westergren guilty Nov. 6 of attempted rape and murder in connection with the刃景Vanera Smith, 84, 823 Kentucky St.
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Smith was found beaten to death in her home Nov. 8,1977.
Donnelly also argued that evidence of Westergreen's criminal record should not have been presented. Donnelly said that during the trial he had never tried to present
Coffman will also hear Donnelly's motion for a new trial.
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358
DONNELLY SAID last month that he had not thought Westergren received a letter.
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
Donnelly also argued that Coffman should have prevented the prosecution from using as state's evidence a confession that intergeren gave police when arrested Dec. 21.
In his written motion, Domnelly argued that the prosecution's evidence in the trial could raise suspicion of Westergren's guilt without sufficient to convict his client.
Donnelly maintained that Westergen, who has a 20-year history of treatment for mental illness, was in poor mental and physical condition when he gave the consolethe Therefore. Donnelly said, the confession should have been rued unreliable.
only at
Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. upstairs
Tonight: Jam Session: No Cover!
Friday & Saturday: Earl Robinson & his Red Hot Scamps Don't miss this 5 piece vocal and instrumental Jazz Group that have been Decca Recording Artists since 1942!
Admission only *5.00 includes Free Beer, peanuts, popcorn, and soft drinks.
Cell 843-8575 for reservations.
10
Thursday, December 7, 1978
University Daily Kansan
GIFTS THEY'LL REMEMBER
LIFTS THEY'LL REMEMBER
Gnemos
THE BEST SELLING BOOK FROM AMRANS
AT THE OREAD BOOKSTORE FOR THESE AND OTHER BOOKS, CALENDARS, POSTERS, CARDS AND UNICEF HOLIDAY CARDS
LEVEL 3 KANSAS UNION
OREAD BOOKSHOP
THE CLASSIC DOWN PARKA
COMPARE INSULATION Trailwise uses 600 fill goose down — that means one ounce of down will fill 600 cubic inches of space.
COMPARE FABRIC B Trailwise uses nylon taffas; more down proof and wind proof and puncture resistant than rip stop nylon.
COMPARE FORM & FIT Trailwise designs jackets for men and women to give you freedom of movement without looking excessively bulky. Trailwise's attention to detail is classic; they use the strongest zippers and snapels, velcro closures and buckles, double zipper buffles, down-filled warmer pocket and collars!
ABOUT OUALITY
It is unwisely to pay too much, but it is unwise to pay too little. When you pay too much you lose a little money, that is all. When you pay too little you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing you bought it to do. The common way of business prohibits paying a little and it must be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well avoided something for the risk you run and if you do that, you will have enough to pay for something better.
—John Ruskin 1819-1900
TRAILWISE PRODUCTS ARE AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE EXCLUSIVELY AT
Sunflower
SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
OUR PRODUCTS FUNCTION
DOWNTOW LAWRENCE * 804 MASSACHUSETTS
The 7th Spirit Cellar
Presents HAPPY HOUR
until 6 p.m. Seven Days a week!
1) $1.50 pitchers of Michelob!
2) .50' Bottled Beer! 3) .65' Texas set-ups!
Bring a Friend-Catch The Spirit!!
Located in the Opera House Building--842-9549
The University Dance Company
Winter Concert of Original Works
Sat. Dec. 9 at 8 p.m. and
Sun. Dec. 10 at 2 p.m.
Hashinger Dormitory 1632 Engel Road
on the campus of K.U.
Gen. Adm. $1.50 Students $1.00 Sr. Cit. $.50
Hillel Presents
CAT BALLOU
Starring Lee Marvin
Friday, Dec. 8th
9:30 pm
Saturday, Dec. 9th
7:00 & 9:00 pm
Dyche Auditorium (Next to the Union)
$1.00 members $1.50 non-members
I will do it tomorrow.
Meisner-
Milstead
wishes to share with
you our finest wine
discoveries to
compliment the
simplest or most
elegant of holiday
meals.
holiday pla
25th & Iowa
M
A parking garage for the University of Kansas Medical Center is in the first stage of a construction method to open the parking lot Warren Corman, Regents director of facilities planning.
Staff Reporter
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
Corman said the $2.1 million garage would be built on the "design-build" concept, which means that the same company designs and builds the structure.
When Eby bid for the project in September, it also submitted a design. The company is now developing the design, creating an Eby construction, project manager for Eby Construction.
Garage is built by new method
marun K. Eby Construction Co. Inc. of Wichita will build the garage. Shaffer Associates of Wichita will work with Eby to design it.
SCHULTZ SAID HE hoped to present some finished design to the state within 30 months.
Corman said the state decided to use the design-build construction for the project because it was faster. However, he said, it has taken more time than expected.
Subcommittees of CSHE get four chairmen
Four subcommittee chairmen were elected last night by members of Concerned Students for Higher Education, the KU lobbying group.
Jim Borell, Overland Park sophomore, was elected chairman of a subcommittee on University renovations. Miki Gordon, Topena junior, was elected subcommittee chairwoman. Rick Kastner, Warameo sophomore, was elected chairman of a subcommittee on improving campus accessibility for the handcapped. Mark Mikkelsen, Lawrence graduate student, was elected chairman of a subcommittee on the graduate student fee
Ron Allen, CSHE chairman, said sub-committee members would begin research on their topics and would present their findings at the next CSHE meeting in January.
Alen also announced the appointment of his assistant chairman, Mark M. Clanlahan, Oversee.
"It didn't end up saving us time because of the amount of red tape and legal problems we ran in to," he said. "Some people would have been better off if it had never been used before."
Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said there had been problems getting documents drawn up with the legal wording for the design-build method.
"The next time we use this method the process should go a lot faster since we've learned."
CORMAN SAID that this method would save the state some money on the garage, but that it would have been less expensive if the process had been faster.
"The cost is reasonable, though," he said.
The car costs $3,000 a parking space, which is fairly expensive.
He said the fee split was decided by mutual agreement between Eby and
The state will支付 a single fee to Eby Construction, which will give a portion of the cost for construction.
Schultz used the design-build method had advantages over the conventional method of construction for the construction company and the customer.
THE MAIN ADVANTAGE is that the contractor has a lot more input into the design of the garage than when the architect is working independently," he said. "It also becomes more economically feasible. If an architect wants to build the construction company cannot build, the architect must re-design the structure, which will cost more money."
The method is also more efficient because the contractor controls the structure, he
The five-level garage will have 750 parking spaces, of which 420 will be employees. The other 300 spaces for employee use. The 300 spaces for be handicapped people.
The Med Center currently has 2,446 parking spaces.
SOME PARTS of the garage will be precast in a Kansas City, Kan., plant, brought to the site and molded to fit. Schultz said it was an economical way to build a garage.
Wiechert said he estimated the garage would be completed in August 1979, a few months after the hospital is scheduled to open.
The KU Endowment Association donated $189,000 to construct a glass-enclosed elevated walkway connecting the garage to the new Bell Memorial Hospital.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SWEATERS, PANTS, BLAZERS
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THE ATTIC
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Class Cards will be sold
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at
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Patronize
Kansan advertisers.
1
KANSAN
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, December 7, 1978
11
On Campus
TONIGHT: STUDENT SENATE will meet at 8:30 in the Forum Room of the Union. SUA BRIDGE will meet at 7:1 in the Pine Room of the Union. COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will meet at 7:30 in the International Room of the Union. There will be an ENGLISH LECTURE at it in the Wainut Room of the Union. Peter Casagrande will speak on "Trends in Hardy Biography." A CLASSICS RECEPTION will be at 8:30 in the English Room of the Union.
TOMORROW—TEACHING AWARD DEADLINE is tomorrow. Information is available at 127 Strong Hall. CELEBRATING THE FIRST TEN YEARS OF SPENCER LIBRARY will begin as an exhibit. A "PRISONER'S HIGHTS" DISCUSSION will begin at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE will begin at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union. CIVIL RIGHTS IN EASTERN EUROPE discussed by Jerez Piekalkiewicz, professor of political science, at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. A STUDENT RECITAL by the Murphy String Quartet will begin at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Rectal Hall in Murphy Hall.
TODAY: UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 105 Blake Hall. GERMAN SINGING CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Pin Room of the Union. GERMAN CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Pin Room of the Union.
the GRAMOPHONE shop
STEREO DISCOUNTERS
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
Phone
843-1211
K.U. Union
Find it in Kansan classified advertising. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
Apex Air Fares/Youth Fares/Ecurail and Student Passes/Auto Rentals/Hotel and Amtrak Reservations
Travel Plans?
make them with us.
Maupintour travel service
KANSAN WANT ADS
Associated departments, good, services and employment
relationships. Supervise staff in job search,
career development, census data collection, BLAE
(MRG) training, BLAE (MRG) certification, BLAE
(MRG) registration.
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times times
15 words or
$2.00 $2.50 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
to run ::
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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 DKR office business at 864-5384.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UNICIFE cards, calendars at Oread Bookstore,
and Adventure A Bookstore No. 6
three December
PARTY-TIME IS 15. ANY TIME Brewing
WEEKEND TIME IS 24. ANY TIME SUGAR
LUQROR
1999 MASS, 803. 1060-7474
1999 MASS, 803. 1060-7474
SALEX from now until Christmas all 912 titles
have got a large and vowel assortment discount!
SaleX is $65.00 off any purchase of one.
**
REPPAT OF A SELLOUT: Back by popular demand, it's another record-breaking sale at the Kansas Union Bookstore. Records and tapes gage up on new arrivals for each week. 12-7 a great end of the semester sale.
Employment Opportunities
December Business Grads. We have openings for
business graduates up to $15,000 and our fees are paid by the
institution. Please contact your instructor in inter-view? We interview by appointment. Court-rules apply. Call 312-483-7621 in lawrence, 812-483-1241 or 812-12
12:12
It doesn't matter if you ask or not, now is
when you can take a class. Fun-filled a day 4 weekend trip, wi-
speak to Glenwood Spring, Colo. Jade Hancock,
the principal of the high school, gives a low price of $219 Get more information and
student union, or write J M Newchl Boom 200 756-6780. Create a stamp, self-addressed return envelope
with your name and date.
FOR RENT
December Engineering Grades. We have openings for positions in our offices and our fees are paid by the companies we represent. Interested applicants may visit by appointment. Courtesy & Associates Corporation 1-866-382-7500 or call in Lawrence, MA 02479.
Extra nice apartment next to campus. Utilities paid. parking. Available immediately. Also avail. free Wi-Fi.
Apartment and rooms furnished. parking most
neighbors. KU and near town. No pets.
Phone: 882-50-3401
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW REHISTERED
unaffiliated from 1718, two laundry rooms,
unaffiliated from 1719, a laundry room,
inaffiliated from INDOOR HEATED POOL, four apartments INDOOR HEATED POOL, five apartments INDOOR HEATED POOL, 244 Front Road Next door to Russell's Egg.
Two bedroom apartment, 4-bed, 562W. W14th,
73rd St., Flushing, NY 11350. No pets. Call Mark Schindler, 844-844-1141.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimhim
from his hometown in San Diego, the master of the
year. Stop by and look at us and we will be glad
to give you all the dresses and apples.
1430 SMITH HALL, 1800 Naimhim
445-859-2698
OPEN-HOUSE-TOWN HOUSE, 3300 W. 8th.
Short-term lease and reduced rent until August 15.
Short-term vacation fee; breakfast and casino money for a three-day vacation in Las Vegas. Other expenses 4-19-79.
Bathroom, garage, bathroom and draps, full kitchen, bathtub, car wash, Car Rallon 12-12/97 or Becky at 843-8787. 12-12
Available Jan 1–three床 townhouse
Available Aug 6 to August 19 Traildale Ave 187
812-492-2600
Christian Housing, Very close to campus. Call 843-6592 between 1- p.m. 12-12
Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in Fourplex-
Short walk to campus. Quel 814-4803. 12-8
He prepared for second semester? Check out his website! Utilities paid and close to campus. Call 843-792-0100.
Need to sublease! Wonderful 2 BR JAYHAwker
All ushers. All utilities pay. Price negotiable.
845-870-870
Sublease. Available February, large one bedroom
Suite. Available on his bus route 168. $12-
84 for Bid #82-497; after 5.30
Wanted to sublease 2 BR bpt 48th and Ridge
160th. A water heater, $950 per unit,
$190 water, paid. 842-6749. Keep in touch.
2 BR apartment unfurnished 10 minute walk to camp
$195 month; 843-0127 Avan. Jan.
1.
476. Convent studio apartment for sublease. Avail-
al to Convent Trail, Ritauli Compile
476.493. Aiks for Studio.
BEDROOM Duplex PARTIALLY FUNFISHED
BEDROOM Duplex $125 Ullite; Call, after $38
841-6700
Sublease, 2 bedroom, unfurnished, dishwasher,
utilities paid, call 843-0882. 12-8
Studio apartment for rent. Utilities paid. 842-
737. 12-7
*Mountaintop apartment* 12-848 in a month. In close to campus-Call 841-7458 10-8
Simulink 4.10, open-source Simulink 6.20; close to simulink 8.15, paid. Utilities paid. B41 - 610-750, 12-8
pus. 415, utilizes paid. Call 641-0750. 12-8
phone. 2 IP requests from Browse Tool.
Rent now! 2 BR unfurnished. Rdg. cheap!
for 2nd sem. Call Senate. Calif.814-7497-12-9
Rooms and apartments. Call Lynch Realty. 2237
Ohio, 843-1601. 12-8
Enhancey apartment for rent: $90/month 1-8
utilities. Close campus, #82301月 1-8
Pursuitified software available Jan 1. Presentency
that you are also $380 plus electricity. 841,572.
www.pursuitified.com
Sublease 3 bedroom -2 story Townhouse. Trillridge. 841-5864. 12-8
Sublease-need 2 female roommates for 2 BR
Roommate needs $99.50 each; rooms
utilize huts. 841-4377
Sublease--Quitet, furnished, two room efficiency,
at $400. All utilities paid 842-457-1256.
*12-12*
Sublease: 1 bedroom apartment, available now.
Frontier Ridge, on bus line. Call 841-530-1273
*Sublease.* Jan. 1, 1 bedroom apartment. Frontier
residence. 700 sq. ft. 2-bedroom apartment.
Pay $25 deposit. Call 841-6355. 12-8
Help! Must sublease two bedroom apartment
from campus. $219 month. Call 841-6900 or
email us at subsales@vacation.com.
Bedroom: Full House privileges starting Jan. 1st.
Enjoy garage, fireplace, home balcony and pool.
Kitchen: Wine bar, kitchenette, breakfast bar.
SPACIOUS, LIGHT QUART one bedroom. Healthy
bedrooms. Available May 12th. 841-7841. 12-12
For Rent-2 bedroom duplex at 1833 Missouri,
kids back of kudu R$ 200 per month.
841-281-2500 12-12
COUPLE-Suig an a bug in the machine 4-bedroom
12-expenses 1 expense and 841-760 12-12
1/1 expense and 841-760 12-12
2 room apartment with dryer and refrigerator
Utilities paid Call 841-6719 at 7:00 p.m. 12-12
Getting married! Must sublease one 1-bedroom apartment. Quit room, close to campus $185 month plus reasonable utilities. Available Jan. 1. Weekdays May—last month's rent. 12-12 Hour CityLink # 841-4546.
2 bedroom, unfurnished, water paid, close to
shopping and bus. $100. 842-197-87
12-7
SPIACUOUS three bedding compartments (snow cover)
two pillows and two sliding doors
Non- smoking grated fall preferences preferred
Available for subsale Jan 1; specaction 1 BR act-
tizen, 2 patio, on bus route C 12-12
Call 12-12
must sublease. comfortable 1 BR apt on bus
route. Call 841-2713 12-12
4 BR house near Dowell school, unfurnished.
6BR house near Dowell school, prefer family $250-
8215-8015, prefers family $250-
8215-8015, prefers family $250-
One BRPT able to campus and KU bus line
transport. The first BRPT on day one
day another WMH before 1:30 pm, or any day
after that. WMH before 1:30 pm, or any day
after that.
2-3 BR apt, with kitchen, bath, fireplace, close to campus lots of space. 1345 Vermont. Apt. 120B. 750 West 68th Street.
Studio apc. close to campus. $140 + util. Call:
814-3235 15-12
2 BR apt. unfurried. KU bus route $195 +\
util. Call 841-8709 12-12
At tomb abseile- rite I RR trap on his route
At tomb abseile-rice paid. Gateau on his route
843 - 093 or 841 - 991
17-12
Sublease 2 BR apt. 5C to campus. Furnished, parking, AC carpetages $46 - upvail. 1BR apt. 5C to campus.
Sacrifice sublease -caye 1 BR furnished apt. in
adjunct campus, most usiul still, $175, 843-391.
Nickelman, 400 West 22nd Street, NY 10024.
BR furnished apt, sabine until May. University Terrace, $190 month, Scott or B4, 360-749-8121
FOR SALE
SUMMER RATES IN JANUARY. Beautiful news
Pleasure Places in NYC. Cars $250.00.
Flight Deals. Car $190.00. Cars $380.00.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
ATOMO MOTIVE ELECTRIK; 843-809-2900. 2900 W. AUTOMO-
MOTIVE ELECTRIK; 843-809-2900. 2900 W.
EXTRAVAGANT PLANT SALE. Perfect holiday
gift. Save 10% off:
9 a.m.-8 p.m. Dec. 9, 9 a.m.-1 i.m.
IAMS' 14W5
SMART PEOPLE DON'T BUY THE BEST STEREO - unless they have an opportunity to hear it. To come To Audio Systems and hear the recording studio, 9th and Rhode Island.
SunSpace-Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-
transparent lenses, seasoned, reasoned,
1021. Mason 843-7570
1021. Mason 843-7570
Western Civilization Note=New on sale! Make use of the notes shown above or them-1). As study guide for 2. For class preparation 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of the Civilization*. Criter, Mals Bookstore, and Oread Bookstore, if you wish.
Michigan Street Music walls and services musicians, violins and other stringed instruments. We have an experienced band and a Mossman T.-F., Gibson L-48, Gibson L-7, and many more string and classical guitarists. We are also an active member of Michigan St. Music, 647 Michigan St., 843-890-2152, p.m. Thursday till Christmas. 12-12
Girl's The best " T" Shirt In Town! Regularly $9.00 Now. $49.90. The 927. Mass.
1972 Mercedes 220 D Sun roof, stereo, rebuilt
1984 Mercedes 350D 300 mile warranty, rebuilt
at Mat for 84-260.
Fender MudRunner Bass Guitar with straps, cords,
muckers, cards and covers. Very good condition.
Mudpuppies cards and covers. Very good condition.
Nordic Foam ski boots Size 6-7 Call 841-8524
49.7
Boxed Set- The Best of Marvel Comics. The Malls Book Shop. 12-8
Techniker Turmble, dukeowner & car-
rrierer. Certified Dealer, $100.
12-month condition, 841-100-0000.
Excellent buy! 2*15J DSL, speakers $72 each.
Excellent buy! 8 month base. 8 hour DSL,
841-1044. dslrint.com
12-7
COLOR PORTFOLIO, Slides or prints, custom
preseting, professional quality, lower prices,
fine lines.
CAMERAS--ANTIQUES AND CLASSICS. Most must have $25. Some have better, beautiful woodwork as well. We offer 3D printers and 3D cameras other equipment. Call (804) 676-2711 or come by 145 Kessuthu #2. Saturday at 9:30am.
Imported. Genuine Hudson's Bay blanket, cut
and hickory board. Hood. Mixed size 10 x 12. 30 x 12.
In the Daytona.
Leaving town! Panasonic SR-20 30 stores and
speed bicycle speed w/cable lock. Cab.
4523 ever.
The World of Doomsey and Doomsey's
are are great Christmas presents. 12-8
Book Sleeve
The perfect gift for your lazy friend. "The Non-
runner's Book," at Malls Book Shop. 12-8
Trac A-1705 Casette $100 Must well. Hardly
822-643-963
12-8
For Real Estate Trf-80) - B-track tape recorders,
must sell will $100. All are accepted tape
641-3272.
Positively the lowest prices in Kansas City for
the most recent year of our inventory.
Store Components - Maxell, TDK, Memorex
Tapes - Dishwahar, all main brands. Special buy
Total Sound Dist. 5622 John Drive, Mission
River, KS 66814.
Give a gift that will GROW in value: antique-hooier style kitchen cupboard; white treedie-sewing machine, complete attachments; reimbursable room furniture; end table editions, glass top. 842-7130. 12-8
2 matching red formats, worn once by bricades
3 matching yellow formats, partition Size 8-12
13-14. Bauron 693-8442
35-36. Bauron 700-8442
Nireco, Yumaha TC1515 YP911 Plumber XB255
speaker and speakers in call 12-18
电话: 12-18
**HRLP** NEED CHRISTMAS MONEY? Calculate
amount for Christmas gift (jacket) or
$10. $10, $20, $30, $40, $50, $60,
$70, $80, $90, $100, $110, $120,
$130, $140, $150, $160, $170, $180,
$190, $200, $210, $220, $230, $240,
$250, $260, $270, $280, $290, $300,
$310, $320, $330, $340, $350, $360,
$370, $380, $390, $400, $410, $420,
$430, $440, $450, $460, $470, $480,
$490, $500, $510, $520, $530, $540,
$550, $560, $570, $580, $590, $600,
$610, $620, $630, $640, $650, $660,
$670, $680, $690, $700, $710, $720,
$730, $740, $750, $760, $770, $780,
$790, $800, $810, $820, $830, $840,
$850, $860, $870, $880, $890, $900,
$910, $920, $930, $940, $950, $960,
$970, $980, $990, $1000, $1010, $1020,
$1030, $1040, $1050, $1060, $1070, $1080,
$1090, $1100, $1110, $1120, $1130, $1140,
$1150, $1160, $1170, $1180, $1190, $1200,
$1210, $1220, $1230, $1240, $1250, $1260,
$1270, $1280, $1290, $1300, $1310, $1320,
$1330, $1340, $1350, $1360, $1370, $1380,
$1390, $1400, $1410, $1420, $1430, $1440,
$1450, $1460, $1470, $1480, $1490, $1500,
$1510, $1520, $1530, $1540, $1550, $1560,
$1570, $1580, $1590, $1600, $1610, $1620,
$1630, $1640, $1650, $1660, $1670, $1680,
$1690, $1700, $1710, $1720, $1730, $1740,
$1750, $1760, $1770, $1780, $1790, $1800,
$1810, $1820, $1830, $1840, $1850, $1860,
$1870, $1880, $1890, $1900, $1910, $1920,
$1930, $1940, $1950, $1960, $1970, $1980,
$1990, $2000, $2010, $2020, $2030, $2040,
$2050, $2060, $2070, $2080, $2090, $2100,
$2110, $2120, $2130, $2140, $2150, $2160,
$2170, $2180, $2190, $2200, $2210, $2220,
$2230, $2240, $2250, $2260, $2270, $2280,
$2290, $2300, $2310, $2320, $2330, $2340,
$2350, $2360, $2370, $2380, $2390, $2400,
$2410, $2420, $2430, $2440, $2450, $2460,
$2470, $2480, $2490, $2500, $2510, $2520,
$2530, $2540, $2550, $2560, $2570, $2580,
$2590, $2600, $2610, $2620, $2630, $2640,
$2650, $2660, $2670, $2680, $2690, $2700,
$2710, $2720, $2730, $2740, $2750, $2760,
$2770, $2780, $2790, $2800, $2810, $2820,
$2830, $2840, $2850, $2860, $2870, $2880,
$2890, $2900, $2910, $2920, $2930, $2940,
$2950, $2960, $2970, $2980, $2990, $3000,
$3010, $3020, $3030, $3040, $3050, $3060,
$3070, $3080, $3090, $3100, $3110, $3120,
$3130, $3140, $3150, $3160, $3170, $3180,
$3190, $3200, $3210, $3220, $3230, $3240,
$3250, $3260, $3270, $3280, $3290, $3300,
$3310, $3320, $3330, $3340, $3350, $3360,
$3370, $3380, $3390, $3400, $3410, $3420,
$3430, $3440, $3450, $3460, $3470, $3480,
$3490, $3500, $3510, $3520, $3530, $3540,
$3550, $3560, $3570, $3580, $3590, $3600,
$3610, $3620, $3630, $3640, $3650, $3660,
$3670, $3680, $3690, $3700, $3710, $3720,
$3730, $3740, $3750, $3760, $3770, $3780,
$3790, $3800, $3810, $3820, $3830, $3840,
$3850, $3860, $3870, $3880, $3890, $3900,
$3910, $3920, $3930, $3940, $3950, $3960,
$3970, $3980, $3990, $4000, $4010, $4020,
$4030, $4040, $4050, $4060, $4070, $4080,
$4090, $4100, $4110, $4120, $4130, $4140,
$4150, $4160, $4170, $4180, $4190, $4200,
$4210, $4220, $4230, $4240, $4250, $4260,
$4270, $4280, $4290, $4300, $4310, $4320,
$4330, $4340, $4350, $4360, $4370, $4380,
$4390, $4400, $4410, $4420, $4430, $4440,
$4450, $4460, $4470, $4480, $4490, $4500,
$4510, $4520, $4530, $4540, $4550, $4560,
$4570, $4580, $4590, $4600, $4610, $4620,
$4630, $4640, $4650, $4660, $4670, $4680,
$4690, $4700, $4710, $4720, $4730, $4740,
$4750, $4760, $4770, $4780, $4790, $4800,
$4810, $4820, $4830, $4840, $4850, $4860,
$4870, $4880, $4890, $4900, $4910, $4920,
$4930, $4940, $4950, $4960, $4970, $4980,
$4990, $5000, $5010, $5020, $5030, $5040,
$5050, $5060, $5070, $5080, $5090, $5100,
$5110, $5120, $5130, $5140, $5150, $5160,
$5170, $5180, $5190, $5200, $5210, $5220,
$5230, $5240, $5250, $5260, $5270, $5280,
$5290, $5300, $5310, $5320, $5330, $5340,
$5350, $5360, $5370, $5380, $5390, $5400,
$5410, $5420, $5430, $5440, $5450, $5460,
$5470, $5480, $5490, $5500, $5510, $5520,
$5530, $5540, $5550, $5560, $5570, $5580,
$5590, $5600, $5610, $5620, $5630, $5640,
$5650, $5660, $5670, $5680, $5690, $5700,
$5710, $5720, $5730, $5740, $5750, $5760,
$5770, $5780, $5790, $5800, $5810, $5820,
$5830, $5840, $5850, $5860, $5870, $5880,
$5890, $5900, $5910, $5920, $5930, $5940,
$5950, $5960, $5970, $5980, $5990, $6000,
$6010, $6020, $6030, $6040, $6050, $6060,
$6070, $6080, $6090, $6100, $6110, $6120,
$6130, $6140, $6150, $6160, $6170, $6180,
$6190, $6200, $6210, $6220, $6230, $6240,
$6250, $6260, $6270, $6280, $6290, $6300,
$6310, $6320, $6330, $6340, $6350, $6360,
$6370, $6380, $6390, $6400, $6410, $6420,
$6430, $6440, $6450, $6460, $6470, $6480,
$6490, $6500, $6510, $6520, $6530, $6540,
$6550, $6560, $6570, $6580, $6590, $6600,
$6610, $6620, $6630, $6640, $6650, $6660,
$6670, $6680, $6690, $6700, $6710, $6720,
$6730, $6740, $6750, $6760, $6770, $6780,
$6790, $6800, $6810, $6820, $6830, $6840,
$6850, $6860, $6870, $6880, $6890, $6900,
$6910, $6920, $6930, $6940, $6950, $6960,
$6970, $6980, $6990, $7000, $7010, $7020,
$7030, $7040, $7050, $7060, $7070, $7080,
$7090, $7100, $7110, $7120, $7130, $7140,
$7150, $7160, $7170, $7180, $7190, $7200,
$7210, $7220, $7230, $7240, $7250, $7260,
$7270, $7280, $7290, $7300, $7310, $7320,
$7330, $7340, $7350, $7360, $7370, $7380,
$7390, $7400, $7410, $7420, $7430, $7440,
$7450, $7460, $7470, $7480, $7490, $7500,
$7510, $7520, $7530, $7540, $7550, $7560,
$7570, $7580, $7590, $7600, $7610, $7620,
$7630, $7640, $7650, $7660, $7670, $7680,
$7690, $7700, $7710, $7720, $7730, $7740,
$7750, $7760, $7770, $7780, $7790, $7800,
$7810, $7820, $7830, $7840, $7850, $7860,
$7870, $7880, $7890, $7900, $7910, $7920,
$7930, $7940, $7950, $7960, $7970, $7980,
$7990, $8000, $8010, $8020, $8030, $8040,
$8050, $8060, $8070, $8080, $8090, $8100,
$8110, $8120, $8130, $8140, $8150, $8160,
$8170, $8180, $8190, $8200, $8210, $8220,
$8230, $8240, $8250, $8260, $8270, $8280,
$8290, $8300, $8310, $8320, $8330, $8340,
$8350, $8360, $8370, $8380, $8390, $8400,
$8410, $8420, $8430, $8440, $8450, $8460,
$8470, $8480, $8490, $8500, $8510, $8520,
$8530, $8540, $8550, $8560, $8570, $8580,
$8590, $8600, $8610, $8620, $8630, $8640,
$8650, $8660, $8670, $8680, $8690, $8700,
$8710, $8720, $8730, $8740, $8750, $8760,
$8770, $8780, $8790, $8800, $8810, $8820,
$8830, $8840, $8850, $8860, $8870, $8880,
$8890, $8900, $8910, $8920, $8930, $8940,
$8950, $8960, $8970, $8980, $8990, $9000,
$9010, $9020, $9030, $9040, $9050, $9060,
$9070, $9080, $9090, $9100, $9110, $9120,
$9130, $9140, $9150, $9160, $9170, $9180,
$9190, $9200, $9210, $9220, $9230, $9240,
$9250, $9260, $9270, $9280, $9290, $9300,
$9310, $9320, $9330, $9340, $9350, $9360,
$9370, $9380, $9390, $9400, $9410, $9420,
$9430, $9440, $9450, $9460, $9470, $9480,
$9490, $9500, $9510, $9520, $9530, $9540,
$9550, $9560, $9570, $9580, $9590, $9600,
$9610, $9620, $9630, $9640, $9650, $9660,
$9670, $9680, $9690, $9700, $9710, $9720,
$9730, $9740, $9750, $9760, $9770, $9780,
$9790, $9800, $9810, $9820, $9830, $9840,
$9850, $9860, $9870, $9880, $9890, $9900,
$9910, $9920, $9930, $9940, $9950, $9960,
$9970, $9980, $9990, $10000, $10010, $10020,
$10030, $10040, $10050, $10060, $10070,
$10080, $10090, $10100, $10110, $10120,
$10130, $10140, $10150, $10160, $10170,
$10180, $10190, $10200, $10210, $10220,
$10230, $10240, $10250, $10260, $10270,
$10280, $10290, $10300, $10310, $10320,
$10330, $10340, $10350, $10360, $10370,
$10380, $10390, $10400, $10410, $10420,
$10430, $10440, $10450, $10460, $10470,
$10480, $10490, $10500, $10510, $10520,
$10530, $10540, $10550, $10560, $10570,
$10580, $10590, $10600, $10610, $10620,
$10630, $10640, $10650, $10660, $10670,
$10680, $10690, $10700, $10710, $10720,
$10730, $10740, $10750, $10760, $10770,
$10780, $10790, $10800, $10810, $10820,
$10830, $10840, $10850, $10860, $10870,
$10880, $10890, $10900, $10910, $10920,
$10930, $10940, $10950, $10960, $10970,
$10980, $10990, $11000, $11010, $11020,
$11030, $11040, $11050, $11060, $11070,
$11080, $11090, $11100, $11110, $11120,
$11130, $11140, $11150, $11160, $11170,
$11180, $11190, $11200, $11210, $11220,
$11230, $11240, $11250, $11260, $11270,
$11280, $11290, $11300, $11310, $11320,
$11330, $11340, $11350, $11360, $11370,
$11380, $11390, $11400, $11410, $11420,
$11430, $11440, $11450, $11460, $11470,
$11480, $11490, $11500, $11510, $11520,
$11530, $11540, $11550, $11560, $11570,
$11580, $11590, $11600, $11610, $11620,
$11630, $11640, $11650, $11660, $11670,
$11680, $11690, $11700, $11710, $11720,
$11730, $11740, $11750, $11760, $11770,
$11780, $11790, $11800, $11810, $11820,
$11830, $11840, $11850, $11860, $11870,
$11880, $11890, $11900, $11910, $11920,
$11930, $11940, $11950, $11960, $11970,
$11980, $11990, $12000, $12010, $12020,
$12030, $12040, $12050, $12060, $12070,
$12080, $12090, $12100, $12110, $12120,
$12130, $12140, $12150, $12160, $12170,
$12180, $12190, $12200, $12210, $12220,
$12230, $12240, $12250, $12260, $12270,
$12280, $12290, $12300, $12310, $12320,
$12330, $12340, $12350, $12360, $12370,
$12380, $12390, $12400, $12410, $12420,
$12430, $12440, $12450, $12460, $12470,
$12480, $12490, $12500, $12510, $12520,
$12530, $12540, $12550, $12560, $12570,
$12580, $12590, $12600, $12610, $12620,
$12630, $12640, $12650, $12660, $12670,
$12680, $12690, $12700, $12710, $12720,
$12730, $12740, $12750, $12760, $12770,
$12780, $12790, $12800, $12810, $12820,
$12830, $12840, $12850, $12860, $12870,
$12880, $12890, $12900, $12910, $12920,
$12930, $12940, $12950, $12960, $12970,
$12980, $12990, $13000, $13010, $13020,
$13030, $13040, $13050, $13060, $13070,
$13080, $13090, $13100, $13110, $13120,
$13130, $13140, $13150, $13160, $13170,
$13180, $13190, $13200, $13210, $13220,
$13230, $13240, $13250, $13260, $13270,
$13280, $13290, $13300, $13310, $13320,
$13330, $13340, $13350, $13360, $13370,
$13380, $13390, $13400, $13410, $13420,
$13430, $13440, $13450, $13460, $13470,
$13480, $13490, $13500, $13510, $13520,
$13530, $13540, $13550, $13560, $13570,
$13580, $13590, $13600, $13610, $13620,
$13630, $13640, $13650, $13660, $13670,
$13680, $13690, $13700, $13710, $13720,
$13730, $13740, $13750, $13760, $13770,
$13780, $13790, $13800, $13810, $13820,
$13830, $13840, $13850, $13860, $13870,
$13880, $13890, $13900, $13910, $13920,
$13930, $13940, $13950, $13960, $13970,
$13980, $13990, $14000, $14010, $14020,
$14030, $14040, $14050, $14060, $14070,
$14080, $14090, $14100, $14110, $14120,
$14130, $14140, $14150, $14160, $14170,
$14180, $14190, $14200, $14210, $14220,
$14230, $14240, $14250, $14260, $14270,
$14280, $14290, $14300, $14310, $14320,
$14330, $14340, $14350, $14360, $14370,
$14380, $14390, $14400, $14410, $14420,
$14430, $14440, $14450, $14460, $14470,
$14480, $14490, $14500, $14510, $14520,
$14530, $14540, $14550, $14560, $14570,
$14580, $14590, $14600, $14610, $14620,
$14630, $14640, $14650, $14660, $14670,
$14680, $14690, $14700, $14710, $14720,
$14730, $14740, $14750, $14760, $14770,
$14780, $14790, $14800, $14810, $14820,
$14830, $14840, $14850, $14860, $14870,
$14880, $14890, $14900, $14910, $14920,
$14930, $14940, $14950, $14960, $14970,
$14980, $14990, $15000, $15010, $15020,
$15030, $15040, $15050, $15060, $15070,
$15080, $15090, $15100, $15110, $15120,
$15130, $15140, $15150, $15160, $15170,
$15180, $15190, $15200, $15210, $15220,
$15230, $15240, $15250, $15260, $15270,
$15280, $15290, $15300, $15310, $15320,
$15330, $15340, $15350, $15360, $15370,
$15380, $15390, $15400, $15410, $15420,
$15430, $15440, $15450, $15460, $15470,
$15480, $15490, $15500, $15510, $15520,
$15530, $15540, $15550, $15560, $15570,
$15580, $15590, $15600, $15610, $15620,
$15630, $15640, $15650, $15660, $15670,
$15680, $15690, $15700, $15710, $15720,
$15730, $15740, $15750, $15760, $15770,
$15780, $15790, $15800, $15810, $15820,
$15830, $15840, $15850, $15860, $15870,
$15880, $15890, $15900, $15910, $15920,
$15930, $15940, $15950, $15960, $15970,
$15980, $15990, $16000, $16010, $16020,
$16030, $16040, $16050, $16060, $16070,
$16080, $16090, $16100, $16110, $16120,
$16130, $16140, $16150, $16160, $16170,
$16180, $16190, $16200, $16210, $16220,
$16230, $16240, $16250, $16260, $16270,
$16280, $16290, $16300, $16310, $16320,
$16330, $16340, $16350, $16360, $16370,
$16380, $16390, $16400, $16410, $16420,
$16430, $16440, $16450, $16460, $16470,
$16480, $16490, $16500, $16510, $16520,
$16530, $16540, $16550, $16560, $16570,
$16580, $16590, $16600, $16610, $16620,
$16630, $16640, $16650, $16660, $16670,
$16680, $16690, $16700, $16710, $16720,
$16730, $16740, $16750, $16760, $16770,
$16780, $16790, $16800, $16810, $16820,
$16830, $16840, $16850, $16860, $16870,
$16880, $16890, $16900, $16910, $16920,
$16930, $16940, $16950, $16960, $16970,
$16980, $16990, $17000, $17010, $17020,
$17030, $17040, $17050, $17060, $17070,
$17080, $17090, $17100, $17110, $17120,
$17130, $17140, $17150, $17160, $17170,
$17180, $17190, $17200, $17210, $17220,
$17230, $17240, $17250, $17260, $17270,
$17280, $17290, $17300, $17310, $17320,
$17330, $17340, $17350, $17360, $17370,
$17380, $17390, $17400, $17410, $17420,
$17430, $17440, $17450, $17460, $17470,
$17480, $17490, $17500, $17510, $17520,
$17530, $17540, $17550, $17560, $17570,
$17580, $17590, $17600, $17610, $17620,
$17630, $17640, $17650, $17660, $17670,
$17680, $17690, $17700, $17710, $17720,
$17730, $17740, $17750, $17760, $17770,
$17780, $17790, $17800, $17810, $17820,
$17830, $17840, $17850, $17860, $17870,
$17880, $17890, $17900, $17910, $17920,
$17930, $17940, $17950, $17960, $17970,
$17980, $17990, $18000, $18010, $18020,
$18030, $18040, $18050, $18060, $18070,
$18080, $18090, $18100, $18110, $18120,
$18130, $18140, $18150, $18160, $18170,
$18180, $18190, $18200, $18210, $18220,
$18230, $18240, $18250, $18260, $18270,
$18280, $18290, $18300, $18310, $18320,
$18330, $18340, $18350, $18360, $18370,
$18380, $18390, $18400, $18410, $18420,
$18430, $18440, $18450, $18460, $18470,
$18480, $18490, $18500, $18510, $18520,
$18530, $18540, $18550, $18560, $18570,
$18580, $18590, $18600, $18610, $18620,
$18630, $18640, $18650, $18660, $18670,
$18680, $18690, $18700, $18710, $18720,
$18730, $18740, $18750, $18760, $18770,
$18780, $18790, $18800, $18810, $18820,
$18830, $18840, $18850, $18860, $18870,
$18880, $18890, $18900, $18910, $18920,
$18930, $18940, $18950, $18960, $18970,
$18980, $18990, $19000, $19010, $19020,
$19030, $19040, $19050, $19060, $19070,
$19080, $19090,
FOUND
Female German shepherd, red collar, NY tag 825-207 or 864-3566 12-7
HELP WANTED
Wanted diwakaras day and night. Dairy师
The Carriage Lamp Skipper Club behind the
Carriage Lamp Skipper Club behind the
VERSASK JOBS - Summer full time Europe, S.
Australia, Australia. Aita, etc. All fields. $600-
$1200 expenses. Expense paid, sightseeing. Free
insurance. Job Center Job Center. Box 12-12
A, Berkeley, CA 94704
PSYCHATRIC ADDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE
MEN. Please apply to Teopaea State Hospital,
men encouraged to apply. Applications apply to
director of nursing, Teopaea State Hospital.
Phone 913-280-4367. Good Opportunity En-
gagement.
Part time custodial/maintenance job available.
Convenient to campus. Experience helpful, be
practical. Call 800-635-1271.
Part time day dishwasher must be able to work
in person only. Basket for bedding,
Romann, 1895, 42rd.
Driver to transport child home from University pre-school. Monday, Thursday, 10 a.m. Call Candice
NEED EXTRA XMAS MONEY Sanctuary caterer
dinners in December for Christmas parties.
dinners in December for Christmas parties.
be able to work three regularity must be
able to work three regularity must be
appearance a must Cust Ace at Atc 0540-0540 for
A student assistant for female quadriplegic students in the school, Kate Hayes of paper papers, taking student to school, lays down helping with research, etc. Prefer junior or senior class. 843-4423 or 843-1011 afternoons and weekends.
Part Umei Umei store clerk. Would prefer grade in B—bachelor major. Apply in person at usmc.edu.
A student labor market research assistant position is offered by the Department of Child Research to assist with the project. Bureau of Child Research must include data collection from police and court records, data collection from the East Katsuki region. Additional responsibilities of data for computer analysis, data analytics, and data analysis will be required. Students are seeking qualified applicants who have at least 3 years of experience in having who has had research experience and who has a Master's degree in statistics or a statistical packages for data analysis. Specify an area of interest, such as correlation, and t tests is preferred. Some application materials are also desirable. Must be approach to evaluation. Approximately 6 months of experience in applying the application pending upon qualifications of the applicant. To apply, visit http://dr.kirgin.application.de/design/Dr.Kirgin.Application deadline December 12, 2014. You must show opportunity. Affirmative Action Employee 18-12
Kratzer city store, 417 allyrry. Kratzer business brassening shop, 200 allyrry. Kratzer business lighting store, 200 allyrry. Kratzer Business Lighting Store, 111 Bahlbaum, Kratzer. Kratzer Business Lighting Store, 111 Bahlbaum, Kratzer.
Part time coin laundry and dry cleaning attendant. Apply at Norge Village 21 & Iowa, 12-12 Belfast. Required Bachelor's degree or equivalent; efficient for person with initiative. Duties varied. Flexible hours, salary open. 842
JB Big Boy is now taking applications for full and part time help. Apply in person. 740 lines. 160 hours.
Drivers needed. Must be 18 years or older, Must have a valid driver's license and apply in person after 4 p.m. Places are: 1620 N. Washington Blvd., Stevens Point, WA 98247.
Department: Pharmacology and Toxicology
Department: Medical History and History of
appointment 12 months with potential for
extension. start Jan. 1 or sooner. Salary: $700 per
month. Expands upon previous clinical chemical studies in small laboratory animals. Requirements: B.S. or equivalent experience in
Familiarity with biochemical techniques. Laboratory animal surgery. Deadline for applications: Dec. 14, 1958. Submit resume to Rev. R. Richard E.
Ecology University of Kansas, 2005 Avenue A-
402, 804 or 804-384. We are equal Opportunity
and Welcome. All sought from all qualified persons regardless of race, religion, sex, color, disability, veteran status.
If you constantly dream of becoming an imper-
per, you have to choose between it and chance. We
have used mindfulness book you have to
choose! We use
Part time positions available at Rainbow Montessori Preschool in students who ENJOY the learning environment. Applicants must be in professional position preferred, but not required. Call Lieanna B-5 834-860-088; evenings 834-7470
SUMMER JOBS, FOREST SERVICE - how. where.
Oil & Gas Corp. 104th Floor, Kaitlan, Mont. 39872.
Mo. Ca. 158th Floor, Kaitlan, Mont. 39872.
Administrative Assistant, Office of Instructional
Administration. Requires Bachelor's degree in ability
required. Familiarity with the University Presence,
preferred 1 yr. time beginning January 1.
Applicant must have completed 400 Bailey Hall Application deadline December 31.
Position opening. Assistant director of facilities planning University of Kansas, Minimum of degree in engineering or related field, exp in experience in field, emphasis on construction administrative support, and one year in construction work design experience. Position available immediately. For further information, contact Facilities Planning, University of Kansas, Box 10429, Kansas City, KS 66215. Resume and resume must be received on or before May 31, 2015. Equal Opportunity. Affirmative Action Enabled.
Sambos new hire wringing servers, waiters, didh machine operators—full and part time. Apply in the job code SAMBOS.
Librighthouse: Immediate part time help. Graphic
separation 14 and 2nd shafts 12-12
957-7360
LOST
Glames, blue case, brow wire frame, brown
lined lenses, 4 weeks ago. Reward: BW1812-17. 7
Lost, one pair of gold pliered earrings. Reward
offered, including one British penny. 434-8114.
$25 HEWARD Information leading to arrest or
revision - 2 VISION KAVID SPEAKERS STO-
LENE PROGRAM - BLUE BUCK IN L.M.H: employ
842-1976. Keep trying x 8" x 7". Confidence
842-1976. Keep trying
Least: 3,000-5,600 lives in many of Nicaragua's cities. They will receive a meal to benefit for MEDICAL BELIEF IN NICARAGUA serving rice and beans; $1,450,000 for 1,631 Cresten Dr Lawrence Catholic Center.
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aice at the House of Uaitch / Quick Copy Center.
Aice is available from A 8.M to 5 P.M. Monday
to Friday, A 4.M to 1 P.M on Saturday at
Mass.
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Choose and cut your beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive east on I-10 in approach #28 to Redwood Ridge. Enjoy the shade! #28 on the south 1/4. Open weekends till Christmas. PINE HILL FARM.
A WHILE ON THE NILE - a dance with an ancient Egyptian mullion. Wear formal dress from any era. Music from the New Wrangler Wanchai and the New Yorker to the New Amsterdam. Tickets $25 at the door. 12-7
NOTICE
INTERGRISATION GUITAF, Mandolio or Bango,
or elastic band (2 m.), 3-2 times as long.
INSTRUMENTS IN SORTION (800-1500 Hz).
Planning a move' mowwill will pay cash for your good use of furniture, antique Call 842-765-9000
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimalh Hall is offering, for the first time ever a boarding plan. Please call 516-789-2400 or visit www.naimalh.com can be you be asked if you choose this plan. Stop HALL in Nawaprasth, Drive 843 - 8559. 12:12 NWAHALL 843, Nawaprasth Drive 843 - 8559. 12:12
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT: Back by popular demand, it's another record-breaking sale at the Kanaa Union Bookstore. Records and tapes garner in store as a result, but a great end of the semester sales. 12-7
PERSONAL
To Whom it may concern: The Pascalian Society Association of New York, the American Association of the Old Consumer Affairs Office arrests from the district of New York.
Gay-Lexian. Switchboard. Counseling and general information. 841-8472.
Come in and see the new Harbour Barmard at that "little piece of heaven in Lawrence" that she made.
EXPERT TUTORS We tutor MATH 000-700-
496 AND CHEMISTRY 100-600. QUALIFICATIONS
B.S. in Physics, M.A. in Math. Call 843-9083 for
or Computer Science. Call 843-5241 for Math.
Call 843-5241 for Math.
HARBOR SPECIALS 1-8 Mon. Tues. and 2-6
Mon. Wed. and 4-10 Sun. MAIDEN DAIRY
NIGHT! Wed. $10, 160 pie; $160 cupcake
Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan, 643-353,丝
and service services and music guilds and all
stores.
The Muffet-belt hand is now accepting auditions for the Instrument Band level. The instrument buildup includes Serrion Xtra 19, 20 and 21. The new instruments are also available.
The Mofet Beers band is now accepting admissions for female venomous Serious inquiries only. **842** **2013** **CLOSED** **SPECIAL REQUESTS ONLY**
After ORAL ROBERTS Celebrate At THE HAWK
Two student season basketball tickets wanted.
Two pay and reasonable price. Call Linda, Linda 803-452-7661.
Unique Christmas gift. AKC Registered Kids.
Males, $125; females, $150-181.591. 12-8
SISTER KETTLE KIPF, fresh food, organge spring water, 14th and Mass. open 10 a.m to 9 p.m. SUNDAY 8 p.m.
Mary good seats available for Mon. Dec. 12
Midnight Dinner. Call SUA. 864-3477.
COLOR PORTFOLIO Slides or prints, custom
prints, customized 12-12
Call 841-7249 evening.
Email info@cador.com 12-12
Def: HARBOURIZATION---The consumption of mass quantities of alcohol until total loss of basic psychological self-awareness, attained only at SPECIALS. 1 LOCK! CHECK THE HARBOURIZATION-12-12
Don't forget to pay your gas bill. Remember
what happened to Pier 1-Illuminator.
12/19
Midrada Hotel is sold-out for Sat., Dec. 9 and Sunday, Dec. 10. 12-7
Yes! The BUNGAIO survived the "New Jim"
and was able to recover his structural damage. Did you Know? Karbe & SKOB
SHIY! The California Social Learning Center's university professor specifically to help you rapidly become more open, assertive and successful in establishing exciting, rewarding relationships with students in an unmasked envelope, just send a postcard to their office. Shire Bld., Suite 215. Beryllia Hill, CA 90211.
Yet another disappointing football season? 12-12
Wayge' George Allen for Head Coach. 12-12
SKI THE SUMMIT, MAR. 10-17
ALL FOR $192
Sign-up deadline, Jan. 22
Contact SUA Office
- SVI Breakkedge, Keystone, Copper Mold,
and Alaskan Aspen
* day rentals in luxury townhouses
* 3-day ski rental
* round trip bus transportation
* wine and cheese picnic
* tree kite skispace
* lowest court to you.
TRAVEL
Gay Services of Kansas presents "Gay Rights in
Victory" with Jim Harden, Kansas Union, Speaker,
Prince Harry, Kansas City Knights. (2016)
www.gayservices.org
Do you have a favorite paddle course that you would like to recommend. I need one for spring training.
To whoever stole my stive at the Hawk. Will you please send me my letter and my keys! I will.
SISTER KATTLT CAFE, LAWRENCE'S ONLY
CARRER. 14TH AVE. OPEN 18 A.M. TO
16TH AVE. 14TH AVE.
For Bobby-I'll love you more than anybody
can, Love, forever, Jeanie. 12-7
HEY BARB--Happy 2011!! "What it be,
it's Barb! Stuart's, Dust's, or Joe, or Laemmle!
12-7
Social event of the season: E.K.D. Christmas
Formal, Dec. 9, Bill Chris, Mike, Patt, Terry 12-
Assistance Comm., you will never take me all mail
Lewis bead jersey. Cut a little wider at the bottom, cut slightly wider. Sit at a table with 12$ through $15$ dollars in Linus. Downstairs
Nicky face also Elvis-Happy 21' strawberry is in season. Giant Nonfroster. 19-7
Oil. Ilizo, tra la Ia and Merrie Christmas! Only
portfolio can make-wait-make more cooked
portfolio to wait-made-with more cooked
SERVICES OFFERED
STATISTICAL TUTORING Call 843-90
Need help in math or CS? Get a t r u f i c t who has with your math or CS problem. Click 841-403-7956.
EXPERT TUTORS: we tutor MATH 600-700;
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B.S. in Physics, M.A. in Math. Call 643-9038 for
science or Computer Science. Call 642-5431 for math.
EMPLATING MEDICATED SCHOOLS • We offer information $2.00 • MIDDEN SERVICES • We offer information $6.00
I do damned good typing—Peggy. 842-4476.
TYPING
DON'T GET RIPPED OFF. GEE UMC Security
payment over电话. Phone 814-8434 for more info.
Theses and manuscripts. Your ideas presented forcefully and effectively within correct grammatical structure. The finished work will reflect your experience with precision and smoothness. Kevenings 842-1351. 12-8
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TREISIS BINDING COPYING--The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us handle you at 838 Ms. or phone 426-3010. That you.
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Fast accurate typist, Papers, under 20 pages, 10
Fast accurate typist, Papers, under 20 pages, 10
Ruth, 843-648 after 5 p.m. (12-12)
Ruth, 843-648 after 5 p.m. (12-12)
Typing- finestkeet Hawkway Typing Service.
Call N22-8799 1.50 a.m. 12-12
Will do typing of term papers, thesis, mrcr Elite
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I DO A HELLLUVA TYPING JOB--CAROLYN.
842-1217 12-12
Female roommate wanted for Towers apartment.
$100 month. 842-5698 12-8
WANTED
Female chrismation roommate for spring semester.
Room 201, on bus route $3. 1.72 mi.
to-wait carpet, on bus route $3.
Roommate wanted at Park 25,$ 80 a month rent.
Call Rike or Mick at 841-1092
12-7
Roommate wants to share clean, furn house
close to campus. non-uniform $7 / 1
roommate $8 per room.
Female roommate needed immediately to help
2 female apartment. Or bus route. Call Kirk
1-800-374-6900.
Female roommate to share beautiful modern girl with
huge closet and laundry space; late evening;
Sat at 841-369edy late evening;
Roommate wanted to share clean furnished 3 BR house close to Prefect. Prefect avoids. Avail roommate only for full-time residents.
Female roommate wanted to share site 2 BR
apartment to campau, dilloway. A $150
room is required. Call 617-483-2800.
Liberal female to share old, warm, comfortable
clothes. 20% off union, 12% off NYC all paid bills
and 8% off bus fare.
Male roommate, share 2 bedroom公寓; $240
mo. plus small electric柜 - 843-6583 12-8
1-2 bedroom home or apartment in house for
sharing a house with other. NM-0089. Keay 2345
SHELDON STREET.
Male roommate wants to share furnished Jay-hawker towers仗. Utilities paid, own room, 600 sq ft. Room is $429/month.
Two females need third for spring semester.
$13.20 = a month all utilities paid B48 647-851
B48 647-851
Reservoir wanted to share tice 2 biosmart apartments in the 1500 block of East 87th Street, dishwasher. Bathroom 817-743-6955.
Recombine needed Immediately. Eagerly male,
female, and juvenile patients come. Cited by M13 Brown Ct. 6:00-8:00 pm. (Tue.)
or 1 or 2 female roommates need Jayhawk
avengers, $30/mo. utilities paid - Call Marlton, 814-252-6799.
Female roommate for large, three bedroom house.
Female roommate on bus route, $70/month, 12/12
to 6/30. Room size varies.
Roommate wanted. Spring school, share 2 bedrooms, 2 bedroom apartments, $100 per month.
2 male room duplex. **833** + 1/3 utility rooms.
3 male room duplex, w/wip carpet, dwalbrader, C/A
4 female room duplex, wip carpet, dwalbrader, C/A
PART-TIME COOK WANTED to prepare two meals on Saturday for guests in pajamas, by 12 noon. Sizes: 8 oz (230 g) and 14 oz (365 g).
2 roommates wanted for Jayhawk Tower
apartment 2 bedrooms, all airbnbs
paid $12.50 each paid 12-12
Clean, non-smoking roommate wanted.
Clean, non-smoking Roommate Wanted.
Walking distance from campus.
Call 641-7078.
Tenant to rent bedroom, full house privileges
in high-end facilities. $296 month, 3 dwellers.
Calls at 817-453-6800.
Christian roommate wanted for spring semester in a large furnished upstairs 2 bedroom apartment. 855-890-800 per person per month including Call, Fax, 866-345-122 with 843-355 evenings.
House member wanted for 5-member cooperative.
Call 643-2278 for details
12-12
Want to buy large abstract paintings, sculpture or
interior design products at prices size and where they can be seen. **18**
**23**
Wanted: I female roommate to share house with
my children. Roommate must be available:
Immediate availability: 842-903-6722, 13-12-12
Female roommate needed: 2 BR, bath, spacious
Bedroom with a rooftop rest. Pay rent and use
Call 824-351-0972 or Call 824-351-0972
Female roommate wanted to serve guests试
with a spoon. Available immediately. Call 849-9062. No
taxes. Availible immediately. Call 849-9062. No
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Liberal female roommate wanted to share two bedroom apt 812 Ashykower House. Call 814-320-9750
Wanted to rent 2-1 B house or apt. in home for a tenant. Please be familiar with a house with other (a) 843-658-0000 (b) 843-658-0001 (c) 843-658-0002 (d) 843-658-0003 (e) 843-658-0004 (f) 843-658-0005 (g) 843-658-0006 (h) 843-658-0007 (i) 843-658-0008 (j) 843-658-0009 (k) 843-658-0010 (l) 843-658-0011 (m) 843-658-0012 (n) 843-658-0013 (o) 843-658-0014 (p) 843-658-0015 (q) 843-658-0016 (r) 843-658-0017 (s) 843-658-0018 (t) 843-658-0019 (u) 843-658-0020 (v) 843-658-0021 (w) 843-658-0022 (x) 843-658-0023 (y) 843-658-0024 (z) 843-658-0025 (
LIVE IN STYLE. Share beautiful new 3 BR
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neighborhood street.
1/2 Bath + 1/2 Kitchen
1/2 Bath + 1/2 Kitchen
1/2 Bath + 1/2 Kitchen
7
12
Thursday, December 7, 1978
University Daily Kansan
---
Concerts ...
From nage one
security, stage and light crews and banded advertising and Facilities staff.
AS FAR AS working with students, Frits said, he has never had a major problem with him.
"There've been a couple of instances where it thought SUA did not follow proper procedures," he said, "but luckily no one got hurt."
One of the procedure problems happened before this year's homecoming concert.
Fitzxir said he had a commitment from SUA for a Stephen Stills concert in Hoch.
No contract had been signed. Instead of Stills, SUA went with Cole. Kahler said SUA thought Cole would appeal to a wider audience.
"I did get screw," Fritz contends. "I got bumped up of Hoch.
"KU HAS got to realize that so far no damage has been done, but there's serious money at stake. They should have come home to work, maybe someone in this business, today."
Kahler said she thought such problems
occurred because students were allowed to decide what groups to bring.
"Those kinds of things would be less likely to happen if there were not student involvement, and I can see why other schools can justify staff programming," she said.
However, Shaw said, the University might not consider concerts a necessary part of academic life if KU switched to K-State's non-student system.
"We are sacrificing professional continuity and perhaps some of the quality of the concert program in order for students to gain knowledge and experience," Shaw said.
Hobos...
From page one
"I HITCHED OR would just do a lot of hiking with my home on my back. Hell, there's no use standing in some place starving to death.
"try to pack equipment for any weather. If I'm sooping wet I'll go to bed anawh."
One of Curt's favorite beds was the ground under Colorado pines because they protected him from the weather and their needles were "like an inner spring mat."
To get clean he would wait for right and would find a golf course sprinkler, the "best damn shower you ever stepped into."
It itdn't bother Carrit to postpone eating a meal occasionally.
"I never missed a meal in my life," he said. "I just waited and made up for lost time when it did come. How are you going to eat up that side door Palmium?"
TO KEEP his meal schedule from becoming too erratic, Curtin would work as a carine, truck driver, fry cook, hired farm hand, a fence, barn and cormeler or trail blazer for the Civilian Conservation Corn.
He now depends on Social Security and supplemental security checks to pay for necessities.
Memories of his tramping days are vivid in Curtit's mind, and many are pleasant.
Admiral Car Rental When was the last time you rented a car for
$5.95 per day
plus mileage
We have a few late model cars for sale
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843-2931
He says he is well suited to the inertian life.
"I don't invite everybody to be a hobo because they're not built for it," he said.
Shaw said, "There may come a time when it is necessary to weigh coal and benefits of it."
"But then there are some families with lots of money that have lost the ability to live," he said.
"But our system is a hell of a good way to learn."
NEVERTHLESS, Shaw said, "It's not the kind of business where you can stick a student or students in a position of risking failure," he added. "I see that fluctuates impressively. It is tooicky."
By the end of the school year, he said, more than 30 students will have had a hand with the new curriculum.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
MONDAY
Italian Spaghetti ... 2.95
TUESDAY
Fish and Fries Dinner . . 2.45
BURGER
JB's
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2 FREE COKES with any 12" pizza and—
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with any 16 " pizza with coupon
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Legal
"But I will say that I think the board reports to the student body president and he does what he wants," Rose said. He did what that's what he is doing—what he wants."
the meeting. He said he did not want to comment until he had seen the letter that Shankel had sent out and had talked to Harper.
From page one
The program that Shankel said the administration would accept was nearly identical to a proposal written by Jeff Arnold and submitted by Harper in
The program will include the following services:
--galleries
interiors
Holday Plaza
M11-1879
ARNOLD, NOW a member of the governing board, was recruited by Harper last May to do a study on legal services because Harper thought the board was moving too slowly to get a proposal in on time.
- Prepaid legal counsel to students
- Help with drafting legal documents
- Negotiations with adversary parties
- Notorial duties
- Notorial duties
Shankel said the administration did not want to provide litigation until the program was firmly established.
- Incorporation of KU student organizations for nonprofit purposes.
The Senate originally budgeted $44,000 for the first year of the program, but an accounting error in the Senate books caused the Senate to cut the budget back to $45,000.
The plan calls for no legal representation during the first year of the program. But Harper said that he thought the administration might be willing to consider litigation after six months, as proposed by Arnold.
HE DID say, however, that the program would be evaluated at different intervals to determine if more services were needed and could be handled.
"One of our concern is that litigation might use up the entire staff time of the attorney, just to serve a very few students," Shankel said.
VW
"If students had had the use of an arm of law in the 1960s and 1970s they would have been better prepared to handle it."
Harper said that several times KU administrators had expressed a concern that if litigation was included it could be a real problem for students for their own personal interests.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES Paraphernalia 842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
Campus Beauty Shoppe
9th and Illinois - 9th St.
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open Mon, thru Sat.
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841-JANE West of Kief's
Monday-Thursday 9:30-8:30
Friday and Sat. til 7:00; Sun., 1:00-6:00
Amer. Express, Visa MasterCharge, Lay-a-way
Physicians shun pills in 'battle of bulge'
Bv LYNN WILLIAMS
Staff Reporter
Amphetamine diet pills are an ineffective and potentially harmful way to fight the battle of the bulge, according to several Lawrence doctors and the Food and Drugs Administration.
There is a movement in the FDA to remove its approval of diet pills containing amphiphetens, Lorela Meyers, consumer affairs officer for the Kansas City district of the FDA, said recently. Such a step would result in a large decrease in diet pill production, she said.
Amphetamines are an appetite depressant. They stimulate the central nervous system, which raises the blood pressure and increases the respiratory rate and heart heat. Tolerance to the drug builds up.
EIGHTY-EIGHT percent of all legal amphetamines are prescribed for weight loss, Meyers said, and a quarter of the amphetamines being used today are obtained with a lethal prescription.
But it would be difficult if not impossible, to obtain a prescription for amphetamines from several Lawrence doctors. They say amphetamines are justified only in the treatment of neuropathy (sleeping sickness), and minimal brain dysfunction in children.
"I not only think it's unethical, I think it's criminal
to prescribe them for dieting," Byron Walters,
physician at Watkins Park and lecturer in oc-
casion.
Walters said he had received requests by mail for amphibians years after he had prescribed them to him.
He said he knew of no doctor at Watkins Hospital who prescribed amoethetines.
SYDNEY SCHROEDER, psychiatrist at Watkins,
says. "They're a very seductive kind of thing to take.
They make you feel like they're going to kill."
Schroeder said he did not prescribe amphetamines because of the attitude of the Food and Drug Administration toward them. But he said there might have been an overreaction to the dangers of amphetamines. There are some cases in which they can be used safely, he said.
R. L. Hermes, a gynecologist, said, "Very few ethical doctors will prescribe appetite suppressants anymore. Doctors are worried about patients getting honed up and hooked."
Monti Belot, a physician, said, "I do not believe there is any reason for amputations to be made."
Barn Bobres, a family physician, said, "The hazards far outweigh any benefit you might get from them. By using an appetite suppressant you are holding off the really true issue."
BUT BARNES said he did not consider the prescribing of ampetamines for weight loss to be unethical. He said some people could use them without abusing them.
One Lawrence osteopath does prescribe amphetamines for dieting patients who have developed a tolerance to weaker diet medications "to get the job done."
He said he was careful to prescribe them only to patients who wanted to use them for dieting, however. It is all right to prescribe them because they are not "obsvitalisantly addictive". he said.
Tom Tyler, graduate student of pharmacology and toxicology, said, "In terms of the classical addiction syndrome, amphetamines are just psychologically addictive."
But there is documentation of some physical and much emotional discomfort, including frightening hallucinations and deep depression in amphetamine addicts who went "cold turkey."
TYLER IS conducting research to find if there is an "antagonist" to amphenatines. An antagonist to a drug is a chemical that counters the effects of the drug. Tyler said if a chemical that blocked the feelings of euphoria resulting from amphenatines were used, doctors would prescribe amphenatines without worry.
Even if such a chemical were found, doctors would probably not prescribe amphenylates wholesale to their dieting patients, partly because they offended the body. weight loss has been only partially substantiated.
"If you can block the pleasant experience then it
wouldn't become a drug of abuse as easily," he said.
Barnes said according to studies that he'd read, ampatetmises work as an appetite depressant for children.
ALTHOUGH SMITH, Kline and French Laboratories, a national company, advertise amphenathes as a possible treatment for obesity, the flyer sent to pharmacists about Dexedrine, a form of amphenatheme, says it has "a limited role" in a weight control program. The advertisement adds that饺pills do not necessarily affect the appetite, but many of the central nervous system or the metabolism instead.
"It could be that you're just too busy to eat when it could be," Richard Tessera, assistant professor of food safety.
The knowledge that amphetamines were psychologically addictive and the fact that they were essential only in the treatment of certain diseases that require a physician's care, led law makers to put amphetamins in Schedule II of the Controlled Substances Act of 1970.
Schedule II drugs are classified as the most
dangerous drugs legally obtainable in the United States.
THEY REQUIRE is prescription written by a physician. Kansas law has the refilling of any prescription for the item displayed in Figure 18.
Doctors try to prescribe the smallest amount of amphetamines necessary to decrease the possibility that patients taking them will get hooked, Randolph Cox, pharmacist at Super X store drug store. said.
A student who works at the computation center said she was prescribed amphetamines for weight loss several years ago while she was pregnant. She said she grew to hate the drug.
She would use them for only a few months at a time and found that they curbed her appetite, but also "drove her up the wall" and made her irritated with her children, she said.
Because she had not begun to solve her weight problem until this year, she was doubtful about the results of her workout.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
She said she suffered from the initial effects of the fast jails she was arrested when she was 16.
"I'm pretty much convinced that the pills slow you up if anything," she said of long term weight reduction.
COLD
I would get a feeling of doom in the pit of my stomach, and I would pass that past. I wouldn't be hungry for the rest of the day.
KANSAN
Vol. 89, No. 71
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Giving concerts 'stock in trade' of Daniels band
Friday, December 8, 1978
KU finds poise against Titans, 90-77
See story page eight
By MELISSA THOMPSON
The Charlie Daniels Band bus was late pulling into the parking lot at the Holiday Inn yesterday afternoon, but within a few minutes, the band's leader had his hotel door opened wide to local press and photographers.
Daniels, who is known for his easygoing nature and openness, conducted the session.
The Three Rivers
He sat back in a chair near the room's window. Snow in the parking lot reflected in the window. He asked, would it would picture his answers by sending a stream of brown tobacco juice thumping into the snow?
Daniels talked about himself, his career and his band with an earnestness that his wife appreciated.
"Music's the first and foremost thing," he said.
"WERE NOT a 'super group,' but we're probably one of the most serious groups in the business in terms of what we’re trying to achieve and how we so about getting it."
He said if he had to name goals for the band, they would be to have every record go platinum and have every concert be a sellout.
"We're a ways away from that, though" he said. He sealt again and rinned.
"I wouldn't record 'Disco Duck,'" he said. A stream of brown juice spattered into
Daniels said his band may not have increased in popularity with any speed, but it had worked long and hard and didn't follow any fads or trends.
Fired up
See CHARLIE DANIELS back page
night in Hoch Auditorium. The concert was their second in a tour promoting a recently-finished album. Also appearing with Daniels was the Billy Sperls Band, a local country and bluegrass group.
The Charlie Daniels Band played its peculiar brand of country-jazz-rock music before a crowd of about 2,000 last pearling with Daniels was the Billy Spears Band, a local country and bluegrass group.
Late grades cause concern
BY JARE THUMPSON
Staff Reporter
As of two weeks ago, grades from 100 courses taught last spring at the University of Kansas had not been turned in to the office of admissions and records. The chairman of the University Council planning and resources committee said yesterday.
"We are concerned on behalf of the dean of admissions and records of the fact that as of two weeks ago there were 100 courses from spring semester in which course grades had not been turned in," Goodman said.
Grant Goodman, the chairman and professor of East Asian Studies, told the University Council he did not know how many students were affected.
He was asked by William Scott, professor of English, whether some of the course grades were those for students or candidates for dissertations.
GIL DYCK, dek of admissions and records, acknowledged Wednesday that some grades had not been turned in, but he chose to name the instructors involved.
Dyck also did not specify how many students were involved. He said the problem occurred each semester and his
Goodman said he did not know
office spent time at the end of every semester tracking down the grades or making special dispensations for students.
Goodman said a letter would be sent to Dyck ask for details and suggestions to help decrease the number of outstanding grades.
REPRESENTATIVES of the planning and resources committee were allowed to observe budget hearings in the offices of three vice chancellors; Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs; David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs; and Frances Horwitz, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
He also said that after his committee sat in on more than 30 University budget conferences in recent weeks, he was surprised by some of the discussions.
"The these hearings have a great emphasis on short run concerns rather than on long-term goals," he said. "We also express some concern on a general level, but the matter instead of academic matters. There was little, if any, reference to affirmative action and little, if any, reference to preventive planning."
Goodman said the conference concentrated on the financial aspects of the budget process, but neglected important factors.
Profits from surcharge alledged
Bv BARB KOENIG
Staff Reporter
Financial statements show that the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation might be making money from a 1966 plan to fund a new football stadium.
A surcharge of $ on football tickets and $4 on basketball tickets was implemented in 1968 to pay off a $535,000 loan to the KUAC from the Kansas University Endowment Association.
But Mike Harper, student body president, said yesterday that he thought the KUAC probably was making a profit from the college.
Doug Messer, KUAC business manager, would not comment on the alleviation.
"I think it's unfair to use a surcharge for a specific item as another source of income," Harper said.
Harper said he learned of the possible additional revenue when he compared the amount of the negotiated loan
payments with season ticket income. The comparison showed that the season ticket income was greater than the regular season ticket income.
BECAUSE FIGURES on how much the KUAC actually paid each year on the loan have not been obtained, Harper is unable to provide this information.
The corporation may pay more each year than the loan agreement calls for. If more money were paid each year than the loan agreement called for, Harper said, the loan could have been paid off two or three years ago.
Harper and Jon Josserand, Johnson law student, yesterday drew up a resolution proposing the elimination of the Supreme Court.
Harper and Josserand, both student members of the KUAC Advocacy Board, present the resolution to the MOU.
"I hope they approve it," Harper said. "If they don't we will have to do something else."
A new surcharge was placed on student and public tickets this year, to help pay annual installments of $168,000 on the $1.8 million loan. The student surcharge is 50 cents a game and the parent's surcharge is 30 cents a game. The surcharge is $1 a game for each ticket or $6 for the season.
HARPER AS asked Richard Winter, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee, to review the KUAC's loan payments to determine whether the corporation was profitting from the surcharge.
BECAUSE THE surcharge has not been reviewed, and the athletic department seemingly has made no move to review it before the 1980 expiration date. Harper said, he is convinced the surcharge is being continued.
An investigation into the status of the surcharge began earlier this semester because Harper suspected the corporation would try to continue the 1966 surcharge to pay for the existing stadium. The Endowment Association for a recent stadium renovation.
Med Center funds cut $1.2 million
Bv DAN WINTER
Staff Reporter
The largest funding slash ever dealt the University of Kansas Medical Center was handed down Wednesday in the form of a $1.26 million cut in a supplemental budget request, according to a KU official.
The cut was made by state budget director James Bibb, who also rejected a proposal from KU for a 20 percent increase in state funds for fiscal 1980. Instead of the 20 percent recommendation, he recommended a 6.2 percent increase for the next fiscal year.
The budget cuts were listed in a letter sent to the official, Keith Nichter, University director of business affairs, after KU requested a supplemental budget request to cover operating costs that were greater than expected.
KU also presented its proposed 1980 budget to Bibb. KU's
1980 budget request was $117,898,037. Bibb reduced it to $106,671,399.
Richard Von Ende, University executive secretary, said Dykes would be interested in getting the salary increase.
CHANCELLOR ARCHIE R. Dykes will attend budget hearings before Gov.elect John Carlin Tuesday and attempt to justify KU's requests for 1980 and the current fiscal year.
"These cuts are larger than we have been used to in recent years," Nitcher said. The "fiscal 1979 reductions are excessive. The total overall reductions, including the 1880 request, are higher than we've ever experienced."
"Of course, we want to get all the funds back," he said, "but we're especially interested in the salary funding, the funding for the new hospital, for the Outreach programs for the Witchita branch."
KR REQUESTED $85,293,006 in general use funds for
municipal 180, but Bibb cut that figure to $74,568,688.
The remaining funds are to be used for
other purposes.
Bibb did not recommend any money to fund expanded radiation therapy and diagnostic radiology services, additional laboratory automation equipment, additional laboratory personnel or ambulatory care improvements.
Bibb reduced to $2,198,211 a $7,297,777 request for maintenance and expanded open space in Center's headquarters. Open in May. *
Nitcher said Bibb made several cuts in the proposed budget after reviewing how much had been spent in those areas in previous years. Those reductions included $727,000 for training programs and $41,000 for Outreach programs, $241,000 from administration;
See BUDGET back page
2
Fridav. December 8,1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Thousands flee turbulent Iran
TEHRAN, Iran—Foreigners and Iranians stamped for flights out of Iran yesterday as reports circulated that opponents of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi were preparing for a bloody showdown with government troops this weekend.
Officials at Tehran's Mehrabed Airport reported "utter chaos." Thousands of people scrambled for plane tickets after airlines announced they had canceled flights in and out of the city Sunday and Monday, the critical days of the month-long holy season.
Large groups of U.S. dependents arrived in Tehran from turbulent provincial areas as American companies such as General Electric, Westinghouse, Flour Mills, Carnation Foods and others.
Carp, and other officers here employed an estimated 8,000 foreigners, including 5,500 Americans, have fled in the past 10 weeks. Thousands of Iranians, fearful after 11 months of political turmoil, also have flied, diplomatic sources said.
Treatu deadline emphasized
WASHINGTON—President Carter warned Egypt and Israel yesterday that failure to meet the Dec. 17 deadline for complying a Middle East peace treaty would risk further instability.
The president, showing increasing frustration over the inability of negotiators to surmount obstacles that have stalled the treaty, said passage of the deadline without an agreement would be a very serious matter with "far growing adverse effects."
Carter urged both sides to carry out the Camp David Summit agreements "not grudgingly, but enthusiastically."
Details aiven on Omaha crash
OMAHA--Radio transmissions between a Mexican Air Force pilot, who decided to beat a winter storm, and the Eppley Airfield control tower were normal before Wednesday's crash, a National Transportation Safety Board investigator said yesterday.
The DC-6, which had flown a Mexican agricultural delegation to Omaha last week but remained behind because of mechanical problems, exploded on takeoff about a mile north of the runway, killing the pilot and his six crew members in the worst plane crash in Omaha in 34 years.
A statement yesterday from the president's office in Mexico City said near zero temperatures had frozen one of the plane's four engines, by the pilot, Samuel Pedroza Cardenas, decided he could fly the DC-6 with only three of its engines operating.
Cardenas, the statement said, thought the fourth motor would defrost in flight.
NY garbage strike resolved
NEW YORK - A tentative settlement of New York City's seven day garbage strike by private carriers was announced yesterday, suggesting an early end to the dispute.
Two thousand drivers and helpers at TeamsMater Local B31 walked off the job Nov. 30, leaving private carts that collect garbage from the city hotels, trash bins and recycling facilities.
The tentative settlement, whose terms were not disclosed, came none too soon, as Fire Department officials reported that New Yorkers were setting fire to the property.
Arctic storm chills Southwest
A renegade Arctic cold front dumped a foot of snow on the southeastern Arizona desert and sprinted flakes on Los Angeles County as widespread snow
Snow in the Midwest crippled traffic, causing school closings, delaying computers and stranding highway motorists and road crews.
In Oklahoma, at least twenty persons were injured when a Grayhound bus overturned on an icy highway about 35 miles northwest of Oklahoma City.
the storms spawned freezing rain as they spread into Kansas and Missouri.
The storms spawned freezing rain as they spread into Kansas and Missouri. The National Weather Service in Chicago reported snowfall of 8.8 inches. Some 200 customers of Central Illinois Public Service Co. were without power much of the day after ice downed utility lines.
Wisconsin and Michigan issued heavy snow warnings and traveler's advisories as forecasters predicted more snow, mixed with ice and冻雪.
SALT II to be summit topic
WASHINGTON—President Carter said yesterday he would brief the leaders of France, Great Britain and West Germany on details of a nearly complete agreement.
He said the United States and the Soviets were willing to meet on this basis, which he could use as a way to resolve, provided the Soviets were willing to contend what he called a steady progress in the talks.
so Soviets were wining to continue what he called steady progress in the Summit will take place Jan. 5 on the岛 of Guadalupe.
Fire kills 11 in N.J. tenement
NEWARK, N.J. - Fire swept through an aging, three-story wood-frame murphy emergency day, killing at least 11 residents who were trapped inside the building.
Eighteen persons escaped the blaze, but one resident was missing and feared dead.
Workers picked through the rubble much of yesterday recovering the bodies, which were burned beyond recomposition.
Fire Chief John F. Gaussfield refused to call the two-alarm fire suspicious, but he said it was under investigation by the city arson squad. Security guards at a nearby city building said they saw a man run from the scene shortly after the fire broke out.
Vendetta victims found in Chile
A Human Catholic bishop directed police and legal officials to the site, at the Longon mine 25 miles southwest of Santiago. Police sources said four bodies were removed on Tuesday, nine on Wednesday and at least 12 more were visible.
SANTIAGO Clule—Twenty-five or more decomposing bodies have been found in an abandoned limestone mine and there is speculation they are the remains of a giant creature.
The newspaper La Tercera quoted unidentified sources as saying the majority of the skulls of those unearthed appeared to have suffered bullet wounds.
Police sources said the bodies probably had been in the mine three or four years and the lack of oxygen apparently delayed decomposition.
Japan picks new head of state
TOKYO-Ruling party leader Masayoshi Oihira was elected Japan's prime minister yesterday after a day's delay caused by feeding within his own Liberal-Democratic Party. Oihira then named a 20-member cabinet apparently armed to battle Japan's economic problems.
Ohira, 18, was assured the top government post Nov. 27, after he scored an upset victory over incumbent party president and prime minister. Takeo
As party president, Oihra was automatically in line for the ministerial post because his party holds a majority in both houses of parliament.
His selection, however, was held up because Fukuda's faction refused to participate in Oihara's election since Oihara had picked one of his own supporters, and he was not a viable candidate.
It will be partly sunny today with a high around 20. Winds will be from the north to northwest. The temperature tomorrow will drop to 10 to 5 below and the temperature tomorrow will rise to 15 to 25 above.
Weather...
For the first time in several months, however, food was not the chief culprit. A decline in the price of meat held the rise in consumer demand, and third the increase of the previous two months.
Gas, oil push wholesale prices up
Overall wholesale prices increased 0.8 percent, compared with 0.9 percent increases in each of the previous two months, the Labor Department reported. Wholesale
prices in November were more than double what they were 11 years ago.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Another big increase in wholesale prices in November, especially for gasoline and heating oil, will mean that it will be a costly winter for consumers.
BUT PRICE increases of other goods offset most of the improvement in the food supply.
November was the first full month since President Carter announced his new anti-inflation program. However, administration officials have said it could take as long as nine months before the program results in a rise of the inflation rate, now near 10 percent.
The department said the price of gasoline increased 1.8 percent and home heating oil increased 2.4 percent.
Illicit prison press use uncovered
LANSING (AP) -- Unauthorized publications apparently printed on the prison printing press may indicate widespread misuse of facilities by inmates at the Kansas State Penitentiary, its director said yesterday.
"This may be just the tip of the iceberg," Kenneth G. Oliver, the director, said. He explained that the printed matter had been printed by the prison's open mailing policy for prisoners.
Lee McCarthar, 38, Wichita, has been placed in isolation for preparing and mailing several newsletters, including one setting up a defense fund for himself.
Oliver reported that one inmate, Richard
"It seems that several inmates . . . have surreptitiously published some literature and have mailed an undetermined but relatively small amount of the printed matter out to persons unknown," Oliver said.
Prison authority discovered 200 copies of the ICA Journal "ready for mailing at the prison."
Crashed plane's pilot dead
DENVER (UPI)-The pilot of a computer plane that crashed on a mountain ridge in a raging blizzard died yesterday of massive head injuries.
A Rocky Mountain Airways spokesman
SKołtepin Klopfenstein, 29, of Denver, died at
10:48 p.m. on Wednesday.
The plane, carrying 20 passengers and two crewmen on a flight from Steamboat
When searchers found the plane Tuesday, one passenger was dead but the others survived with injuries ranging from minor to critical. Klopfenstein was one of those with critical injuries.
Earlier yesterday, Federal investigators interviewed the seriously injured co-pilot of the plane and another investigator collapsed when inspecting the plane's wreckage.
WAXMAN
Candles
1405 Mass
Lawrence, Kansas 60011
913-813-8324
10:28 Mon-Sat
1:25 Sun
"The material identifies itself as being from the International Correctional Association, Midwest District Office, P.O. Box 4354, Wichita," Oliver said.
The literature included a one-page flier soliciting supposedly tax deductible donations to several "reward funds." One of the documents cited is the "Richard McCarthier Defense Fund."
A brain does not live by bread alone. It also needs cheese, and pepperoni, and mushrooms, and all the good things you find on top of a Pizza Hut* pizza. So before you hit the books, clip the coupon below and bring it to a participating Pizza Hut* restaurant. You'll get a great pizza at a great price. Your stomach will be happy, which will make your brain happy, which will make your finals happy, which will make your parents happy . . . which will make Christmas break a whole lot happier!
Before you stuff your brain, feed your stomach.
So clip the coupon and Let Yourself Go to Pizza Hut¹
McCarthier is serving 43 years to life for unlawful use of a firearm, unlawful possession of a firearm, first-degree robbery or influencing a witness and escape.
Other confiscated materials included a letterhead from the "Kansas Justice Union," an "affidavit of the ICA," an application to the Court of Appeal A and a request for donations to the ICA.
Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut* restaurant and get 50% off the regular price of your favorite SuperStyle pizza. Offer expires December 31, 1978. One coupon per customer per visit.
ending in November, gasoline prices were up 10.7 percent and heating oil increased 4.3%
any SuperStyle pizza
50%OFF
Oliver said they appeared to have been printed on misappropriated state property.
customer per visit
Pizza Hut.
© 1978 Pizza Hut, Inc.
Cash value: 1.20c
K.
ALTHOUGH THE increases reported yesterday were at the wholesale level, they are certain to be passed along to consumers in higher retail prices.
Consumers in the Northeast already are facing an increase of 3 to 4 cents a gallon for home heating oil, and Carter's chief inflation adviser, Alfred Kahn, said Wednesday that prices of all oil products may increase as increased further to alleviate shortages.
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
On a brighter day, the department said meat prices declined 1 percent during November, the first decrease in several months. Up 6.1 percent for the three-month period.
THE 0.6 PERCENT increase in food prices compared with increases of 1.7 percent in each of the previous two months. In addition to meat, the price of coffee also decreased. There were higher prices for cheese, potatoes, poultry, eggs, sugar and fresh fruit.
Wholesale prices of goods other than food use 0.8 percent, up from 0.6 percent increases in each of the previous two months, ie department said.
Wholesale prices had increased 7.8 percent during the first 11 months of the year. he department's producer price index for (nished goods stood at 200.6 percent in November, meaning goods price at $100 in 167 had risen in cost to $200.60 last month.
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LEVEL 3 KANSAS UNION
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8, 1978
3
'Electra' well done despite time barriers
By MELISSA THOMPSON
reviewer
A member of the chorus in KU's presentation of Sophocles "Electra" nods grimly at the end of the play and declares, "This day's work is well done."
Indeed.
"Electra" which opens in the William Elyse Memorial Theatre Monday, is well done despite the handicaps inherent to the program. A long and tense audience. The play will run through Dec. 9.
"Electra" is part of Sophoes' trilogy about the murder of a Greek hero, Agamemnon, and his son and daughter's subsequent search for vengeance.
KATHELEN L. WARFEL, Kansas City, Kan, senior, plays the title roll skillfully. From the moment when she strides nervously on stage, her voice carries a half-swallowed sob; her chin verges on quivering.
WARFLE HAS a fine air of distracted grief that shifts into self-increasing anger and mackery during her confrontations with her mother, dyshemia, and her mother, Clivemestra.
Robin Manzano, Lake Bluff, Ill., sophomore, plays Chrysothermis. She is a tall, slender woman whose beauty and calm personality with Warfel's shaggy, shabby appearance.
This contrast is heightened during one scene, a typical sisters argument. Warfel and Manzano rehash the past and bitterly reproach one another for their different views on her mother's cruelty and her second husband, Aegisthus.
Another scene between the two women demonstrates their versatility. Tenderly, Warbf刷 hands back Manzuno's hair and kisses him, recalling their mother. Manzano recolls in horror.
JUDY KROEGER, who plays the murder queen, Clytemraean, does a good job portraying a hateful woman. When she glides on stage in purple satin and silver chains, she has a hard look in her eyes. The cut edge to her appearance.
Kroger's voice drips with despair as she knocks her daughter Electra for mocking her. "She's not going to be here."
My eyes are a weary red,
My jeans have worn a hole in behind (you can't see it by turning the page).
And my pocketbook is thin from inflated bills and too much party.
What will I do?
A man with a beard and hair. He is wearing a shirt and pants, and his hands are on his hips.
(a simulated picture)
I need a new pair of jeans (my hands are in my pocket to keep myself warm).
Think I'll drive over to Jeans for Beans,
where I can buy dark denims for just $10.25,
or a sweatshirt for only $5.50.
Jeans for Beans sells quality clothing at a cheap price. Granted, the store isn't fancy (these guys won't even replace the carpet), but who cares?
jeans for beans
shirts and skirts
1903 MADE
Electra's smudged, lined face glares back at her.
Crestes, played by Timothy Loftus, Florissant, M., junior, is the only character that seems less polished than the others. Loftus lurches about the stage a bit too easily. He has sems admirable moments, but needs more stealth during other parts.
Director Bill Nesbitt handled the chorus well. Instead of messing with problems of getting the chorus members to move and speak in unison, he has each member speak alone. He also has reduced the chorus from its original 12 members to just three.
SET DESIGNER Robert Butcher and costumer Chez Haeli have also done their work well. The sparse, sandy pillars and simple Greek togas enhance the bare emotions of the play. They pare away unnecessary distractions.
Persons not familiar with mythology or the story of Orestes and Electra should not use their ignorance as an excuse to stay silent, but should never be so sure they to solely be the sob in the warflea's voice.
Efforts under way against Oread plan
Some property owners in the Oread Neighborhood are trying to collect money for attorneys to represent them and explain their objections to the Oread Neighborhood plan during public hearings on the plan scheduled for next month.
Virginia Munger, 1601 University Drive, and yesterday that a letter had been sent by several property owners to ask them for the neighborhood, requesting donations.
Munger said legal counsel would help the landlords present an organized front during the hearings, and avoid the potential for one presenting a different proposal.
Munger would not go into detail about the contents of the letter or the number of people to whom it was sent. She and some other property owners object to a
proposal outlined in the Oread Neighbored plan for rezoning to restrict future growth. Munger and the other architects would rezone the rezoning would decrease property values.
The aim of the rezoning, according to the plan, would be to control traffic problems and deterioration in the area by limiting population density.
Recently, some landlords started a splinter neighborhood association, saying that a new association could do more for the neighborhood than the Oread Neighborhood Association could do.
The Oread Neighborhood runs from the KU campus to Massachusetts Street and from 19th Street to Ninth Street.
Munger said the request for money had been made to many property owners, and not just to those who supported the splinter association.
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Suggests Prepare your pose for choreography will provide depth motion and most breath.
Court Martial. Supervise and Juries are assigned to analyze for this 12 week course. College Preparation
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(713) 543-4460 ext. 907
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DO NOT CALL AUDITION LOCATION
Live auditions will be held at the following locations:
Jan. 4 - O'SMURRAY, M - O'SMURRAY (842) 543-4460
Jan. 4 - MISSISSAU, M - MISSISSAU (442) 543-4460
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
DECEMBER 8,1978
Property loss problems
It is both startling and unsettling to learn of the size of theft and inventory problems that plague the University of Kansas.
Between October 1977 and October 1978, the University reported $73,636 lost to theft. During that same time, only $2,719 of KU property was recovered. In addition, most University officials agree that the theft problems have worsened in recent years.
The reason for these problems, in part, some persons say, is because of KU's inventory system, which delegates responsibility for receiving and storing University property to individual departments.
Inventory, under this system, is only as accurate as each department makes it. Often this allows for an abundance of useless and forgotten property to accumulate in storage areas of University buildings.
"TVE GONE through a lot of buildings on the KU campus," Dwight Regnain, a former University storekeeper and security guard, said. "The waste and theft is so immense you can't believe it—a lot of it simply isn't reported."
Regnier is no neophyte to the concerns of inventory, either. He worked as a supply chief and taught supply and logistics for 15 years in the U.S. Marines. He quit his job as storekeeper last July, because he said he was frustrated with KU's property management system.
In the meantime, the University needs to take a closer look at its inventory policies and seriously consider an independent audit. A crackdown on departmental inventory methods would be a logical first step. In addition, a greater lobbying effort in the Kansas Legislature for inventory and security improvement funds is needed.
Considering the amount of property lost last year at KU, it would seem that any money used to reduce that loss would be well spent.
Book states possibility of bankrupt government
A fitting conclusion to the stormy year of Proposition 13 and chatter about tax revolving comes in a new book by Richard Rose and Gue Peterts, in its title, poses a question for our times: "Can Government Go Bankrupt?"
He recommends that the University create a central supply office and have an audit of KU property conducted by someone outside the University.
The authors use the word "bankrupt" literally, reflecting their concern about the fiscal consequences of government spending without limit, and figuratively, alluding to the political fallout from wild tax and spending policies.
Their answers score points-and,
ultimate measure of activity—about the proper
of government.
"There was a laxness in the handling of taxpayers' money." Regnier said. "A lot of the problem was that there was a great deal of time and money spent on materials that were obsolete or valueless."
Despite their apparent concern, a plan for such a central storage and supply stem is listed only 13th on KU's priority list of 25 needed projects, which means that it probably will be at least five years before the project is funded.
one literal answer to the title question is,
appropriately for the political scientist
guy you got.
State and local governments, they say, can end up flat broke if they overburden taxpayers to the point at which it becomes politically impossible to tax heavily enough policy.
ALTHOUGH KU administrators reject the notion of an outside "housecleaning," they agree there is need for both more storage space and a central supply system. But a lack of funding, according to administrators, is the biggest obstacle to making changes in the supply system.
CENTRAL GOVERNMENTS, on the other hand, need not worry about literal bankruptcy because they can always crank up computers and print enough money to pay their debts.
The authors' larger concern, however, lies with a bankruptcy more threatening. They conclude that a government that tries to do too much, as most have in recent years, will become "politically bankrupt" or cease to exert authority over the public.
Political bankruptcy may not send the world's governments to tapping like tenpins—indeed, Rose and Petra dollars are going to grow a "tyranny of weakness" in which citizens would become indifferent to their government's demands and would cease to rely on them.
Rose and Peters contend both financial and bankruptcy can be avoided in
In that world, the governed would struggle trottover to avoid the edicts of government, which they perceive as exorbitant themselves, and to wring out of paying taxes.
They want the state to reduce its size to save itself.
"JUST AS A Doctor may advise an overweight patient to count calories to lessen the risk of heart attack," they say, "so a social scientist may note that if politicians do not count the cost of public money then political bankruptcy can result."
Is the United States slipping toward political bankruptcy?
The politicians and pundits—and whoever doutts them?—have wailed incessantly for years.
Rick Alm
since August, when Californians repudiated their leaders with Proposition 13.
That loss of faith exists, all right, but the country shows signs of drifting back the other way, of intuitively applying the law. Politicians noticed the warning signs of political bankruptcy and in some startling reversals have began cutting taxes and reducing spending.
IT APPEARS, then, that the political system works with hydraulic leverage. If the government applies pressure by demanding too much in taxes, the people's rights are threatened the political existence of government. At that point, the state retreats.
Right now U.S. governments are backing away.
only for education, it's back to the book.
Like all good books, "Can Government Go Bad" is worth reading, although hardly original, one. Rose and Pete remind us that we must watch the size of government or it will grow until it can afford its citizens without militaristic methods.
The danger exists, however, that the flux of experience will obscure the lessons of 1978 and, when taxes no longer press so heavily, the experience will swing in the opposite direction again.
As a political primer for our times, then,
the book emphasizes that governments
ought not attempt more than they can
accomplish; that they should not run up
expenses that will prove unacceptable when it
comes time to collect taxes.
In deciding which benefits to provide to the public—and to themselves—governments should not tend to undervalue or ignore cost. High cost with limited benefits should be avoided, even if it means having some blaemes on the body politic.
IN SOME WAYS, Rose and Peters anticipate somewhat the political creed that could emerge in the United States as more and more citizens question the size of government after they receive their tax bills.
Finally, it should be emphasized that the worst part of endless government problem solving is the larger problem it creates: a government without limits.
And an unlimited government destroys a free society.
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Publicized at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60454. Subscriptions to mail are $15 for six months and $20 for nine months. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, said the student activity fee.
Editor
Steve Frazier
Business Manager
Don Green
Advertising Advisor Chuek Chowina
General Manager Rick Musser
There it was, screaming at me from a page of the New York Times. I didn't want
Biorhythms hit new low in credibility
*Should you, or shouldn't you?* Personal pocket-size BIORHYTHM COMPUTER reveals his and her compatibility on any device. You can do anything to it in a full year in advance.*
The National Enquirer, definitely, Guide, probably. But the New York Times?
"Sigmund Freud suspected it, today's scientists investigate it, five NFL teams monitor it, 3.5 million people swear by it, some of the world's largest companies rely on it. Now you can determine your own life cycles..."
Allen Holder
AM I TO understand that, for $10, postage. I'll learn whether I should get up tomorrow, bother taking final next week or take a trip next month? It's safe to say I'm a skeptic and biorhythmia are one of those including astrology, that I just don't believe in.
This prophetic computer, it said, "may tell you tell a bit about your peaks, poops and perilous days ahead. $10 plus $1 postage and appropriate sales tax, if any."
Birthythms have been around awhile, but only recently they received much
national attention. A 1978 edition of
the book, *Dictionary doesn't even
have the word listed.*
Well, then, what is this theory of biorhythms all about? Jennifer Bolch, in a Reader's Digest article last year, called it a "theory to explain what the difference is between low, good and bad days," and a "theory to appear ebb and flow of energy."
According to Bolch, there are many kinds of body rhythms, but three are the most commonly known: the physical, emotional and acoustic rhythms, which are used to determine body rhythms.
THE CYCLES begin on a person's day of birth and are repeated again and again, with different lengths of time for each cycle. Each cycle has its high and low points, as well as critical points, which fall right in the middle.
For example, a person who is on a
physical peak supposedly will be energetic, strong and full of vitality. When he's at the low point in the cycle, he's tired and run down. And in the middle, when the physical cycle crosses the critical line, anything can happen. And that is supposed to be dangerous.
Biorthythm proponents don't argue that the theory predicts what will happen, but only that it "tells us our tendency to behave in accordance with the laws we can overcome by awareness and willpower."
Biorythm supporters have, of course, all sorts of examples to back the theory.
"Lee Harvey C. swaled shot John F. K. Lee when Oswald bottomed on physical and intellectual rhythms, and was shot the first time he was also on an emotionally 'critical' day
"The Washington Redskins, favored to win over the lower-rated New England Patriots lost instead. . predicted by biorhythm experts."
Gee, there must be something to those biorrhythms.
I prefer to remain skeptical and believe people who at least sound reputable. Andrew Aighen, a professor at the University of Minnesota, said biorhythms were "basically a put-on with no scientific proof whatsoever."
"MARILYN MONROE and Judy Gurland be committed suicide on their critical days."
Amazingly, many people readie believe things like biorthryms with few, if any
And Michael Persinger, a professor at Laurentian University in Canada.
questions. Businesses, oddsmakers and sportswomen are said to reheart heavily when asked.
I doubt that I'll believe in biohythms unless I see one lot more evidence to back the claim.
ALTHOUGH I don't believe the theory is accurate, I'm still just a little bit interested in this research. It's a lot of work over weeks ago, and, because a computer that could determine biothymes was available, I can check it out.
What I was interested in, of course, was how I would be functioning during final exams. And, if I remember correctly, I am still very good at math. I'm relieved, but I still think I had better study.
And, if one day soon I hear that the Rev. Jim Jones and about 000 of his followers were on physically, emotionally and internally, a couple of weeks ago, I still won't believe it.
MCCALEY DESIGNER NO. 14520386
© 2018 BY QUINCETT THOMSON
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'Practice paper' funds should be cut
To the editor:
Three cheers for Norman Krite, Keith Seveidge and Brian M. Farley. In their letters in the Kansan Nov. 28, we find that the Kanan is the epitome of capitalism—"Profts motive behind advertisements," cries the headline.
I suggest that funding for the Kansan from the student activity fee be immediately halted. Let anybody who wants the paper buy a subscription. If circulation goes up or so, that's no problem. A single book is produced as sufficient for a practice paper.
That's fine. It is obvious they need the practice. But why should I pay for it? I don't ask journalism students to buy me comics. That's because art supplies are fine art students.
Maybe, if we're extremely lucky, the
Excellent! I'm all for our journalism students learning about the American business system. When they move on to the real world and start work for the Kansas City Star, Lawrence Journal-World or Wichita Beacon, they should be well trained.
Obviously, the quality of the paper is no justification. There hasn't been an intelligent student editorial in the paper since Diane Wolkow left. Announcements of her work are printed after the event. AP and UP releases are duplicated in local papers.
The important question is what is the main purpose of the Kansan? I contend that its main purpose in recent semesters has been to train paper for journalism students.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN letters
But wait a minute! Since when does any real newspaper have a guaranteed circulation of 20,000? Don't real newspapers have to sell their product to the public?
If the Journal-World goes through a period of mediocrity, I can cancel my subscription. When the Kansan goes to hell, I'm stuck. Sure, I can stop reading it—but that makes little difference to the Kansan. I got my money, my opinions be damned.
When hundreds (thousands?) of students were offended by a concert review, what could they do? Cancellation or cancellation of methods of influencing a paper. Why is this right denied to the students? The largest appropriation is the one from Kansan. Are they deserving of such funds?
paper will improve to the point that money for thousands of subscriptions will flow into the Kansan coffers. At least it will be because of the quality of the paper, not the quality and quantity of lobbying in the Student Senate.
Max Coe
Assistant instructor of computer science
American pleading for anti-shah support
To the editor:
Because my country is responsible for the slaughter of thousands of Iranian men, women and children through its support of a terrorist organization, I be more ashamed to call myself American.
The Shah has acquired power over the lives of 35 million people, not through the people's support, but solely by the military and financial support of the U.S. govern-
I am ashamed because we have always prided ourselves on the belief that people should be responsible for the determination of their government, yet we forcibly imposed upon and maintained a king over 35 million people.
I am ashamed because we have prided ourselves on defending the liberties of people of all nationalities, yet our government has supported the Shia in their artworks and tortures mercilessly anyone who is outspoken against his regime.
I am ashamed because we have always prided ourselves on helping groups of underdeveloped countries improve their lives, yet millions of Iranians live in nightmarish squail, while our American dollars find their way into the pockets of Shah Pahlavi and his family, and into his enormous military arsenal.
I am ashamed because it is perfectly clear that the Iranian people oppose the Shah for his intense, unrelenting cruelty and a claim its support of this man. I am ashamed because
our government defends a man whose soldiers shoot peaceful and unarmed people, whether they are demonstrating or praying to God.
I am ashamed because, as an American, I must share in the responsibility for what we have done. The government is our political arm and we, as the body to which that arm belongs, are as much responsible for what it does as we individually are responsible for what we do to others. There are no exceptions to this rule. We are no scapegoats upon which we may place the burden of our guilt. The guilt is surs because it is our government.
I must wonder what has happened to us. Throughout our history as a nation, we have been forced to force their government and lifestyle upon another people. We fought against them because we were firm in our conviction that all people should be forced to determine their own direction.
However, President Carter hasn't excluded the possibility of sending American soldiers to Iran to force the Shaig's regime to withdraw. That is why their opposition to him. Certainly, we must realize that fighting with the goal of making people free to determine their own political destiny would be immeasurable more noble than what Americans have always been proud of.
President Carter was elected under the promise that our foreign policy would be directed by "human rights." The campaign promised to fulfill the. The campaign promised to help their hearts and minds, if help them in their struggle against the cruelties of Shah Pahlavi if we so choose.
I am not urging war in any sense. But everyone at least can give support to the Iranian people in their hearts and minds. My policies must be changed is not unjustified.
Consequently, Americans must immediately give their support to the Iranian people, because they are the oppressed, as we have seen. Consequently, to many oppressed people before them.
But that decision depends upon all of us, and it is a decision that each of us inevitably will
To the editor:
Nancy Haskins Lawrence junior
I have a complaint regarding the sports department at the University of Kanaa. I feel there is some discrimination going on in this case, in students with children.
Children of students need bleacher seats
I am a 28-year-old sophomore and have a four-year-old child. I also have a season ticket to the basketball games. When I called the ticket office to see if there was anything I could buy, so I could send my little girl, Sunit, to the game with me, I got a very strange answer.
The woman I spoke to was on the verge of being rude and informed me that I could, she guessed, buy a high school ticket for $2 for my four-year-old. But she stressed that she would not stick to sill in the student section, and I should really buy her a reserved seat for $5.
Somehow I cannot see myself seating my 4-year-old in the reserved section and seating myself in the bleachers. This practice is unfair to those of us who have children, and yet still want to participate in sports and other events at K.U.
I would like to suggest that there be a $1 ticket for children under twelve.
Lawrence sophomore
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is afilmer, a list of addresses should include the writer's class or home town or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8, 1978
5
Westergren verdict upheld
The conviction of Eugene E. Westergreen last month for the attempted rape and murder of an elderly Lawrence woman was upheld yesterday in Douglas County District
Franklin County Judge Floyd H. Coffman, who found Westerngrenalty guoy Nov. 6, denied a motion for a new trial fled Nov. 15 by the jury. He defended defense attorney Jerry Dunnellly.
Westergren, 51, was convicted of attempting to murder his partner, 84, Knightsgail, 51.
Smith was found beaten to death in her home Nov. 8, 1977.
After denying the motion for a new trial, Coffman ordered Westergreen to report to Larned State Hospital for 120 days of psychiatric examination and evaluation prior to sentencing. Westergreen has a 20-year history of treatment for mental illness.
In his written motion, Donnelly argued that the court had erred several times.
DONNELLY HAD Filed the motion for a trial, he said, because he thought Mr. Dillon was being unfair.
Donnelly argued that a confession Westergren gave police when he was arrested Dec. 21 should not have been used as state evidence. Donnelly maintained throughout the trial that Westergren was in poor mental and physical condition when he gave the confession and, therefore, the confession should have been considered reliable.
Donnely also argued that evidence of Westergam's criminal record should not have been presented by the state. Donnetly argues that the state should support of his client's character, and the state should have been prohibited from presenting evidence against Westergam's
At yesterday's hearing on his motion, Donnelly centered his arguments on Kansas Bureau of Investigation tests of blood and samples found at the scene of the crime.
san
ers
ced
uld
and
af-
ter
and
con.
edit
DONNELLY, REFERRING to the testimony of a BKI lab technician, said an H factor was present in seminal stains on the blood of animals. Another women was incapable of producing the H factor.
Donnely acknowledged that the H factor, a blood type factor, could have come from
the victim. But, he said, because 20 to 25 percent of all people cannot produce an H factor, there was a one in four chance the factor did not come from the victim either.
Therefore, Donnelly argued, the state could not prove beyond reasonable doubt that Mr. Ginsburg was a Republican.
"The only logical confusion that one could reach, without consideration of anything else, is that the defendant did not produce the seminal stains on the victim's clothing." Donnelly said. "This is an absolute conclusion."
But Harry Warren, Douglas County assistant district attorney, countered that the state did not need to present the blood sample tests as evidence.
"I DIDN'T HELP our case—in fact, it
may have hurt it." Warren said. "One
reason we used it was to prove the defendant
was wrong and that he would have
the possibility that he could have done it."
sufficient evidence to link the murder and attempted rape charges.
Warren said the blood sample evidence did not prove any element of the case that
Donnelly also argued that there was in-
Citing previous testimony by a county pathologist, Donnelly said there was no way to prove the rape was committed before the death of the victim. If the rape had occurred the victim's death, Donnelly said, Western State would be charged with second degree murder.
But Warren said Westergreen admitted to the rape in his confession, and the state could assume that Westergreen committed suicide while attempting to rage the victim.
WARREN AGREED there was no way to prove the rape had been committed before the victim's death. But, he said, the state did not charge Wistergren with rape, but atropion.
Warren', in addressing Donnelly's argument regarding the reliability of Westergren's confession, said the company had warned that the investigation for Westergren not to have been involved.
Warren also said the court ruled correctly when the state was allowed to present evidence.
Br² jar
NO REFURB
NO RETURN
B.Y.O.B.
Bring your old bottles and
jars to The K.U. Ecology Club's
glass recycling center
December 16 and 17 between the
hours of 9:00 am and 5:00 pm
LOCATION:
Daisy Hill Parking Extension, West of
the dorms on Irving Hill Road between
lowa Street and the KANU radio tower.
For more information, call 841-1484
or stop by the Ecology Club office,
103 Snow,
open 1:00-3:00 pm weekdays.
Skiing Over The Holidays?
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WHAT SANTA SHOULD KNOW ABOUT BLAUPUNKT
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* Cassette Program Select Switch
* Manual Tuning Control
* Waveband Select, Loc/DX/DX Switch
* Compact size for installation in most Import Cars
* Adjustable Shafts for Domestic car installation
* Adjustable Impression Circuit FOR FM
* Broadcast reception
Police said the woman, Blue Goldman,
1309 Ohio St., reported that a burglar broke into her apartment and stole part of her stereo system.
Features
1 Variable Tone Control
2 On/Off, Volume, Stereo Balance, Cassette Eject Control
3 FM Muting Switch
4 Delete Noise Reduction Circuit Switch, for reception
5 Playback of Dolbyized FM broadcasts & Cassette Tapes
6 Mono / Stereo Mode Switch
Lawrence police reported that several thefts occurred Wednesday, including one burglary in which a Lawrence woman lost $2.700 in stereo equipment.
Police Beat
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Features
BRIGHTER ROADS is Lawrence's exclusive Blaupunkt dealer offering SPECIAL PACKAGE DEALS on what YOU want, not what some salesman wants to sell you.
While you're shopping Saturday, stop in for a free lunch (11:00-2:00) and sample auto sound that's as good as the food you'll eat. Also see and hear the fine quality line of Grundig auto sound equipment.
Police said the theft occurred about two weeks ago. Davis valued the wheel covers at
Carolyn Davis, a secretary in the School of Engineering, reported the theft of two wheel covers from her car, which was parked at 2017 Louisiana St.
p. m. Wednesday. The unit was valued at $250.
On campus, KU police reported there were few crimes committed on Wednesday.
POLICE SAID the theft occurred between
15: 15 m. Monday and 8: 45 m. Wednesday.
Goldman lost a reel-to-reel recorder valued at $1,500, a receiver valued at $700 and a wristwatch.
See you Saturday—When you find what you like be sure to tell Santa !
The thief cut the cable that secured the bicycle to the rack.
Brighter Roads Inc
843-9030
1420 W. 23rd
Police received a report from the Westridge Medical Clinic, 1400 W. Sixth St., of the theft of $168 from Ross A. Sciara. The theft occurred between 3 p.m. and 3:50 p.m. Wednesday.
However, a resident of Ellsworth Hall, 1734 Engel Road, reported that a burglar stole $800 bank, a clock radio, a suitcase and a couple of clothes while he was eating dinner Wednesday.
Compiled by Henry Lockard
5:15 p.m. Monday and 8:45 p.m. Wednesday.
Scott Robinson, Prairie Village senior,
100 Naismith Drive, reportthe theft of
his nails from a bike rack near
Naismith Mall.
Pice said Robinson valued the bicycle at $150. The theft occurred between 8 p.m.
and 10 a.m. at the store.
The 10-speed bike valued at $133 belonged to a 10-year-old boy. The theft occurred within three months of purchase.
OTHER REPORTS included the theft of another bicycle, the theft of a radio-tape player unit from a car and the theft of $168 from a local physician.
KIEF'S Records
Police said the theft occurred at about 8
A Lawrence man reported the theft of a radio-tape unit from his car, which was part of an investigation into drug use.
THIS AFTERNOON ENJOY T.G.I.F. AT THE HAWK
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6
Friday, December 8, 1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Night Life
Lawrence, Opera House, 644 Massachusetts St.
- Koko Taylor and Her Blues Machine,
D-8 9/6 p.m. to 12:30 p.m., $3 general admission
- Vale Spell, Dec. 13, 9 p.m., to 12:30 a.m.
tree
- Morningstar Concert Dance, Dec. 14, 9 p.m. to 12:30 a.m., $2.50 general admission and $2 members.
Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
Off the Walt Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
Spare Time
- Worm Ranch Warriors, Dec. 8, 8 p.m. to midnight, admission $250.
- East Kansas Song Writers, Dec. 9, 2-5*
n.m. admissions $150.
- Norman Blake, Dec. 16
* Jam Session, Dec. 13, 8 p.m. to midnight
from
- Earl Robinson and the Red Hot Scamps
Dec. 8, 9 p.m.; midnight, $5
Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts
- Jam Session, Dec. 14, 9 p.m., free.
Concerts
Queen, Dec. 8, Kemper Arena, $7.50 and $8.50.
Recitals
Student Recital Series
- Murphy Quartet, Dec. 8, 8 p.m.
SWarthwout Rectal Halt, free.
- swiftfor Hecifar Man.free!
* Vocal students of Richetta Manager. Man.
* Teaching English in Paris.
- David Weir, piano, Swarthout, 8 p.m. free.
- Trombone choir and Tuba ensemble,*
* Dec. 11 8.a.m. Swarthout*
*Collegiate Musical conductor by J. Bunker Clark, Dec. 12, 3:30 p.m., Spooner Hall.*
Doctoral Rectal, Sylvia Reynolds, piano
Dec. 12, 8:30, Swarthout
Carillon Recitals, Dec. 10, 3 and 7 p.m.
Soencer Museum
Exhibits
- Paintings by Hung Hsien, until Dec. 10
* Collector's Choice
- Early, Topographic and Documentary Photography.
Kansas Union Gallery, Walker Evans at Fortune.
photography
Kansas University Gallery, Walker Evans at For-
niture
Nelson Art Gallery, 4525 Oak Street, Kan-
lonsville, MO
- Twas the Night Before Christmas, student works in the Junior Gallery. nondocument
Theatre
The professors said their previous dancing experience would help them with what they called the difficult job of expanding KIT's dance program.
Electra, by Sophocles, Dec. 8, 2015, b.m., Inn
Theatre, free for KU students with ID.
KU's revived dance company to perform
The Fledgling University Dance Company will present its first concerts tomorrow at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in the theater at Hashiner Hall.
Admission is $1 for students, $1.50 for the public and 50 cents for senior citizens.
"The ground in Lawrence is fertile for dance," Cline said recently. "Audiences are responsive. We have people climbing the walls to get into dance classes. Dance is growing everywhere and I think it should be growing at KU, too."
The company is three years old, but until this year it met informally and never gave a concert. The company's rise stem from the school he attended, his first semester, Joan Sloss and Kay Cline, assistant professors in dance, who said they were assigned to build up KU's dance
Sloss and Cline have backgrounds in modern dance. They said the company would do only modern dance this year and maybe some ballet next year.
Sloss said dance in Kansas was not progressive and was dated because Kansas was not in contact with the East Coast, which has sent dance into new directions.
"BUT, I was pleasantly surprised because the dancers here are better than I thought." Sloss said. "The audiences are like nice people, even smaller and growing and very supportive."
The company has 15 members. Eleven will perform in this weekend's concert. Auditions are held every semester, and members must readdition each semester. Sloiss readauftions keep the company professional and hard-working.
SLOSS SAID the company's most important functions were to give students the opportunity to develop their dancing to a level developed and to learn how to run a dance company.
Money for the troupe has come, so far,
from the dance department and from Sissol's
and Cline's pockets. They said they would
try to get Student Senate funding.
Clare said she thought the company had worked hard to put a concert on in one semester. Members have practiced twice with a float two hours since the first week of class.
THE CONCERT will feature two large group pieces, two small group pieces and a solo work. All are modern and abstract. Chine cloque two of the works, Sloss one of them and Willie Lenoir, a company member, choreographed one.
"The dances are about dance. The movement is the medium," she said.
"The most important thing for anyone who wants to perform for a career is to perform and that is the opportunity that the company presents," she said.
Bense Reiss, a member of the company,
explained why the company was important.
Traditional Christmas Vespers to be observed this weekend
Staff Reporter
By RICK ODELL
Christmas is made of traditions. At the University of Kansas there exists a 54-year tradition that ushers in the holiday season with splendor—the annual Christmas Ves-
Vespers, a program of traditional Christmas music, is the School of Fine Art's Christmas gift to the campus and community. That gift will be presented at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 10 in Hoch Auditorium.
THE VESPERS TRADITION began in 1923 under the initiative of Donald M. Swarthout, then dean of the School of Fine Arts. The first Vespers services were performed in the auditorium of old Fraser Hall.
A handful of people listened as a tiny chorus sang "Silent Night."
The next year the chorus was considerably larger and so was the audience. The Fraser Auditorium was filled to capacity. For the next three years Fraser Auditorium was full two hours before the services began. Hundreds had been turned away, and hundreds Christian music at KU spread through the town neighboring Lawrence.
The Vespers crowds continued to grow, and people were continually turned away because of the limited capacity of Fraser Auditorium. In 1927 the auditorium in Hochschule Grafenburg had when Hoch Auditorium, with a seating capacity of 4,000, was completed.
WITH EACH YEAR, however, more and more people would flock to Hoch for Vespers. It wasn't long before Hoch was accustomed to the loud "Jingle Bells." In 1957 another means was found to accommodate the growing popularity of Vespers—an additional performance was added. Since then, attendance fell and Hoch fills up well before performance time.
James Ralston, director of choral activities, said the music of the Christmas Vespers has not changed a great deal over the years. Ralton said he tried to stay true to his musical roots by selecting which usually included traditional Christmas favorites. The traditional musical opening, "Fanfare for Christmas Day" by English choral composer Martin Shaw, and the processional, "O Come all Faithful," will be performed again this year.
OTHER CHORAL WORKS will include "Glory to God," and "The Dance of the Gift," the KU Symphony will feature works from the Nutracker Suite by Tatikovsky.
Two new additions to Vespers for 1978 include a joint work by the choirs and orchestra, "Christmas Day" by Gustav Holst, an English composer, and a new work, "Sung Lilyab" which was composed by Tracy Icengelo, a KU student.
Iceogle, a Topека senior majoring in music theory, composed the piece not knowing whether it would be used. Iceogle said he presented "Sing Lullaby" to
Ralston who immediately liked it.
HELEN WILSON KEWALD
ICENOLE SAID HE was surprised but happy that his composition went together so easily.
"I sat down at the piano and started composing. Everything just fell together. I had the work completed in one day."
Choir and orchestra rehearsal of the compositions will take longer than Icengle's work took to compose, however. Ruth Runnels, Topeka freshman, one of the singers in the Vespers' balcony chalk, also has been rehearsing for about three weeks.
had the work completed. Ralston said he thought this would be the first time a student's work had ever been used in Christmas Vespers.
"THE CHORIS AND the orchestra rehearsed together last Saturday and it sounded really good. I think we just are ready for the Vespers," she said.
Runnels' participation in Christmas Vespers appears to be somewhat of a tradition in itself. Runnels' mother sang in Christmas Vespers in 1967 and now runs the choir she has attended just about every Christmas Vespers service since his graduation from KU in 1929
Cotton, who remembers Dean Swarthout as being "one heck of a great man and a fine musician" said the Vespers were a wonderful way to bring in the holidays.
"The Vespers are a most beautiful expression of the season," he said. "I guess that's the reason I have attended the Vespers for so many years."
BALLET
Reach out
6. 11.3. Newberry Dixon Company released Wednesday for its concert, which will be presented Saturday and Sunday at Hashinger Hall. The group is directed by Joan Sissom and Kaye Cline, assistant professors in dance.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8.1978
Women tracksters start season
one KU women's track team will compete in its first indoor meet of the season tomorrow in Allen Field House. Also competing in the triangular meet will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Emory State universities. Field events start at 5:30 p.m. and track events at 7 p.m.
KU technically will not be competing as a team. Although team scores will be kept, only individual times and finishes will be recorded.
KU women's track coach Teri Anderson said this was a precautionary measure so that the athletes who might become academically ineligible next semester won't lose a year of eligibility because of this meet.
"Mainly, I want to see who shows competitness and speed under meet conditions," she said. "I expect to see a lot of intramatch competition for the top finishes."
Competing for KU in the 60- and 300-year dashes will be the defending Big Eight champion in both events, Sheila Calmese, Freshman Lori Green and returning sophomore letterman Amy Miles also will enter the races.
Lori Lorelli, Gwen Poss and Claire Overstake will run in the 80-yard hurdles. KU entrants in the 1,000-yard runs will be Michelle Brown, Sena Frame and Maureen
Competing in the mile will be Finholm,
Brown, Wendy Warner, Louise Murphy and
First time on TV - the Pythons' outrageous hit movie!
Ring Arthur's legend has survived for centuries, but can it survive this? Funny as a movie can get! — TIME
Monty Python And The Holy Grail
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films sua
Friday & Saturday,
Dec. 8 & 9
Screwball Comedy Double Feature:
BRINGING UP BABY
Dir. Howard Hawks, with Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Charlie Rugles. The epitome of the screwball era.
-with-
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
(1934)
Dir. Fran Capra, with Clark Gable, Claire McCarthy and Gagans, captures this was the last of Capra's win all of the major Academy Awards, including Bicep Image. Watch for the next one.
For both movies:
$1.50 3:30 & 8:00 pm Woodruff Aud.
Monday, Dec. 11
Last of the Film Noir:
TOUCH OF EVIL
(1958)
Dir. Orson Welles, with Worse Welles, Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Marlene Dichtel, Mercedes McCamary, and William Welles as an evil sheriff of a border town. This print includes 15 minutes of footage originally cut before its restoration, and a longer version considerably restores Welles' original conception of the film.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Wednesday, Dec. 13
Humphrey Bogart:
TREASURE OF
THE SIERRA MADRE
Karen Fitz, Fitz, Warner and Murphy also are entered in the two-mile.
Shawn Corwin and Beverly Fuller are expected to compete in the high jump and Corwin, Miles and Overstake will compete in the long jump.
Dir. John Huston, with Humphry Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt, Bruce Bennett, Altono Bedoya, MacBain Lalean, Robert Blake. An excellent movie about greed and what grief does to people's souls.
(1948)
and mile." Anderson said. "We also should do really well in the 440, 600 and 880."
"I'm expecting a 1-2-3 finish in the 60, 300
Kansas, 5-2, take a trip to Iowa this weekend for two women's basketball games.
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Running in the 440 will be Corwin, Jm McMillion and Norma Wilson. In the 600, Hertzog and Vickl Simpson are scheduled to run Hertzog is also KU's only entrant in the 880
Basketball team to play in Iowa
The Jayhawks will oppose Grandview tonight in Des Moines. KU plays Drake tomorrow night in a precede to a men's game between Iowa and Drake.
UK beat Grandview last year 92-79 and won one and two games with Drake. In of those games, Drake beat the Jayhawks 60-59 in the game for fifth place in the National Women's Invitational Tournament.
Lynette Woodard has led KU in scoring and rebounding in five of its seven games. Kathy Patterson led the team in assists with 14 before Tuesday's game with Central Missouri State University, which KU won 85-43.
After six games, Woodard also leads the team in steals with 22 and blocked shots with 17.
Kansas enters the weekend coming off the win over CMS. Shyra Holden, the Jayhawks' freshman center, scored a season best of 22 points in that game.
Nick Nolte in
THE RAIN" R
with Tuesday Weld
Eve 7:30 & 9:45
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Hardee's
The place that brings you back.
2030 W. 23rd
Gymnasts battle foes,weather
"I just hope you get out to Fert Collins." KU men's head coach Bob Lockwood, said. "We have had some problems getting out there in the past."
The University of Kansas gymnastics teams will have several obstacles to overcome this weekend. One of them may be the weather.
The Jayhawks will compete in the 17-team Rocky Mountain Invitation, which includes such teams as two-time defending Oklahoma Oakland, runner-up Arizona State and Big Eight powerhouses Nebraska and Iowa State.
in the field," said Lockwood. "We are certainly going to have to perform very well."
"There are going to be 17 strong teams
Lockwood said the team was nearby at full strength, with the exception of Jay Garza, who was sikelined because of a knee injury.
"We are in pretty good shape for the meet," Lockwood said. "Our main problem will probably be how good our school is, but we need to get our school about here and finish about to begin."
The women's team will meet Iowa State today in Ames and participate in a triangular tomorrow at Des Moines.
against Grandview College and Wisconsin University.
The "low state"淀则 should be like the "Oklahoma State meet last month," KU head coach Ken Snow said. "We should have a very close match."
Snow will enter all six of his performers in the all-around events. The gymnasts are Jackie DIPITto, Kim Kee, and Kristen French, Kane Neville and Angie Wagle.
Grandview should be a stern test for the Jayhawks.
1970
Tonight and Tomorrow—Bliss Logand & National Recording Artist
KOKO TAYLOR
& NER BLUES MACHINE-Direct from CHICAGO!
ONLY: $3.00 Gun. Adm., $2.50 for 7th Spirit Members!
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Next Week:
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COME EARLY-GET A GOOD SEAT!
Doore open at 8:00 P.M.
Shenanigans
Next Week:
Wed. Vale Spell
Thur. Morningstar
Fri. Cameraate Band
Sat. Shooting Star
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Spirit Club 7th & Mass.
Presents
the
Moffet and Beers Band
Friday December 8th and Saturday December 9th
Last Weekend of the School Semester Also Appearing Tuesday December 12th to celebrate the last day of classes
SHENANIGANS
Moffet & Beers Band at
901 Miss.
KANSAN
JUST
IN TIME
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
841-4600
during December for our GRAND RE-OPENING CELEBRATION
HAPPY
HOLIDAYS
FROM
Vista
RESTAURANTS
1527 W. 4th
TONIGHT'S HIGHLIGHTS
Tennis 9:06 | 11 Great Britain faced the U.S. in the TEN Cup final, Cup representing America are British, Rep representing McEnroe, Smith and Bob Latham.
Young And Foolish 8:06; 5.1 Danny attempts to learn "What kids are into" and comes up with a musical comedy hour that features comedy from Bob Hope; songs by K.C. and the Sunshine Band; skateboarding with Jimmy and Nicola; Nibbi and Susanne Somers songs to Copacabana. This and much more.
Variations From Vienna 8:15; 19 A program of light classical music with Erich Leinsdorf leading the Vienna Symphony. Selections: operatic exe-
tion from "The Battered Bride," "Hary Janos" and "Der Rosenkavaller."
TV
P. M.
TIMES
5:30 ABC News 2,9
NBCS News 4,27
CBS News 5,13
Rookies 41
EVENING
6:00 News 2, 5, 9, 13, 24
Cross Wits 5, 17
MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
Zoom 11
6:30 Marty Robbins' Spotlight 2
$100,000 Name That Tune 4
Family Feud 5
Dating Game 9
Kansas City City Map 19
Mt Tyler Lake Moore 27
New跃 game 41
7:00 Donny & Marie 2,9
Different Strokes 4,27
Special Sesame Street Christmas
5,13
Washington Week In Review 11,
Tic Tac Dough 41
7:05 Movie—"Way Out West" 19
Movie — Angel in My Pocket
8:05 Variations From Vienna 19
7:30 Who's Watching The Kids? 4 Joker's Wild 41
8:90 **Movie—"The Gift Of Love" 2**, 9
Rockford Fids 4, 27
Young And Poison 5, 13
Fear 5, 14
**Movie—"Angel In My Pocket"**
9:00 Eddie Capra Mystery 1,4
2 Flying High 9, 13
10:00 Duchess Of Duke Street 19
10:00 News 2, 4, 5, 13, 27
10:00 News 2, 4, 5, 13, 27
9:15 Duchess Of Duke Street 19
10:25 News 2, 4, 5, 3, 13, 27
10:35 Love Experts 41
10:35 Carletta 19
10:35 Barretta 1
10:35 Johnny Carson 4, 27
10:35 "Mope Of Sand" 5
10:35 Mary Tyler Moore 9
10:35 New Avengers 13
10:35 Star Trek 41
10:45 ABC News 19
10:45 Bob Newman 19
10:ABC News 11
10:35 Billboard 11
10:35 Dick Cavett 11
10:45 Flash Gordon 11
10:45 Movie "Beau Geste" 2
10:45 MacNeil/Lehrer Report 19
MacNeil/Denner Report II
11:45 Movie—"Nightmare"
12:00 Midnight Special 4, 27
Phil Slivers 41
12:30 Movie "The Angry Hills" 5
Best of Groucho 41
12:50 Movie "Angel In My Pocket" 41
Gunnerose 13
13:00 News 4
14:00 Story of Jesus 2
14:50 Movie "Spooks Run Wild" 41
15:00 Art Linklater 5
15:30 Andy Van Dyke 41
16:00 Andy Griffith 41
'Dnotes HBO
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news
k weather
8 Friday, December 8, 1978
University Daily Kansan
NOW OPEN
1
A New Concept In Young Fashion Shoes (for ladies only)
J. J. Angelas Shoes
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
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1978
BUYBACK
Dec. 11-22
2 Locations:
Locations:
Main Bookstore
Kansas Union
Lewis Hall Lobby
Daisy Hill
Store Hours: 8:30-5:00
Monday-Friday
Prices Paid • Highest Prices Paid
'Hawks find poise against Titans
The Jayhawks showed something last night when they beat Oral Roberts in the second round.
John Crawford called it poise.
By LEON UNRUH Sports Editor
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"That's what it is—poison on offense," he said after No. 5 ranked KU had raised its record to 40. "That what's it. We took it to them. We put the pressure on them."
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Again and again the pressure was on. KU battled back once in each half against its tough opponent of the young season. But in the last 15 minutes, it was a sustained explosion that pressured ORU out of the contest.
"I think we had to grow in confidence tonight," head coach Ted Owens said. "We
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
We have a few late model cars for sale
Sports
2340 Alabama
842.2921
Crawford scored 23 points, his best of the season. Guy had 19, Darnell Valentine 13, and Paul Mokeski and Wilmore Fowler 12 each.
The Titans had a 50-49 lead with 15 minutes left in the game when Guy decided to take a break and gave up 17 points and eventually打 19. By the time he scored his last, Kansas was coasting and Titans' offense was moving down.
were behind early against a good team and had to come from behind.
The Titans put the heat on Kansas early, picking on KU's man-to-man defense, as the Titans scored nine points as the Titans went to a 28-14 with ten minutes played in the first half.
"When you're never challenged, you don't know what kind of team you have."
to pay against a good team and play
well in front of a confidence builder,
especially for the youngest.
AS TOUCH A challenge as ORU was, the road gets only tougher for Kansas. Tomorrow it plays Kentucky in the Wildcats' 23,000-seat Rupp Arena. Kentucky is 2-0. No.14 in the country and the reigning national champ.
Tony Guy, along with Crawford an off-valent star last night, said, "It's a good feeling going into Kentucky 'cause it's going to be toug."
ORU's junior forward, Calvin Garnett, hit 10 of 29 from the field and six from the line to lead all scorers with 26 points. Antonio Mokai scored tied Mokaike for the rebounding lead.
Mokesi, who along with Brad Sanders makes up the team's entire senior contingent, eagerly awaits a Lexington rematch of the 1978-90-63 flasco.
Then Kansas switched to a 2-1-2 zone defense. ORU, making the most of what other teams learned against the Jayhawks, played the entire game in a zone.
OWENS CALLED a time out and later said he told his team, "This is the time you have to grow up as a team. And they responded."
The Jayhawks are still on their way up,
too.he said.
By halftime, a patient offense and pressure defense turned Kansas into a 41-37 leader. ORU was held to 14 points while KU scored 24 in the last 10 minutes of the half.
"We proved something to ourselves and whoever was watching grew in confidence also," he said. "The crowd has more confidence in us, and it helped us.
CRAWFORD, THIS year’s wonder sophomore, missed only three of 17 shots—only one in each game.
"The they played good, but they still haven't showed their best. They're great ballplayers, but they're still growing," he said.
"It's really comfortable to see everyone make a contribution to the game," Owens said. "It's a lot of fun."
"I think our team might react—play the tougher competition tougher," he said.
Crawford, who played only 31 minutes last season, said, "Oral Roberts brought a little 'good' out of us. The better a team is, the better we have to play defense and defense."
freshman and, for all practical purposes, so John Cawdor is a freshman."
"I'm not playing really as well as I can. I want to establish my defensive game. We have a lot of offensive threats, but the key is defense—especially for me."
VALENTINE BOOSTED their stock
Guy said, "The second half I just took my time and relaxed. As the game started getting more and more exciting, I got more into it.
"Myself and Brad remember last time that we got thrown out. That isn't going to happen."
Hillel Presents CAT BALLOU
Starring Lee Marvin
Friday, Dec. 8th 9:30 pm Saturday,Dec. 9th
7:00 & 9:00 pm
Dyche Auditorium (Next to the Union)
$1.00 members
$1.50 non-members
FORD FIESTA
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- Front wheel drive. Goes in snow, on ice.
- Room. Seats 4 adults. More back seal room than any other imported or domestic car in its class.
- Transverse-mounted engine gives nearly flat floor
- Fold-down rear seat. For 29 cu. ft
loadspace.
- Goes 0-50 in an average of 8.8 seconds.
* 1,500-mile or six-month, whichever occurs first, intervals for oil changes during painting. Many vehicles lubricated parts.
- Easy service. See-through battery, radiator, brake fluid units.
WITH THESE GREAT NUMBERS:
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Springthinking?
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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
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Bucky's
Brown Bag Special
Get a double cheeseburger a crispy order of french fries for only 99¢
offer good thru Sunday December 10
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2120 W. 9th
Friday, December 8, 1978
9
Fambrough chooses Hadl
Head football coach Don Fambrough did what he had all but promised and yesterday named John Hadd to be assistant head coach and offensive coordinator.
Hadi, a candidate for the head coaching job, won Monday by Fambrough, was an assistant coach under former head coach Dennis Bibby and first assistant coach chosen by Fambrough.
"The opportunity to work under Farnbrough is one I wouldn't pass up," Hall
Swim teams ready for weekend meets
The men's swimming team has a busy weekend ahead when it travels to Texas for two dual meets. The women's team will host an AAU invitational meet.
Several AAU teams, including the Wichita Swim Club, Kansas City Jets and Kansas City Blazers, are scheduled to be here women's invitational, which starts at 2 p.m.
The meet will not be scored because of AIAW rules. Gary Kemp, women's swim coach, said the meet would provide many of the AAU swimmers a chance to see how a college program operates and would give KU swimmers an opportunity to compete in Christmas break. The meet also provides a recruiting opportunity for Kempf.
The men's team will meet the University of Texas-Arlington tonight and is scheduled to drive to Dallas tomorrow morning for a trip. The Southern Methodist University that night.
KU has already faced Texas Arlington in the year in a meet which the Jawahras will face.
SMU should prove a considerable challenge for KU because the Mustangs have been consistently ranked among the ten teams in the country for several years.
"We're looking forward to swimming against that kind of competition," Bill Spahn, men's swim coach, said. "It could be our if guys swim up to their potential."
OPEN UP TO
DIGNITY NORTHEAST KANSAS
A/O Box 107
Lawrence Kansai 60044
Gay Catholics or any interested persons.
Happy
24th!
to
Jane
Barrett
the GRAMOPHONE shop
STEREO DISCOUNTERS
KIEF'S
DISCOURNER RECORDS & STEREO
412-576-3080 fax 412-576-3080
Schneider Investments Apartments Available NOW
502 W. 14b, No. 6 (14b & Ohu); modern six-plex, two
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$25.00 money). Available January 1.
19 W. 14th. No. J 3 (14th & Vermont), one bedroom.
$100.00 month, pay electricity, water and gas fur
mished old home.
314 W. 14th, No. 4 [14th & Tannessee], one bedroom
$175.00 month all utilities paid, older home
19 W. 14th. No. 5 (14th & Vermont), one bedroom
$125.00 month, pay electricity, water and gas furnished older home.
728 UHM No. 3 one bedroom 1140-800 pay
electricity at home furnished home name
600 Ohio. No. 3. studio apartment, $100.00 month, all utilities paid, older home.
1021 Rhode Island, No. 1, one bedroom. $160.00
menus, tenant pays utilities, modern eight-plex.
said. "He is not only a great football coach, but also a terrific person.
932 Rhode Island, No. 4. Studio apartment. $125.00
month, pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older
home.
Athletic director Bob Marcum has generally been credited with a coup for keeping Hadd on the staff while hiring players. Before the selection was made, Hadd, a Lawrence native, had said he might leave KU if he couldn't be head coach.
933 Rhode Island, No. 7, one bedroom, $100.00 month pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older home
Farnbrough said Monday night after his selection that he planned to keep Hadi on his top assistant. He hinted at it again at his press conference, but wouldn't make a firm statement then.
653 Rhode Island, No. 6. Studio apartment. $75.00
month. pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older
home.
"He's dedicated to putting Kansas foot-
sweep at level and I'm honored that he has asked me."
Drive by and look at these homes, then call Mark Schneider at 843-4214 or 843-3212 to see the one you want to live in
No pets — $100.00 deposit on all apartments
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
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"Like me, Kansas is his first love. He is totally dedicated to building the best possible program."
Hadi, 38, was an All-America halfback and quarterback when he played for Kansas in 1960 and 1961. He was a three-time all-Big Eight player and guided Kansas to a 33-7 victory over Rice in the 1961 Bluebonnet Bowl.
Fambridge said, "I can't begin to explain how pleased I am that John is joining my staff. He has so much to offer, both as a coach and as a recruiter."
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ANY STUFFED PIZZA PLUS ANY SOFT DRINK only 1.25
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Allow four weeks for delivery
23rd & Iowa Southwest Plaza must have coupon expires 12-31-78
Friday, Dec. 8th 2:30-5:30
Admission
82¢ with Class Cards
$3.00 without Class Cards
Class Cards will be sold
at
FREE BEER & PRETZELS
SHENANIGANS
Sponsored by Fr. Class Officers
--only at
The University Dance Company
Winter Concert of Original Works
Sat. Dec. 9 at 8 p.m.and
Sun. Dec. 10 at 2 p.m.
Hashinger Dormitory 1632 Engel Road
on the campus of K.U.
Gen. Adm. $1.50 Students $1.00 Sr. Cit. $.50
ALL YOU CAN EAT
MONDAY
Italian Spaghetti ... 2.95
TUESDAY Fish and Fries Dinner 2.45
HAMBURG
JB's
BIG BOY
FAMILY RESTAURANTS
740 Iowa
KU 14.1 Pool Tournament SAT, Dec.9, 1:00 PM KU Student Union
Each match to 75 points Double elimination
Entry Fee: $3.00/Sign-up sheet at Jay Bowl
(All entries must be in by 6:00 PM Friday, Dec. 8; no limit on number of entries. 1ST and 2ND place finishers will travel to Warrensburg, Mo. in February to play in the regional 14.1 tournament.
This tournament is restricted to full-time students, undergraduates and graduates.
This tournament is restricted to full-time students, undergraduates and graduates.
WE NEED CERTAIN COLLEGE MAJORS TO BECOME AIR FORCE LIEUTENANTS
Mechanical and civil engineering majors, telephony and telecommunications engineering majors, chemistry concentration majors, industrial engineering majors.
The Air Force loves for young men and women to grow professionally, acquire practical knowledge. If you are one of these people, you may be eligible for the two in four year AIRTC program. And to help you with the college task, we have three online courses designed specifically for you.
The AIRTC program works to an Air Force commission that organizes events during summer, internships, medical and dental care centers, public awareness week, year-round flight training, means responsible for people and their value assessment. Pressings, writing, and publication are welcome at all times.
And outfits today about Air Force ROTC scholarships is a great way to help you for your college and it could be that your personal mode of learning about Air Force Athletics comes.
FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES
Register for the 1 hour ROTC course now. See what the Air Force was to offer Call Clear Nicks at 860-4676 or stop in room 108, Military Science Building.
AIR FORCE
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Gateway to a great way of life.
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926 Mass. upstairs
Tonight: & Saturday: Earl Robinson & his Red Hot Scamps
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Admission only *5.00 includes Free Beer, peanuts, popcorn, and soft drinks.
Call 843-8575 for reservations.
---
10
Friday, December 8, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Prof chosen to study in China
A KU professor has been chosen as one of the first U.S. researchers to travel to the People's Republic of China under the leadership of the Chinese people between China and the United States.
Chu-sing Ll, professor of art history, and four other Americans were chosen by a committee in Washington, D.C., to present papers expressed a desire to do research in China.
I. intends to study 13th and 14th Century paintings, housed in the museums of Peking and seven other large cities.
At the same time Li I was chosen, the committee selected seven U.S. students from more than 100 applications to study in China for a year.
Although seven KU students applied, none was selected.
Chae-in Lee, director of East Asian Studies, said 50 to 60 more U.S. students would be selected in the spring to study in China.
He said if KU students were interested in the exchange program they should talk to him during the spring semester in room 2118 Wescott Hall.
Halsey Beemer, staff officer of the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., said about 600 Chinese students would be studying on American campus next weeks.
"The whole effort in science and technology recently has been almost revolutionary," Beamer said. "I think the Chinese will be looking upon our researchers' ideas and will be very cooperative."
We're On Our Way. . .
To Hillel's Bagle & Lox Brunch
Paul Friedman speaks on "Jewish Students and their relationships"
Sunday, Dec. 10, 12:30 pm
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
917 Highland Drive
(across from Hillcrest)
$1 members $2 non-members
Our
Weekend Special
is
$1.00 off
any pizza
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25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
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THE NOBEL PRIZE/78 Eleven extraordinary men have earned the world's most prestigious award.
An exclusive broadcast TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, ON MOST PUBLIC TELEVISION STATIONS
Made possible by a grant from
J
Rockwell International
Mechanics urge winter car care
(Check your local listings)
By PHILIP GARCIA
Staff Reporter
The snow and ice of the past few days marks the coming of the cold worker, and the arrival of a new season.
Local mechanics recommend that cars receive tune-ups and have checks made on the car's heating system for the freezing days.
"The most important thing is to make sure you don't have any leaks in your radiator and to test your antifreeze." Lauren McClure, service manager for Turner Chevirolet, 3400 S. Iowa, said recently.
*All the hoses and belts should be checked to make sure they are good and light and not soaked.*
McClure antifreeze should be winerized to at least 20 degrees below zero.
"That'll take care of you through the winter in our area," he said.
Also, a regular tune-up should be made.
McClure said that because cars required antifreeze all year the rush by consumers to prepare their cars for winter was not as great as before. But Donald Grammer, owner of Don's Automotive Center, $01 million in annual revenue from getting a car ready for winter early.
"THE MOST IMPORTANT thing is to trust a person to do all the wrapping," he said.
Grammar said changing the oil in the engine to a light weight oil was important to reduce fuel consumption.
"Heavy oil (30 weight) will work fine at about 20 to 15 degrees," he said. "Below that the oil will get like molasses and the engine is real slow in turning over."
The cost of preparing a car for winter averages about $50 dollars, he said.
"Number one, a car has to have a good compression system," he said. "If the compression is not good, it's pretty difficult to start." There is no difference between starting and not starting.
G. A. Gabeliel, service manager of Landmark Ford, 23rd and Alabama streets, said the compression in the engine was the key to getting a car started during the winter.
GABRIEL SAID bad compression results when valves are not seeded or fail to close pressure.
The battery, points, spark plugs and choke should be checked to make sure they will operate in 20 degrees below zero weather. he said.
Dairy Dwyer, of D & D Tire Co., 1000 Vermont, said most people in Lawrence should place mud and snow tires on their car to protect the air pressure to provide good traction.
"The 50 percent of the people who have mud and snow radials travel back and forth to Teopera or live near Avranar or in some forsaken place with hills," Dwyer said.
Pharon Miller of Miller Automotive Service, 3341 W. 9th St., said, "The thing that works the best during the snow and ice's the driver
"Slow and easy on the start and careful and easy with the brake."
"If you get stack, just sprinkle some sand around the tires and take off," Miller said.
Millet also recommended that a 10-inch
gad of sand be carried while driving in snow
and mud.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
Events
TODAY: KU HUMAN RIGHTS COALITION will present a discussion on prisoner's rights at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas University. Laurie Bretz and Alfredo Para from the Leavenworth Prisoners Group and La Raza de Atlant will speak. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY Cork 1 of the Union, BIOLOGY CLUB meets at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
TONIGHT: THE KU HUMAN RIGHTS COALITION will sponsor a talk on civil rights in Eastern Europe by Jerez Pieklekawitz, professor of political science at the University Union. THE YOUNG SOCIALIST ALLIANCE and MECHA will sponsor a talk
PARTY?
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TOMORROW: FRIENDS OF THE IRANIAN PEOPLE will present a slide show and speaker on human rights at 1 p.m. in the Library of Rochester, voice students of Richette Manager will present a STUDENT RECITAL at 3 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. David Wheeler, pianist, will present a student recital at 4 p.m. in Swarthout Hall in Murphy Hall.
8-12
BIGK'S BAR & GRILL 708 MASS. LAWRENCE, KANSAS
on repression in Mexico at 8 p. m. in the Forum Room of the Union. The Murphy String Quartet will give a STUDENT Quartet performance in Swarthout Recital Hall in Humburg Mall.
Friday & Saturday
Touche'
SUNDAY: ACHIEVEMENT PLACE MEETING will begin at 10:45 a.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union. The HOLIDAY DINNER FOR RETIRED MEETINGS will begin at 10:45 a.m. in the Watkins Room of the Union, SUA CHESS meets at 1 p.m. in Pariors & B C of the Union. The SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS, SIGMA DELTA CHI, will meet at 1:30 p.m. at 1433 Ohio #7 Dick Red, assistant to the editor of THE WORKPLUS, will present Gerken and Mark Holmberg will present CARILON RECITALS at 2:45 p.m. VESPEPS will begin at 3:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB HOLIDAY RECEPTION is at 4:4 p.m. at the Watkins Room of the Union, KU at 8:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room in Pariors B C of the Union. Albert Gerken and Mark Holmberg will give a CARILLON RECITAL at 6:45 p.m. VESPEPS begins at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
In view of the tragic occurrences in Guyana a few weeks ago, the following comments are published as a call for all of us to put our trust in the LIVING GOD AND HIM ONLY worship and serve
Down through the ages "tooils" have been denying the existence of the Almighty God. One result and fruit of this foolishness is to produce men who claim to be divine, and to make them believe in the existence of gods and others have claimed deviety and demanded worship!
The evidences of the existence of "The Living God," who is from Everlasting to Everlasting, having no beginning and no end—(man has not been created with a mind capable of understanding that which has no beginning nor end)—are clearly seen, being under Goddess that are unseen, being under Goddess; and they are without excuse—that deny Him. Romans 1:20.
Over two hundred and fifty years ago Joseph Addison wrote wonderfully telling how the created things seen tessibly of the unseen Creator, and how "the heavens declare the glory of God." God was writing and still is yesterday's writing, and still are preserved in hundreds of thousands, yea, probably millions of hymn books round about the world, being used and sung by the true people of God as they worshiped and adored the hymn words of the song "The soure placidum assured on high" in order that you
might see its testimony of the "Living God" and compare it with the testimony of those who say God is dead, or does not know.
The spacious procmail on high, With all the blue ethereal
ORIGINAL PROCMAIL; THE unweird sun, from day to day,
DOTH HIS CREATOR'S POWER DISPLAY, AND
THE EVERY LAND THE WORK OF AN
ALMIGHTY HAND.
Soon as evening shadows prevail, THE MOON TAKES UP THE WOUNDRON TALE, and nightly, to the listening ear, REPEATS THE STORY OF HER BIRTH; WHILE ALL THE STARS that ROUND HER BIRTH JOB MAY BE IN THEIR TINY CORNIM THE IDIAS AS they ROLL, AND SPREAD THE TRUTH-FROM POLE TO POLE.
What the 'o in solemnia all move round the dark terrestrial ball? What the 'o no ringing voice nor sound, amid the radiant orbe be found? In reason's eat they all rejoice, and they sing; but in reason's eat they as she shine, "THE HAND THAT MADE US IS DIVINE!"
Hear the testimony of God Almighty Him in Psalm 130 and repeated in Psalm 53:1: "THE FOOL HATH SAIID IN his HEART, THERE IS NO GOD. THEY ARE CORRUPT, THEY HAVE DONE ADMINIBASE WORKS."**
P,O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8, 1978
Med school gets boost
11
The Kansas University Endowment Association has received a gift of $10,000 from Milton McGreevey, a Kansas City businessman.
The money will go the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences to fund surgical research and to aid outstanding residents in internal medicine.
The prize was established through previous gifts to the Endowment Association from McGreevey and his wife.
The other half of the money will be added to the fund for the Milton McGreevey Prize for Excellence in Internal Medicine.
surgery, who is studying diagnosis and treatment of malignant growths.
The Kenneth Spencer Research Library is having a birthday and the public is invited to "Celebration," a special exhibit of stiffened books, since the library opened 10 years ago today.
According to Alexandra Mason, Spencer librarian, the 10th anniversary exhibit will include an original draft of the invitation to the 2016 festival in England. The invitation was acquired last year.
tures into Verse," also will be on display. Mason said yesterday that copies of the book would be available.
Spencer toasts 10th year
The first book of H.L. Mencken. "Ven-
"Mendenk thought the book was dreadful and tried to persuade people to destroy it. Also, the warehouse where many of the copies were stored burned down," she said.
The exhibit, housed in cases on three
faces of the library, will remain on display
until 2015.
Phone
843-121
K.U. Union
O
Apex Air Fares/Youth Fares/Eurail and Student Passes/Auto Rentals/Hotel and Amtra Reserva-
Travel Plans?
make them usus us.
Maupint travel service
CLASSIFIED RATES
Asecomodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Raman are offered to all students without regard to sex. All CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FILL HALL
one two three four five
time times time times times
15 words or
fewer $1.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
Each additional .01 .02 .03 .04
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.
MENDELLE
to run
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These can be sold in person or by calling the UDX business office at 864-3583.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
PARTY_TIME = IS_ANY
PARTY_TIME = BOWTIE
PARTY_TIME = UACUP
LIQUOR
MASS = LIT-816
MASS = LIT-816
Employment Opportunities
UNICIP cards, calendars at Oread Bookstore,
6 illinois and Adventure A Bookstore
6 illinois 12-12
SALE—from now until Christmas, all 812 artisit price are on sale for $0.25, off regular price! We’ve got a large and varied inventory choose from. Strong’s Office System, 1040 Vermont, 812-363-6880.
It doesn't matter if you skim or not - now it's the time to think about a new job for a little over a week. Day after day, I sleep better than in Cinnammon Springs, Colon, Jan 18. My name is Jake Smith, and I'm on a low价 of $120. Get more information and contact me at Student Union, or write J.M.Newell, Room 260 at 514-327-3930, clamped, self-addressed return envelope to jmnewell@cinnammonsprings.edu.
Extra nice apartment text to exampl. Utilizes
the word "in" in line 6, but it can be a
sure, a unite difference. 847-929, 847-958,
847-969.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
well paid residents KU and near town. Np.
Petition. 806-247-3155. www.np.ca.
December Business Grads. We have openings for graduating Business Administration majors, paying the tuition and fees. We coordinate companies we represent. Why stand in line to receive a Bachelor's degree from KSU or Associates Consultants (382-150-62). Or call (382) 150-62.
FOR RENT
December Engineering Grads. We have openings graduating engineering graduates paying up to $18,000 and graduating grading professionals paying up to $25,000. Why stand in line to interview? We interested in working as a Consultant, 139-1620 or call in Lawsuits, 817-2941.
Two bedroom apartment, 6-place, 502 W. 14th,
722 Fifth Avenue, 92nd Flr., 800-355-4820,
*pares: Carl Matt Schulz, 822-536-2270*.
FRONTER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-ME
Rental from $170.00, furnished and
unfurnished, from $140.00,
particular parking. On KU train
in道 INDOOR HEATHING at 242 Frontier Road.
Next door to Houses #242 at 242 Frontier
路.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimuth Reminder of the day to sign up for the remainder of the day. Stop at 8:30AM and we will be glad to give you all the MASMITH HALL, 1000 Naimuth Drive, 843-5893, Naimuth Hall
OPEN-HOUSE-TOWN HOUSE. 3300 W. 8th Short-term lease and reduced rent until Aug. 15, 1978. In the house, who leaves will win room, breakfast and creme. Vacation in Las Vegas. Offer expires 4-19-78. The building, garage, baths, garages and drapes, full kitchen, dishware, appliances, Call Ron. 234-221-9197 or Becky at 842-878-87.
Christian High School, Very close to campus Call 842-5029 between 1-3 p.m. 12-12
Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in Fourplex.
Short walk to campus. Quail 841-1803 12-8
He prepared for second semester. Check out his website at www.northwestern.edu/business-funds/paid and close to campus. Call 842-760-3591.
Need to submit? Wonderful 2 BR Jaywalker
Apartment. All utilities paid. Price negos-
hed. 842-5760
Suburbia. Available February, large one bench. Battery powered on bus route; $180 min.
Call 842-9427 after 5:30.
BEDROOM Duplex PARTIALLY FURNISHED
841-6720 Uuilton Call; 12-8
841-6720
Wanted to submit 2 BH pt. sth. and Ridge
Water to pay $16,950 for 3 years (1993,
1994, 1995) $190, wafer paid. 842-747. Keyen W.
Conventium station apartment for sublease. Avail-
842-9635. Aik for Jin. 842-9635. Ask for Jin.
Sublease, 2 bedroom, informatted, dishwasher,
initiated pay phone 843-0582
12-8
Sublime - Copy study apartment -- De 15, $15.00 a month in close to campus - Call 641-7834. 12-8
building 1. One bedroom apartment close to campus.
8415, utilities paid. Call 641-750. 12-8
Sohlenne Jan. 1, 1 bedroom apartment Frontier
$250 off new lease to new lease $250 off deposit Cars
$250 off deposit Cars
*Quilt, furnished, two room efficiency*
*Quiet, furnished, 810 rooms*
*Baju rooms, paid - 842.59*, *Keep 12.12*
*810 rooms*
Subnail - need 2 female roommates for 2 BR
Subway - need 3 female roommates for 99 $5 cedar
clubs utilize 814-2537
Infinished studio available. Jen A. Presents
that you are also a brilliant designer.
you are also just 810 plus electric. 842-7375.
www.infinitedstudio.com
Sublease 3 bedroom-2 story Townhouse, Trail-
ridge, 841-5064. 12-4
Enhancing apartment for rent. $30/month. 1/8
Room, and attic. Call Residence 272-5487.
Rooms and attics call Residence 272-5487.
Booms and apartments. Call Lynch Realty, 227
Ohio, 843-1601
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment, available now.
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment, Call 841-795-12-18
Rent now! 2 UN furnished
Rent now? 2 HH unfurnished. Front, Hq楼.
Rent for 2nd床上. Call Julie 1411, 19-92
**Help! Must sublease two bedrooms apartment**
from campus. $219/month. Call 641-4600 or
email info@cabinet.com
Bedroom: Full house privilges, starting Jan. 1st.
Bedroom 2: Full house privilges, starting Feb. 8th.
$9 monthly, 1旅力. Utilities 842-192-1267.
SPACIUS, LIGHT, QUET ONE bedroom. Healthily
AIRY. [AUTHOR]
*TU81...* 12-13
**TU81...** 12-13
For Rent - 2 bedroom duplex at 1833 Missouri,
room size of KU of KU per month: 12-
841-2107
841-2107
COUPLE WITH a bug in a bedroom 4-bedroom house with landfill and dinosaur. Each $10. In the apartment, a child sleeps on a couch.
2 room kitchen with stove and refrigerator
Utilities paid. Call 614-6719 at 7:00 p.m. 12-12
Room for rent. Call 614-6719 at 7:00 p.m. 12-12
9:30 p.m.
time, 10:25 p.m.
Getting married: Married to a lifeboat-
room apartment. Quit, reentry, close to
monthly plan and reasonable utilities. Available Jan. 1.
month plus reasonable utilities. May last—August month. Rent 12-18
Bullet 841 - 45465
SPACIUS three bedroom furnished apartment, near city limits, carpeted, with fireplace, waver & drive, private entrance. Utilities paid, reasonableness. 2566. middled grade获得价格:12-12
Available for sublease Jan. 1; spacious 1 BR apt.
Kitchen 2, patios on road. Bus route 127.
Kitchen 823.
must sublease, comfortable 1 BR apt. on bus
route. Call 841-2713 12-12
4. BR home row Deever school, unfurished-
children. 5. Br for springtime, prefer family. $260.
6. Br for summer time, prefer family. $460.
One BR prt. close to campus and KU bus line.
One BR prt. close to campus and KU bus line.
Wednesday morning, KU prt. 1:30 p.m. or any day.
Saturday morning, KU prt. 1:30 p.m. or any day.
2-3 BR apt. with kitchen, bath, fireplace, close to lots of space of 1945 Vendemir. Apt. 123. Building permit: B4.
Studio apt. close to campus. $140 + call Util
841-3223 12-12
2 BR air, unfurnished KU bus route $195 +
call. Call 841-8709. 12/12
Apt. to subleave—nice 3 BR apt. on bus route
841-6293 or 841-8991.
Gatehouse, 12-12
841-6293 or 841-8991.
Subbass 2 BR apT 16 to campus. For-
mer admission Jan. 3. Call Jiang, 841-1700. 12-12
Sublease-60 old old 3 Bedroom house unifur-
rent, available Jam 12, on bus route C. Train-
8406 806
Surfice sublease -cozy 1. BR furnished apt. ad-
journals campus mnt. pay $175, $145, $125, $105, $85, $65, $45
SUMMER HAITES IN JANUARY Beautiful new
hotels in New York. 2 rooms, $180;
3 rooms, $240; 5 rooms, $320.
Fire alarm, 2 baths, private
french door, 14' ceiling,
electricity.
2. bedroom apartment, carpet, draps, CA, ref. 158,
serves coworkers and downstairs to 982-734-6000.
Credit: 982-734-6000.
Several brand new 2, 3, 4-bedroom houses avail-
able in the central area, near city centre,
central air port, and airport.
Sublanee Boosieus 2 bedroom apartment at Tranfeak, walk-in information, call #842-5872 (12-12)
Spaceout 2 bedroom fireplace, 1½ bath, sankin
dining room, fireplace, complete kitchen, diag
sink, laundry room, refrigerator
Roopy Park 25 apartment, furnished, must be
available, January 1 | 2 bedroom | 12-12
Single bedroom in apartment to compare with
single bedroom in apartment for a similar size.
Call Steve Gray at 614.452-3090, 5-9 in
the morning or late afternoon.
One bedroom furnished apartment (converted garage); walk to KU or downstreet OF street address. Required requiring immediate payment of first deposit. Call 842-7126 after 6 or weekends. 12/21.
BEAUTIFUL, converted studio for sublime
soundscapes. Call now 843-927-6500,
pashayi® on bus route. Call now 843-
927-6500.
1 month's rent free. Must sublease Jaywalker
one year for spring semester.
814.6727.7100 12-12
www.jaywalker.edu
1. Quit 2-bedroom apartment with balcony, pool
2. Availate December-January, 843-1174,
841-2901.
3. Availate January-June, 843-1174,
841-2901.
Western Civilization Notes-Now on sale! Make unsure out of Western Civilization notes. See preparation 31 for exam preparation. New Analysis Criteria. Male Bookstore, and Oren Bookstore. If
FOR SALE
Need one person for roommate $05 monthly, plus utilities. Call Mike. 841-5145. 12-12
Sun-Specs sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
conductive sun glasses selection, reasonable
1021 Masa 844-7570
Fender Mantling Bass Guitar with wires, cords,
wires, cables and covers. Very good condition.
mains, cord, and covers. Very good condition.
SMART PROPEL DON'T BUY THE BEST STEREO. . . unless they have an opportunity to come to Audio Systems and hear the beats he creates with their recording tools, 8th and Rhode Island.
Michigan Music cells and services guitar,
voice and other stringed instruments. We have
guitars T.-F., Gibson L-48, Gibson L-7,
Mossman T.-F., Gibson L-48, Gibson L-7,
and classical guitar. We also have a good choir.
We also have a good orchestra. Michigan St. Music. 647 Michigan 843-
301. Michigan University. p.m. thursday till Christmas. 12-12
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
WEIVE MOTOR ELECTRIC, 845-690-3200, 300 W, 4th f.
11h
Girl! The girl " T" Shirt In Town! Regularly!
$6, Now $49.0 The Aitc. 927 Mass.
For Sale Real Estate TRB-10. 8-track tape recorder.
Boxed Set-The Best of Marvel Comics The Mala Book Shop. 12-8
COLOR PORTFOLIO SLides or prints, custom
presenting, professional quality, lowest prices,
up to 20% off.
Technice. Turbillable, manual, duetsteer & car-
riage systems. $149.00/day. $25.00/day in
condition. 841-006-016
CAMERAS--ANTIQUES AND CLASSICS. Most
cameras are $25-$30. Some have beautiful woodwork
and colorful designs. Other cameras, other equipment. Call
811-977-8999 or visit by 1541 Kentucky #2. Saturday 9
at 11am.
Sunflower bows wishes you Season's Greetings &
the sunflowers that light your life through
Sunflower finds selection of grecias gifts
Woolchip clothing
Firework down gowns
Skiffle Army knives
Old man woodworkers and banksets
Ornamental Buck knives
Country countryside kits, backpacking and camp
gear, canes, and accessories of all kinds. a
generity of quality person or people
who can earn the person they want.
Sunflower Surplus
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Downtown Lawrence
Sunflower Surplus wishes you Seasons Greetings &
Leaving town! Panasonic SE-20 300 st霖 and
a speed bicycle w/cable lock. HC-4328
64328 12-11
Sunflower Surplus
GREAT BUY! 1896 Battery Ultra, lots of extra:
make offer. Call anytime. 864-2849 or 864-1852
The perfect gift for your lazy friend. "The Non- Runner's Book" at Mallin Book Shop. 12-8
Imported, Gentile Hudson's Tortoise blanket coat
(Size 10) measures 12 to 12.5 inches at
See the Jay Shop.
1972 Mercedes 220s D 5un floor, stereo, rebulit
at Mate at 842-236-2360, 3,000 mile warranty.
The World of Doomersby and Doomersby's
are great Christmas presents. Mild.
Book Shop.
T-A 1705, Cassette deck. $100. Must sell.
Hardly used. B42-843. **12-8**
Give a gift that will GROW in value: antique-hoofer-style kitchen cupboard; white treadle sewing machine; complete attachments; rehauled sewing machine; antique end tables; 1 glass table; 842-710-3900.
**BELIF:** NEED CHRISTMAS MONEY? Calculator
1025, $18. **BELIF:** NEED CHRISTMAS JACKET (medium), $35.
1025, $18. **BELIF:** NEED CHRISTMAS JACKET (medium), $35.
Sterio. Yamaha TC1515, YPD10. KISS355
speaker and speakers KKS headphone. Call 12-128
www.kiss355.com
Toe Instrument with aidarmor SBR3A-10 speed
Dex 240 Hz
Toe Instrument with aidarmor SBR3A-10 speed
Dex 240 Hz
Toe Instrument with aidarmor SBR3A-10 speed
Dex 240 Hz
2 matching red formats, worn once by bt-
chick (or Christmas dresses) 6*12-12-
14-14; Bare shoulders 6*12-12-14
Golden years 66 WW Camer. Needs motor, electrical work, body, fire and great Make off ideas.
WANTED: $10,000.
Guitar and case. Conqueror: 6 steel string, ex-
cellent; Must sacrifice, $55. Cash Allowed: 450-500.
Replacement.
Large antique dropleaf table with six
tablet. Excellent condition. $200.98-142.92
12 tufts.
JEWELRY anything made to order for Christine Slover. High quality creations, reasonable prices, high quality creation, reasonable prices.
HELP WANTED
OVERSEKS JOBS--Summer full time Europe, S.
Australia, America, Atac, etc. All fees, $200-
$180 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing Free
departure fees. Travel bookings Booked Box 12-12
K. Berkeley, CA 94704 97407
Wanted dailieshirts day and night. Daytime:
Wanted dailieshirts day and night. Daytime:
Carriage Lamp Club Shirts behind the
Carriage Lamp Club Shirts behind the
PSYCHIATRIC ADDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE
Male Enrolled in school. Must be
Male encouraged to apply. Applications
to director of nursing, Tupea State Hospital,
813-295-4256. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Part time secretary wanted. Must be well or-
ward and have 2 yrs of experience. Vacation fees, Flexible hours, salary open $350 a week.
JOBSORC . CURSE SHAPE FRETIGHERIE Human
imagery. High hip shape SEE IMAGERIE.
Assaulta, Su. Bionerial, Tier-Statem.
Assaulta, Su. Bionerial, Tier-Statem.
C庐, WOOL-COAT. Gilbertson 6195.
C庐, WOOL-COAT. Gilbertson 6195.
MEN! WOMEN!
A student half-time research assistant position is available with the Achievement Place Research program and will participate in program evaluation and program research research. Responsibilities will include location of several communities in the northwest, located in several communities in the northern states, and will provide data visualization and preparation of graph, and report writing. We will be responsible for developing a b.A. degree in the behavioral or social sciences and working knowledge of SPSM, BMPS, and related software. We will also experience with the use of ANOVA, COVAR, FEAR, experience with the use of remote terminals to enable our team to work cooperatively as part of a team starting December 15, 2018. Salary $789-$500 per semester, apply to Achievement Place III, Haworth, TN. The Bureau of Child Research is an equal opportunity employer. A student assistant for female quadriplegic student for second semester. Job includes using computers, assisting with research, help with research, et al. Prefer junior or semienlvings. 843-4523 or 843-1011 evening
NEED EXTRA XMAA MONEY? Sanctuary caterer needs $25,000 in December for Christmas parties dwellers in December for Christian parties to work on their holidays. You can work to thru June 23. No age limit. Need an insurance a must Call Ace At #834-6540 for information.
Part time lain laundry and dry cleaning attendee
Apply at Norge Village, 24th & Ithaway. 12-12
Part time day dishwashers may be able to work
in person or in person only. Only a
Dishandler, 1800, W. 25rd.
Dishlander, 1800, W. 25rd.
Big B boy is now taking applications for full and part time help. Apply in person, 140 748
Part time lice store clerk. Would prefer grad
B-school mature. Apply in 12-13
1906 Mar
1908 Mar
Kansas City work during X-mas break cleaning fluorescent lights full or part time nights. Starts 6 p.m. $3 per hour. No experience necessary. Please call 817-644-8200. M. 64104 or cial 818-842-8600. 12-12
Drivers needed. Must be 18 years or older. Musu-
ce required. Apply in person after 4 p.m. in PC24, Inc.
140 W. 26th St., Bronx, NY 10459.
If you constantly dream of becoming an importor, you have a chance! We need intramural training to help players gain the chance to play in an important game in basketball in basketball on an agile, an aggressive, figure in basketball, 208 Robinson, or any other team.
Part time positions available at Maintee Montserti Preschool for students who ENJOY WONDERS in the school with the school prefers but not required. Call Licnea 8-5 843-6800, evenings 823-7470
NUMBER JOBS FOREST SERVICE. Where, where,
where, where. Mc, Cali, NY, Kewalton, Montreal, 1987.
Marsh, New York, NY, Chelsea, NY, 1995.
position opening. Assistant director of facilities planning, Kappa, Minnaum of the degree Architecture or Architecture in experience in field emphasis on construction ad- hensive and one year in construction work design, drafting, and project supervision. Formation and job description contact Facilitating Planning, University of Kauai. Box 10825, University of Kauai. Position and resume must be received on or before January 31st. Equal Opportunity. Affirmative Action Ensu- sions.
Sambro's now hire waitresses, waiters, dish machine operators full and part time. Apply in person at Sambro.com.
Lithography Immediate part time help. Graphite
auto resists separation 1, 4 and 2nd steps
12HF
12HV
Programmer. Assistant (student hourly, 10-20 hours) performing computer programs change, creating and executing program programs, changing user interfaces, putting documentation reports into text-based format, writing communication reports with text-based format, requiring oral and written communication skills, processing and communicating technical skills, Applications and experience, Academic Computer Center, KU Computer Science, Academic Computer Center, KU Computer Science are an equal Opportunity Employer Qualified employees are an equal Opportunity Employer. Services with disabilities are encouraged to apply.
LOST
Lost, one pair of gold pierced earrings. Earned,
including on one British penny. 832-814.
$23 REWARD: Information learning to arrest, or recovery - 2 VISION DAVID SPEAKERS STOLEN - 3 BLUE BUICINI in L.M.H. employee - 4 CARTRIDGE "x" 4 x 4" CINDERELLA 842-976. Keep trying
Least-Doberman puppy, black and tan male, 5 m
large. Has cropped ears with bandages. t
male, black.
List at Dec 4 RU Hasketball Game. BLACK
VALUE call at 9:30 a.m. VALUE call at
9:45 a.m. 841-7858. Reward is
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alice at the House of Uncle Quirk Copy Center.
Aliie is available from 8 A.M. to 5 M.P.M. Monday
to Friday, 8 A.M. to 1 M.P.m. on Saturday at
Mass.
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Choose and cut your own beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive east on Route 60 to County Road 127, exit marker #82 for Open weekends! Christmas Tree, PINE HILL Farm.
INTERSESSION GUITAR, Madison or Rampage
INTERSESSION GUITAR, Madison or Rampage
INTERSESSION GUITAR, Madison or Rampage
INTERSESSION GUITAR, Madison or Rampage
Planning a move! Wishkins will pay cash for your good used furniture, buyhouses. Call 123-456-7890 or visit www.wishkins.com.
NOTICE
Our Specialty—
Christmas Convoyes at
Alexander's Flowers
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimalh Hall is offering, for the first time ever, a boarding plan. 19 bus tours are offered from Naimalh Hall can be you enquire if you choose this plan. Shop at Naimalh HALL, 1800 Naimalh Drive, 843-8590. 12-12
Don't waste your final week suicide on a military picture. Join us at Potter's Lake for the fund-raise and fund-rainer help we raise funds to cover the cost of an education. Help us set a new world record mass suicide.
PERSONAL
The Moffett-lab based in new accepting additions to the Moffett-lab's instrument library. Instrument families. Barrier filters. Waveform filters. Microphones.
EXPERT TUTORS We tutor MATH 000-700-
1548; SCIENCE 000-693; AND CHEMISTRY 100-690;
QUALIFICATIONS B.S. in Physics, M.A. in Math. Call 843-9036 or
or Computer Science. Call 843-541 for math.
843-541 for math.
HARBOUR SPECIALS: 6-10 Mon. Tues. and 2-5 Wed.
Dining Room: $40-$70 per person.
MAIDS DEALS SUNWED: Night $1,60 picture
free.
Michigan Music, 647 Michigan, 643-335,
string instruments and guitar and all
stringed instruments.
To Whom It May concern: The Panebihel Americas Admiral of the Navy, Air Force officer goven from the old Customs Agent, Air Force officer goven from the old Customs Agent.
Copenhagen and the new Harbour Barmada at
place of heaven in Lawrence—at
Harbour Life.
SKI THE SUMMIT, MAR. 10-17
ALL FOR $192
- SKI dischargeway, Keystone Cooper
* 6 days / 8 hours on lowkey lofts
* 6 day ski rental
* Round trip transportation
* Airport or cheese饼
* FREE RIS ski rent
* FUISA agreed means lowest cost to you
ALL FOR $192
Sign-up deadline, Jan. 22
Contact SUA Office
SUN TRAVEL
Gay-Leishman Switchboard. Counseling and general information. 841-8472
Unique Christmas gift, ARC Registered Valeurs.
Males, $125, females, $141, $81-291.
SISTER KETTLE CAFE
fresh food, organic spring water, 140h, and Max. open 10 a.m to 9 p.m.
(check schedule online).
The Mofet Bomb ban ham add to existing additions inquiries only. 842-5063, 844-3231, 841-9251.
COLOR PORTPOLIZ slides, or prints, custom-
processing, professional quality, lowest
lost rate
Don't forget to pay your gas bill. Remember
what happened to Pier 1- Illuminaus.Z.L.F.
www.illuminaus.com
Der: HARBOURIZATION — The consumption of materials of alcohol until total loss of basic psychological life-awareness, attainable only at the "Mature" line. CHECK THE SPECTACLES
12-12
Yes! The BUNGALO survived the "Reim Jev"
structure and the structural damage. Do you Know? Karbo's SROB
SHY7 The California Social Learning Center. The Correspondence Program is designed by a unit of the California State University, Berkeley to become more open, assertive and successful in establishing rewarding relationships between students and faculty. In an unanticipated envelope, just send a postcard to Shy7's office, Suite 215, Beverly Hills, CA 90211
T.G.I.F.
AT THE HAWK
Yet another disappointing team season? 12-12
*Why* George Allen for Head Coach.
Gay Services of Rakmana presents "Gay Rights" in
1:30 p.m. Price House, Rakmana Union, Speaks
at 7:30 p.m. Price House, Rakmana Union, Speaks
at 8:30 p.m.
Do you have a favorite paddle course that you would like to recommend. I need one for spring.
To whoever stole my vest at the Hawk, Will you
take me my letter and my key? I will appreciate it.
Social event of the season: E.D. D. Christmas
Formal, Dec. 9, Bill C. Mike, Mrke. Patt, 12-8
NSTER KETTLE CAFE CONSCIOUS COOK-
ING 10 A.M. to 12 P.M.
OPEN 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Ge Straight. Be comfortable. Levi's Straight leg
was straight on Saturday at Living
Downtown, 831 Mile Road.
R happy R day Elaine. Good bad-you to the Hatter
& have 21 at last! *KMQ* P Love, Linda. Spark
& Happy R day Elaine.
Good luck RETA PHI DELTA HOWLENS! Been the SHIFT II and don't miss the beer brew!
B. Y.O.B. Bring your old bottles and jars to the KI Klizzy Gloss Glass Room at West Point. The West Point is on living Hill Road between Iowa Street and the street the hour of 9 and 5 only. 12-12
CRK You have you a Happy 26th birthday
Love, Wiggles, Precious, Murcia and the gang
SERVICES OFFERED
STATISTICAL TUTORING Call 843-9036. tt
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can
help you with math or CS problems. CA
Bruce 841-14757
EXPERT TUTORS: we bet! MATH 000-786-3241
AND CHEMISTRY 100-649-QUALIFICATIONS
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or Computer Science Call #453-341-3541
CONTEST PLAYING MEDICAL SCHOOL? WE
have a job for you in the information $3.00 MEDIAX SERVICES, Box 4289, New York, NY 10017.
Theses and manuscripts. Your ideas presented forcefully and effectively within certain grammatical structure. The finished work will reflect your experience with precision and work skill. Eveninga 842-1351. 12-8
DON'T HIT HIPPED OFF Let UM Security Services keep an eye on you at 1-800-327-4567 for more information.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4900. IT
TYPING
Experienced typist will type term papers, remes, diessertations, etc. Too a page: 843-6890
Magic Fingers Manuscript Service: thuez; techs; quality typing call: 843-7479
Quality typing call: 843-7479
I do damned good typing—Peggy. 842-4476. tf
THEISH BINDING COPYING—The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us uncover you at 838 Mason or phone 842-3610. Thank you.
Typist/Editor IBM Pim Ekle/Ele. Quality work.
Design, Team, dissertation welcome.
404-3217
Experienced Typist-term paper, sheets, mice, mike.
Experienced Typist-term paper, sheets, spilling cell
board. 84-353-6544 Mrs. Wright
MASTERMIND PROFESSIONAL TYPING, MA-
STERMIND PROFESSIONAL TYPING, low-rate. Call us at any time
3587.
7 years experience. Quality work guarantee.
Bachelor's degree in Law, paper terms, Mrs.
Wu, 842-702-4724.
Fat accurate typist. Papers, under 20 pages.
Fast accurate typist. Papers, under 12 pages.
Rubb. 843-6438 at 5 p.m. **12**-12
**Typing--frost kind Hawkeye Typing Service**
*Call* 842-8726 after 5:30 p.m. **12-12**
bring in typing of term papers, thesis, miltte
elektor documents. Call 842-8726.
**Typing needs work now. Quality work, negotiable
recall. Call Will, before 7 p.m.* 842-8726 (Ex-
periably work over semester break)
**I DO A HELLUVA TYPING JOB--CAROLYN
842-8726**
Excellent testing, proofreading, spelling, corrections,
papers, under 30 pages. Cards. Call 12-128
3832. Print Service.
Represents, theses, disertations, legal forms. 24.
Reported by the author to 20 pages.
Jeannan or Elen. 841-2127.
WANTED
Roommate female wanted for Towers apartment.
$100 monthly. 842-5698. 12-8
Corporate chrismon rooms for spring semester.
Room 408 is on bus line $3. 1/2 unit to-
wall chair, on bus line $5. 1/2 unit to-
wall chair.
Female roommate needed immediately to share an apartment. On bus route. Call 842-7137. 12-8
Male roommate, electric 2 bedroom apartment $240
mon. plus small electric 843-6582. 12-8
Liberal female to share old, warm, comfortable
blockhouse furniture; $115.90 MW. All utilities paid.
Family meals $75.00 per person.
1-5 bedroom house or apartment in house for 2 adults sharing a room with others. 843-608-6000 Keep 12 out of reach.
Two females need third for spring semester
on a month, all utilities paid 842
647-7517 Ask for 2 weeks.
Ash for 3 weeks.
Recommise needed immediately. Easily mould made
using Compound Formula 1 with Compo 613 BMucrow 6-30-38 P
Compo 613 BMucrow 6-30-38 P
1 or 2 female roommates need, Jayhawk
roommates; $9/mo, utilities paid -Call Mar-
15
12:15
Male roommate wants to share furnished Jaya
Room. Towers apologize, paid own, room-
12-18. Towers apologize, paid own, room-
12-18.
Female dormitory for large, three bedroom
Downtown area on bus route 789/month
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2
Roommate wanted to share two bedrooms apart,
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Christian roommate wanted for spring semester in a large furnished upstairs 2 bedroom apartment. $85-$890 monthly per person including usual utilities. Call Pit, Phone # 614-335-3364 or 614-335-3365. 12-12
House member wanted for 5-member cooperative.
Call 863-2278 for details. 12-12
Want to buy large abstract paintings, aryll or oil on canvas. Call 832-845-658 between 8-6 with Stephen R. Gaines.
Wanted: 1 female resumes to house with 2 other girls. $169, *month* + + util. $32. LaTeX
Female roommate needed: 2 BB, bath, spacious Park 25 ks. On KU bus route: Few rent and utility rooms. No other fees.
Female roommate wanted to share Tower apartments. Female roommate wanted to share Tower apartments. Avail immediately! Call 843-958-1926 or Avail immediately! Call 843-958-1926.
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Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment for 2nd semester: 841-8915. 12-12
Female roommate for 2nd semester, 2 bedroom
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*Note:* Roommate must be at least 24 hours prior to arrival.
Roommate wanted to share clean two bedroom
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12
Friday, December 8, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Daniels
From page one
the cup. He wiped his chin with a Holiday Ink towel.
"It don't fit us."
INSTEAD, WHAT does fit his group's image is the kind of country-bluegrass-rock 'n' roll mixture with which it tours across the country at least 250 days a year. Daniel's performance last night was his second in Charleston, where the performance was in Charleston III, on Wednesday.
Daniels and his musicians amply demonstrated that mixture of music last night before an appreciative crowd of about 2,000 in Hoch Auditorium.
They played several tunes from their new album, including "Rainbow Ride," a combination of a soft ballad and several rapid changes of rhythm. The audience listened attentively and broke into applause several times.
Another new song, "You Can't Beat the Damned Old Man," was more in a row with "voyeur" corn.
DANIELS ALSO had his fans swinging in the ashes with many of his old hits. The first few notes of several songs were greeted by a chorus of bouncing drums, clapping and waving of straw cowboy hats.
As Daniels had said earlier in the afternoon, concerts are what have built a musical fortress.
"That's our stock in trade, playing concerts," he said.
. .
He calmly pulled out a bone-handed knife and started cleaning his nails with the blade. The third finger of his right hand was missing one joint.
Even though his band is gaining in popularity and has played benefits for some political functions, including Jimmy Carter's presidential campaign, he said he didn't like to cash in on his fame just to win a vote for somebody.
"I'M GONNA sound like a hypocrite if I don't explain myself," he said. The knife blade screeched across his nail. "I done it from the standpoint of a private citizen. That's my contribution to their campaign, that's what I'm going on, the sameabout anybody."
Daniels might not get on soapboxes for people, but he is certainly a man of strong opinions. Any suggestion that he or his band would be willing to play music for musicians gets a quick, decisive answer.
"I don't like stars at all," he said, nodding his wisdom-haired head. "No sir."
One visitor asked him whether he thought "star" were a different breed of people. He laughed. The belly under his tightly stretched T-shirt shifted.
"I don't know, I never been one, darlin'."
Weather lore forecasts for entertainment only
If you want to know how harsh this winter will be, don't look at gaggles of geese
Such lore is for entertainment only and is, not the stuff that forecasts are made of, says Larry Cosgrove, director of the University of Kansas Weather Service.
"The joke about that is wooly bears are often uniformly black and thick," he said.
The sayings about animals' behavior before approaching weather changes may have some validity, but natural instinct works only in short-range forecasting.
"Ninety percent of all folklore about weather can be traced to Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson."
Some of the weather lore is based on physical ailments such as grandma's arthritis, he said, but the majority of it is based on changes in plants or animals. Woody bear caterpillars are a favorite forecasting tool.
According to entries in a folkcore archive in the KU anthropology department, wooly bear caterpillars with black, thick hair are omens of a long, cold winter.
"instinct can only tell them how to protect themselves on a continuing basis," Coryn says.
Such instincts don't usually extend beyond five days.
Some weather forecasters rely on weather folklore for their long-range predictions. The oldest publication using these methods is the Old Farmer's Almanac.
Since 1792, the almanac claims, it has been predicting weather all over the United States. Its forecasts appear in a condensed format for each day of the month is carefully noted.
Cogrove said such sayings are just carry-
overs from the past.
"A lot of it just doesn't make any sense," he said. "People just don't use it to explain things."
The almanac states that it uses reliable methods to forecast, including "solar activity, the orientation of the earth and its moon," and "the amount of dust and countless other natural phenomena."
"It's not legit," Cosgrove said, "It's totally false."
He said results from a test in California showed that the Farmer's Almanac had an accuracy rate of 37 percent. The National Weather Service had 68 percent accuracy.
"It's harmless, I don't think people take it seriously," he said.
Scholarship to begin soon
A memorial fund has been established with the Kansas University Endowment Association in honor of Richard Kelton.
Kleton was KA ulnumers who died of a heart attack in Colorado while filming a segment of the television series "Centennial."
The fund will be used to assist student actors who seek careers in professional theatre, according to Ronald Willis, director of the University Theatre.
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Wichita branch—to fund four psychiatric residencies at a cost of $64,944—survived Bibb's cuts. The branch is seeking funds for improved medical instruction programs.
Watch the want ads in the Kansan.
Gifts For Her
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Budget . . .
From page one
A request to fund 17 additional medical residency positions at the Med Center was held to two positions. A $135,000 request to a private faculty position was reddited also.
$345,837 from utilities and $266,870 from the physical plant budget.
A plan by Med Center offices to improve rural health care in Kansas was cut short by a funding failure.
ALSO TRIMMED from KU's proposed budget was a request for a 6.5 percent faculty salary increase and an 8 percent salary increase for Med Center residents. Bibb also rejected a request for a 9.5 percent increase in student wages, and instead suggested a 5 percent increase for all salary increases requested.
$129,017 request to establish three area health education centers.
In order to cut down the amount of money the Med Center would need from the state in fiscal 1880, Nitcher said, Bib recommended that the Med Center spend $799,820 more of the revenue generated from the state over the past decade to carry that amount over to fiscal 1881.
THE SLASHING of the proposed funding of 173 additional nursing positions at the Med Center did not seem to ruffle David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for administration, who had not seen a copy of the revised budget since Bibb's cuts.
Holida Plaza—25th & Iowa
OPEN ENEWINGS & SUNDAY
Waxman said that as the move to the new hospital was made, rooms would be opened
Research finds safer diet pill
Researchers have found an appetite suppressing drug that resembles amphetamines but does not have the potential for abuse or the stimulating effect of amphen
The drug, fentramine, or Pondimin, has a chemical structure similar to that of amphotetmes. But it does not cause wakefulness or hyperactivity, Richard Tessel, assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology, said.
This is an advantage to deters since they tend to break their diets in the evening, he saws.
Dieters find that Pondimin, unlike amphetines, is more of a relaxant than a
stulman, Tessel said. It can be taken
overnight, even without keeping the
dairy awake.
The only drawbacks to Pondimin are that it should not be taken by people with a history of depression, or by some people with high blood pressure, he said. The user might also build up a tolerance to it, he added.
Tessel called Pondimin "the best available drum for reducing weight.
"It doesn't seem to have the abuse liability of amphiphetms," he said.
He said he would not recruit it except and a next-to-the-last resort in weight training.
Meisner Milstead
wishes to share with you our finest wine discoveries to compliment the simplest or most elegant of holiday meals.
I
a section at a time so those 173 nurses would not be needed immediately.
The Wichita branch of the medical school had $846,328 cut from its budget request.
One request from the budget of the
holiday plaza 25th & Iowa
WHY JUST RING IN THE NEW YEAR WHEN YOU CAN ROCK IN THE NEW YEAR?
WHEN YOU CAN
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THE PABST-MARSHALLTUCKER NEWYEAR'S EVE PARTY
Seasonal rush hits Headquarters
Bv RICK JONES
Staff Renorter
During most of the year, business isn't exactly what you'd call brisk at headquarters, a 24-hour crisis center at JPMorgan.
But with holidays and finals just around the corner, the volunteers at the center find that business not only thrives,
"Things definitely pick up this time of year," Alan Johnson, director of the center, said. "The end of the semester can turn into one big confusion, and students need somewhere to turn.
"When people hit a brick wall like finals week, they're naturally going to take some knocks."
*Depression and loneliness are usually the main reasons people call us,* Johnson said. "Right now it's more like a vacation."
The people at the center usually just try to lend a sympathetic ear to the callers, and maybe point out a few snipings.
"When you get a caller asking, 'How do I get from here to '
a week and a buff?', you try to convey to the person
that 'C' is too much."
However, John Vicodimone, a volunteer at the center, said finals might not be the only reason for the recent rash.
"People normally tend to get depressed around the holidays," he said. "They remember the way things were when they were young—turkeys, Santa Claus and all the rest.
"I instead, they have two papers due in the morning and an ugly roommate who wants to go out and get drunk tonight."
Vicidomines, who is also resident director at Hashinger Residence Hall, said he had noticed a lot more stress and anxiety in people's faces and many tempers that detonated at the slightest touch.
"People right now are just going bonkers," he said.
They yell a lot more, then they listen a lot more—the pressure is pushing them.
"I try to convey to people that, as important as grades
"If they step back and take a look at the whole picture, n lot of the time it won't seem so mind-boggling."
are, they're just not important enough to get an ulcer over.
to're give to them to take a little more in stride.
Because many of the volunteers at the center are enrolled at KU, they understand the problems students face this time of year. In fact, many of them are going through the same thing themselves.
"It helps me out to talk to people about problems that I have myself."
"I get as weird as anyone this time of year," Beeky Cushman, a Wichita graduate student and student volunteer, said. "It's good to know that other people react to the fails mess the same way I do."
During most of the year, students constitute only about half the callers to Headquarters. But at this time of year, that figure increases dramatically. Johnson figures that will return to normal in about a week and a half.
"Students are just more vulnerable than other people right now," he said. "When a whole semester hinges on one week's performance, there tends to be a little bit of pressure there someplace."
KANSAN
Monday, December 11, 1978
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 72
U
Vespers singers
Members of the University choir, under the direction of James Ralson, inset, performed
Christmas carols yesterday during the 54th annual Christmas Vespers presentation in Hoch Auditorium.
U.S. asylum policy called 'double standard'
Staff Reporter
By PHILIP GARCIA Staff Reporter
The U. government has a double standard policy for granting asylum to political activists seeking refuge here. Hector Maran is an student activist from Mexico, said Friday.
In a speech at the Kansas Union on "Repression in Mexico and Political Asylum in the U.S.", Marroquin told a group of about 45 persons that the United States had a long-standing relationship with activists to activists from "enemy countries" but not to activists from "friendly countries".
"The director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service says. We are not willing to grant political asylum to a person claiming that violations of human rights are
being constructed in friendly countries, "Mr Marroquin said.
Mexico is considered a friendly country, he said.
"IF THEY give a Solzhentsyn political asylum they should give asylum to the Chileans and Haitians, to all political activists seeking asylum," Marroquín said.
Marrquino, who has been in the United Marroquin, since 1974, applied for political asylum after the Mexican government charged him with being a member of the Sept. 23 Communist League, which allegedly killed a librarian at the University of Nuevo Leon four years ago. The Mexican government also charges he participated in
A deportation hearing was scheduled for 27 but was postponed. New hearing date is not yet announced.
two gun battles with Mexican police the same year.
Marrroquin said if he were granted asylum, a precedent would be set for granting asylum to activists from friendly countries.
MARROQUUN SAID. "They say that I was an illegal alien and helped to create unemployment, inflation and to disrupt the balance of payments.
Marrouquin said that on Sept. 18, 1977, the INS arrested him in Texas as an illegal alien and placed him in jail for more than three months until his mobile for $10,000 bond could be raised.
"It's not the unemployment, not the Chicanos, the blacks, not the women, that caused the economic mess, it's the absolute work for profits instead of human needs."
It is "political manure" to tell Chiances they are American citizens and tell Mexicans they are Mexican citizens.
He said there was an attempt to divide the Chicanos and the Mexicans.
Marrquin said he knew that if he were to return, to Mexico, he would be subject to travel restrictions.
He said, "I know if I go back to Mexico they are not going to give me one chance to Philadelphia."
Variety of factors lead to deanships
By JAKE THOMPSON
Few professors seeking the freedom of an academic career desire to become a University administrator, shuffling volumes of paper around the University,
See ACTIVIST back page
Staff Renorter
According to some deans of University of Kansas schools, however, many circumstances led them out of teaching and into University administration.
And varied choices led them into academia in the first place.
One man who has talked to all of the deans recently, hired many of them, and says he knows them all well, is Ron Meyer, president of the affairs. He has had budget conferences with each dean this fall to set guidelines for budget requests in the fiscal 1980 budget.
Caligara said recently that the deans had varying roles and were one of the most important groups of leaders at KU.
Calgard said he thought a dean's involvement in academics was important to maintain contact with his profession.
All of KU's deans teach part time or do some research.
The most common answer to the question, "why seek university life in professional career in the business world," was that the deans enjoyed
"ONE WOULD have to say it involves some sort of ego conception that you can do it better than others and have clear forethought." Kahn said. "The most frustrating piece is the lack of what we want when school is and what I would like it to be."
Charles H. Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture for the last 11 years, said he enjoyed leading the school's programs.
Kahn teaches and does some outside architectural work, which he said was essential to remaining dean.
"If the administrative work precluded teaching and architectural work, I'd get out," he said. "I like teaching too much and the University too much, but I do occasionally regret not being in the professional career."
He said he became interested in an academic career while in graduate school studying architecture.
Joseph A. Pichler, de the School of Business, said he learned administrative work while serving as executive secretary under George P. Shultz, who was the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury from 1972 to 1974.
Pichler has been a dean for five years and teaches part time.
"The best part of administrative work isn't paper shuffling, but setting up programs and seeing them work," Pichler said.
He said being a dean was a "time-consuming life-consuming job" and felt that progress toward goals of the University and confidence in the faculty were essential in receiving satisfaction from the work.
"THE ULTIMATE satisfaction is the success of the students who graduate from here and go into the business world," Pichler said. "The principal frustrate is not having the resources to studentize." He added that potential as well as possible.
Pichler said he became a dean partly by coincidence and partly through the influence of two professors.
Choices, not coincidence, influenced Dale P. Scannell to seek the deanship of the School of Education in 1969. He said that he felt the school's direction had been satisfying.
"To be a dean you have to be a masochist because sometimes the petty problems outweigh the rewards," Scannell said.
19 The most satisfying aspect is seeing a beneficial change for the school. The most frustrating thing is persuading the
faculty to give unselfishly of their expertise for a programmatic need."
Scannell said a higher salary was not the primary reason for his seeking the deanship.
"MOST PEOPLE in administration are motivated by the challenge rather than the salary increase," he said. "You must personal freedom and broader influence."
Scannell said he taught, conducted testing programs and wrote books in his spare time to keep in contact with his profession.
Consulting for civil engineering firms and teaching consume David C. Kraft's spare time. Kraft has been dean of the School of Engineering since 1912.
"Each individual has to make a choice where you want to make a contribution," Kraft said. "For me, I enjoy the educational arena. You choose to stay in school, or you decide to trüge you. I discovered, while in graduate school, I truly enjoy teaching and working with students. At one time I gave consideration to going into engineering consulting, but I would have had to come now because I would not be teach'd."
James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts since 1975, said he was frequently tested by the faculty in organ surgery, gives, but the recitals were vital.
"IF I HAD to quit playing organ I'd "quit
Robert Cobb, dean of KU's largest school, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he became dean "from an almost accidental beginning." He served as acting dean twice and then became dean in 1974.
"I like to think this is one of the most important offices on campus because we're so large," Cobb said. "It's not only academic programs and be involved in the maturing of colleagues as academics and students as intellectuals. The increase in the proliferation of committee work is frustrating."
Frustration for Martin B. Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, comes in the form of arbitration between opposing lawyers at the University made since he became dean in 1971.
"THE GREATEST danger is to go along with the status quo after a period of years, but there is an advantage in longevity." Dickinson said. "I often have thoughts of going back into tax practice. My guess is there may be a more ready interchange between a law practice and an academic practice."
A dean who feels he could not go into the professional world is Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy.
"Right now I could not go back primarily because my tools would have to be resharpened," Mossberg said. "I've learned that if you're young, and you enjoy it, because I'm never doing the same thing. The most important thing to me is to see goals we set to achieve 10 years ago taking place on our industrial job I would still be an administrator."
David Hardcastle, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said he was passing up an opportunity to be a research analyst earning $30,000 to $60,000 because he wanted to teach and remain close to his family.
"MONEY IS NOT a primary reason for my involvement. The curiosity factor among students and faculty is better than in the outside world." Hardcaste said. "Salary may be the tip point between professional support and a nice job, but most people in academia don't trust it." The most satisfying aspect is to give some unfying direction to a program in your school."
Speed use unpopular at KU, doctors say
By LYNN WILLIAMS
Staff Reporter
Using white crosses or another form of amphiprene to study into the wee hours is probably less popular at the University of Kansas than it was a few years ago, according to local doctors.
And doing speed just for the fun of it is apparently an even more lonely activity.
"I don't know what a white cross is," one student replied somewhat sheepishly.
"We HAVEN't any cases that involved any of our school started in August." Jallow Mullens, a detection specialist.
Amphetamine abuse is not considered by campus police to be a problem.
According to R. L. Hermes, Lawrence physician, ampatemphasis runs up many of the body processes, putting a strain on the organs. Increased heart rate and blood pressure are its most noticeable effects.
Some students are familiar with speed's power to
destroy badness, although they may not know the
effect it has on their senses.
along with quickened but not necessarily more efficient thought processes.
For tasks involving more than simple monitoring, memorizing or arithmetic operations, ampetamines do not help and may detract from performance by making business or overestimation by the user of his capacities.
ACUTE AMPHETAMINE poisoning may result in coma followed by death, but there are few documented cases of "speed kills" from a single patient to Richard Tessel, assistant professor of pharmacy.
High doses of amphetamine decrease the sex drive, rev up the organs, increase peripause and result in periods up to several days of sleeplessness and loss of appetite.
The possibility of addiction to speed also detracts from its desirability.
"Speed freaks" often stay up for days, lose weight, suffer from heart palpitations, liver and kidney problems, loss of memory and decreased vocabulary and are more susceptible to colds, flu and other communicable diseases. Inveterate users eventually take on an aged appearance.
The Do It Now Foundation, an organization devoted to drug education that is based in Phoenix, Ariz., recommends niacin supplements and doses of yogurt and milk spread out over the day following an episode of pregnancy. In addition, it also recommends that users allow their bodies at least one day to recover from the effects of speed use.
BUT THE occasional use of ampetamines is not considered very dangerous, except when the drug has been cut with a more harmful substance, such as strychnine. And customers of street dealers can never be sure what they are buying, because speed is easily manufactured bootleg in basement laboratories. The dealer himself may not know exactly what he is selling.
Amphetamine may be illegally obtained in several forms, some of which are "white crosses" or "whites," small white pills with crosses; "Christmas trees," green and clear capsules with white and green granules; white capsules with white or off-white capsules; white capsules with white or off-white phetamine, sometimes in the form of a white powder, which may be put in solution and injected or snorted; "bennies" and "Dexies" are slang terms for Ben-
zedrine and Dexedrine, pharmaceutical forms of amphetamine.
"The majority of people in our studio stay up on their own steam," one said. "Wild cross use is the most common."
Often white crosses, Christmas trees and other so-called speed contain only caffeine or "garbage" mixes of little-known drugs that simulate the effects of amphetamines.
Two late night chatterers working on architecture projects in Marvin Hall said they had used white crosses to stay awake only one or two times this semester.
DESPITE THE potential danger of using street drugs containing unknown substances, several KU students still seek out amphetamines when the long nights start to loom.
Students at Marvin are noted for keeping late hours, but apparently most of them are content to rely on coffee, cigarettes and camaraderie to make it through long nights.
"I if wanted to get some white cross it would be through a friend in a whole 'nother school,' one of the students said, "I had a friend in Micro. He used it all the time to finish lab projects and lab reports."
She said she had been prescribed some black beauties, a type of amphiphetine, from a Kansas City doctor about two years ago. But the pills gave her insomnia that she never used most of them, she said.
EVEN AMONG local truckers, speed use on the job is almost nonexistent, according to Daler Garner, Lawrence senior and cashier at the Howard Johnson's turnip restaurant east of Lawrence.
"the ones that do it are the younger ones, the ones that drive across the country," he said. "If they're doing它 constantly, after they've taken it for a certain reason, you can keep it for 24 hours straight so their bodies can catch up."
Aphetamines for partying have taken a definite back seat to cocaine and barbiturates in Lawrence. Cocaine, though much more expensive, provides a safer alternative to heroin, which some users also consider to be more pleasant.
"Speed is not popular to play around with on a social basis," Allen Johnson, director of Headquarters assistance center, said. "I think it's just a preference. It's just not that pleasant of a hush."
2
Monday, December 11, 1978
University Dally Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Iranian protest ends peacefully
TEHRAN, Iran — Hundreds of thousands of Iranians surged through the heart of Tehran yesterday in a huge anti-ahist protest that ended without the violence.
The march was held on the eve of Ashura, an emotional holy day commemorating the martyrdom of the founder of the Shite sect.
Estimates of the number of marches varied. The Army said 300,000 paraded along the 5% mile route. March organizers said up to 2 million people took part in the six-hour procession. The official Irish news agency estimated the march was the march was in honor of World Human Rights Day, which was yesterday.
Graduate job market improving
BETHELHEM, Pa.—The job market for college graduates is improving despite a reduction in government hiring, according to a study by the College Pipeline Project.
survey results released today indicated an overall hiring increase of 17 percent is anticipated. In private businesses, employers predict a gain of 18 percent in job openings.
Local and state governments forecast a 12 percent decline. The fea-
l government projects a 15 percent reduction, possibly the lowest level since the
year.
The biggest increase in jobs, 34 percent, is expected to be in engineering. A 19 percent increase is projected for the "sciences, math and other technical" fields.
Of the 707 employers surveyed, all who commented agreed that minorities and women who were qualified would be in high demand, particularly in jobs requiring higher education.
Vance. Sadat meet in Cairo
CAIRO, Egypt—Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance opened a new round of battle diapers for the Middle East peace talks,摩萨尔 90 minutes with President Eva Porres Abreu.
Neither Vance nor Sadat spoke with reporters later, but State Department spokesman George Sherman described the talks as "very good, full and con-
He did not comment on speculation that Vance tried to persuade Sadat to send a top-level official to Israel to revive direct negotiations between the two countries and perhaps attend the funeral tomorrow of former Israeli Prime Minister Gold Meir.
Vance is to confer again today with Sadat and acting Egyptian Foreign Minister Buxhal Ghor before flying to Israel for Meir's funeral. Vance had expected to end his Mideast trip Wednesday after talks in Jerusalem with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, but Meir's death changed his plans.
Israelis pau tribute to Meir
JERUSALEM—Israel paid tribute yesterday to Golda Meir, the country's fourth prime minister and a giant of its founding generation. Plans were being made to build a new synagogue.
Sorrow over Meir's death Friday tinged national pride as Prime Minister Menachem Begin received the Nobel Peace Prize in a ceremony in Oslo, Norway.
Meir, 80, died of complications from lymphoma, a disease of the lymphatic glands. She kept her illness secret since it was first diagnosed 16 years ago.
Accepting the Nobel Prize he shares with Egypt's President Anwar Sadat,
Begin opened his address by paying homage to Meir.
Her body will lie in state in the Kneisset, or Parliament, building this morning. Tomorrow's funeral will be with full military honors. Burial will be in a section of the national cemetery on Jerusalem's Mount Herzl, called "The Plot of the Nation's Great."
Begin attends Nobel ceremony
OSLO, Norway—Menachem Begin and Amar Sadat's stand-in accepted the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize at a gala royal ceremony yesterday, while 5,000 Norwegians marched in protest nearby and diplomats struggled elsewhere to keep alive the promise of Egyptian-Israel peace.
Bent开始拟的Camp David agreements as "a good treaty of peace between countries that decided to put an end to hostility and war and begin a new
Sadat's speech was by personal envoy Sayed Marri. Sadat had declined to come to Oslo to pick up the prize personally. The official explanation was that he was busy with the peace negotiations, but Egyptian officials said they wanted him to begin here while the talks were dwellled because of what Osman called a "crime."
Sadat, instead, was meeting yesterday in Egypt with Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance.
In Stockholm, meanwhile, the nine other Nobel Prize winners in the sciences and literature received their awards and gold medals from King Carl Gustaf of Sweden.
Military plane crash kills 5
HOPKINSVILLE, Ky.-A military cargo plane crashed early yesterday morning in a farm field short of a runway at Fort Campbell Army base in southwestern Kentucky, killing all five crew members aboard, a military spokesman said.
Lt. Col. A.T. Brainerd, public information officer at the base, said the Air Force C-130 Hercules crashed while in a landing pattern.
The plane was en route to the base from the Little Rock, Ark. Air Force Base to participate in a training exercise with members of the 101st Airborne Division.
It was the seventh fatal crash of a C-130 from the Little Rock base since the planes were deployed in 1970.
J. M. Pendleton, whose house is about 200 yards from the crash site, said he heard a roar from the plane's engines followed by an explosion at about 7 a.m. CST yesterday. Only the tail of the aircraft remained intact after the crash, he said.
Venus data surprise scientists
The surprises came as scores of scientists at the Ames Research Center checked information relayed from five separate spacecraft during their descent Saturday to Venus' surface, as well as from one which remained in
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Information from Earth's latest encounter with Venus may force a complete revision of theories about how the solar system works.
Michael McElroy, a Harvard University physician and one of the experts studying the findings, said, "It's totally unexpected result that we've come up with in our research."
The scientists found that the Venusian atmosphere appears to contain argon 36 gas in proportions as much as 100 times greater than on Earth or Mars. The finding means that either Venus was formed from different substances than the rest of the solar system or the formation process itself was different.
Inmate-editor caught in the act
LANSING—Richard Lee McCarthar a knowledge of printing, a flair for the pop publishing business and he knew how to keep his mouth shut. But McCarthar, a Kansas State Penitentiary inmate, just didn't know how to hide his product.
Prison officials last week discovered 200 copies of a political magazine that McCarthar had published. The issues, dated October 1978, were ready for mailing and featured endorsements of Kansas political candidates in the November general election.
Kenneth G. Oliver, prison director, said the magazine was printed without authorization and on misappropriated paper in the prison印刷展。
McCarthier is serving a 3-year-to-life sentence for unlawful possession of a firearm, an unlawful use of a firearm, first-degree robbery, corrupting or infiltrating.
Weather
It will be sunny and warmter today with temperatures reaching into the mid
Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 15 miles an hour. Temperatures will
be cooler in the evening.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- Democrats refused to repudiate the Carter administration's budget policies yesterday after Vice President Walter F. Mondale warned that inflation would drive them from office if they failed to deal with it.
Democrats back careful budgeting
At the closing session of the party's midterm convention, Mondale warned that if Congress failed to resolve the problem of inflation . . . or it will be driven out of office just as our predecessors were.
"Make the dollar worth a dollar," he said.
"We've got to respond to that overwhelming pain."
DELEGATES THEN rejected, 822 to 521, a resolution that would have put the party on record as supporting "an adequate budget to meet human needs in no case less than the current services budget for human and social services."
They approved a resolution on the federal budget, saying, "We believe it is essential that all areas of the budget - domestic as well as defense - be fully scrutinized and that a special effort be made to avoid unintended reductions in programs which aid the poor and the homeless." They also urged our urban areas. If errors are to be made, they would be on the side of avoiding
harm to those least able to protect them-selves."
DOUGLAS FRASER, president of the United Auto Workers and a principal backer of the substitute resolution, said the position of Fraser was based on "sanctions cuts in vital social services."
The final sentence echoed statements made here repeatedly by President Carter.
The inflation-conscious administration's allocation of budget resources has been the focus of the agency.
Its victory on the budget resolution ended the threat that the convention might adopt a position embarrassing to the Carter administration by preventing pressure from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, and agreed to support a resolution opposing the 90th Congress of national health insurance.
The health insurance resolution was adopted after the budget session of 2015, and the administration's effort to obtain a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel and to negotiate an arms deal with Iran.
THE DELEGATES also put the party on record as supporting full congressional representation for the District of Columbia, and for making Jan. 15, the birthday of the
Farmers distributing "Dump Carter" buttons at the convention were among a group demonstrating dissatisfaction with Carter's farm policies.
late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., a national holiday.
Jerome Frikk, a Texas affrer and one of five American Agriculture Movement members named to serve as advisers to the Democratic Party's 1980 platform committee, said the move was meant to get a message across to the administration
Jerome Friend, a Texas farmer and one of five American Agriculture Movement members named to serve as advisers to the Democritic Party's 1980 platform committee, said the move was meant to get a larger share of government that its farm policies were not working.
"The farmers are not too happy with the Carter administration in general." Fremal said. "The object of distributing the buttons is to inform the fact that we had better wake up."
Carlin speaks up for D.C.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)—Kansas Gov.lecter John Carlson yesterday urged fellow Democrats to support giving the District of Columbia voting representation in Congress.
Columbia voting representation was a nonpartisan issue.
In an address to the Democratic midterm
candidates, Martin spoke for
congressional vote rights.
"We tax them, yet we don't allow them to vote." Carlin said. "He added that the election was a challenge."
Carlin said those in the Midwest "have to be fair and support them, so the city of Washington and other urban centers around New York will support Kansas farm programs."
In an interview later, Carlin said the real benefit of the convention, which ended Sunday, had been the opportunity for rank-and-file students to talk with Carter administration officials.
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3
Menninger says easing pain vital
A good bedside manner helps physicians ease their patients' pain, Karl Menninger
"The object of medicine is to relieve pain, not merely to treat illness," he said.
Menninger, 84, co-founder of the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, was the featured speaker at a two-day seminar in the Kansas Union on mental health and aging. He kept his audience amused with his points and pointed comments during his speech.
"It is important to do things for the patient to sit at him ease," he said. "It isn't enough merely to ask them whether they are at ease."
Menninger told about a lesson in patient care he had received when he was in medical school. A professor called him and students to the front of a large lecture class.
"THEE WAS A patient lying on a table at the front," he said. "Dr. Cunning looked at us and said, 'Do what you can to make her comfortable. We weren't sure what to do.'"
Menninger said he got a quick lesson in an area that health professionals sometimes neglect. Often, doctors become so absorbed by the problem that they miss the person they treat, he said.
"I'm sure we were a comical foursome
way, hemming and hawing around,
Some persons are born with a gift for making others feel better, some achieve it through training.
plumping the patient's pills and awkwardly asking whether that was better for them.
"If you've got it, thank heaven," he said,
"and if not, try to get it. There is no profession more dedicated to it than medicine."
Menninger said it was only human to resist approaching and reaching, out to him, and then to attack.
"WE HAVE A resistance to making these people comfortable," he said, "I'm not just speaking for old people. I am one. I suppose that's why you put me up here."
Menninger said patients would not pay a bill immediately cared about, but they would appreciate it.
He said most people were overwhelmed with odd feelings about being a dying per-
"We old people try to minimize our fallings, but we expect you to help us. It's a favor unconsciously asked for by us," he said.
"EVERYONE IS going to die," he said,
"but old people are reminders of the time that will come for everyone. They appreciate your perception of their values
"Old people need a good chair to sit in.
You all have a little love—spread it."
Lack of funding stalls negative preservation
By CAROL BEIER Staff Reporter
Thousands of irreplaceable negatives in the Kansas Collection of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library could be lost if funds are not provided for their preservation.
According to George Griffin, curator of the Kansas Collection, there are about 60,000 glass negatives in need of a special preservation process. However, no preservation work on the negatives has been undertaken September, when funds were exhausted.
"WE STRETCHED THE money as far as we could," Griffin said. "Friday. If the deterioration goes on, even in the best conditions, we're going to lose some of them."
The preservation process involves carefully washing the negatives, then using chemicals to make the negatives permanent.
About 40,000 of the negatives belong to the Pennel Collection, donated to the University of Kansas in 1948 by the Pennel family. Joseph Pennell was a photographer in Junction City and Fort Riley from 1886 to 1921.
Griffin said the library used a $2,500 grant from the KU Endowment Association between 1973 and 1975. Since that time, a portion of the library's work-study funding was used to pay students to preserve the negatives.
"WE NEED MORE money—considerably more than the Endowment Association can offer."
Griffin is working on a grant request to the National Endowment for the Humanities for funding for the archeology program. The completion of that request, he will apply to
He estimated that preservation of the negatives would cost $20,000 a year for at least three years. To set up a retrieval system, he calculated the Griffin said, the total cost would be $150,000.
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the National Endowment for the Arts for the photography collection.
"In the way library funding works, we are robbing Peter to pay Paul," he said. "The archives are the backbone of the collection, followed by the photography."
Griffin said the earliest date funding could become available from the federal agency when it
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Griffin said Pennell photographed nearly the residence of the two townships during a trip to Alaska.
"HE TOOK PHOTOS of all types—all types of people," Griffin said. "One of his photographs of Junction City prostitutes is to exhibit on display now in Spencer Museum."
Griffin said it was impossible to put a monetary value on the negatives in the Pennell collection. However, if deterioration is allowed to continue, the images on the negatives will be destroyed, he said.
Griffin described a print of Washington Street in junction CY, which he called "the lateness of the city."
FOR THE TIME being, however, the negatives, most of which are 5 inches by 7 inches, are stored in the stacks of the storage boxes. In double-walled boxes, inside larger boxes.
Although Pennell had a system of numbering and labeling his griffins, Griffin said, the negatives lack organization somewhat because they had been stored in several different places before they were brought to the library 10 years ago.
Pennell's photographs have been used in textbooks and for background research by members of the University Theatre, Griffin said. Recently, they appeared in a commercial for McDonald's—"A Salute to the American Family."
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TONIGHT'S
HIGHLIGHTS
Bilgraham Family Christmas 7:00:4 The evangelist is joined by Johnny and June Cash, Orange Zimmer, Evie Tourniquet, Gorge Beaverey, Myrtle Cliff Barrows, and the Ralph Carmichael Chorale for a Christmas program.
A Woman Called Moses — Part 1: 8/40; 27 Cicely Tyson plays Harriet Ross Tubman, a fugitive wife who gained fame in the Civil War era as a "conductor" of ragtime bands. The organization that transported runaway slaves across the Mason Dixon Line.
Flintstone 7:50; 27 When Santa is injured in a fall from the Flintstone's roof, Fred and Barney take the reins from the jolly old sun and set out with Santa's reindeer to deliver presents and good cheer.
P. M.
EVENING
5:30 ABC News 2,9
NBCS News 4,27
CBS News 5,13
Rookies 41
6:00 News 2, 5, 9, 13, 27
Cross Wits 4
MacNel/Lehr Report 19
Let's Go To The Races 41
6:30 Nashville On The Rue
Hollywood Squares 4
Wild Kingdom 5
Dating Game 9
Striping 19
Mary Tyler Moore 27
Newlywed Game 41
7:00 Year Without Santa 2,9
Billy Graham Family Christmas
4
White Shadow 5, 13
Evening At Symphony 19
Flintstones 27
Tic Tac Dough 41
7:30 Turnabout 11
Joker's Wild 41
8:30 One Day At A time 5,13
8:00 NFL Football 2,9
Movie—"A Woman Called
Moses"
*MA* "ASH" 13
Onedin Line 11
Visions 19
Movie—"Welcome Stranger" 41
9:00 Lou Grant 5, 13
Spirit of Punxsutawney 11
Billy Graham Family Christmas 13
10:00 News 4, 5, 9, 13, 27
Kansas Archaeology 11
Dick Cavett 19
Love Experts 19
10:30 Johnny Carson 4, 27
Stanley San Francisco 5
ABC News 11, 19
Rockford Files 13
Star Trek 14
11:00 News 2, 9
Dick Cavett 11
MacNel/Lehr Report 19
11:00 Man From U.N.C.L.E. 5
Ironide 11
Flash Gordon 41
11:00 McMillan & Wife 13
A.M.
12:00 News 2
Tomorrow 4, 27
Wrestling 41
12:30 Story Of Jesus 2
Movie—"Tamahine" 5
1:00 News 4
Movie—"Welcome Stranger" 41
2:30 News 5
2:45 Movie—"Sherlock Holmes and the Woman in Green" 41
3:00 Art Linkletter 5
4:30 Dick Van Dyke 41
5:00 Andy Griffith 41
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news and weather
Protests, controversy stirred KU campus
By PAM MANSON
Protests and controversy dominated campus news in 1978, with the visit of Vithak Rabin and the accompanying demonstrations emerging as the top story.
Rabin, former prime minister of Israel, was greeted by about 200 Arab and Iranian students and other protesters when he arrived at Hoc Audiotrium to give a speech on the search for peace in the Middle East. The demonstrators shouted and wave flags, while a counter-demonstration of about 13 Israel citizens took place.
About 150 of the demonstrators moved inside Hoch, yelling so loudly during the speech that Rabin was silenced at least 26 times, sometimes for as long as three or four minutes.
Earlier in the day, about 200 students wearing white masks had marched down Jayhawk Boulevard in protest of Rubin's visit. About 25 pro-Israel demonstrators marched down the opposite side of the building.
ALTOUGH UNIVERSITY officials had announced that those who interrupted Rabin's speech
would be disciplined, no action was taken because demonstrators could not be identified, ad-
The cancellation of a display of Nazi memorabilia five hours before the exhibit was to open in Kennecott Spencer Research Library on Monday. The administrators said the exhibition was canceled out of concern for "our Jewish students and colleagues." They said the opening of the exhibit would have been poorly timed with the opening of the exhibit.
In opposition to the decision, the University Council and the University Senate passed resolutions endorsing free speech, and library staff members circulated petitions calling for a rescheduling of the
This semester, the American Association of University Professors met with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, to discuss the administration's decision about the Nazi exhibit. Critics have said the administration evoked the impression Jewish Jews had asked that the exhibition be closed.
The firing of Bud Moore after a dismal 1-10 record was the No. 3 story. Moore, who had two years left on a four-year contract, had been football coach at the University of Kansas since 1974.
The story voted fourth was a 187 percent increase in tuition at the University of Kansas Medical Center, which prompted a lawsuit by 234 med students seeking to block the increase.
The increase, scheduled to take effect this semester, came at the same time the Kansas Legislature offered a new scholarship that would pay students $400 for their agreed to practice in the state after graduation.
The students argued that the increase was tapacious, oppressive and amounted to concentration.
A DEMAND BY about 200 black students that the University Daily Kansan print a front page apology about a story they said was racist was the fifth-hridden story.
The story was a review of the Oct. 28 Natalie Cole concert.
Complaints about the review prompted an amendment by a student senator to withhold Kansan funding until a review board could be established to determine the level of sensitive issues. The amendment was defeated.
Other top campus stories:
Other top campus jobs: The Walker, director of the Kansas University Athletic Corporation, ranked
- The controversy over the proposed move of the Jimmy Green statue was No. 7.
- The reorganization of administration offices, which included the elimination of the offices of the commissioner of finance.
- The admittance of KU to the Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobbying group, was ninth.
- The approval of the fiscal 1979 budget, which included funds to renovate Watson Library, followed by a reduction in the budget.
- Memorial Stadium renovations was No. 11. Because of the work being done in the stadium, the Kansas Relays were moved and May graduation ceremonies were threatened.
- President Fords visit to the campus and his participation in the dedication of Gold Hall took the
- Custodian disputes throughout the year with American Management Services, the outside firm hired to supervise KU jantors, who are No. 13. Custodians at the Med Center staged a brief walkout to protest working conditions and custodians on the Lawrence campus threatened to strike.
- The approval by the Student Senate of a Legal Services program for students was No. 14.
- HEW investigations into discrimination complaints about KU's athletic programs and the basketball season, capped by a close defeat at the NCAA Midwest regional, tied for 15th.
Other top stories were the kidnaping of the Baby Jay mascot, the broadcast of a false news story about a nuclear explosion by JIKH-FM and the subsequent investigation by the FCC, the lawsuits stemming infections in Mets Center buildings and the proposed merger of the men's and women's athletics departments.
Mideast, suicide, economy ranked top stories in '78
Rv TIM SHEEHY
In terms of coverage and significance, the movement toward peace in the Middle East is being recognized.
For their efforts, which have angered many of the Arab neighbors, both men and women, the United States
Beginning with the historic 1977 meeting in Jerusalem of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and culminating in the signing of the Camp David accords, peace in the area has not appeared closer in 1,000 years.
Ranking as the No. 2 story of the year is the tragic and as yet unexplained mass death that occurred in 2015.
Rep. Lee Ryan of California, who was in Guyans to investigate the People's Temple cult, was killed as he tried to lead several Islamist groups in States. Then, 917 members of the San Francisco-based cult followed leader Jim Kimberly and attempted to poison or burn him for refusing to do so.
Tax cuts, inflation and Proposition 13 ranked as the No. 3 story. The "I'm mad at hell and I'm not going to take it any more" attitude of voters was reflected in Congress, where an $18.7 billion tax cut was passed and later signed by President Carter. In
California, where the tax-cut revolution led by Howard Jarvis got its start, residents voted 21 to slash property taxes by 57 percent.
Much of the tax-cutting spirit of the American electorate was fostered by inflation, which has stagnated since 2013 and a level of about 10 percent. The American consumer's dollar will buy only half what it bought in 1967, and Carter recently announced a toughened
The continued decline of the dollar, along with the replacement of Arthur Burns by G. William Miller as head of the Federal Reserve Board, ranked as the No 4 story.
The bequequered dollar has dropped in value in relation to nearly every important foreign currency this year, prompting Carter and the Federal Reserve Board to raise the discount rate to an unprecedented 9.5 percent.
PASSAGE OF THE Panama Canal treaties, an important victory for the president, ranked fifth. By a narrow vote, the US and its counterintelligence control of the canal in the year 2000
Other top national and international stories were:
- The death of Pope Paul VI, followed by
the short reign of Pope John Paul I and the
long reign of Pope John XXIII.
By MARY ANGELEE SEITZ
Scientific discoveries turn dreams into facts
Visions of Alain Daundry Huxley's "Brave New World" run rampant when a neurologist, Dr. Michael Fennell, conceived Robert Ekwinds, fertilized a human egg in a test tube then implanted it in its brain.
A series of discoveries and inventions turned 1978 into the reality visualized by the science fiction of several decades ago. Home computers, astronomical discoveries and strides toward safe, cheap energy from the sun could give us news to shock both scientists and laymen.
Scientists voiced concern over possible birth defects resulting from test-tube conceptions, while laymen pondered the morality or immorality of test-tube birth. Louise Brown's birth was also in a sense of hope for thousands of infertile women.
Author David M. Korvick invented skeptical, scorn and speculation when he announced that scientists had created an in-vestigative genetic copy of an unidentified millionaires.
ROWICK'S BOOK on the experience,
"The Cloning of a Man," contained no
Scientists responded that, although mice have already been cloned, human cloning has not.
Pluto's moon is 5 to 10 percent the mass of Pluto. The earth's moon is 1.2 percent the mass of Pluto.
Computers lost some of their technological mystique and become more of a house
A moon was discovered orbiting Pluto when James W. Christy of the National Observatory in Washington investigated that showed that Pluto was elongated.
hold luxury, in what Science Digest termed "the home computer revolution."
**COMPUTER SHOPS** spruced around the country as 50,000 Americans bought home computers. Home computers range in cost from $300 up to thousands of dollars.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, however, legalized Laetrile for terminally ill cancer patients, under the assumption that "safety" and "effectiveness" were irrelevant if a person was expected to die from cancer.
Scientists at Princeton University produced a laser capable of producing 100 million degrees. Kelvin—the temperature of hydrogen—was used in newspapers' haunted event as a major technical breakthrough, although the Department of Energy made no change in the timetable or funding for government fusion research ahead of expected attacks at the facility before completion.
- The Supreme Court's ruling in the Bakke reverse discrimination case, in which strict quotas in University policy were overturned, although the court said race should continue to be a consideration.
The Food and Drug Administration warned the public that Laetrile, the miracle- or quack-cure for cancer, contained cyanide, and that toxic contaminants were found in some samples of the amrionic-ot derivative.
PIONEER VENUS, a series of probes designed to study the planet for a year, was launched. On May 20 the first orbiter was launched from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, and on Aug. 7 the second component was sent into space.
- The congressional action to lift the Turkish arms embargo, the sale of sophisticated warplanes to Saudi Arabia, the transfer and the renegotiation of a SALT agreement.
- The invocation of martial law by the shah of Iran, as his country was shaken by a national strike and protests against the militarist rule and his Westernization policies.
A primary purpose of the Venus orbiter is to map regions of Venus where the solar wind comes in. The question to be answered is: what "holds off" the solar wind from the Earth?
- The fall of the Andreatti government in Italy, coupled with the kidnapping and murder of political leader Aido Moro, by a terrorist around the Red Brides.
- The nation-wide strike by coal workers that cut back production in several large industries and prompted Carter to invoke the United States in an effort to force miners back to work.
- Continued rebellion against apartheid in Rhodesia and South Africa, even though majority rule has been promised for Rhodesia.
- The birth of the world's first test-tube baby.婴儿由英国physicians.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- The emerging adversary relationship between the Supreme Court and the press, as the court upheld a police search of the Stanford University newsroom and sent it to the FBI, an attorney barter to jail for refusing to turn over notes on possible murders to a federal judge.
- The continuing tails of corruption and mismanagement in the General Services
'78 in Review
These year-in-review articles were prepared by members of an editorial and interpretive writing class in the School of Journalism. Events chosen for inclusion in the articles were determined and ranked by a class vote.
DECEMBER 11, 1978
Tax revolt spawns conservatives
By SARAH TOEVS
"Government is the biggest growing industry in this country." Howard Jarvis, author of California's Proposition 13, says. "And the only way to cut the cost of government is not to give it any money in the first place."
That statement captured the mood of the American taxpayer in 1978. Growing resentment toward excessively high taxes took hold and spread this year, with Jarvis and his proposition leading the wav.
several factors brought about the resentful mood. First, tax-
payment were feeling the personal crunch that comes when taxes and
payroll are taken away.
Second, a full 80 percent of American taxpayers think the government is wasteful, compared with 60 percent a year ago, and
CALIFORNIA VOTERS in particular were angry because the effects of inflation brought about automatic tax increases, especially property tax increases. Property reassessment and real estate taxation took place into higher brackets, even though their real income did not increase.
Proposition 13 was intended to solve just this situation. It proposed limiting taxes to 1 percent of the 1975 market value of property and to limit reassessment increases to 2 percent a year, a reduction from an average of 3 percent increases that some Californiaiens were faced with this year.
The proposition won a 2-to-1 victory. Opponents of the measure
feared that the 7 billion loss to the California government would be disastrous. Proponents argued that it would broaden the tax base by sparking a building boom, thereby stimulating personal and business incomes.
POLITICIANS, SENSING that the tax revolt was spreading nationwide, jumped on the fiscal conservative bandwagon and made tax cuts and spending limits the theme for this year's congressional elections.
In a dramatic closing of the congressional session, Congress put a $17.5 billion bolt of money on the cutoff to the price of a $20 billion bond, with only $3 billion remaining.
The average family of four earning $15,000 will have taxes reduced by $7. But that will be offset by a $42 increase in Social Security.
Proposals to cut taxes and curb government spending appeared on ballots across the country. Voters in 12 of the 16 states voting on the measure.
THE CONSERVATIVE political air at election time made it almost impossible to distinguish between the two parties. Republicans, oddly enough, failed to take advantage of their unity and the fact that conservatives jumped at the chance to make themselves heroes of tax reform.
Sen. Charles Percy, R-II, reflected the attitudes of most candidates in admitting to voters, "Washington has gone overboard, and I am sure that I've made my share of mistakes, but your矿窑 are mine, too. Stop the waste. Cut the spending. Cut the tax."
By ALLEN HOLDER
Kassebaum victory leads state news
In a year marked by politics, agriculture and disaster, the election of Nancy Landon Kassbeaum as Kansas' first woman senator was the No.1 story of 1978 in the state and area.
Kassebam, daughter of 1936 GOP presidential nominee All Landon, was a late entry in the race to succeed retiring Sen. James Pearson. She first had to defeat a field of eight other Senate hopefuls in the Republican party primary.
A newcomer to Kansas politics, Kassebaum won the primary and then soundly defeated Democrat Bill Roy of Topeka in November. The race was predicted to be a toss-up, but Kassebaum won by more than 80,000 votes.
our state's No. 2 story was the issue of serving liquor in restaurants. The Kansas Legislature approved a bill in the final part of its session that allowed individual counties to vote on whether liquor could be served in restaurants.
BUT FOR the question to be placed on the ballot, counties had to submit petitions with the signatures of at least 5 percent of the county's voters. Forty-five counties eventually voted on the issue, but the question passed in only 15.
RANKED THIRD among stories in 1978 was the surprise election of Democrat John Carlin to the Kansas governorship, Carlin, speaker of the Kansas House of Representatives, defeated incumbent Gov. Robert F. Bennett in a race generally predicted to be an easy Bennett victory.
However, even those votes were cast in vain. Attorney General Curt Schneider had said he thought the law violated the Kansas Constitution's ban on the open saloon, the Supreme Court ruled the new law unconstitutional.
CARLIN PROVED to be a tough campaigner in the late stages of the campaign, attacking Bennett on several
issues. The most notable issue, however, was the high cost of utilities. Carlin vowed to remove the three members of the Kansas Corporation Commission, which rules on utility applications, and rebuilt Bennett, a Johnson County Representation by 18,000 users.
The year's No. 4 story took place June 17 when the Whippoorwill Showbait overturned at Lake Pomona during a stormy evening cruise. Sixteen of the 60 passengers aboard the boat drowned. A man whose wife and unborn child were among the victims has sued the boat's owners, seeking an unspecified amount of damages.
The No. 5 story took place in Rock, a town about 20 miles southeast of Saultem. Two members of a rocket refugee crew were killed and six others were injured in late August when a fuel line broke at a missile site, sending poisonous fuel into the air. Staff Sgt. Robert Thomas and Airman 1st Class Erbvy Hersfeld died.
THE NO. 6 story was a year-long one involving unhappy farmers. The American Agriculture Movement was important to many farmers in Kansas, especially in the western part of the state. Farmers revolted against low prices and were selling products and were especially upset when they learned that President Carter planned to allow the import more beef.
UNREST AMONG policemen and firefighters was the year's No. 7 story. In Wichita, firefighters staged a strike and some policemen honored the strike by also staying off the job.
In Lawrence, policemen and firefighters bickered with city officials, but both groups eventually signed contracts
the American Royals and the 1972 baseball season were the area's No. 8 story. The Royals won the American League's western division for the third consecutive year, while the New York Yankees also for the third consecutive year.
THE WOLF CREEK Nuclear Power Plant and nuclear
energy were rated as the No. 9 story. Several demon-
sters were rated as the No. 1 story, using the plant's
constriction and the arrival of a nuclear reactor.
The tenth story took place in late May when a state highway trooper was shot and killed on the Kansas Turnpike. Three men were held in the murder, which took place near El Dorado.
Other too stories in Kansas and the area:
- Seventeen persons died when the Coates House Hotel burned in Kansas City, Mo.
- Attorney General Schneider was plunged with problems as a counsel in the use of state records for his criminal accidien and a young woman in whom he was in Joplin. Mo, late last year. He eventually was defeated in his bid for re-election by Bob Stephan, a Wichita lawyer.*
- The Legislature passed measures in an attempt to ease the shortage of doctors in the state. A scholarship program was established to provide training and employment for new physicians.
- Grasshoppers and other bugs attacked Kannas crop this summer. Efforts were made to kill the insects with pesticide.
- Witchia, like some other American cities, repealed a law that prohibited discrimination against homosexuals.
- Members of the Legislature attempted to bring capital punishment back to life, but the effort failed.
- Voters turned out in unusually high numbers to vote in an off-year election.
- Mila Sandstrom was sentenced to life in prison for the May 1977 murder of her husband, broadcast executive Thadat Sandstrom.
- The use of Laetrile as a treatment for cancer was approved by the Licensure.
*U.S. Rep. Martha Keys, D-Second District, was narrowly defeated in her attempt for re-election by a 37 percent margin.*
MK.NEILY
BOOM!
WORLD EQUALENT OF WAR
MY NEW YORK
FOR THE AMERICAN UNION
78
LOGIC TEST IF MYRON FARBER IS BACK IN JAIL,
WHICH ONE OF THESE MEN IS WARREN BURGER?
10
SURK!
Carter tops newsmaker list
Rv RRIAN SETTLE
Four years ago, Jimmy Carter played an insignificant role in the nation's daily news.
But today he ranks as the No. 1 newsmaker of 1878. Carter was in the daily news because of his battles with the 95th Congress, his foreign involvement with the Soviet Union and Iran and even because of family vacation down Idaho's
5
However, the most important news Carter made was the epochal Middle East agreement between Israel and Egypt.
When Carter went to Camp David in mid-September to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Amir Sadat, he asked, "that the people of world war pray that our negotiations will be successful."
THE STAGGERING success of the negotiations stunned the nation 13 days later when the three leaders emerged from Camp David to announce they had reached a two-part agreement for a comprehensive peace settlement.
Not surprisingly, Carter's co-negotiators, Begin and Sadat, tied for the second biggest newsmaker of the year.
The Middle East agreement strengthened Carter's popular with the public, after he struggled early in the year to reach a milestone.
Since the Aug. 6 death of Pope Paul VI, the church struggled to regain some sense of normality in the Vatican. The death of Pope John Paul I only 34 days after he was elected to the now Paul VI further complicated the church's problems.
the Roman Catholic Church, whose leaders were selected together as the fourth biggest newsmaker.
Also struggling this year, but for different reasons, was
The fifth biggest newspaper of the year was a crusty, 75-year-old retired executive who described himself as a "rugged bastard." His name was Howard Jawryk, and he coauthored California's Jarvis-Gann amendment, known as Proposition 13. The amendment will slash that state's property taxes by an estimated $7 billion this year.
Monday, December 11. 1978
- Allan Bakke, who was admitted to the University of California at Davis School of Medicine after the Supreme Court ruled that race could be a deciding factor when admonishing a student who would not reserve a specific number of places for minorities.
KAKOL, WOJTYLA, who followed John Paul I and took the name John Paul II, made news by being the first Polish pope.
Other key newsmakers were:
- The shah of Iran, who underwent extreme domestic pressure and violence in his home country, the Shaakat事件
United States" was eventually forced to impose martial law in Iran.
- Jim Jones, who persuaded more than 900 of his followers to commit suicide in Guyana.
- Louse Brown, who was the first baby conceived in a test tube.
- Hubert Humphrey, who died of cancer after serving as a public official for more than three decades.
Other newsmakers who appeared on the front pages throughout the year were Richard Nixon, who came out of political exile for the first time since he resigned as president. George Wallace, who announced his retirement from politics in 1974, was a "Saturday Night Fever" and "Grease"; Muhammad Ali, who became the first boxer to regain the heavyweight title three times; Cheryl Tregs, who replaced Farah Fawcett Majors as the 1o. pin girl; Aliko Mongo, who was kidnapped in a 2003 attack; Alex Martin, who was fired as coach of the New York Yankees, then rehired to coach the team beginning in 1890; Myron Farber, who was sent to jail after refusing to relinquish notes about a murder case; John Vostor, who resigned as coach of South Africa; and Anastasiia Somova, who found his dictatorism in Nicaragua threatened by domestic unrest.
Rv SARAH TOEVS
Economy hits highs, lows
1978 was a year of records for the United States economy. The dollar plunged to its record low since World War II, the price of gold in dollars reached new heights, and the stock market made two record-breaking dials during year of otherwise steady decline.
It was a frustrating year for President Carter, who was forced to make a complete turnaround from his inflationary antitumor policy to a strong anti-tumor policy.
Earlier in the year the administration's concern was focused on stimulating the economy in order to curb unemployment. Inflation was a secondary worry and the exchange value of the dollar was scarcely considered.
By April, however, monthly prices were climbing in excess of 10 percent and the volume of purchases was up.
In mid-April, after a long, steady decline on Wall Street, buyers suddenly went berserk and caused the market to climb at about 100 points within a week of trading. The buying spree didn't last long, and the stock market was soon on its way back down.
The program, announced Oct. 24, called for voluntary wage-price guidelines and pledged to slash the highly inflationary budget deficit.
PRICES AND interest rates continued to
be rising. Interest rates were higher in
winter, in turn, pushed prices even higher.
During September and October, Carter and his economic advisers busily planned Stage II of Carter's anti-inflation program. The widely leaked program was disappointing to businessmen who had hoped for more substantial action.
The New Federal Reserve Chairman, G. William Miller, convinced President Carter that inflation had to be the 1. priority. Mr. Miller said he would take any strong moves to boost the dollar.
The United States' seeming inability to manage its economy was the primary reason for the dollar's decline. Inflation, as well as decreasing productivity, indicated that the economy was deteriorating and the government was unwilling to do much about it.
The dollar reached a record low against the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc. In August, the price of gold reached a record $215.90. And by the end of the summer, Carter was hopelessly on to the prediction that the annual inflation rate would not exceed 7.2 percent, even though the rate at the time was closer to 10 percent.
IT WAS far from the drastic measures hoped for, and the financial world again
Not only was it becoming clear to the administration that recession was almost inevitable in the United States, but a rise in recession was becoming more and more likely.
The new plan increased the Federal Reserve discount rate, the interest rate at which the Fed lends money to commercial banks, to 9.5 percent. In January the rate had been only 8 percent. The immediate result was a climb in the prime interest rate, which now stands at 11.5 percent. In January, it, too, had been only 8 percent.
Finally, when he could hold off no longer, Carter made a surprise announcement of his new anti-inflation plan. Stock and money traders were caught completely off guard by the new measures, and the result was an immediate boost to the dollar.
The amount of gold to be sold by the U.S. government was quintuple in hopes that the government would accept it.
went berserk. The stock market fell 105 points in 12 days of trading, gold shot up $17 an ounce to $243 in only five days and the dollar plunged even further.
Under the new program, the United States borrowed $20 billion from Japan, Germany and Switzerland to support dollar prices on the foreign exchange market.
Reaction to the plan was astounding. On the day of the announcement, the dollar rose 1.09 percent; on the day of Japan, Germany and Switzerland. The price of gold fell **£3** an ounce by the end of the week, and the Dow Jones average jumped 35 points; the stock, the highest one-day rise in its history.
The economy has settled down since President Carter's announcement and the dollar seems to be stabilizing. As the prime interest rate continues to rise many are predicting that it could reach 12 or 13 percent by the end of the year.
THE HIGH interest rates make it too expensive to invest and the housing industry in particular is expected to fall. As investment decreases, unemployment increases, and a mild recession could push the economy from the present six million up to seven million.
1978 typified the zigzagging pattern in the United States, where the economy grows so rapidly that inflation spirals out of control. The only way to be inflated, then, is to employ recession, and thus face excessive unemployment. That may be the story for next year.
Bv LEON UNRUH
It was a big year for sports records
It was a year of records—in sports—set by a pair of horses, by a man who hit a ball often and a woman who didn't, by a man who just hit hard. And, some said, 1978 was a year of too much hitting.
The big record belonged to the New York Yankees, who improved their wins by winning 16 of their last 18 regular season games. Behind the Red Sox by 14 games in mid-July, the Yanks forced Boston into a playoff for the division title, beat the Kansas City Royals again for the American League pennant and met Los Angeles in the World Series.
It brought together baseball antagonists Reggie Jackson and Thurman Munson, Don Sutton and Steve Garvey and a team of 15 players who lost the first two in Los Angeles but rolled back to win the next four at home—another record—for their second season.
SECOND ON the list of Top 10 sports stories was the Muhammad Ali-Leon Spinks saga. Gap-toothed Spikes beat him in the year, but couldn't decide whom to fight next. The WBC champion also rested the rest to Ali, who became a record third-time world champion. But Spinks was tired; he had been taking uppercaps from the long arm of the law for drug and traffic violations.
The kid and the colt made it big for No. 3: Affirmed
THE CAUSE celebrate of football - banning ude violence — was sixth. After New England Patriot Darryl Stingley was paralyzed in a game against Oakland, some fans, the team, threatened the justice. Coaches promised to look into the matter.
Some called it a rivalry that transcended the Triple Crown itself.
No. 4. Only Joe DMaggio did it better than Pete Rose, the Cincinnati Reds' third baseman. Rose got his 3,000th hit early in the season, then went into a slump. When he broke the slump, he went 44 games without being shut out at the plate. That tied him with Willie Keeler (1897), a dozen games behind DMaggio.
became the sixth Triple Crown winner; jockey Steve Cauthen became the youngest millionaire rider. In a racing first, Alydra came in second in each of the three legs. It was the 13th of 15 races that Alydra was to Al-farried.
In North American Soccer League play, the well-heeled New York Cosmos bests the Florida Wiendas to take their season out of the hands.
No. 5 is Nancy Lopez, whose five consecutive tour victories set a record in the 28-year-old LPGA. The fifth victory gave her a year's earnings of $150,000, a professional for rookies. Jack Nicklaus won his third British Open.
Blizzards of shredded paper filled the stadium in Buenos Aires when the home team, Argentina, beat Holland in a World Cup game.
Deterseen actions by disappointed fans seemed tragic, but no country was more disappointed than neighboring Brazil, Italy and France.
Borg Borg made No. 8 on the list by taking his third straight All-England tennis title at Wimbledon, beating Jimmy Connors. Women's title winner Martina Navratilova was defeated by the Czech government to watch their daughter play in England.
THE DOOMSDAY DEFANCE and the Orange Crush met in Super Bowl XIII in New Orleans in January. Led by Ruger Stauabch, the Dallas Cowbys broke the Denver Broncos and Stauabch's former teammate, Craig Morton. The victory could not be directly attributed to the Cowgirls, who played a battle of girls on National Football League sidelines.
No. 10. Twenty years after Adolph Rupp and his Kentucky Wildcats won the NCAA basketball game, Joe B. Hall and his Wildcats brought home another crown. The Wildcats beat Duke in the finals, helped by Jack Givens its astonishing 48-23 win for five years, died in 1977, the December night that Kentucky beat his alma mater, the University of Kansas.
Popes, Humphrey among '78 deaths
Bv RICK ALM
Twice in 1978 death drew the world's attention to Vatican City, where thousands of somber mourners gathered after the death of a pope.
Th United States lost a spiritual force of sorts when the Democrats "Happy Warrior," Hubert Horatio Humphrey, former vice president and a Minnesota senator for almost three decades, died in January at age 66. A colleague in the Senate, Sen. James Allen, 65, of Alabama, died in June.
Pope Paul VI, 80, died in August after an ambitious 15-year pontificate. Within two months his 65-year old successor, Pope John II, died after one of history's shortest reigns.
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A violent end befell Aldo Moro, 61, leader of Italy's Christian Democrats, who was found murdered in Rome after two months in the hands of Red Brigade terrorists. Death came more peacefully to Jomo Nyerere, a former Biafra captain from Kenya, who led that former British colony throughout the bloody Mau Mau uprisings to independence in 1963.
Irazel lost its former prime minister,
Golda Meir, 80, who died Friday. Her
reunion was scheduled for June 19.
NORMAN ROCKWELL, 84, the illustrator whom one critic called the "Rembrandt of Punkin Crick," died in November. He was best-known for his unashamedly sentimental cover drawings for the Saturday Evening Post.
Among the sports figures who died in 1978 was Gene Tunney, 81 former heavyweight boxing champion, who defeated Jack Dempsey in the famed "long-bout" contest in 1927 and retired undefeated. Lyman Bostock, 27, highly paid outfitier for the California Angels, was shot to death in Gary, India.
The academic world also lost Bruce Catton, 78, preeminent Civil War historian, who won a 1964 Pulitzer Prize for "A History of the Civil War" in the annual volume of his trilogy on the war.
Margaret Mead, 76, died the same week as Rockwell. Her dozen books, beginning with "Coming of Age in Samao," written in 1945, was 28, revolutionized anthropology.
SHOW BUSINESS DEATHS include
Adgar Bergen, 75, the ventilator who
created wig-guey Carl McCarthy, W.C.
Fields' nemesis on radio. Will Geer,
6grandater to television's "The Waltons," died in September.
- Jacques Brel, 49, the Belgian-born singer whose plaintive songs became known through the lacey-style "Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris." *
*G* Big Young, 60, whose portrayal of the cynical,whiskey-voiced emcee in "They Shoot Horses, Don't Don't They?" earned an Academy Award in 1970.
Other show business deaths included:
- Jack. Warner, 86, the last of the four brothers who founded Warner Bros.
- CHARLES BOYER, 78, the debonair French actor with he deeply sensual voice, best known for the invitation he never uttered. Algerians" : "Come wee me to the Casabah."
- Robert shawr, 51, who played Henry VIII in "A Man for All Season," an Irish gangster in "The Sting" and the shark Quint in "Jaws."
*Bob Crane*, 49, star of television "Hogan's Heroes"; Totie Fields, 48, the rotund comedienne who joked about her obesity; Dan Dalley, 61, lanky song-and-dance man; Louis Prima, 66, jazz drummer; Keith Mason, 32, drummer for The Prime; Frank Malone, 56, "Crazy Guggenheim" on Jack Nicklaus, 56, winceaking; Jack Oakie, 74, wiscercaking ceeadman remembered for his parody of Mussolini in Chaplin's "The Great Dic
toator"; Howard Hawks, 81, director of "Red River" and "Scarface."
- Maybelle Carter, 68, matriarch of country music's Carter Family, whose songs included "Wildwood flower" and "Will the Circle be Unbroken?" died in October. Karl Wendlaiza, 75, patriarch of the death in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
OTHERS WHO DIED this year include James Gould Coones, 74, author of "By Love Possessed" and "Guard of Honor." Louis Baldwin, 84, author of more than 80 books of light fiction; Edward Durrell Stone, 76, the architect who designed the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Kennedy Center; and William H. Bruce Rice, 50, Kansas City sportscaster.
The world of business and finance lost John D. Rockefeller III, 72, philanthropist, and one of the world's most famous who shared the Rockefeller oil fortune: Willard F. Rockwell, 90, founder of Rockwell International, and Charles D. Tandy, 60, founder of Shack stores into a billion-dollar business.
Daniel "Chappie" James, 58, the nation's first black four-star general, Bret Morrison, 66, the voice of Lamont Cranton, "TheShadow", on radio; Willy Musserschmitt, 80, designer of the German aircraft that shot down the Boeing-boeingBMW, 54, reputed New York mall chaiefuhn.
And television lost its fickle feline when Morris, 17, the star of cat food commercials,
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Monday, December 11, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Week for forgetting loss lies ahead for Jayhawks
By LEON UNRUH
Snorts Editor
It's the one game that can be rehashed for
many purposes. It don't be much for table talk
mong the lawyer.
"Believe me, the Kentucky game is over with," forward Tony Guy said yesterday about KU's 67-66 defeat Saturday in Lexington, Ky.
"There's nothing we can do to get it back.
We can just look ahead and say, 'Hey, we can't think about the game we lost to Kentucky.'"
films sua
Monday, Dec. 11
Last of the Film Noir:
TOUCH OF EVIL
(1958)
Ordon Welles, with Orson Welles,
Charlton Heston,杰克 Leigh Marl,
Lene Dilettch, Mercedes McCam-
pion, and Jesse Welles as an evil sifter of a border town. This print includes 15 minutes of footage originally cut before its theatrical release; this longer version is also included. Welles's original conception of the film
$1.00 7:30 pm Woodruff Aud.
Wednesday, Dec. 13
Humphrey Bogart:
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
Another player, Brad Sanders, said, "The only time the Kentucky game will be brought up again will be to learn from the mistakes made by us."
In a night of play unsurpassed this season, the Jahayhans played nearly perfectly, but lost their first game in five. It was a single loss in two games for Kentucky, which stewed the 'Hawks.
It left No. 5 KU with its 10th loss to Kenckie in 11 games and blessed No. 10 leap for the Cup.
"IT WAS A HECK of a game," guard Darrell Allen alighted in look at the papers.
"It hurt. We should have won, but we didn't."
Kansas, which had led 35-28 at halftime,
maintained the lead through most of the second half. But KU went into a four-corner offense to reduce the effects of foul problems, and Kentucky whittled its way back to the game 96-54 as regulation ended.
The Jayhawks built a six-point lead with 31 seconds left in overtime, but Kentucky hit two baskets and two free throws to tie the game 66-66 with three seconds left. KU forward Mac Stallcup took the ball out of bounds and called for time.
So did at least two other Jayhawks. And it was granted, but KU had no more time to spend and was socked with a technical foul, Kentucky guard Kyle Macy hit the free throw, making 167-64, and the Wildcats ran out the clock.
STALCUP SIMPLY happened to be the only fawkhaw being watched by a referee.
"It was strictly instinct," Stallcup said of his request.
And Valentine, who together had 40 of KU's points, said it could have been any of them. "I think I will have to go," he
"If 'w was one no one's fault, " Guy said. "if anything, the whole team should have taken over."
Valentine said, "It was just like an immediate reaction on my part to call time out and tell me you're safe."
"We're not going to blame it on Mac, or on anybody else. It was a team loss."
Sanders put it succinctly. "The thing is, we lost. They didn't beat us; we lost."
AFTER THE GAME, head coach Ted Owens suggested that, by missing a Kentucky charging foul and a rim violation, the haden helped KU lose.
"If they had called the game the way they had until then," he said, "there would be celebrating in our dressing room. Those that were lucky enough to win it. It was an absolute crime they didn't."
KU will have a week to remember—or forget—the Kentucky game. The Jawhays won't play again until Saturday night, when he'll head back to Louisville, comes to Lawrence for an evening game.
But like any bad lesson, the Kentucky game will haunt Kansas for a while.
STALCUP, ONE OF two KU substitutes to play, said, "It will make us more determined. We played the game well enough to easily win. Once we take the court Saturday night, SMU will know they 've got a lot of game on their hands."
vaticentine, the game's hot hand with 27 points, said, "I'll take a lot of climbing to come back and use it as a springboard into the real season."
He didn't blame KU's youth--Mokeski was the only senior who played for the loss. After all, Kentucky had lost three starters to graduation.
"I think it would have hurt as much if we'd been 60," he said with a slight chuckle. "I felt like I was very young."
Attendance
| | FT | REF | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Guy | 48 | 14 | 5 | 13 |
| Oxfordford | 54 | 12 | 4 | 12 |
| Motorskey | 41 | 94 | 8 | 5 |
| Powder | 41 | 94 | 8 | 5 |
| Vollmer | 91 | 19 | 4 | 8 |
| Skilchop | 11 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Neal | 11 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Neal | 22-48 | 36 | 28 | 18 |
| | PG | FG | FT | REB | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cowman | 49 | 2.4 | 6 | 16 | 7 | 10 |
| Williams | 49 | 2.4 | 6 | 16 | 7 | 10 |
| McKinney | 27 | 1.3 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Jackson | 17 | 1.3 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Claytor | 38 | 1.0 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Anderson | 38 | 1.0 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Snider | 38 | 1.0 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Snider | 49 | 2.4 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 8 |
Stephens | 49 | 2.4 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 8 |
Stephens | 10 | 1.2 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Tillman | 16 | 0.4 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 2 |
Total | 1745 | 1417 | 11 | 20 | 18 | 10 |
Kannas ... 35 21 10 -- 66
Krennkv ... 35 21 11 -- 67
Kenney
Institute of Food Science, KU—Coach Owens, Stalcup, Official Kitchen, Menge, Attendance: 23.472.
Christmas hours — 10-8, Mon-Fri
10-5, Sat
Staff photo by RANDY OLSON
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Fast break
Kansas' vaulted fast-break offense, started against Oral Roberts against Kentucky. But the Wildcats had a few furlures of their University last week at Moe Flower, worked well Saturday own—including a last-minute rally, and won 67-66 in overtime.
KAMSAS
00
Haskell
Swimmers split meets to Texas teams
Bill Spah, men's swim coach, said he was extremely disappointed with the team's performance against SMU.
The men's swim team beat the University of Texas-Arrlington Team Friday night at Arlington, 66-81, but got bolted out of the pool after a slow start. The Canyons lost by 49-70.
"I was very unhappy with the way we swarm, and I put the blame on the guys," Spain said. "They were not mentally prepared, and I didn't want to be."
SMU has been one of the top-ranked teams in the country for several years and, Spahn said, he knew KU probably could not defeat them. But he had hoped KU could challenge SMU in several areas.
Peter Baker-Arkema had the only second-place finish for KU—
13.68 out of 14.68. Out of the other events KU managed to third place finish,
and it was
"TT UPSETS me in that we should be looking past Big Eight competition and aiming at a higher level of competition," Spahn
Spain said the only good swimming was done by Dave Killen in the 1000-vard freestyle with a time of 9:50.
In the meet against Texas-Arlington, Spahn said, KU swam people in events that they normally don't swim.
"The meet was like I thought it could be if we weren't right on form," Spahn said. "We felt like we would probably able to be better."
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 11, 1978
Jayhawks dominate men's track
KU's men's track team and athletes from three other schools gathered Saturday night in Allen Field House to open the indoor track season with an informal meet.
7
Athletes from KU, Southwest Missouri
State, Pittsburgh State and Emporia State universities compete in events in the region.
No team scores were kept. All athletes competed unattached from their schools so
Women 'win' own meet
Winning 10 out of 12 events, the KU women's track team successfully opened its indoor track season this weekend in Allen Field House.
Although no team scores were kept, KU dominated the triangular meet with Emphasis.
Junior Sheila Calmess set a KU indoor record in the 69-yard dash with a time of 60.8. She broke the record she set last year and also set another record in the dash was fresh in Master Lort Green.
'Hawks stumble after victory
By NANCY DRESSLER
Associate Sports Editor
KU found the intensity weekend in Iowa that KU women's basketball coach Marian Washington has been looking for all season. The only problem was that it didn't
Kansas used an inspired pressure defense to demolish Grandview College Friday, 96-53. But the Jayhawks couldn't hang on in a 69-66 loss to Drake Saturday.
"We finally found the intensity in Grandview but we've got to find it and keep it defensive intensity," Washington said yesterday.
"Our guards did a super job of pressuring all the time in Grandview but we didn't control the ball handlers in the Drake game."
ANOTHER IMPORTANT factor in the loss was KU's fouls. The Jayhawks were whistled down 20 times and Cheryl Burnett had 15. The Drake was reprimanded only 10 times.
"Fouls hurt in the Drake game," Washington said. "Our big people did not get into four trouble against Grandview, but against Drake. It was terrible."
The big people - center Shyra Holden and
forwards Lynette Woodette and Adrian Miah
are in line.
Washington's frustration with fouls was not confined to the Drake game. Against Grandview, Kansas was charged with 16 for as opposed to only three for Grandview.
"We only got to shoot seven frees in two games," Washington said. "We've had our challenges with officials. It's a clear definition of what home-court advantage can do."
WOODDAR SCORED 33 points against Grandview and Holden added 20. Against Drake, Woodard again tapped all scores with 32 points and Holden had 10.
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In the 300-yard dash, Calmee and Green switched places. Green won the race with a time of : 36.3, and Calmee finished second with a time of : 36.4.
Deb Hertzgut the 600-yard dash with a time of 1:30.4 and the 800-yard dash with a time of 2:27.2. Michele Brown won the mile race over the 1,000-yard dash with a time of 2:46.5.
That any athlete who might become ineligible next semester would lose a chance to play.
KU won seven events and swept the first three places in the mile run, the 60-yard race.
Lori Lorely won the 60-yard hurdles with a time of .082.
CHRISTY TUMBERGER won the shot-
put with a throw of 43'5".
In an extremely close mile race, KU swept the top five places. After Brown was Wendy Warmer, 5:11.5, Mauren-Finholm, 5:12.9, Murphy, 5:13.0, and Karen Fitz, 5:13.3.
in the 440, Deen Hogan and Lester Mickens for the first in 483. Kewell Newman for the second in 483.
DAVID BAUER won the mil in 409.4.
DAVID BAUER won the mil in 60-16.2, beating Heman
t by a tenth of a goal.
"We've gone all year without much competition," KU head coach Bob Timmons said. "We don't really know what direction we're headed indoors.
"We've got to find the direction we're going to Once the season starts, there's only one way forward."
KU has two more home indo meet the. Jayhawks will play host to Wyoming and Southern Illinois universities and then Southern Oklahoma State universities in January.
Timmons said Kansas athletes would have to be ready to compete quickly after the semester break because of a short season.
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--around competition. Iowa State finished second and Arizona State was third.
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By STEVE SELL
Sports Writer
OPEN 10-8 Mon-Sat 1-5 Sun Closed 12-24
The KU gymnastics teams were shut out in three weekend meets. The team was second and third in its two meet, and the men were eighth in their sole meet.
In a field featuring top national powers, the men's team finished eight out of 17 teams at the Rocky Mountain Invitational at Fort Collins, Colo.
KU failed to land anybody in the final competition,but had a team score of 274
Nebraska, which won the Big Eight. Invitational last month, took first behind the performances of Larry Gerard and Jim Hartung, who finished 2 in the all-
Jackie DiPinto, KU's brilliant freshman who is the Jayhawks' best score, strained her elbow Friday while warmer. The team with only five contests that left the team with only five contests.
"WE DID very well," Brad Foech, KU's leading all-around performer, said. "There were some really great teams that played Nebraska with Gerard and Hartung."
Without the services of its top all-around performer, the women's team lost a dual team to Iowa State and placed second in a triangular meet.
109. 30. The highest finisher for KU was Angie Wagle, with a third in the floor exercise and fifth in the uneen bars.
Iowa State came out on top, 122.75-
GRANDVIEW COLLEGE won the triangular meet Saturday with 127.50 points. KU was second with 114.50 points and Wisconsin third with an even 100.
Wagle again took third in the floor exercise and was fifth in vaulting. Kim Danleo was fourth in the floor exercise, and Rita Frei and Rene Nevile were fifth in beam and uneven bars respectively. Danleo was fifth in the all-around competition.
KU head coach Ken Snow said that without DIPin, it was hard for the team to be on the same level as its competition. It was the last meet for KU until Jan. 15.
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Monday, December 11, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Researchers look at plants
Plants, which years ago produced home remedies for the common cold, might produce new drugs to figh cancer or infections, according to a KU professor of plant biology.
The professor, Lester Mitscher, said recently that many drugs currently used by doctors were synthetic chemicals patterned after chemical components of plants. For example, procaine, the generic name for Novocain, a mild anesthetic usually used by dentists, was patterned after a portion of the cocaine molecule.
Cocaine is a non-narcotic drug derived from the cocaine tree, a plant found in South America.
YEARS AGO, Mittscher said, people got rid of headaches with tea containing the same drug that people use to today cure headaches, acetyl salicylic acid or, more commonly, aspirin. The tea was brewed from the bark of the willow tree.
Today, it is cheaper to produce aspirin from coal tar and petrochemical wastes.
Many of the body's natural chemicals have been copied to make drugs, according to Mitscher. Amphetamines, commonly known as speed, are synthetic stimulants patterned after adrenalin, the body's natural stimulant.
The new drugs are needed, Mitscher said, because some diseases, such as venereal diseases, have been around so long that they have begun to develop immunity to the effects of older antibiotics, such as penicillin.
testing thousands of plants in a search for new antibiotics to ward off infections.
Mitscher said that of the thousands of plants he had tested during the 10-year research project, about 12 looked promising. He said researchers had found cancer-fighting chemicals in flowers such as periwinkles and bachelor buttons.
Mitscher said he was studying chemical extract from a tree known as the false hop
tree, which was used two centuries ago by German immigrants in America to replace hops in the beer brewing process. He said the plant contained a chemical that inhibited bacteria such as the one that causes tuberculosis.
"IT'S NOT STRONG enough for human use," he said, "but maybe one of my students will make a descendant of the molecule that could be beneficial."
Milchater said research was going on around the world to test plants for beneficial traits.
More students riding KU buses
The KU on Wheels bus system increased the number of its passengers in August by more than 33 percent over last year's August total, according to figures released last week by Mike Harper, student body president.
"We're trying to codify what is known and what is still available," he said.
Harper also said that for the month of September, the bus system had 1,332
For this month of August, Harper said, the buses handled 11,929 cash cars and 36,237 passes, with a total of 48,168 passengers. For the last week, 285 riders over all months, total of 31,881
more passengers than the previous year. The system had 196,504 passengers in September this year, compared with 195,172 last September.
"Although an increase of 1,300 doesn't seem like much of an increase when compared to August's increase, if we had that kind of increase last year we wouldn't have been able to handle it without the three hundred buses we had this year," Harper said.
Harper said a large part of the increase
could be explained by the addition of three buses to the system this year.
"I expect there was another large increase in October," he said, "because the weather got worse and more people ride the buses in bad weather.
Harper said the buses would run as regularly scheduled, during finals, with Harper's parents.
"We had excellent weather in September. I was expecting a possible decrease that month because of the weather, but we still had an increase of 1,300."
Many useful plants became extinct as cities and industries grew, he said.
Some drugs derived from plants often considered dangerous are now being used to treat diseases such as schizophrenia, alcoholism and glaucoma.
LSD, an illegal drug based on a chemical found in the mescaline cactus, is now legally prescribed in rare cases by psychiatric hospitals for schizophrenia and chronic alcoholism.
Also, the U.S. government is sponsoring a project in which some glaucoma patients are allowed to legally smoke marijuana. Marijuana has been found to relieve the fluid pressure on the inner eye in some patients suffering from glaucoma.
On Campus
Events
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TODAY: LAW FACULTY AND STAFF LUNCHHEON will be at noon in the English Room of the Kansas Union. WOMEN'S RIGHTS DISCUSSION will be at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union. ARCHAEOLOGY COLLOQUIUM will be at 2:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIM by Camille Wortman will be at 4 p.m. in room 547 of Fraser Hall. PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM will be at 4:30 p.m. by L. Brown in room 332 of Malott Hall.
TONIGHT: OWL SOCIETY *w* will meet at 3:00 in the Council Room of the Union. A film and discussion of the J.P. STEVEN BOYCOTT will be at 7:10 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. RADIOACTIVE FREE KANSAS will meet at 7:30 in Plymouth Congregational Church. THE DUKE KUMRON Trombone and Trumpet choir will be in 8:00 in Swartwater Rescue Hall of Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW; CIVIL ENGINEERS LUNCHEON will be at noon in the Centennial Room of the Union. A DISCUSSION on the "Subtitles of Racism" by Carl Leban will be at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union, BLACK FACULTY and STAFF COUNCIL FOR THE SENIOR YEAR GROUP. COLLEGE MEMBERSHIP will be at 3:30 p.m. in Spooner Hall. COMPUTER ASSISTED INSTRUCTION SEMINAR by Edward Mattila will be at 4 p.m. in the Computer Services Auditorium. AN ANTHROPOLOGY HUMAN DYNAMICS LECTURE will be at 4:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union, DOCTORAL RECITAL by Sylvia Reynolds, pianist. WORKSHOPS OF COMMUNICATIVE EXERCISES AND CHRISTIAN ATHLETES will meet at 8 p.m. in the Fireside Room of Lewis Hall.
Man jailed for indecent liberties
A 22-year-old Lawrence man has been sentenced to two to 20 years in prison for his conviction last month on charges of taking indecent liberties with a child.
The man, Kenneth Loehr, 101 N. Michigan St., was sentenced Thursday in Douglas County District Court by District Judge David R. Sargent, who found Loehler guilty of the charge Nov. 27.
that he might alter the sentence after reviewing a psychiatric report on Loebr for his case.
Loehr was arrested last September for taking indecent liberties with a 3-year-old boy for whom Loehr was babysitting Sept. 9. Throughout Loehr's trial, his attorney never threatened to put him on the stand against him, but argued that Loehr was insane and irrational at the time of the incident.
King said Thursday after the sentencing
The Honor Society of
Phi Kappa Phi
ΦΚΦ
GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS
B.Y.O.B.
Designed to assist a limited number of individuals during their first year of graduate or professional study.
2008 Learned Telephone: 864-3826
NO DEPOSIT
NO RETURN
If interested, contact PROFESSOR DAVID DARWIN
Bring your old bottles and jars to The K.U. Ecology Club's glass recycling center
December 16 and 17 between the hours of 9:00 am and 5:00 pm
LOCATION:
Daisy Hill Parking Extension, West of the dorms on Irving Hill Road between Iowa Street and the KANU radio tower.
For more information, call 841-1484 or stop by the Ecology Club office, 103 Snow,
open 1:00-3:00 pm weekdays.
Announcing:
GALA NEW YEAR'S EVE CELEBRATION!
Saturday December 30,1978
COLE TUCKEY FAST BREAK
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Street Club
featuring:
plus all the N.Y.E. trimmings
WE NEED CERTAIN COLLEGE MAJORS TO BECOME AIR FORCE LIEUTENANTS
7th & Mass.
Metropolitan and civil engineering maps geospatial
and geotechnical engineering maps intimate
environment maps mathematics maps
Tickets available soon!
The four team members for young men and women provide training in English, French, German and some other languages. We offer five year internships with our community programs to help you develop your job skills and your own job program. And to help you with the college process, we invite you to visit us at one of our locations located throughout New York. We are also proud to be responsible for providing
The STEMSCO program seeks to air Air Force professionals. Then, they teach students at the Air Force Academy in New York City. The year-long program costs more than $1 million, but more than four of them are committed to helping the student gain experience with teaching and communicating with each other in a team setting to make their country, with great pride, a success. They will travel to the United States, with the help of your faculty, and will receive a private visit from the president of the university.
**FRESHMEN'S SOPHOMORES**
The Fresher's Sophomore is a new face. The Air Force has to offer a Cell Cap Masks at 864-7007 for those who need them.
*Prices* vary.
2019.10.26
AIR FORCE
ROTC
Gateway to a great way of life.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
Largest Selection of Paraphernalia Rock & Roll T-Shirts Underground Comix Plus earrings-Combs-Jewelry
15 W. 9th 842-3059 We Buy Records
SCRUBS
Genuine Surgical Scrub Suits
for lounging, working, studying, sleeping,
or just plain scrubbing up together!
Your choice of BLUE, GREEN, or WHITE
Your choice of HEIGHTS.
$14.95 each, postage and handled included
(Ohiu residents add 4% sales tax.)
MELLO MEDICAL ORDERER
MEDLIS RECRIBES, INC
P.O. BOX 327
SYLVANIA, Ohio 43560
(Please specify, color, size, and quantity.)
Allow four weeks for delivery.
Apartments Available NOW
Schneider Investments
19 W. 14th. No. 3 (14th & Vermont), one bedroom.
$100.00 month, pay electricity, water and gas fur-
nished older home.
502 W. 14th, No. 6 (14th & Athle); modern six-plex, two bedroom, $200.00 monthly, tenant pays utilities (apricos) $25.00 monthly, available January 1.
314 W. 14th, No. 4 (14th & Tennessee), one bedroom,
$175.00 month, all utilities paid, old home.
19 W. 14th, No. 5 (14th & Vermont), one bedroom.
$125.00 month, pay electricity, water and gas fur
buried. old home.
728 bcd 196 hw 3 one program 1498 00 math. sxy
exercises 1498 00 math. sxy
800 Ohio, No. 3, studio apartment, $100.00 month, at utilities paid, older home
1021 Rhode Island. No. 1, one bedroom. $160.00
menancy, tenant付费 utilities, united eight-plex.
933 Rhode Island, No. 4, Studio apartment, $125.00
month, pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older home
933 Rhode Island. No. 7, one bedroom, $100.00 month pay electricity, water and gas furnished, older home.
933 Rhode Island, No. 6. Studio apartment, $75.00
month, pay electricity, water and gas luranted, older
home
Mark Schneider--The Lawrence landlord who cares !
No pets — $100.00 deposit on all apartments.
Drive by and look at these homes, then call Mark Schlenker at 842-4141 or 843-2121 to see the one you want to live in.
CHRISTMAS & SUMMER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
IN
OVERLAND PARK & TOPEKA
TYPISTS ★ STENOGRAPHERS ★ FILE CLERKS
KEYPUNCH OPERATORS ★ BOOKKEEPERS
Available For
BOSSLER TEMPORARY HELP
★ No Foes ★
In Overland Park Contact
n Overland Park Cor-
Anne Dune
Bossier-Hix Personnel
6405 Metcalf
Overland Park, Ks. 66214
913/262-8633
In Topeka Contact
Doris Derrington
Bessler & Assoc.
1053 S. Turtle
Ka. K5612
913-7234-6612
ALL YOU CAN EAT
MONDAY
Italian Spaghetti ... 2.95
TUESDAY
Fish and Fries Dinner ... 2.45
©
JB's
BIG BOY
FAMILY RESTAURANTS
740 iowa
University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 11. 1978
0
Professor to challenge city's use of fluoride
Claiming that the fluoridation of the city's water supply may be causing illness in Lawrence, a University of Kansas history of science professor will appeal to the Lawrence City Commission tomorrow night.
The professor, Lewis McKinney, said yesterday that he hoped to be able to persuade the commission to suspend the use of the chemical.
Lawrence has flushed the water since 1963, according to city water officials. The city's fluoride level is currently only one percent below the under state limit of 1.8 parts per million.
from a book he had written to try to persuade the commission.
THE PENNSYLVANIA court decision determined that fluoridation caused cancer, McKinney said.
"It was an amazing demonstration of the lack of evidence that fluoridation proponents have," he said. "The proponents of fluoridation had their brains beaten in; they were unable to stand up to cross examination."
Some of the more severe potential effects of fluoridated water, McKinism said, are kidney damage, mongolism and genetic damage.
MKINNEY SAID that after talking to one of his classes recently, he had discovered that many of his students suffered from the symptoms of lowlevel toxicity.
Several of the students started drinking distilled water at his urging and soon felt better, McKinney said.
McKinney said he was approaching the commission now because of next year's opening in the Clinton Lake water treatment which will supply Lawrence's water needs.
Currently Lawrence draws the 10 million gallons of water it needs daily from the Kansas River.
a "low-level symptom syndrome." Some of the symptoms, he said, are extremely severe headaches, chronic thirst, gastrointestinal problems and excessive urination.
To help the commission reach its decision, McKinney said, he has supplied each member with a copy of his book and a memoir of the Pennsylvania court decision.
"BUT THE COMMISSION, if it's wise, will discontinue it," he said.
But the news was greeted with dismay by at least one commission member.
ARGERSINGER SAID the City Commission had appointed a committee in 1975 to look into fluoridation, but the committee disagreed when no agreement could be reached.
"The anti-fluoridation representatives came around in the spring of 1975." Marnie Argeringer, commentator, said that attackers were so much as just matter to read. I just not going to读 it again."
Argersten said she would not support a new committee and was skeptical of the MCA.
"Until someone can prove to me that it is harmful, I'm ready to continue it," she said. The worst thing I think it does is make old kitties homeless. They live brittle bones than have kids 'teeth fall out.'
The office of student financial aid will hold an open house tomorrow in the Kansas Union to explain and distribute 1978-80 financial aid application forms.
Jeff Weinberg, assistant director of the office, said recently that the new program will allow students to obtain Student Assistance Application form a simpler way to file aid applications.
Aid office sets open house
Students will receive a packet from ACT containing a student data form and a family financial aid statement, both of which are required to ACT for processing. Weinbaum said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to sex. Registration is required. ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRE HALL
The open house will be from 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times time
time times time times time
15 words or
each $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Extra additional
word 01 02 03 04
SUBPARTIALS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two insertions. No allowers will be trade when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
FOUND ADVERTISINGS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge except exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or via the CKU business office at 864-6258.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UNICFCE cath. calendars at Oread Bookstore,
6th December. Adventure A Bookstore 12-12
6th December.
PARTY-TIME 18 ANS TIME Born avenged
PARTY-LIFE 18 ANS TIME Born avenged
WILLHIPPED 18 SKILLET EDGAL LIQUOR
WILLHIPPED 18 SKILLET EDGAL LIQUOR
SALE-fine now until Christmas, 491 all2 artis
pads are on sale for $0.89 off regular price! We've
got a large and varied assortment to choose from.
Storm's Office Systems, 1404 Vermont, 840-7533,
12-12
It doesn't matter if you ask or not, "now in time to do this" or "now for a fee." A 4-year bedroom loan is available at Sleeper Bilt in Glimwood Springs, Collium. Job #2893861. The low price of $275 gets more information and a student union offer. $219 gets more information and a Student U
Employment Opportunities
FOR RENT
December Engineering Grade. We have openings for teaching a grade level paying up to $16,000 and our fees are payable by mail or online. Please visit us at interview. We prefer visions by appointment only. Call or in Lawrence, 823-4531 after 6:30 p.m.
December Business Grids. We have openings for:
up to $15,000 and our fees are paid by the
interview? We interview by appointment. Court-
room interviews available in Lawmen's Uniform
in Lawmen's Uniform
Extra nice apartment next to college. Utilities included, a large kitchen, a double bed, a one room efficiency. 430-579-2872.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
willingly. KU and NU dear to both. No
banks. Phone: 843-507-6071
FRIONTHE RIVER ADPARTMENTS NOW MENT
REQUESTING ADDITIONAL FURNISHING,
unfurnished, from 1M to 2M. Two
packings, parking, or KU rent.
INDOR HEATED LOFTS at 844 Flounder Road
Next door to Room 305.
Two bedroom apartment, 6·16ck, 502 W. 14th,
Baltimore, MD 19804. Room for two adults.
pets. Call Mike Schmidler, 212·376-8080.
Still looking for a place to call home? NautismMall has the best location for theervation of the妈咪. Stop by NautismMall at 845-8505 and we will be glad to give you a tour of the 845-8505 MALL HILL. 1000 NautismMall Drive, 845-8505
Christian Healing, Very close to campus. College 842-6092 between 1-3 p.m. 12-12
Wanted to annotate 2 BH stt 420 and Ribes
180. water, BH stt 420 and Ribes
180. water, BH stt 420. Keep yaiting
Furnished studio available Jan. 1. Presently have mature tenants. Will need two references that you are also. $180 plus electricity. 12-11
Suburban. Quick, furnished, two room efficiency.
$199. 816. All paid: $423. 879. Keep trying.
Nicholas - need 2 formate rooms for 2 IBM
411-8036 - need 995.35 room for 2 IBM
chilies initile: 811-6277
Kidney transplant for rent $90/month) 1/8
Hospital stay after admission $15
12-11 Failure bedridden
SPACETOUCH, LIGHT, QUIT one bedroom. 7 AM-
12:42 PM Available Tuesday, 7 AM-
12:42 PM
835-7891
For Rent 3-2 bedroom duplex at 1833 Minnesota
841-2107 of KU's rent per month. 12/15-
841-2107
Bedroom. Full floor privateiies, starting Jan 1st.
Bedroom. Full floor privateiies, starting Jan 1st.
Bedroom. Full floor privateiies, starting Jan 1st.
20 months (1) Facility Call: 845-397-1212
20 months (2) Facility Call: 845-397-1212
Sublease: 1 bedroom, apartment, available now.
Frontier Ridge, on bus route Call 641-785-12.12
COUDF. -Snap as a bug in a lug room 4-bedroom
unit with two bedrooms and a bathroom
1.5-expansion suite, bid 841-6709 12-12
2 room apartment. Call 841-6719 at 7:00 p.m. 12-12
Utilities paid. Call 841-6719 at 7:00 p.m. 12-12
**Getting married!** Must sublease 1-3 bedrooms apartment. Quit room, close to campus. $185. Minimum 2 mo. liabilities. Available Jan. 1, lease runs through May. $150. Minimum 12 mo. rent. Call 841-4456
SPIACIUS, three bedroom, furnished, apartment, near city limits, carpeted, with fireplace, weather & dwarf, private entrance,入住平价, pay rent.
2566. Nearman grand mail, preferred 12-12-12
Available for ambulance 21, Jan. 19: one IH nurse,
Mitchell, 2 patrons, on bus route C 12-12
Wilson, 6 patients, on bus route D 12-12
Must sublueze, comfortable 1 BR apt. on xtm
Call: 841-2713 12-12
4 BR home suite. Downtown school uninfused,
24 hours of day care, laundry service, weekly
kitchen for 24 for summer months. Weekly
kitchen for 18 for summer months. KIDS
school for 3 for summer months.
One BH bill allows to campus and KU bills that are non-transferable. A second bill may require that daytime, maybe nighttime, before 12 noon in any city or state. You'll need a valid ID card.
2-3 BR bp. with hiketer, hath fireplace, closer
843-0766. desmos, 1345, IPRON Apt. 12-17
843-0766
Studio apt close to campus $140 = unit Call
841-3223 12-12
2 RB act, infiltrated. KU bus route. $195.
Call: 841-8709 12-12
Bt. to saddlebag—nice 1 BR bpt on hone route
Ct. to water paid. Gatehouse bpt. Ct.
843-625-9010
843-625-9010
Sacrifice sublease—cozy 1 BR furnished up and
admitting campus must pay $175, $434-281.
I HC furnished adj. subtenant until May. University
Terrace, 1975th Ave., Seek 841-309-8200
2 bedroom apartment, carpet, draps. CA, IN,
OK. Master suite with kitchen, dining and downstairs.
Just a mile from U.S. 101. KU and downtown.
Jamestown, NY 11759.
SUMMER HATES IN JANUARY Beautiful new hats!
For September, 2, choose one of two bathers (one pair)
for your summer party. Each pair is $15.00.
Sublease $4,000; old 3 Bedroom House unfur-
ished; available Jan. 1, on bus route C842-842.
Nevada brand new 2.3, 4-bedroom home available
in central air, private fireplaces and flagpole.
Call 862-821-7500.
Subluate: Business 2 bedroom apartment at Tridridge. For information call *M424783* at 12-15
Suitesure 2 bedroom apartment, 15 baths, sunken,
dining room, fireplace, comfortable kitchen, dishwasher,
bathroom, laundry, pool, spa. Roomy Park 25 apartment, furnished, must submit proof of enrollment January 1, 2 bedroom. Codes 12-125
alicome#141026
Ringlet bedson in apartment close to campus in
San Diego, CA. Graduate student, 48 hours on
main course. Civil Slave Gray of 48-80 on a
male course. Offer may be extended.
One bedroom furnished apartment (converted), walk to KU or downtown. Off street parking. No pool or spa. Required including immediate payment of first month's rent. Call 821-2130.
1 month's rent free. Must submit jawbone
wearment for spring sweater. *Available*
12-12
**SPECIALS:** $49.00
REACTIVE, conversion studio for suburban
residents. Located on 82nd St., call now #272-5027.
Inspection included; load custody on bare roof.
Call now #272-5027.
Need one person for roommate, $5 monthly, plus
utilities. Call Mike, 841-5145. 12-12
2 Bedroom apartment with hallowen pool
$197.50 Available December-January 81-2651
Sublease—one room住 next to campus, $55, 12-12
bills paid. $814,787付款。
Sublease - 1 BR furnished apt for spring services
from campus. $165 monthly. 10/12-12/
7531
Available for second tenure completely new
building. Purchased on 12/18
utilities paid CGI 843-8093.
Retail price: $65,000.
FOR SALE
Alternator starter and generator Specialists
Automotive technicians MOTIVE
MOTIVE 833-969-2000, 300 W. Gkf,
1165 W. Kgf, 2460 W. Kgf
Western Civilization Notes—New on sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in Western Civilization! Use in Civilization 31 for exam preparation. New Analysis: Use in Civilization 31. Available now at Town Crier; Main Bookstore.
2 & 3 BR apts, new three bedroom homes. Units
are all finished with carpet, hardwood flooring,
unfurnished. For further info, $415 per
unit.
Suburban or one female roommate preferably 2-
story townhouse. Traitridge Call Diane 843-1092.
Credit card accepted.
Sunbirds - Sun-air glasses are our specialty. Non-
Sunbirds - Sun glasses are less sensitive, reassured.
1023 Mesh 841-5709
1023 Mesh 841-5709
SMART PEOPLE DON'T BUSE THE BEST STEREO - unless they have an opportunity to hear it. Come to Audio Systems and hear the recording at www.audio-systems.com, once you record it, studio 9th, #Rhode Island.
Fender Mitchell Guitar with strings, cordz,
string guides, washers, picks, cards and flowers. Very good condition.
COLOR PORTFOLIO, Slides, or print, custom
increasing, professional quality, lowest pric
eg. 10.99
**The Girl** Best the "T" **Shirt** In Town Regularly
$6. Now $49. The Attic. 927 Mass.
Michigan State Music alls and services guitarists, violins and other stringed instruments. We have a new bassist, T.-F. Gibson L-48, Gibson L-7, and Mountain T.-F. Gibson L-48, Gibson L-7, and classical guitarists. We also have a good band of musicians. Michigan St. Music 647, Michigan 843, Michigan St. Music 647, Michigan 843, p. thursday till Christmas. 12-12
For Sale Resale, TB-81. 81 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-82. 82 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-83. 83 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-84. 84 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-85. 85 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-86. 86 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-87. 87 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-88. 88 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-89. 89 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-90. 90 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-91. 91 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-92. 92 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-93. 93 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-94. 94 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-95. 95 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-96. 96 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-97. 97 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-98. 98 track tape recorders/
for Sale Resale, TB-99. 99 track tape recorders/
*
Leaving town! Pamacanai SB-20 30 stree and
18 speed bicycle w/cable look. Cell
12-11
GREAT HUY! 1968 Hotte Electra, lots of extracts
GREAT HUY! 1968 Hotte Electra, lots of extracts
GREAT HUY! 1968 Hotte Electra, lots of extracts
12-11-14
Imperial, Granite Hudson's Bay blind coated, black
and white, size 10.12 inches at 30° S at The Jay Shipping
Store.
1972 Micronex 228 D Sun roof, screws, rebuilt
1975 Micronex 3000 D 3000 mile warranty. As
marked at Mint.
*See item #1460817082710299395*
HELP - NEED CHRISTMAS MONEY? Collects:
$150.00 + $99.00 + $99
Sierra, Yamala TC13H, YP901, Pierson X525
speakers and speakers host, cellu-
864
2 matching red formulas, were once by birefidon-
diamine. These were matched with Minerilite M-12;
13-14; Barium; 822-0422
Golden Hardware WWW. CW Carrier. Needs motor, electrical, with body, tire, good grip. Make other modifications as needed.
Toward Instrument with adductor BRDA, 16 speed
pump. Seatback is adjustable. Lower leg rests on
I. Set seat; I. Set foot. Measured depths: BLK M1,
BLK M2, BLK M3.
Guitar and ear incl. Compass 6 steel strings, ex-
plore 4 bass guitar, Mod saxist instrument, Call
12-1285 offer $395 up.
Large antique droplet dining table with wain-
Excellent condition $200.842.92-12.12
JEWELRY anything made to order for Christmas! Luxury items. High quality creations remember the holidays. Ships FREE in U.S. and Canada.
BOOKS: Thousands of used books for holiday travel, paperback and children's books. 9 Writers' Travel for $15. Travel, etc. 20c. Tank and out of print books at High Road Highway 92-59. Every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
1975 Motorcycle Kawasaki 400 for $25 with
discount. Mail Call: Harry H. McKinney
at 7 p.m. or call (866) 355-1212.
Classic 3508 Charger, good transportation. New
condition. No rust. Great package. #64-0023
condition. No rust. Great package. #64-0023
Snow tresses - 6.5 13" - 4 ply Phillips 66, barely
$30 both 841-5252
12-12
Elegant custom load guitar with case, price to
call. Call Andy, 842-713-7132
12-12
Suroir, coat-size 28 knee length, worn once.
mat. call: 843-4209 after 4:20 842-9569 15:17
1975 impala
1974 impala
Loving country, well cared,
good condition, 841 8723
12-12-12
FOUND
I found your glues (the men's brown leather onlay) on Jayhawk bib in front of Fresner Hall.
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS JOBS- Summer full time, Europe, S.A., Australia, Asia, aida, etc. All fields, $500-$1800 monthly. Employment, lightweight, Free Shipping. K. Berkeley, CA 94204 12-12 M. K. Berkeley, CA 94204
Wanted daily shoppers day and night. Daytime
shoppers must wear a face mask. The Carriage Lamp Shops Club behind the
Carrie House would be interested.
PSYCHIATRIC AIDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE
CENTER FOR HOSPITALITY SERVICES.
Male encouraged to apply. Application apply
to director of nursing. Topeka State Hospital.
physician 239-826-476. Excellent Opportunity.
phone 239-826-476.
A student half-time research assistant position is offered by Place Project Research project. Bureau of Child Development program evaluation research. Responsibilities will include conducting research in several communities in the northwestern region, which have files hosted in several communities in the northwestern region. The project will include data summarization and preparation of graphical analysis; data analysis
A student assistant for female quadriplegic学生 for second semen, include typing for students with tachycardia, helping with towealth, etc. Prefer junior or senior. 843-482 or 1013-1014 afternoon and evening.
NEED EXTRA XMAS MONEY? Summertime cater-
ciner, holidays in December and mid-April.
Diapers in December, necessities and being
able to work from home. Requires ability
to work from home. Must be able to
obtain a must call Ace at 804-854-for
money.
Drivers needed must be 18 years or older. Must apply in person at 4 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 14, 14b.
Part time rain laundry and dry cleaning attend-
ance. Apply at Norge Village, 24th and 15th. 12-12
21 Big Bay is now taking applications for full and part time help. Apply in Appleton, 740 Ioway.
Part time lime store clerk. Would prefer gren
B-herished major. Apply in 12-12
1960 Min M
SUMMER JOBS FORD SERVICE WORK. Where, where,
you work. Mm. Col 184, K. Eggerstrom, Kalispell, Mo. 90957.
Col 216, R. Eggerstrom, Kalispell, Mo. 90957.
Administrative Assistant, Office of Instructional
Administration. Supervise and organrate an
ability required. Familiarize with the time beginning January 1,
1979, $360 for full-time position, Fax: 342-652-8900
and Hall & Bay Academy. Apply deadline December 20.
Position opening. Assistant director of facilities planning at Kokusai, Ministry of development in Architecture of Japan. Experienced in field emphasis on construction administration and one year in construction work. Desirable Bachelor's degree and one year in construction work. Position available immediately. For further information contact Director of Campus Planning, University of Kansas, Box 4139, Lawrence, KS 67205. Resume and resume must be received on or before January 1, 2018. Equal Opportunity. Affirmative Action Employer.
Sambar's new wired waitress, waiters, dish runners, kitchen staff and part time Appliance. In person 3214 W 21st St. (216) 956-8474.
Lithography. Immediate part time help. Graphite
separation, 1st and 2nd shirts, 12-12
842-7340
Programmer Assistant student hourly, 10-20
weeks. Duties include entering
programming programs. Duties also
include data web cell deliogging, putting docu-
mental files in the data web cell,
placing documental files into
responsibilities. Headdress oral and
writing skills. PHYTANTHA text processing, and
skills of verbal skills. ADAM J. Baldock, Associate
Computer Center, KU CENTER, NW. We are an Equa-
lity Opportunity Employer Q. U.S. Postal Service.
Students with disabilities are equiv-
lated to apply.
LOST
Flexible hours for maintenance position at larger
locations. Respond person phone 613-749-1028
12-12
Part time food service personnel needed. Starting
pay $2.30 per hour and up. Part time table service
needed also. $1.50 per hour plus tip. Previous
food services: 7,198; Apply in person. Position:
Food Services, 7,198; 12-12
The Laverne Open School is hiring two aids. Position one is Kindergarten aid. We prefer a certain level of experience. Position two has a tenure day package, designing and making curriculum packets. Visit Application must quality for CFTA Title XII Employer Software. Equal Opportunity 12-12
Lost: one pair of gold pierced earrings. Reward offered, including on British币. p. 834-841.
Lid,降 off. Dec 4 RU Hasketball Game. BLACK
@ LM-HS-8185, LM-HS-8185, Reward.
Least-Doberman jumper, black and tan male,
Hawaiian cropped ears with bandages, 16"
10"
8"
6"
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the Hotel of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. Monday through Friday, 4 A.M. to 1 P.M. on Saturday at Max.
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM: Choose and cut your own beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive east on Route 12 in County Road exit marker #248 then open weekends till Christmas. PINNE HILL FARM
MISCELLANEOUS
INTERBISSION GUARFAN, Mandolin, or Bamboo
instrument. 8-string guitar, classic style, 1 hour-2 minutes, LP vinyl record.
Sunflower Surplus wishes you Reason Creations 4
invites you to visit our store, and chances are through Sunfork freezes of delicious gift cards. Trainwigs goes down gowns at Awaire Affaires Ltd. Awaira southerns and markets Dinner books in store We stock cross country skis, backpacking and camp gear, canes, and accessories of a kind, a gifts skin or people who just want to stay warm this winter.
Sunflower Surplus
SunflowerSurplus
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Downtown Lawrence
Downtown Lawrence
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimah Hall is offering, for the first time ever a boarding plan. 19 weeks ago, we gave you the best week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop having to give or give us a call. Naimah Hall see you.
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A SINCERE THANKS
to all the Greeks.
New year next year. New year next year. David Bernstein.
Anth. Ward. How lucky I am to have known you. Thank you so much! I'll see you March 9 in San Francisco.
Doog. Merry Christmas and our friendship
continue. A little birdie.
12-12
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**
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WANTED: Tutorial Coordinator for Spring session on Social Science Major, functional knowledge of the Social Sciences, large blocks of time, above average academic ability, and disadvantaged students. Applicants must be minority and disadvantaged students. Application to O'Leary, 684-3871. SES is an equal opportunity employer. Women and men of all races are encouraged to apply.
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Opening for teaching assistant in Chinese language courses for Spring 1979. Contact Department of East Asian Languages and Culture, 2118 Washington Avenue, Opportunity Apartments, 12-12
AND THAT IS IT! **NO** MORE CLASSIFIED
ABOUND ANYMORE!! WE HAVE TO
ABOUND ANYMORE!! 12-11
10
Monday, December 11, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Group protests literature policy
sy CAROLINE TROWBRIDGE
Staff Reporter
Four members of an academic freedom group handed out literature Friday morning in Strong Hall, the second attempt in one week by members of the University to violate KU's policy on distribution of literature.
The policy was approved in October by the University Events Committee and David G. Reid, president.
The four members of the Academic Freedom Coalition handed out about 175 copies of the Bill of Rights, which were one of the copies of the literature distribution polls.
The coalition violated a section of the policy that says distribution of literature must take place outside University buildings.
The Literature distribution policy outlines a place and manner of distribution of literature.
RON KUBY, spokesman for the coalition, said the group comprised 12 students who were being processed.
"I certainly won't accept anything less than the University changing its policy," Kuby said. "I would expect we'll continue to do until the University does change the policy."
Kuby said he thought the distribution nolicy was enforced arbitrarily.
"We're trying to illustrate the discriminatory manner in which these rules discriminate against minorities."
violating these frequently, it will prevent the result from taking action against the result does not happen.
Kuby said that when he and members of his group distributed literature at a Higher Education Week banquet in the Kansas City area, he was director, director of the Union, served them punch.
However, Kuby said, when members of the Young Socialist Alliance distributed literature in November in the Union, they were told they could not distribute literature from a booth in an entryway, but had to go to a booth in the Union lobby.
Burge said he did not think Kuby and his orem had disobeyed any Union policy.
AMBLER SAID his position on literature distribution had not changed from a week ago when Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies, distributed literature in the rotunda of Strong Hall. No action was taken against Miller.
Ambler said earlier that he would speak with anyone who was dissatisfied with any part of the policy, but that he still approved of the policy.
He also said the events committee had consulted with the University counsel's office and had found the distribution policy did not violate anyone's rights.
Kuby said he thought his coalition would be better organized next semester and would continue to violate the distribution plan, an attempt to have the policy changed.
"WE HAVE an unofficial list of 376 political activists who have been arrested in Mexico because of their activities for social change."
From page one
---
Activist
Marrouquin, a self-proclaimed socialist, said he became involved in student demonstrations in the late '60s and early '70s on the issue of economic conditions that exited in Mexico.
"The Mexican government does nothing, absolutely nothing, in behalf of the students," she said. "They are not involved."
terest of the landlords and big business," he said.
He said the Revolutionary Institutional Party (PI) had been in power for 50 years but not had it be the champion of the lower classes. Marroquin said 52 percent unemployed people with no land and skyrocketing inflation faced problems and the causes for social unrest.
Marrouquin is a guest speaker in conjunction with Human Rights Week at the UNHCR.
Marrquinin was sponsored by the Young Socialist Alliance and MECHA.
Snow removal force viewed as adequate
Last winter, Lawrence motorists were plagued by hazardous driving conditions on ice streets. But George Williams, director of public works, said recently that he was hopeful the situation would be different this winter.
"I don't think snowball like last year happens that often," Williams said. "I thought we did a damn good job last year. We had some unusual snows.
"But I don't think it's wise to tool up for a heavier snow like last year."
Williams said he did not think the city needed to increase the size of the snow removal force because there were not enough snow during the winter to make it worthwhile.
Williams said the price of a road grader, often used for snow removal, could run between $80,000 and $100,000. The cost last year for hiring contractors to help the city clear streets of snow was more than $4,000, whereas $22,000 overall last year for snow removal.
The city has eight snowplows and five salt and sand spreaders.
Williams said there were some streets in the city where snowplows had not been able to remove snow because the streets were too steep.
He said he hoped a new four-wheel drive salt and sand spreader could spread salt on those streets, melting the snow so plows could finish the job.
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Compiled by Henry Lockard
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Lawrence police yesterday reporter that burglaries recently stole $2,645 in stereo equipment, a $120 typwriter and $100 cash from them.
Police said the two burglaries were examples of why students should take a little time to secure their homes, and that they will be the holiday break that begins tomorrow.
Police said Linda Taylor, Glathe freshman, 1338 Ohio St., reported that her home was burglarized Thursday morning between 10:20 and 11:40.
"I've become really leery about students leaving for the break because they always want to get out of here so we don't take precautions," Longaker said.
Police said the burglar entered Taylor's home through an unlocked window and stole a stereo receiver valued at $260, two speakers valued at $150 each, a turntable valued at $250, 100 albums valued at $500 and $100 in cash.
POLICE SAID the two women each lost several hundred dollars in steree equipment. Missing were two steree receivers, one valued at $250 and the other valued at $100 each and two values at $100 each and two values at $140 each; and turntable valued at $140.
Susan Finkmeier, Kansas City, Kan., junior, and Lori Livel, Coffeeville, Mo., reported that a burglar entered their home through an unlocked window on Friday.
Jeanne Longaker, KU police sergeant,
said the semester break between
Christmas and January was a busy time
for thieves near campus.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
KU police said a student, who was not identified, reported that someone had stolen $465 from her bank account during the last two weeks.
THE STUDENT told police that someone had used an automatic bank card on Nov. 30, to steal $190 and then stole $275 on Dec. 4. However, how the bank card had been stolen was unknown, and no one knew if he had the card when the report was filed.
Two students, Deborah Reddig,
LawrenceSenior, 1244 Indiana St. and Julie
Gross, St. Louis Junior, 1313
Bethany, St. Joseph, the sheets of
1204 batteries from their cars.
Police said the thief store a citizen's land value valued at $160, an AM-FM radio value valued at $250 and a $180, two speakers valued at $7 each and a Fuzz Buster used for finding radar cameras.
Lawrence police said John Sheppard, Lawrence sophomore, 2020 Dover Square, reported that someone broke into his car, which was parked at home.
Police said Reddig's battery was stolen about a week ago from her car, which was parked near her home. Reddig valued the battery at $70.50.
GROSS' BATTERY also was stolen from her car, which was parked at her home, between 6:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. The car said. Gross value the battery at $35.
An elderly Lawrence man's pickup truck was stolen late Saturday from where it was parked at 446 Locust St. the theft occurred at about 11:30 p.m.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.89.No.73
Christmas hours, building schedules
See vacation hours page three
Study of classroom use resumed
Rv TIM SHEEHY
Nathan Kenorter
A nearly forgotten legislative audit that indicated some Kansas Board of Regents universities have too much classroom space and are not adequately staffed at State Sph. Northern Gaur, K-Westwood.
The audit, done by the Legislative Division of Post Audit in 1977, warned that two buildings set for construction at Regents schools were not needed and would be wasteful if built. By 1890, the audit said, campuses will have excess classroom space.
The Legislature has ignored the audit's recommendations and has committed more than $10 million to erecting the buildings: an office and classroom building at Fort Hays State University, and an education and training building at Emory State University.
TO FOLLOW up on the post audit report, Dave Barclay, administrative assistant to Gaar, has studied the use of classroom space at six of the Regents institutions this
His study consisted of spending two days at each of the schools: Fort Hays State, Emory University, State University, Wichita State University, and Pittsburgh State University. Barclay walked through every classroom building and gathered data about classroom use.
Barclay, who last year did a study of state construction that led to reorganization of the State Architect's office, also is planning to recruit professors use their assigned office space.
HOWEY, HE did say that, in general, he supported the finding of the post auditors that large universities such as KU used their space well, and that smaller schools, such as Pittsburgh State and Emporia State, were less efficient space users.
Because the data from his tours of the universities have not been fully analyzed, Barclay was reluctant to discuss his findings.
"Although the Regents were very critical of the auditor's report they were never able to statistically refute it," Barclay said. "I have not found anything to refute it either."
The audit report also compared the amount of space expected to be needed in 1980, considering declines in enrollment, and the amount of space that would be available based on current building projections. The report concluded that by 2015, most of the non-residential space at Regents schools would be potentially excessive.
Barclay he thought the Legislature voted to fund the new buildings because planning funds for the buildings had been appropriated.
"AS FAR as I am concerned the time to
heat the process of building a new structure
from recycled glass," Barclay said. "When this study is
completed, a legislator will be able to look at
classroom and office utilization at any
time and decide whether fund for more space."
"As I have walked all of the Regents institutions, I have seen very well utilized space at the larger institutions," Barclay said. "We have utilized space at some of the smaller schools."
A study done last year by a legislative task force also indicated that the Regents smaller institutions are less than efficient at using their space.
The study used national standards that
a classroom use 30 hours each week is
branched into five weekly blocks.
The state researchers studied the flow of students at six Regent schools and one private institution for a week to see whether they use measured up to the national standard.
THEIR FINDINGS indicated that classrooms at Pittsburgh State were used least efficiently, at an average of 20 hours a week. Classrooms at Fort Hays State were used most efficiently for 27 hours a week, emulation State 25, Kansas State and Wichita State 30, and KU 35.
Barclay has used the same national standards to judge classroom use during his presidency.
"The mere fact that a school like KU can
average 30 hours or so shows that the standard is not all that hard to meet.
Planning directors at Emporia State, Fort Hays State and Pittsburgh State repudiated the findings of both the post audit study and the task force study, saying they were purely statistical and did not tell the whole story.
In reference to the post audit's recommendation that a new education and psychology building was not needed at State Director of facilities, the State Director of facilities planning, said other buildings on the campus would not be maintained and therefore the building was needed.
"IT IS a difference of views as to whether you think a college should be run like a factory or like an educational institution," Barnhart said.
Barclay offered several explanations as to why there was a disparity in how the schools used their space. He said the multitude of enrollment projections clouded how much the schools were justified in asking for. He also said the scheduling of classes and the attitudes of some faculty members added to the problem.
"In some of the schools there is almost a turf mentality" Barclay said. "Professors think they have to classes in the same building as their office, departments think
they should have their own building, and they don't need to. At Wichta, the professors walk all over campus and the system works fine."
Barclay said he expected his study to be done by Jan. 15 and to be the most comprehensive to date. It will identify surplus space and tie that information to requests for additional space so that the Legislature does not fund unneeded classrooms.
Barley said he also planned to send a copy of his final report to the Regents for approval.
"Publishing this report will serve as a warning to the Regents that before they request money for more classrooms they better be sure it is needed," Barclay said.
CANTERBURY
Terry Asia prepares to pack up one of the remaining puppets of the discontinued Puppet Theatre in his studio at 624 New Hamp-
Old friends
brist St. Asia was director the three-year program and made
most of the puppets for the show, which was discontinued Nov. 22.
Report awaited on Green Hall
By DEB RIECHMANN
Staff Renorter
A proposal recommending ways to correct structural and appearance problems of concrete panels on the exterior of KU's Green Hall is expected in month 1, according to Allen Wiechert, KU director of facilities planning.
Wiechert said yesterday that the recommendation would be given to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes for his consideration.
Pre-cast panels that make up the outer surface of the building have been a problem since the building was constructed in 1977.
Wiechert said he could not estimate how much money had been spent so far in the effort to determine the best way to improve Green Hall's appearance, the cracks in its concrete and the structural deficiencies of the panels.
However, Brad Smooth, attorney for the state Department of Administration, recently estimated that $10,000 of Kansas tax revenue went on the Green Hall panel investigation.
IN ADDITION, he said, money has been spent on legal fees and time has been taken away from other projects.
Recently, Wieicher, Smoot and Warren Corman, facilities officer for the Kansas Board of Regents, traveled to Hartford, Conn., to look at products that might solve the appearance problems of the panels.
Smoot said, "You've got to figure out
"We don't want half the building when we're done. We want the building we paid for."
whether the products will satisfy the University and whether they will provide longevity for the canals.
ONE PRODUCT is an appy concrete surface material. If applied, it would improve only the appearance of the building and would seal cracks in the panels. It would not solve the building's structural problems. Wiechert said
The $-million structure was built by Casson Construction Co. of Topeka, Wiechert said that the contractor had cooperated with the investigation and had agreed that would go along with the recommendation and correct the building's deficiencies.
Wiechert said KU would try to find the products they saw in Connecticut at dealers closer to Lawrence.
Before the first of the year, Wiechert said, he hopes answers to the structural problems will be found so that a recommendation can be made.
After a proposal is approved by Dykes and John Conard, executive officer of the Regents, it would be given to Casson for implementation, Wiechert said.
If the contractor does not take care of the building's deficiencies, the problem could end up in court, he said.
Smooth said, "We're getting closer and all the time to a solution. We want the University to take the lead on this." We listened with distilled with the building after it is fixed."
Motion to eliminate surcharge postponed
By BARB KOENIG Staff Reporter
Members of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Advisory Board last night postponed a motion that proposed a $250,000 in 1980, of a student ticket surcharge.
Mike Harper, student body president and a member of the board, proposed a resolution that would automatically eliminate a $5 surcharge on football season tickets and a $4 surcharge on basketball tickets. The student ticket would be left for the board to decide each year at its annual spring budget meeting.
"My main objection is that from the students' point of view, I don't feel we were aware that the surcharge of the ticket would be $". "Harper said."
The total of $8 for each student season ticket is being used to pay off the two tuition fees.
"I don't like the idea of the corporation committing $5 of student funds to the new school."
A new surcharge of $3 was added this year to make a total surcharge of $4 for student
The additional surcharge for football of 50 cents a student season ticket a game and $1 a public season ticket game was imposed in the stadium finance a $1.8 million stadium renovation.
The 1986 SURCHARGEE, imposed to help KUAC finance a student addition to the east side of Memorial Stadium, was scheduled for review when a $355,000 loan for the project expired in 1880. The surcharge has not been reviewed.
Richard Von Ende, University executive secretary, moved that Harper's motion be postponed because he said a more complete review of the terms of the 1978 loan
agreement with the University of Kansas Endowment Association was needed.
VON ENDE ALSO wanted the KUAC executive committee to meet with officers of the Endowment Association to discuss financial commitments for the new renovation.
According to minutes of the Dec. 18, 1977, KUAC board meeting, the advisory board voted that money generated from the 1966 loan was used to the new loan after the 1966 loan expired.
Von Ende said he thought all information concerning the terms of the Endowment Association loan should be put into one package so that board members would fully understand the terms before voting on Harper's proposal.
HARPER And Gerhard Zuther, professor of English, were appointed to assist the KUAC executive committee in reviewing the terms of the loan agreements. The findings will be presented and a meeting of the board. A date has not been set.
Laura Smith, chairman of the Athletic Seating Board, asked that the number of available student seats for basketball be re-evaluated. There were 160 more student tickets available in 1975 than have been sold this year.
Smith said she had received several phone calls from students who complained because there were no more season tickets available.
"I think their complaints are valid and we should do something about them," Smith
Bob Marcum, men's athletics director,
said he would meet soon with the seating
席.
The board also discussed salaries for assistant coaches but the meeting was closed to the press by Del Brinkman, Dean of Journalism and chairman of the board.
Godfather 'Papa Joe' rules Kan. county
He's 74 years old. A boulevard and an overpass are named after him. A plaque on his office wall from the墙 Democratic Party calls him "A Living Legend, a man of famous U.S. politicians and him hamming it up."
There's a fat old man in southeast Kansas who accidentally got into politics and became a living
D. "J. Papa Joe" Saia, Frontenac, a Crawford County Commission since 1938, already had one hound and two dogs.
His education, political success, antics and hobbies attract attention. He's the boss of southeast Kannas
Sela earned the name "Papa Joe" from the manner in which he put county funds to use. He taken
IT IS RUMORED that Saia has Mafia connections but that only ticks Saia.
"About the time Aiupa was on trial a reporter from Arkansas came to ask me about my connections with the Mafia. Hell, we were just about finished talkin' and some guy drops in and says 'Hiya, Papa Joe,' and the reporter took that to mean the wrong thing," Sala says.
He says the rumors started in the early 1960s when a reputed mug figure from Chicago, Joe Auppa, was thrown off the street.
Sala says Aiupua was "a very well-behaved man" and that he wouldn't be ashamed to be associated with the group.
"I'm not a member of Mafia na, or I never have been," he says. "People think those mob guys go around killin' people and hurtin' people. Well, my wife has had an affair with anyone who wants to join. I don't turn one a way."
Curt Schneider, Kansas attorney general, knows
Sata about as well as anyone. Sata was Schneider's campaiz co-chairman.
**SNHEIDER SAVS** Sain sometimes gets in an emery mood and starts up with the Mafia act when she is called.
He said it was Sala's speech and manner that had led to the godfather image.
"You ever heard Joe give a speech?" Schneider asked. "You ought to hear him. He's always using the wrong words and we're sitting there holding our hands. We've fired up because he believes in his 'saving.'"
It was Saia's beliefs that landed him in politics in 1935.
Saia says he ran for mayor of Frontenace because "I saw how the town people were being cheated and I was stunned."
He lost the election despite promising people free water, electricity and a completely new police force.
But that was the only election he lost until this November, when he ran for state representative.
CRAWFORD COUNTY fails into the state's Fourth Legislative District. But Sala's campaign area stretched onto foreign land, and he lost the election to Senator John D. Conway, a dairy farmer, by about a two-to-one margin.
Beeley said he was surprised that he beat Sai, who sources close to Beeley say they were all along with him.
On a Friday night recently, an univertified reporter stopped by Sai'a's home in Frontenaca to find out
Saia credit benefits with waging a smart campanage against Saia's bid. Others say that Saia's campaign is ineffective.
Salaaya says of the defeat, "It's either a message that on the way down or that these people don't want it."
why his backers wouldn't let him go, if in fact they wouldn't.
Frontenca, near Pittsburgh, is a town about the size of Eudora. Finding Sala's home was easy. Probably everyone in Crawford County knows where "Papa Joe" lives.
A SIGN IN his front yard directs all visitors to the "office in back."
Saira greets his visitors personally. Not all legends took alike. Saira is dark complaceted, has a gray hair and a big nose.
He wasn't eager to talk about politics. Instead he wanted to tour his garden, sausage-making operation and go fishing.
Apparently, Sala lives simply, made mysterious only by his dedication to his beliefs and power to success.
See SAIA back page
2
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and ware reports
Vance reports treaty progress
TEL. AVIV, ISRAEL—Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance said yesterday he discussed new ideas for peace treaty with President Anwar Sadat of Egypt,
He arrived from Cairo, where he reported good progress in talks with Saad and urged Egypt and Israel to try to sign their long-elusive treaty by next month.
Vance is in Israel today to attend the funeral of former Prime Minister Golda Meir. He praised Mrs. Meir as "an outstanding figure, one of the great leaders
Iranian violence surges again
TEHANH, Iran - Two days of peace between the government and anti-shah protesters exploded into violence and bloodhed yesterday in the ancient city of Ilafah, where at least five persons were reported killed when soldiers fired on removing crowds.
Reports from reliable sources said anti-sahail rosters in the northeastern city of Mashhad stormed the U.S.-owned Hyatt Hotel, wrecking the floor and walls of the building. An ambulance was sent to the scene.
Official sources said the violence in Isfahan, 300 miles south of Tehran, began when a protest march similar to one held in Tehran over the weekend turned into a riot. The sources said thousands of demonstrators damaged downtown banks and public buildings and toppled statuses of the Shah.
Rhodesian oil depot explode
SALIBURY, Rhodesia - Explosions and towering flames coiled through a storage depot of four major oil companies near Saliburly last night. There were
A police spokesman said the fire started after a small explosion that was followed by other explosions. He refused to comment on the possibility of
The fire could seriously affect Rhodesia's war efforts against guerrillas who have been battling for six years to establish black majority rule.
*there is an international oil embargo against Rhodesia because of its racial policies, and the oil is shipped through white ruled South Africa in a com-
Kennedu hires political aide
WASHINGTON - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who insists he is not running for president, has hired a young political expert, Carl Wagner, in another move to make his case.
Even though Kennedy denies he's a presidential candidate, he acts like candidates are supposed to. By hiring Wagner, Kennedy is getting a man well-versed in his politics.
Tom Southwick, Kennedy's press secretary, said Wagner, 33, will join the senator's staff to "keep track of governors and other out-of-state officials," as he said in a statement.
Southwick said hiring Wagner has nothing to do with any presidential campaign.
Three kidnap to protest law
TEL AVIV, Israel—Three Israeli brandishing pistols burst into a West German cultural center yesterday and seized a female hostage, but released the gunmen.
The raiders reportedly were demanding the abolition of the West German statute of limitations, which says that new prosecutions of those accused of Nazi crimes should be prosecuted by the Supreme Court.
Police said the three were led by Andre K琳奇那, who may have set fire to the West German embassy and shouted anti-Nazi slogans. He was not sergeant.
Police said the pistols the men carried were capable only of firing blanks and were of the type used for track meet.
Railroad rates rise 7 percent
WASHINGTON—The Interstate Commerce Commission yesterday awarded the nation's railroads a 7 percent overall freight rate increase. This increase is driven by an increase in rail capacity.
The ICC said the increase, which meets the administration's anti-inflation guidelines, would take effect Friday. The increase could provide financially greater relief to workers.
The rail industry last month agreed to trim its proposed 8.1 percent freight increase request to 7 percent to comply with Carter's program.
Chaplin's snatchers admit guilt
VEVEY, Switzerland—Two men told a court yesterday they acted alone to steal the body of comedian Charlie Chaplin. But a judge hinted the body was actually the remains of a 19-year-old girl.
Roman Wardas, 24, of, Poland, and Bulgarian-born Ganche Genev, 38, admitted their guilt in the scheme, saying they felt the March 1 theft would earn them a share of the reported $100 million Chaplin left his family. The suspects insisted no one else was involved.
Wardas said he was the man who called the Chapin family home and family attorneys over a 10-week period to negotiate a ransom. He was arrested in a car that had been driven into the building.
But the Chapin family lawyer, Jean-Felix Paschoud, testified that five of the dozens of calls he received appeared to be from a different man, using a voice different from the one he had heard on the other calls. That prompted presiding Judge Roland Chatielon to speculate a third man may still be at large.
Farmers plan tractor parade
JOHNSON-Money and weather permitting, scores of American Agriculture movement tractors will leave a handful of western towns today and form a plains rural supply network.
Bob Scrivener of the Johnson state AAM office said yesterday almost a dozen tractors would leave Johnson today and be met by a group from Satanta-Sublette about halfway to the overnight stop at Dodge City. Other groups of tractors and campers are scheduled to depart from Elkhorn, Liberal, Syracuse, Sharon Springs, Goodland and St. Francis and wind their way, at 15 miles per hour and about 100 miles a day, to Topeka.
The tractor motorcade was delayed several days to make its Topoca arrival closer to the D. 18 beginning of a multi-state grain marketing conference to take place in April.
WASHINGTON—An Agriculture Department official said the United States made progress in achieving an International Wheat Agreement last week.
World wheat vact predicted
Thomas Saylor, associate administrator of the department's Foreign Agricultural Service, said in an interview that the United States and Common Market were working on a solution.
The administration strongly supports an agreement to end sharp swings off wheat prices, which have posed problems for American consumers and producers in the last ten years, and to spread responsibility for holding wheat reserves among exporting and importing nations.
Missing dynamite recovered
GREAT BEND - Six hundred pounds of dynamite and 400 blasting caps stolen almost a week ago from a geological exploration company were recovered.
The Barton County Sheriff's office, Great Bend police and the Central Kansas
Sarcolot Utl recrived the explosives from an abandoned storm shelter eight
miles north of Barton County.
Leonard Mastromi, narcotics unit supervisor, said the 10-count drug unit was asked to help with the investigation Saturday when it was learned that the ex-convict had been in possession of cocaine.
Information provided to the narcotics unit by a confidential source allowed retrieval of the explosives, valued at about $1,800.
Weather...
It will be mostly cloudy today. Highs will be in the low $w$. Winds will be south to southeastern, 5 to 10 mph in the morning, shifting to west northwestly in the afternoon.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said yesterday it would decide whether employers with no proven history of racial bias illegally discriminate against whites when giving preferences to minority workers.
Court to rule on minority hiring
In a case that may dwarf the court's Bakke ruling of last June in its impact and may affect millions of Americans, the justified agree to hear three appeals stemming from a Louisiana job-discrimination lawsuit.
The justices' eventual decision will likely be reached sometime before next July, after a review of the nominees.
Brian F. Weber, a white employee at Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Co's Gramercy, La., plant, charged that an affirmative action program begun by Kaiser made him a victim of reverse discrimination.
"It's been a long time coming—it's been almost four years since the suit was filed and I didn't expect to get near this status," he said. "I would have been satisfied to have it resolved at any time this last four years, it's too important to be settled this early."
Two lower federal courts ruled that the program aimed at landing more blacks in higher-paying jobs was illegal because it fostered racial bias against Weber.
In a flurry of action Monday, the court also:
- Agreed to decide whether police may question criminal suspects who do not specifically relinquish—either orally or in writing; remain silent and obtain a lawyer's help.
IN GRAMMERY, Weber expressed
concern that the court would agree with
blain concordance.
The court thus takes the stage, in a case from North Carolina, for an important interpretation of its controversial Miranda ruling, which requires police to warn suspects of their rights before questioning them.
- Uphold by a 4-4 vote a ruling that criminal suspects' statements that are rude madishable as trial evidence under the Code of Civil Procedure not be used to justify a police search warrant.
- Refused to hear the appeal of two Connellsville, Pa., library employees who were fired because they live together but are not married.
- Agreed to decide whether federal prosecutors may bring former Rep. Henry Helstoki, D-N.J., to trial for alleged bribery.
- If prosecutors can try Helstoski, charged with agreeing to receive bribes from various resident aliens in return for introducing legislation to help their immigration status, the justice must decide what evidence may be used.
- Agreed to hear a government appeal in the case of another prominent New Jersey politician, former Newark Mayor Hugh J. Addison. The court's action raises the possibility that Addison will have to accept the sentence serving a 10-year sentence for extortion.
- Turned down an appeal by a Virginia
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- Agreed to decide whether the government fosters impermissible sex bias by giving aid to families in which breadwinner does not breadwinner mothers—are out of work.
married couple challenging federal tax laws that imposed heavier tax burdens on the spouses' combined income after they were married.
IN WEBER'S CASE, the justices agreed to appeal to the Appeal, the United Steelworkers Union.
The affirmative action program launched by Kaiser in 1974 was approved of in a company-union agreement. It accepted minority and white employees on a one-for-one basis in an on-the-job training program that led to higher paying work.
Webe sued after being denied participation in the program. He charged that the selection of black workers with less than 10 years of experience provided a portion of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Had trainers been selected solely on the severity, or priority, blocks would have been included in the selection.
In the Bakke decision, a deeply divided high court ruled that a state-run medical school in California illegally discriminated against women who is white, when it denied him admission.
Bakke had charged that less-qualified applicants had been admitted ahead of him under the school's special program which is increasing its number of minority students.
The justices ordered the school to admit
students who did not destroy the concept of
affirmative action.
Because the decision was grounded in a federal law dealing only with discrimination in education, it provided few clear signals as to the court's view of the hundreds of affirmative action programs in employment that now affect millions of workers.
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This semester break take advantage of Continental's price break on airfares. We'll take you to the snow in Colorado, the sun on either coast, or the warmth of your family circle. And you'll save enough to live it up once you get there. Fly anyplace Continental flies on the mainland and save up to 50% off regular Coach, depending on when and where you go. Of course, there are some restrictions and you must purchase your tickets in advance.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
3
Christmas schedules,building hours
Watson Hours:
Walon Hours:
Regular hours for Dec. 12 through Dec. 21.
Sunday: noon to midnight
Monday through Thursday: 8 a.m. to midnight
Friday: 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Dec. 22 through Jan. 16
Monday through Friday: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Closed weekends, Dec. 24, 25 and Jan. 16
Spencer Research Library:
Regular hours except for closings on Christmas and New Year's Day and all
Saturdays between Dec. 16 and Jan. 20.
Monday through Friday: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Sunday: closed.
Green Hall Law Library Hours:
Regular hours through Dec. 22.
Regular hours: Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to midnight
Saturday: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday: 11 a.m. to midnight
Closed Dec. 23, 24, 25 and 26
Dec. 27-29: open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Dec. 30-Jan. 1: Closed
Jan. 2-5: open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 6 and 7 closed
Jan. 8-12: open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 13 and 14 closed
Jan. 15: open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 16—resume regular hours
Kawaii Union House:
Dec. 13: 19; open during their regular hours, 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Dec. 20: 23; open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Dec. 23: 25 the Union will be closed
Dec. 26: 28; open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Dec. 30: Jan. 1 the Union will be closed
Jan. 2-5; open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Jan. 8 and 10 the Union will be closed
Jan. 8:10; open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Jan. 11: 13 open 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Jan. 15 the Union resumes its regular hours.
Union Food Service hours:
Hawks Nest:
Dec. 13-Dec. 15; open regular hours, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Closed until Jan. 15 when it will resume regular hours.
Prairie Room:
Dec. 13-Dec. 20; open regular hours, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Closed after that until Jan. 15 when it will resume regular hours.
Deli:
Dec. 18-Dec. 21 open regular hours, 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Dec. 22; open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Dec. 23-25 the Deli will be closed.
Dec. 26-28 open 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Dec. 29 open 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Dec. 30 1 the Dell will be closed
Jan. 2-5 open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 6 and the Dell will be closed
Jan. 8-12 open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 13 open 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Union cafeteria:
Dec. 13-15 open during regular hours, 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Dec. 16 and 17 the Union cafeteria will be closed
Dec. 18-22 open 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Dec. 23 Jan the Union cafeteria will be closed
Jan. 2-5 open 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Jan. 6 and 7 the Union cafeteria will be closed
Jan. 8-12 open 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Jan. 15 the Union cafeteria will resume its regular hours
Union Bookstore:
Union Bookstore:
Dec. 22 at 12:22 open during regular hours; 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Dec. 23 at 12:22 Union bookstore will be closed
Weekdays during intermission: open 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Jan. 8 the Union bookstore will resume its regular hours
Jan. 13 open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Jan. 14 open noon to 3 p.m.
Residence Halls and Scholarship Halls:
Dec. 23 will close for intermission by 9 a.m.
Jan. 7 will open at 9 a.m.
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7
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
DECEMBER 12,1978
'Do not think'
If you haven't noticed how often the University of Kansas has shown that it doubts your ability to think for yourself, your passive assent to the University's stiffening pattern of suppression has helped tighten the screws on individual freedom at KU.
Increasingly it seems as if the achievement of an outward sheen of harmony and happiness on Mount Oread has been a prime goal of the university administration. There is nothing inherently wrong with the University's presenting a "good image" to the public, the press and the Legislature, but when efforts to achieve such an image trample individuals' rights to be heard, those efforts are dangerous.
Perhaps it would be easier to identify and discuss the apparent fear of individual opinion at the University if one could point a finger at a prime culprit.
ALMOST ANYONE acquainted with the style of the current chancellor, Archie R. Dykes, knows how public relations-oriented he is. Those who praise him usually include at the top of his list of accomplishments the restoration of rest in the University after the troubled administration under Laurence Chalmers.
But this is not to suggest that Dykes would singlehandedly throttle individual expression. Rather, it seems as if Dykes and the rest of the current administration have fostered the sort of atmosphere where apparent unanimity of opinion is highly prized and controversy is shunned simply because of its controversiality.
The Student Senate's heavy-handed attempt to stifle the Student Bar Association is a unfortunate example of how far such an attitude can spread, without direct administrative fiat. That the administration's values can infect students to the point where they are willing to suppress themselves is alarming.
FORTUNATELY, MOST of the University community can express itself most of the time. But the majority—at the University, a conservative majority—seldom has trouble finding means to express itself. It is those views that are unpopular with the majority that run the highest risk of being suppressed. It is those views, however unpopular, which must be guarded by the very majority that rejects those views, or there will be an end to diversity and constructive, progressive criticism.
A disturbing pattern of unwillingness to tolerate controversy and dissent has spread across the University in recent months:
- The administration cancelled, at the last minute, a display of Nazi memorabilia at Spencer Research Library. Although Strong Hall may have been, as it said, operating out of sympathy for the feelings of Jews, the decision apparently was made more from fear of unfavorable publicity. Whatever the motivation to cancel the exhibit, the University missed an ideal chance, in keeping the exhibit open, to publicly demonstrate the University's commitment to academic freedom. Explaining the value of education in both the triumphs and the horrors of the past would have been a far more courageous stand than to try to avoid all controversy.
- STRONG HALL refused to fund the appearance of Jonathon Kozol, a speaker critical of American education, at the student-organized Higher Education Week banquet. Again, the University missed its chance to show the value of opinion contrary to the majority view.
- The Integrated Humanities Program has been squeezed to neardeath by a series of budget and staff cuts and by policy changes that restrict its ability to attract prospective students. This fall, the controversial program has been dragged through a series of public hearings where those professing to protect the rights of supposedly naive students are trying to destroy academic freedom, all in the name of academic freedom. The University administration, rather than kill the program outright because of any real problems or defend its right to exist, seems to prefer to let IHP die quietly—out of the public spotlight.
- THE ADMINISTRATION approved a literature distribution policy that provides considerable latitude in squelching any "out of the ordinary" distribution of literature. The policy seems to stem from some inexplicable idea that students need to be protected from the unpopular—there has been no demonstrated reason why existing anti-litter laws and First Amendment case law can't be used to limit literature distribution that infringes on the rights of others.
- When Mike Harper, student body president, called a press conference to discuss the removal of Phill Kaufman as StudEx chairman, it was held "on the record." Only through pursuit of the facts from "on-the-record" sources was it made known that Kaufman had been given an ultimatum to resign or be fired. Reporters encounter similar frustrations in airing the facts about the University almost every day—such as when FacEx regularly retires behind closed doors to make routine appointments. Who will ever know what the University governance is really discussing behind those doors?
- AND, AS MENTIONED, the Student Senate tried to stop the SBA from circulating a petition by threatening to cut SBA funding.
Fear of controversy, rather than rational grappling with the merits of any given issue, affects a wide range of policy decisions. The administration's decision not to approve litigation services in the first phase of a student-funded legal services program reportedly stems partly from fear that an "outer fringe" of students would abuse such legal services.
Usually when discussion of such an "outer fringe" occurs, administrators and faculty refer to the "late 1960s and early 1970s" as a euphemistic frame for the period when students were outspoken in their criticism. The students of the '70s are seldom taught to search for the reasons why their predecessors reacted so strongly to what they saw as serious wrongs. Instead, they are told simply that the protesters' efforts should be written off as pointless because they led to violence and unrest.
IF STUDENTS aren't taught to appreciate the value of dissent—and if the administration and Student Senate show them, by example, that dissent should be hidden—it is difficult to see how the distressing circle of suppression can be broken.
By maintaining a happy face, whatever the toll in individual freedoms, Dykes and the rest of the administration are pleasing a largely conservative constituency of Regents, legislators, faculty, students, the public and the press. Despite some rumblings of discontent, the inactive majority seems unwilling to speak up for freedom for the minority that already feels oppressed.
Those who actively contribute to suppression of opinion apparently have not learned a basic lesson that has been taught time and time again through history—that limits on freedom eventually backfire.
What those who remain silent fail to realize is that when they are ready to speak up, they may find their voices unmistakable in maniasms they failed to protest earlier.
THE UNIVERSITY'S pattern of suppression is far more troubling than whatever "unpleasant" facts or opinions the administration may be trying to avoid airing to the public. The University should be more trusting in the public and the Legislature, who are smart enough to realize that no public institution is an untrebled paradise.
By trying to promote a too-pure image of the University, the administration—and those who comply unthinkingly with the public relations push—are setting unrealistically high standards of calmness for KU. When widespread dissent does occur—and it probably will, especially if measures to prevent dissent grow more stringent—the public and the University will be woefully unprepared.
The University could use a healthy dose of the criticism of the late '68s and '70s—but it can't afford the violence. Unfortunately, if administrators refuse to learn from the past, they may be doomed to repeat it.
Widely used in Europe, it taxes goods and services at each step from producer to consumer. Each time a firm increases the value of a commodity, a percentage of that value flows to government coffers as tax.
Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said last week that he would rescue Social Security from bankruptcy with a new tax. A value added tax.
Social Security defrauds taxpayers
It amounts to nothing more than a national sales tax, every cent of which would be paid by consumers. The most obvious aspect of it, however, is the way it conceals itself from those who pay it.
Besides, the Uliman camp is too late. Congress "rescued" *Social Security* by drastically raising payroll taxes. The higher taxes, which take effect Jan. 1, will reduce some workers' paychecks by as much as 300 percent by 1967.
THE TAX rises from its present 6.0 percent on the first $17,100 earner, a maximum tax of $1,071, to 6.13 percent on the first $22,900 next year, a maximum tax of $4,104. By 1997, the tax rate to 1.75 percent on $42,000, a maximum tax of $16,800.
The law, meanwhile, slows the growth of benefits. The maximum payment as a percentage of the above wage limits declines from 34 percent now to 24 percent in 1987. That shift will allow prices to increase.
But Social Security never was a bargain. It linka a particular tux with particular benefits, neither of which was standard.
But yoked together, it is the most sacred of cows.
Those who expose the fraud of Social Security risk attack as反应aries who, without conscience, would condemn grandmothers and orphans to a life of impunity on a diet of Alpo.
Butlet's go at it anyway.
ON THE TAX side, Social Security will involve a 12.26 percent levy on wages up to a maximum of $22,900 next year. The employer matches the worker's 8.13 percent levy on wages and pays half part of his total wage bill, the employee fools the whole bill.
Rick Alm
The poor pay proportionally more of their income to security than do the wealthy. The benefit side, too, favors the rich, who invest in high-quality investments receives full benefits, but a 65-year worker who earns more than a certain salary, receives less.
There you have a regressive payroll tax.
---
Low-income workers, moreover, usually begin work and start paying the taxes at 17 or 18, while upper-income taxpayers often finish graduate school before beginning work at 23 or 24. Poorer workers pay more years, and with compound interest, pay substantially more to receive the same benefits.
And the worker must continue to pay Social Security taxes.
UPPER-CLASS taxpayers also tend to receive benefits for more years because of the demographic fact that they live longer. Social Security's biases, then, work against those with the greatest need.
The fraud, however, comes in the idea that Social Security is an individual purchase of insurance. In fact, no relationship exists between payment and benefits—which makes Social Security a good deal for the old.
Older workers receive larger annuities than their investment would have yielded because they didn't pay taxes during all of their working lives and, when they did pay, it was at lower rates.
For young workers it is a raw deal. Workers below the age of, say, 40, will receive less than 3 percent return on their investment and may have no private annuity or deposited in a bank, they would receive a larger check at age 65 than the government now
promises. The situation only gets worse for young workers as the number of retiree workers and the amount of taxes
TO AVOID THE generational revolt, Social Security should be junied. The payroll tax should be rescinded and no more workers should be made eligible for Social Security. We could not, of course, reage on earlier promises to older Americans, but Social Security should be phased out. The burden for funding benefits, which would decrease to nothing over several decades, should be shifted to general taxes.
The rebellion cannot be far off.
For those who insist that the great unwashed are too shortsighted to provide for their futures without a companion, they are often so.
For those under a certain age—again, say, 40—the government should no longer promise them a retirement income, and all their Social Security payments would be refunded. It would henceforth be their responsibility to purchase the wage increase—the payroll tax refund—to purchase a small egg that offers a higher return than Social security.
No one would be without some old-age protection.
THE GOVERNMENT could establish its own retirement plan and fund it by taxing workers who belong to no private fund. Those who do not provide for them should be taxed directly so do their. These taxes would be used to pay their annuities.
An added advantage of reliance on private pension programs should be noted. Social Security does not add to the nation's savings. Private pension funds, on the other hand, channel money into investments that create jobs.
Under that system, the government forces most workers to buy its retirement plan—the one with the regressive tax and unequal benefits. Workers sink 12 percent of their pension plan that will not provide the return a private annuity offers.
Social Security is fraud of the first order and should be ended.
MAGNLEY
THE DUMMY AND NEWS LEADER.
©1978 BY CHICAGO TIMES.
UH, PASS THE SALT.
It may be hidden beneath the lights, the wrapping paper and the price tags, but
What is so great about this holiday, if it's all a gimmick? That's really not a difficult question.
Christmas memories offset commercialism
What's so great about Christmas, anwav?
And we can't forget about credit card companies and banks, who probably make as much money as anyone. Remember all those buy-now-pay later plans you've heard about? And the Christmas clubs advertised at banks? Well, they have dues.
CHARITIES EVEN exploit the holiday.
Christmas gifts are sold by the thousands.
And what about all those Sants who ring
the bell at Christmas? It is more
it is more blessed to give than to receive.
Think about it, just for a minute. Christmas is a religious holiday—right? Well, not anymore. What is more representative of an American Christmas in the 1780s—a nativity scene or an altar? It looks long white hair and a beard! It's obvious.
AND WHO GETS in that so-called "Christmas spirit" most of all? Not the kids. They leave Christmas each year with a profit. But department store owners are the morrist celebrants of all. Who's going to miss it this year or in October—a good two months before the holiday? Money. The high point in their year comes the day after Thanksgiving.
But then, everyone makes money from Christmas—except the little guy, of course. Department stores and shopping malls rake in the profits by the barefluff in early winter. But look who else makes big bucks.
Greeting card companies, who have a hand in almost every holiday nowadays, push their wares at a feverish pace each Christmas.
But that's only part of it. Look at Santa Claus himself. No matter how often we tell Virginia there really is a Santa Claus, we know it's a lie. There is no fat man at the North Pole who makes a trip vying for each of these Christmas Eve. How ridiculous.
But still we play along with the gag, telling all of the younger children that they better watch out and not pout and yell at them. "Wonderful would they grow up not trusting anyone."
10
Allen Holder
something still shines—not dimly—that makes all those other points seem rather
Remember how difficult it was when you were a child to sleep on Christmas Eve. And thinking the night would never be over. Listening for sounds on the roof. Or maybe sneaking into the living room in the middle of the night to see whether he'd really been there. And always getting up before dawn.
IT'S NOT ALL a gimmick.
It's easy to see what so many people see in Christmas. Look into a 3-year-old's eyes and you see Christmas trees, Christmas morning, or even in a toddler's eyes when he sees a lit Christmas tree.
REMEMBER THE CHRISTMAS card you got last year, and thinking that someone really did care. And think about that Superman necktie you received and not caring that it wasn't really supposed to be a gag gift. And remember searching for just the right gift because it was important.
Underneath it all, no matter how hidden it is, Christmas is a religious celebration. Remember the church programs and the hymns that greet guests And along with the decorations and the candy, remember singing Christmas carols—not only "Jingle Bells" and "Frosty the Snowman," but "No Night Away in a Manger" and "O Holy Night."
Most of all, remember the smiles. A lot of smiles. It's a magic season.
Sure, Christmas is too commercialized. And a lot of people make a lot of money. But who cares about that? It would be hard to think of something to replace Christmas, Good memories and hopes for a happy future.
Remember being in kindergarten and making handprint in clay as a present for them.
Sure, Christmas is a children's holiday. But it's also a holiday for adults.
Cultists assured rights despite Guyana tragedy
To the editor:
In regard to Alex Seagel's letter to the Dec. 6 Kansas, a few comments are in order from at least one member of "the erstwhile apathetic student body."
Certainly the tragedy in Guyana should cause us all to look with some suspicion toward fanatics of all kinds, including the Islamic extremist group, whose suspicion should not lead to an arbitrary persecution of all faiths existing out of the mainstream of American religious life.
Fortunately, even if the University were to take Mr. Seago's suggestion and exclude the Moines from campus, the courts would almost immediately strike the action down as a direct violation of the "free speech" and "free expression" clauses and of the "equal protection" clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Mr. Seago's allegation that Mooney has "little conception of that democratic concept" of free speech suffers not only from redundancy but also from irrelievance. First, redundant freedoms are not to be denied upon failure to pass a test on democratic concents.
It behoves me, i suppose, to declare here that I am not now nor have I ever been a member of the Unification Church. My knowledge on that group is quite limited, so I cannot determine if the group can be classified accurately as a "cult."
Whether the Moonsies, College Republicans, KU Sailing Club members or other "cultists" are "psychological fascists" is also a question that I cannot answer, for I am not certain exactly what a "psychological fascist" actually is.
Is a "psychological fasciit" any different from an ordinary, run-of-the-mill fasciit? Perhaps the term applies to psychology majors who hold reactionary political views and who are fond of wearing black shirts. Most likely they believe that someone who believe a little too strong or who preach a little too persistently a doctrine that most of us cannot accept.
It would be very interesting if Mr. Seago were to lurk beneath Wescoe Hall next semester, preaching against the Moines and psychological fascism. He would not have any difficulty finding a spot to set up his booth. Wescoe has lots of room.
In the meantime, perhaps we should all
KANSAN letters
remember the principle enunciated by Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson while dissenting in Ballard v. United States. Jackson wrote, "The price of freedom of man is the curse or the press is that we must put up with, and even pay lay, a good deal of rubbish."
Whether the views of the Mr. Seagau, or those of the Moonies, or those of those who are rubbish in their own view, are honest, is a question for the reader.
James Clinger
James Clinger Lawrence senior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily through Sunday, through Monday through Thursday. Subscription cost per day: Sunday and holidays. Second-day subscription by mail are $15 for six month subscriptions by mail or $30 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid online.
Editor Steve Frazier
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
5
Teamsters talks to start, terms uncertain
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sed by Jackson States. dom of is that for, a those rubbish anger senior
WASHINGTON (AP)--Like a long-awaited Broadway show, contract talks between the Teamsters union and the trucking industry open this week. But the actors don't seem to have all their lines together so one is sure what turns the plot may take.
Will the nation's largest union adhere to President Carter's anti-inflation program? Will a wage-fringe benefit increase strike? Will the country be spared a disruptive strike by 400,000 Teamsters? Will the government pay a higher rate as a critical test of Carter's inflation fight?
The answers will unfold as bargainers work toward a deadline of March 31, 1979, when the current three-year contract expires.
The talks formally open Thursday with a one-day, ceremonial exchange of general contract proposals that contain no specifics. Then, on the two sides will recess until January.
THE NATIONAL Teamster agreement traditionally is one of the most important labor contracts. An even brighter spotlight on the talks this round because of inflation.
In the past, the Teamsters have won lucrative contracts that have set a wage pattern for other unions. And because trucks haul so many goods—from food to petroleum into the cost of a Teamster contract figures into a broad range of consumer prices.
But now the administration is determined to end the costly contracts that have made Teamsters among the highest-paid hourly workers.
The current Teammate contract raised wages and fringe benefits by more than 11 percent a year. Today, the average Teammate is paid by the national contract about $8.40 an hour and grosses about $20,000 a year, according to government figures.
Several months ago administration officials began meeting with Teamsters and trucking industry officials to stress their desire for a less costly settlement.
So far, 70-year-old Fitzsimmons has refused to pledge his union's compliance with the government's wage guideline. Administration officials are using sweet talk as much as anything else to cajole the union into compliance with the program.
Carter's wage guideline limits to 2 percent a year increases for wages and fringe benefits, such as health insurance and pensions.
But Fitzsimmons has said fringe benefits—which often eat up a third or more of contract costs—should not be counted in the 7 percent figure.
ON FRIDAY, Carter's chief infiltration fightler, Alfred Kahn, praised union leaders as "patriotic and socially responsible" and warned the teammates to cooperate.
In response, the administration has agreed to consider exempting some cost increases required to maintain pension and retiree benefits at lower levels. A decision is expected Wednesday.
(13 E. 8th)
Prime Cut Hair Co.
Merry Christmas
"We want to see what the economy looks like, what's happening to prices first," Ray Schoesling, Teamsters secretary-treasurer, said last week. He said the Union Bank of America and Carter Curters' program was slowing infaction, which now runs about 10 percent a year.
This could free more than one percentage point of the 7 percent guideline for wages—a particular relief for the Teamsters, which may need a large increase in contributions
UNION DEMANDS will include higher wages and benefits and more time off, but Teamster officials insist it too early to decide how to address the situation, decide whether to abide by Carter's guideline.
wishes you
A Merry Christmas
and a
Happy New Year
At a meeting last week TeamMasters leaders distributed copies of proposals to be presented to the industry at the opening of a new facility. Prentice obtained a copy of the proposals, which included changes in many areas of the contract but not economics.
to its Central States Pension Fund, the target of federal charges of mis-
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Specific proposals on money items, the union document said, "will be submitted for negotiation of negotiations" and will be "sufficient to maintain and expand real purchasing power."
industry payrolls--that could be spurred by a costly contract.
Meanwhile, the union will be feeling pressure in pushing for a contract that ignores Carter's guidelines, while there also is a growing trend of non-union workers—now about 30 percent of
The Interstate Commerce Commission, which sets trucking rates, has warned it will not automatically approve rate increases that would cost an expensive contract to consumers.
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Industry officials say Carter aides have been urging the companies to firmly resist high wage demands, even if it means a strike.
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The Boggas Frito and Dillo Digger blaze across the pages—and fail your spectacles—in a tempestuous saga of rapoquois effl amd masters, toroid roller-slotting dragons—and the 'Eternal Quest' of those who are
ARE YOU BORED OF THE RINGS?
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Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
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THIS THURSDAY December 14th OPEN AT 8:00 P.M. SEATS WILL GO FAST!! DOOR SALES ONLY!!
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7th and Massachusetts
---
6
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Thousands of mourners pay last respects to Meir
JERUSALEM (AP)—Tens of thousands of jeremies filed past the flag-drawn coffin of Golda Meir yesterday, bidding her forgiveness in Israel's military and political heroes.
Meir's body lay in state outside the ornately carved doors of the main entrance
Israel's Parliament, the Kneset, President Yitzhak Navon led the first mourners, a small group of relatives and friends, past Sunday. The Kneset were opened yesterday morning.
The 80-year-old Meir died Friday after a 15-year battle against lymphoma, which she
kept secret during her years as prime minister from 1968 to 1974.
hair lords
THE CROWD, many dabbing at tears, lined up outside the Knesset over undercast skies and occasional rain. The crowd, frightened but brushed back they were allowed to enter the plaza and view the coffin, raised on a five-foot catatail raft that tore torches. They were collected for today.
message from the president, saying, "Mrs. Meir dreamed about peace for Israel. what is it we have been struggling to achieve peace will be a wonderful memorial."
showed a young Golda Meir, with a firm jaw and determined gaze.
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braved the night cold to pay their last respects.
Witnesses estimated that 10,000 fled past during the first hour when the gates opened at 10 a.m. The coffin was to remain on view through the night.
Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger; Sen. Muriel Humphrey, D-Mimm; Sen. Daniel Moyhan, D-N.Y.; Sen. Daniel Moyhan, Member U.S. delegation also viewed the bier.
Carolyn Pool — formerly of Gentlemen's Quarters
Valerie Morris — formerly of Gentlemen's Quarters and Lords & Ladies in Wichita
Cindi Sneathen — formerly of Park Hill Plaza Studio
Rick Morris — formerly of Lords & Ladies in Wichita
Debi Keating — formerly of Park Hill Plaza Studio
"I was at the synagogue that day," said Michael, referring to Meir's first meeting with Soviet Jews after returning in 1948 to Jerusalem. "It was a remarkable, emotional moment.
Featuring:
In the late evening, Lillian Carter,
President Carter's mother, arm-in-arm
with a female Israeli solider, slipped
away to meet a moment with bowed head near the coffin.
Upon arriving at the airport, she quoted a
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance was scheduled to attend the funeral before returning to Cairo and resuming talks with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat.
THE ISRAELI army, in charge of funerals
arrangements, said 4,500 persons an hour
One Soviet immigrant, Yoshi Michael, pulled a yellowed photograph of Meir from his wallet, taken during her days as Israel's first ambassador to the Soviet Union. It
One nurse who helped care for her after her cataract operations in 1974 said nurses fought for the chance to attend her: "The woman couldn't see anything, but she went around cheering up other patients in the ward."
While standing in line, mourners discussed in hushed tone their memories of Mama's death.
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Supplies of unleaded gas expected to be tight in '79
WASHINGTON (AP)—Supplies of unleaded gas will probably be tight next year and "market disruptions" are likely by 1882 unless gas prices are lower. By 1904 energy Secretary John F. O'Leary told a congressional committee yesterday.
O'Leary said, however, that current supply problems of four refiners did not reflect a general nationwide shortage of gasoline.
He testified at a Senate Energy Committee hearing that was called to investigate whether the oil industry was manipulating supplies to raise prices.
Shell Oil Co. announced last month that
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But in surveying major refiners, O'Leary said, he found that if demand for motor fuel remained as high as it had been and stocks are not repressed, "supplies might be tight by next summer. . . There may be to be a very tight tailored market."
OLEARY SAID an Energy Department investigation showed that the problems of these refiners appeared to be unique and not because of a technical indication of a general supply shortage.
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He said refiners were producing all the gasoline they needed but, "American automakers import conserviv.
This year, he said, unleaded gasoline makes up 36 percent of the gasoline market. By 1980, that figure is expected to rise to 50 percent.
IN 1972, he said, there was no unleaded gasoline, which is sold primarily to meet increasingly tough federal environmental standards.
MANY MOTORISTS who bought new 1977 cars believe they drive smoothly only with high-octane, unleaded gasoline. This technology also made now sold by Shell and two other producers.
As explained by O'Leary and oil companies, the result of an extraordinarily warm fall this year and unexpected problems with the air supply of unleaded gasoline was the result of an extraordinarily warm fall this year and unexpected problems with the air supply of unleaded gasoline.
The Carter administration has made no formal proposal to Congress for deregulating gas prices, but legislation expected to go to Capitol Hill next year.
In addition, because of the way federal price controls worked this year, Shell was required to sell its best unleased gas 3 days a week at the price charged by most other producers.
As a result, O'Leary said, the low cost, compared to other refiners, turned Shell into a "candy store" in the gasoline market.
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University Dally Kansan
Tuesday, December 12. 1978
7
Calmese seeks glory for women
By CARLOS MURGUIA
Sports Writer
KU's best bet in track for the 1980 Olympics is also an American record holder.
Part of the reason for obscurity may be that the athlete is a woman.
"I don't think it's fair," Sheila Calmese.
AFC ready; NFC muddy for playoffs
By the Associated Press
The American Football Conference playoff teams are all set. In the National Conference, the only sure thing seems to be that mediocrity will be represented.
With one weekend left in the National Football League regular season, most of the AFC will be playing for next year's salary negotiations and positions in the college draft order. Houston and Miami, each 10-5, are set to play in the national home field in the Dc. 24 first round. West Division champ Denver 10-5, East winner New England 11-4 and Central tiltlist Pittsburgh 13-2 are tuning up for the Dec. 30-31 second round. The Steelers, assured of the conference's best record, have guaranteed a spot in the field as long as they live in the playoffs.
THE NFC REMAINS scrambled with Minnesota and Green Bay each 8-4-1 in contention for the Central Division title—and along with Atlanta 9-6, Washington and Philadelphia each 8-7—in the race for a wild card as well.
Dallas 11-4 has won the East Division title and the Rams 11-3 the West.
With the addition this year of two more post-season berths, 10 of the 23 teams more than 36 percent of the league, is in the playoffs. And it is possible that the Vikings with the poorest team can get in the playoffs with the poorest record for a post-season team in NFL history.
If Minnesota loses its final game, it can still win the NCFC Central Green Bay loses too. The Vikings would division bumps with an 8-7-1 record, a .531 percentage. That's lower than the low-water mark of the Baylor Bears League Boston Patriots and Buffalo Bills, who tied for the Eastern Division title at 7-6-1, a .538 percentage.
Even if Minnesota wins to finish at 9-1, the Vikings' .594 percentage will exceed only the Ruffalo-Boston .538 mark and the team's best in the playoffs. The Vikings and the 1970 Cincinnati Bengals.
Next weekend's games involving AFC playoff teams are Pittsburgh at Denver on Saturday, San Diego at Houston on Sunday and New England at Miami on Monday night.
the athlete, says,"that a man and woman can both accomplish the same thing athletically but the man receives all the recognition."
Calmeese could have a point. Probably few Calmeese are aware that since coming to KU three years ago, she has broken several Big Eight and KU track records.
Calmese holds the Big Eight and KU records in the 60-year dash (±69.3) and 100-meter (11.8) and indoor, at the 100-meter 200-49.9 and 200-59.9 races. She was All-American in 1977 and 1978 and finished third at last year's Association of Athletics Departments meeting outdoors meet in the 100 and fourth in the 299
CALMESE ALSO is a two-time defending Big Eight champion in the indoor 60 and 300 and the outdoor 100 and 200. No one else has won the four races for two years in a row.
She said she didn't think the lack of recognition of her achievements or of her career was important.
"Women's athletics just doesn't receive as much recognition as does men," she said. "Some of the best women track stars are known by their own fellow athletes."
The lack of publicity, however, will not
influence the trying out for the 1980
Olympic track team.
Assistant women's track coach Theo Hamilton, who has helped train Cainese, was the new face of U.S. tennis.
PETER LEE
Sheila Calmese
"Shella has been working very hard in practice this year," Hamilton said. "She's always had talent but now she's starting to learn more about it." She's one of the best sailors in the nation.
team in either the 100 or 200.
Colorado Springs. The invitation was based in part on the American record she set last summer, when her group won at the nationals.
"WHATEVER IT TAKES for Shelia to get to the top, I think she can do it."
"In that race, I had everything under control," Calmese said. "Funny thing is that I probably could have run even faster but I let u a little at the end."
In preparation for the Olympics, Calmse,
this summer, was invited to attend a
meeting of the American Soccer Co-
Calmise she attributed her success in track to natural talent, rigorous training, a good attitude and being able to perform under pressure.
"I guess I have a little more speed than others," she said, "but what makes the biggest difference between myself and others is really train hard."
Although she has been successful so far, calmness said she didn't think that winning a game would be easy.
A WINNER IS AN individual who can consistently improve her time and always
"You run expecting the worst," Calmese said, "You might run a bad race and someone else might run an extraordinary race. You can't run an extraordinary race and remember each race is different."
Calmese said she had improved her running noticeably since coming to KU, and she attributed the changes to coaching, training and experience.
"When I was in high school, and my first year here," she said. "I was still learning technique, but actually improving my running and running better. I think I'm becoming a true sprinter."
Carr chooses Wichita to ward off recruiters
WICHTIA/ (UP1)—A 6-8 high school All-American player, hoping to end massive recruiting pressure, announced yesterday he planned to attend Wichita State University to play basketball next year.
Antoine Carr, one of the nation's most highly sought seniors, said he wants to play with his brother James on the WSU football team and Stephenson. Even though Carri cannot sign himself of intent until April, he announced the choice to try to get recruits to leave him alone to concentrate on playing his national or high school ball for Wichita Heights.
University of Kansas to join former Wichita Heights coach Lafayette Norwood and ex-teammate Darnell Valentine. Carr said he had narrowed his choices to Kansas and Wichita State before he made the decision.
Since Carr's sophomore year there had been speculation he would attend the
"I'm still close to Coach Norwood." Carr said. "I have nothing against KU, but when I was growing up I always wanted to play with my brother somewhere. I see a national contender at Wichita State. Hopefully I can help them get to the top level. Coach Smithson is a great person."
Carr as a sophomore averaged 14 points and 14.5 rebounds to help Heights to the state 54 championship.
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Tuesday, December 12, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Darnell, Crawford lead KU, Big Eight statistics
Darnell Valentine, KU's hot shooting hand this young season, is riding high in the Big Eight Conference statistics this week.
With Valentine at point guard, the Jayhawks are 1- and ranked No. 8 in the country. Their only loss came Saturday to Kentucky. 67-46 on newtie.
Valentine is fourth in scoring with 10 points a game. He also is first in steals, 3.6 a game; second in assists, 5.8; and third in field goal percentage, 63%.
Teammate Johnny Crawford leads the league in shooting from the field, hitting 13.6 percent. He is averaging 13.6 points, 14th in the leagues, and is fourth in blocked shots
Paul Mokeski leads in blocked shots, knocking down three a game, and is 10th in rebounding.
Other players in the stats are Tony Guy, 15th in scoring with 13.4 points, fourth in steals with 1.6, and 10th in assists with 3.2. Moe Fowler, tied for with Guy in steals with 1.6, in ninth free throw percentage with 78 percent.
David Magley, copping the ball four times, is ninth in steals.
The league's leading scorer is Mark Tucker of Oklahoma State, who is averaging 21.3 points an outing.
Despite Kanas' high standing, the Jayhawks don't lead any conference statistics. The Jayhawks are outscoring them and are hitting 50 percent of their shots.
KU's next game is 7:35 p.m. Saturday against Southern Methodist University in Allen Field House.
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Thursday— Concert/Dance featuring MORNINGSTAR with the Gary Charlson Band.
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The Lawrence Opera House and 9th Spirit Club
Hectic semester of hirings, games leaves sports editor's eyes bleary
Saturday, Dec. 30 with COLE TUCKEY
FAST BREAK
And popular Don Fambrouch returned from exile as a fund-raiser to replace Bud Moore as head football coach. Moore was relieved—fired—for being a poor recruiter, a losing coach and an unpopular man with the alumni who feed the sports program.
Tickets available soon!!
It was about 18 weeks ago—as we started putting together the back-to-school sports section—the bags began to form under our guidance, but I think they are etched there permanently.
Two new coaches; Terry Hudsons replaced Stan Narewski on the men's track staff after Narewski left for Furman's greener pastures (and better track facilities).
But bleary eyes or no bleary eyes, it's been an impossibly hectic few months. So much for half of my supposedly memorable days. And a few of the big things that I do remember.
FAMBROUGH, WHOM Moore replaced in 1974, is a jovial man, who reportedly has quieted down most of the screening alumni. The press, coaches, players and others like him, and he ought to be off to a good . . . well, at least to a better . . . start.
Bob Marcum, who likes to be called "Bob", moved in as athletic director. Taciturn Clyde Walker, who didn't like to be called at all, left for North Carolina.
I am very grateful to you.
Football equipment manager Larry Trowbridge popped up at practice on
THERE WERE personal disappointments and thrills in the football season, I was disappointed that, after covering Jayhawk football for three years as a correspondent and editor, I was out of the state when Moore was fired.
But then, I won the Kansan's piskinpick'me contest by a game over my associate, Nancy Dressler, Dressler, who had been a campus editor Dan Bowerman by a game.
Legislature and Gov. Robert F. Bennett gave them slim pickin' on the budget.
Halloween dressed as Dracula. Mention of his escapade was made in Sports Illustrated, just before the magazine the pallor of KU's loss to Nebraska.
The field hockey team stretched its budget and advanced as far as the regional tournament. The women's cross country team went to nationals for the first time.
INSIDE SPORTS
Women's basketball, the biggest item in the women's budget, started the season ranked No. 8 in one poll and now are 6-3 and No. 16. Lynette Woodard has been nothing short of awesome, averaging 30.6 points and 15.3 rebounds a game.
The Big Eight didn't turn out exactly as I predicted it would in an early column. Thank goodness I won't lose too many beers in wagers. I picked: Oklahoma, Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota, Kansas State, Oklahoma State. Fate picked: NU,OU,isuMU,CU,KSU,OKU,KU
DIANNA BEERE borrowed money and worked as a custodian to help pay the expenses of her field hockey team after she was fired in 2013, so fund it. Money was tight all over after the
Leon Unruh
the Kings got Phil Ford. They're winning.
The Chiefs have won four games. That's probably a surprise, but it's a pleasant one. Let's hear it for ancient offenses.
The Royals won their division, Oh, how I would have liked to have been the first Kansan editor to cover a World Series in Kansas City . . .
The rbuphy team, 17.3, was second in the Heart of America tournament, and will cap its finest year with a January tour through Scotland and Ireland.
NEW YORK (AP) -- Duke retained the top spot in The Associated Press Top Twenty college basketball poll, receiving 56 of a possible 60 first-place votes.
But then, men's basketball hasn't been doing so badly, either. Now No. 8 after losing to Kentucky, the Hawks are 4-1. Their season if they play as they did in Lexington, may be the biggest story of the semester to come.
The Blue Devils overcame the slowdown tactics of LaSalle to win their only game of the week 66-42 and improve their record to 50.
Duke holds on as No.1 team
Duke finished with 1,196 points from the nationwide committee of writers and sportswriters.
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Notte Dame, with 1,084 points and three first-place votes, moved into second place, and then to third place.
Michigan State. 92-89 winners over Fullerton Western, won spot on the top seeds in three of four NCAA tournaments.
Kentucky, an upset winner over Kansas,
moved into fifth place with 83 points. The
Wildcats, last year's national champion,
moved up from 10th place.
Illinois and Indiana State, both 6-0, are in the Top Twenty for the first time this season.
'Hawks drop to 8th
Completing the Top Ten were North Carolina State points, Kansas 722, Michigan 610, Utah 545.
LOUISVILLE made the biggest jump of the teams in last week's poll, finishing with 930 points, and moving from seventh to fourth place.
NEW YORK UFIU-1 The United Press International
NYU Press UFIU-1. Send proofs with first place votes and records to Saturn-
Tower, 400 W. 58th St., New York, NY 10017.
Points
563
533
460
431
389
389
292
265
237
237
188
141
138
103
68
68
31
27
27
27
1. Duke 5-4 (33)
2. Notre Dame 7-6 (12)
3. Louisiana 4-0 (11)
4. Louisville 1-4 (11)
5. Kentucky 6-3 (12)
6. North Carolina St. 1-4
7. Alabama 1-4 (11)
8. Michigan 3-1 (12)
9. Syracuse 5-0 (12)
10. Syracuse 5-0 (12)
11. So. California St. 4-0
12. Georgetown 6-0 (12)
13. Indiana St. 6-0 (12)
14. Oklahoma 7-6 (12)
15. Long Beach St. 4-0 (11)
16. Illinois 3-0 (12)
Note: By agreement with the American Basketball Association, the U.S. Academy is intending for the top 20 and national championship candidates for 1978 to be the Team currently ranked by the AP. The Arizona State team for 1978 is the Team currently ranked by the AP. Arizona and Akron-Auburn University of Idaho are on the same team.
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University Dallv Kansan
Tuesday, December 12. 1978
9
Local theater history told
Staff Reporter
BY LYNN WILLIAMS Staff Reporter
A man who worked in and managed Lawrence movie theaters half a century ago is now making his mark.
Emory Scott, 69, 1921 Vermont S. says he is writing the book because he is probably the author of the book.
"One thing that is making my book difficult to write is that the old-timers are disappearing fast," he said. "Only a few are still living who can remember the various facts and information, so I have had to do a lot of research."
He has managed each of the five theaters that have existed in Lawrence.
Scott, who is now the major owner of Scott Temperature Equipment Co., 1815 Bullene Ave., was at different times an usher, advertising artist and manager of theaters in Lawrence and other Kansas towns since the 1920s.
IN HIS BOOK, "One Hundred Years in Lawrence Theater," he traces the history of entertainment in Lawrence, beginning with vaudeville acts and figures such as Horace Greeley, who appeared at the Bowersock House, now the Lawrence Opera House.
"Susan B. Anthony made one of her fiery speeches there," he said.
The Bowersock Opera House, which is on the corner of the first meeting hall in Lawrence, was opened in 1970.
In the 1800s, great opera which played in Kansas City and Denver played there, he began.
The old opera house was gutted by fire in 1811, and the modern concrete, brick, and stone building was built.
Before Scott entered the movie business, he booked vaudeville acts for 14 years. But he never made it big.
"It was like a factory closing down," he said. "There just was much activity on the road."
SCOTT'S ATTITUDE that "it's all part of show business" attracted him to movie theater management. But he entered the industry, barely out of love for the entertainment industry.
"You do what you know how to do," he said.
Because he had learned every facet of the theater business from ushering to running the projector in his pre-auduville youth, he decided to take up movie theatre work.
Five different theaters in Lawrence—the Orpheum, across from the Douglas County Center, the Varsity, the Granada; the Pates, into arcade next to J.C. Penney Co.; and the Bowersock, now the Lawrence Opera management at various times in the 1920s and 1930s.
"Prices for tickets varied, depending on the quality of the movie," he said.
They also varied according to the time of day. The dinner price was a dime; evening shows cost a quarter.
SCOTT ALSO MANAGED theaters in
1
Abilene, Osawatomie, Independence and Kansas City, Kan. In Kansas City and Abilene, he said, he charged 50 cents for a car accident in which he was special movies like "Gone With the Wind."
Happy Birthday D.L.A. With Love, J.K.S.
Blacks sits in the upper balcony at most Lawrence theatres, he said. They were not allowed in the Patee or in the Granada during its first years, he said.
The days before $2.50 movie prices also were the days of racial segregation.
The Patee had no balcony and offered low-budget westerns for a dime.
Concession stands first came to Lawrence movie theaters about 1940. Scott said, "It was a kind of thing."
"If you wanted a coke, you went next door to a drug store," he said. "In fact, in the case of alcohol, you should allow drinks inside. This was probably because they wanted to protect the chairs."
in those days. There were no candy bars sold in the theaters.
This book is not Scott's first. He has written and published a book on fishing exploits called "Hurry Up Homer" and a guide to the air conditioning business called "One Furrow One Faith, It Takes Two to be Number One."
"Writing, fishing and golf have kept me too busy to see a movie for five years," he said.
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Hanukkah 3; 20: 19 Documentary Edward Asner serves as host and narrator for this celebration of the Jewish festival of Hanukkah. Asner explains the significance of the holiday and its customs.
Nobel 1978 Prize Awards 11, 19; 8:00 A look at the 11 men whose achievements in the sciences, literature, and diplomacy have earned them the world's most prestigious award. This documentary includes taped coverage of the December 10 awards in Stockholm and Oslo.
Movie—"I Alm At The Stars" 10:30 When Nazis take over Germany, rock expert is ordered to develop missiles for America and goes to work for U.S. Army. Curt Jurgens, Victoria Shaw. 1960.
EVENING
5:30 ABC News 2,9
NBC News 8,27
CBS News 3,13
Rookies 41
6:00 News 2,5,9,13,27
Cross Wits 4
MacNeil/Lehreer Report 19
6:30 That Nashville music 2
Beauty Show 4
Match Game PM 5
Dating Game 9
Kansas City Strip 19
Mary Tyler Moore 27
Newlywed Game 41
7:00 Happy Days 2,9
Creative Geography To Washington 4
Paper Chase 5
Soundstage 11
Bionic Woman 13
Once Upon A Classic
King O Gypsies Premiere Party
Tic Tac Dough 41
7:30 Laverne & Shirley 2,9
Julia Child & Company 19
Joker's Wild 41
8:00 Three's Company 2,9
Movie—"A Woman Called
Moses" 4,27
Movie—"The Jordan Chance" 5,
13
Movie—"The Man Who Never
Was" 6"
1978 Nobel Prize Awards 11,19
Movie—"The Far Country" 41
8:30 20
9:30 Starcky & Hutch 2,9
9:30 On The Road For Peace 11
Hanukkah 19
10:00 News 2, 4, 5, 9, 13, 27
Dick Cavett 19
Love Experts 41
10:30 Movie "Smash-Up On Interstate 5"
Johnny Carson 4, 27
Streets of San Francisco 5
Mary Tyler Moore 9
ABC News 11, 19
Barnaby Jones 13
Star Trek 41
11:00 Bob Newhart 9
Dick Cavett 19
Dick Eicher Report 19
11:30 Man from U.N.C.L.E. 6
Movie "Smash Up On Interstate 5"
9
Flash Gordon 41
11:40 Movie "You Can't Win Em All"
13
12:00 Tomorrow 4,27
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Phil Silvers 41
12:30 News 2
Movie——"Story Of Three Loves" 5/
Best of Groucho 41
1:00 Story Of Jesus 2
News 4
Movie——"The Far Country" 41
2:30 News 2
Movie——"Dick Tracy vs.
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2:40 Art Linkletter 5
3:00 Dick Van Dyke 41
4:00 Andy Griffith 41
Cable Channel 10 has continuous news and weather
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10
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
University Daily Kansan
2 photography exhibits show changes in style
Photography buffs have two viewing options in campus galleries this month: photographic exhibits in both the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art and the Student Union Activities gallery in the Kansas Union.
An exhibit of "Early Topographic and Documentary Photography" opened last week in the South Balcony Gallery of Spencer Museum. The photographs have been collected from University and area sources by Thomas Southall, curator of history, and instructor of history, and by graduate senior students.
Southern said recently that the Spencer exhibit illustrated a wide variety of ways in which photography was used as a recording device between 1850 and 1910.
The Spencer exhibit includes several new additions to the Museum photography collection, such as 1867 photographs by Theodore Gardner, a Civil War photographer.
ACCORDING TO SOUTLAIN, viewers can see a progression in technique and visual styles from the earlier series, featuring the American Indian, also shows a change in attitude toward women.
The Spencer exhibit will remain on display until Feb. 4.
The SUA exhibit features photographs by Walker Evans that were taken when he was a member of the staff of Fortune and the southeast desulfurized Evans as a maverick.
Southall said the most recent photographs in the exhibit showed a shift from simple graphic recording to an active crusading effort by photographers for social change. He said the SUA was a fundamental part of what was a logical extension of this effort.
Evans is most famous for his work in the book, "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men," by James Agree. The book discusses the effects of the Depression in the rural poor.
The Evans exhibit will close on Dec. 20.
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Good dogs help raccoon hunters
Two men tramped slowly through dense woods at night.
By JAKE THOMPSON
Staff Reporter
They wore headlamps, similar to those of coal miners, and many layers of metal.
Suddenly, about 50 yards away, a dog peled.
Next to the man another dog, wearing a cowbell, joined in the barking and ran for a few yards.
"Sage has got a strike." Bruce Bertwell,
of the one men, said. "That's a coon he's
The two men hurried toward the barking dog. A raccoon hunt was on.
Then, the barking from the first dog changed, sounding as if it were far away.
"sage is in a hole," Bertwell said, "that no
sage is in a den hot or we never'll get that"
sage.
The other man, Jim Hale, said, "Maybe we got luck, and baptized him down the river."
Hale and Bertwell are Kansas State game protectors.
They were raccoon hunting on a night off. They, like many raccoon hunters, spend much of their free time wandering in the woods for night, ignoring the cold and the brambles.
THE BRAMBLES WERE plentiful that night and as the men hurried on, a third dog, Buck, began to howl. Rivers, the dog with a scarcely visible back and仁 into what in his path.
The two men and two dogs stopped on a ridge by a pond. Sage was about four feet underground, growing occasionally between his incassent barking.
"Hey, Iey a coon a coin," Hale said. "Hear
that, come on. Bruce, old Saga has got a
horn."
The two men listened intently, while shining their headdips down a hole, to Sage and the raconte's growl. Rivers and Buck stued above ground and howled.
"get him, Sage," Bertwell said. "Bring him out of there, he's looking right at you."
For the next 15 minutes, Bertwell, Hale and the three dogs tried to coax the raccoon from his underground retreat. The note level rose as the two men yelled, the dogs barked, the bell clanged and the raccoon rrowled.
The combination filled the night with an eerie noise.
Hale and Bertwell repeatedly yelled encouragement to Sage when it sounded as if he were fighting with the raccoon. Rivers went underground twice, but Bertwell called him out, saying the dog was adding to the confusion.
THE HEADLAMP lights, called wheat lights, flashed back and forth as the two
"We might as well give up because that coon's backed into a hole and his business is forward," Bertwell said, meaning the raccoon's sharp teeth and claws.
Finally, after constant clatter, Bertwell called Sage out and put him on a leash.
All five walked further into the woods, searching for more raccoons.
men tried to look down into the few small holes. Betrew looked heed, 32 uniform rife.
Bertwell and Hale spent about five hours that night, Nov. 21, wandering in woods in Shawnee County, hoping their dogs would pick up a scent and chase a raccoon into a tree. Once the raccoon is treed, the men decide whether it large enough to snatch.
But the dogs found only one other scent. They charged off howling, yet their efforts stirred only leaves and the chilly night air—not a raccoon.
Racoon hunters use "coon bounds" to track raccoons. Herbert said the sport is dangerous.
The "kill season" for raccoon, the only raccoon who raccoons can be killed, benign, but deadly.
"Cooch hunting depends entirely on your dogs," Bertwell said. "If your dogs are worthless you can be out there all night and get nothing but cold."
Bertwell and Hale call themselves "walking hunters," which means they follow the dogs or to lead them in a reaction where they think raccoons might be.
"Cooch hunting is the most novel form of hunting I know, because of the way you have to move around it. You can do mostly at night," Bertwell said. "You see things differently at night than you do on a sunny day."
Raccoons usually stay in dense woods, near water and their near den树 or tree丹 hortt. Bertwell said. Den trees and holes are low space spaces where raccoons hide and live.
SOME HUNTERS let their dogs out and sit in their automobiles until the dogs have a
But walking behind the dogs is not the only way to hunt raccoons.
Others ride mules through the forest and keep closer to the dogs than walking hunters
Still others let the dogs out on one side of a forest, drive to the other side and wait for the telling cry of a treeing dog, Bertwell said.
After training a dog for several years, "you really appreciate them when they go straight after a coon and tree him," Bert-well said.
At all times the relationship between the hunter and his dog is close, he said.
Bertwell said raccoon hunters went hunting primarily at night because wests
are nocturnal mammals and sleep during the day. He said they are tracked by two different types of dogs: "hot-nosed" or "cold-nosed" dogs.
HOT-NOSED DOGS, like Bertelw's Sage, follow warm scents better and move quickly with their heads up. Because they have their noses down, they almost lose the scent and have to backtrack.
Cold-nosed dog tracks better on old scents and move with two paws on either side of the trail, their noses to the ground. Betwalt says that reason, was the most accurate tracker.
"Take old Sage, when the track gets hot and he's close to that coon he barks with every breath and his 'he burnin' up the turf," he said. "He's going to try to catch that coon on the ground. But Rivers, he just plods along and gets the job done right."
The dogs often suffer bruises from their battles with raccoons, Bertwell said, and occasionally a raccoon will kill a dog. A raccoon can be a man if he is trying to grab them, he said.
"A raccoon can be a vicious fighter, especially in water," Bertwell said. "But if you give one half a chance he'll趴你 too, you won't. But if you give him one he'll climb his own bicep to bite your hand."
Much of the enjoyment of "coon hunt" is in the training and quality of the dogs, he said. Prices range from $75 for a pup to $1,500 for a fully trained "finished dog."
HOWEVER, BERTWELL said, killing a raccoon is not the important part of raccoon
Training schools are used by some hunters, Bertwell said, but most dogs are trained by older, more experienced dogs during the hunt.
Young dogs gain experience during another season, the running season, when it is illegal to kill raccoons. There are 12 weeks from Feb. 7 to March 15, and July 15 to October 20.
Hunters train dogs during the running season to chase only raccoons and not other game. Other game, such as deer, opossum, fox or heaver, are called trash, Bert-well said.
"You don't want a dog who chases trash or 'else he'll tree every animal he smells and chase deer for miles,' he said. "If he chases you, it won't see him for a couple of days."
"WHEN I TOOK an interest in coon hounds about five years ago, I read everything I could get my hands on about them. And I wonder what they do with coons just amazes me.
"When a hound leans down to pick up a scent, his face forms a disc, which in effect forms a funnel for scent, much as a radar gathers sound waves. I truly believe that."
Bertwell said there were six breeds of
dogs used for raccoon hunting that are registered with the United Kennel Club. They are: treeing walkers, black tans and turtles. These dogs also hunt birds, hounds and redbone coon hounds.
Each breed and every dog has its own personality, and the hunter quickly learns the dogs particular bark and what it means, Bertwell said.
Besides enjoying the hunt, raccoon hunts can make money.
Bertwell and many others around Lawrence take their raccoon furs to Clarence Wales, who manages Wales Raw Furs. 923 Department Store.
Trends in the fur coat business determine the value of fur, he said.
Wales checks the fur for size and for quality, based on color, condition and age of the racoon. He pays the hunter between $3 and $36 for a racoon fur. Wales said racoon furs that were about 28 inches and dark-colored brought the highest prices.
Wales skins all the furred animals brought to him, then sends them to New York City or Winnipeg, Canada, to a stock sale.
"RIGHT NOW lighter furs are in the biggest demand because they make lightweight coats," he said. "The big style is for short, lightweight coats and those movie stars out there in Hollywood are buying just loads of them."
He said he usually gets about 2,000 raccoon
raises and sells them on the internet.
"There are more than 200 grades of coon in international trading and between 38 and 50 states."
Wales said he experienced a Christmas rush of furs about eight to 12 days before Christmas. Many of the hunters freeze their furs and sell them at that time so they will have extra money for Christmas presents, Wales said.
"During that rush, the floor is covered two or three feet deep, and you can hardly get up."
Bertwell said much of the money was put back into raccoon hunting.
He said hunters were constantly trying to teach their dogs to track and tree better. Sometimes that means buying and extinguishing or paying for hours of additional training.
HAIL SAID HE was always looking for a better dog than the ones he had, but not hotter. "He's a little bit more."
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Glover said the legislators sent out more than 70 invitations to groups and indies.
Douglas County's representatives to the Legislature will hold a public meeting. 20 to 10 give organizations that normally do not lobbyist a chance to discuss their needs.
The legislators are State Rep. John Vogel, 43rd District; State Rep. Mike Glover, 44th District; State Rep. John Solbach, 45th District; and State Rep. Arnold Berman.
Lobbying needs to be discussed at local meeting
The meeting will be from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Dec. 20 in the auditorium of the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
State representatives from the 43rd, 44th and 45th Legislative Districts and the area's state senator will be at the meeting, which will be filled as a legislative platform hearing.
were trying to give organizations without an organized lobbyist a chance to tell their ideas to the legislators before the 1979 session starts on Jan. 8." Glover said.
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Tuesday, December 12, 1978
11
Winter chills fish farming
Staff Renorter
By HENRY LOCKARD
Walt Massey stood outside the metal garage at his farm and looked out over his seas of crops. The sun reflected off the pastures and the wind kneaded their surfaces. On a cold November afternoon Massey was thinking about the repair work he'd get done during a long, hard winter that was on its way.
Massey, manager of Kaw Valley Fish Farms, Route 3, led the way past hanging rubber boots and giant fishing nets, called seines, to his office inside the garage. The air smelled dank and stale. Bags and boxes of feed were to blame for that, as were the 88.5 acres of water that stood in one-to-four-acre ponds on the Valley Farm.
Inside his office, Massey sat in a swivel and unfolded a metal chair for his visitor.
"Right now things are kind of slow around
he said. "Now's when we do our repair
work."
"Things'll start bustin' out after May 15. We'll start nesting fish for the following year and moving brood stock. We're quite busy during the warmer months between the early spring and the late fall. They make up for the quiet days in the winter time."
MASSEY HA SEEN managing the farm for Ozark Fisheries, which is headquartered in Stouland, Mo. for 11 years. He said that the main problems were the main problems of a fish farmer.
"The power went out one time and we lost several thousand fish from these runs because the oxygen pumps quit," he said. "They suffocated."
Massey, in his 50s, is one of the younger fish farmers around. The pioneers of the business in Kansas—Bus Hartley, who farms 600 acres of water in Kingman, and Vernon Krabbel, who farms 500 acres of Prairie Pretty—began almost 30 years ago.
Massey said he probably was among the last to get into the business because the costs of developing a fish farm now were "astronomical."
Kansan ceases fall publication
The Fall 178 Kanse will cease publication with this issue. The business office and the newsroom will be closed until orientation begins. In addition, the Kanse will resume publication Jan. 17.
-KANSAN-
On Campus
Events
TODAY: A COMPUTER ASSISTED INSTRUCTION SEMINAR by Edward Mattila will be held at 4 p.m. in the Computer Services Auditorium. A STUDENT RECITAL will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Spooner Hall. A PIANO DOCTORAL HOUR will be held at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. A DISCUSSION on the "Subtitutes of Racism" by Carl Leblen will be at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union. A DISCUSSION of "Gay Rights" by Mike Storms will be in the Fine Room of the Union. KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jawkaway Room of the Union, THE Helen Forsman Spencer Museum of Art. A CIVIL ENGINEERS SENIORS LUNCHEON will be held at noon in the Centennial Room of the Union. The BLACK FACULTY & STAFF COUNCIL will meet at 3 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. AN ANTHROPOLOGY HUMAN POPULATION LECTURE on "Genetic Epidemiology" by Theodore Reich will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: SIGMA PSI will meet at 2 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. A FORUM on the "State of KU Libraries" will be held at 14:45 a.m. in the ECM center, 1204 Frost Avenue, LECTURE by Paul F. Hoffman on the "Stratigraphic and Structural Development of Alacuogens" will be held at an 426 Floor in the KU GO CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of Union. The SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors B and C of the Union.
meat at 8 p.m. in 124 Robinson Gymnasium.
FRIDAY: LATIN AMERICAN
SUPPORTIVE COMMITTEE will meet at
12:30 p.m. in the Room of the Union. A
SUMMARY ON PROMOTION of
Small Mammals sponsored by the KU
division of biological sciences will start at
1 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. The
MAMMAL BOMB will meet at 4 p.m. in the
Sunflower Room of the Union. The KU
FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet in 173
Robinson Gymnasium.
THURSDAY: KU SKYDYNING CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in 129 Robinson College
SATURDAY: THE ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE will meet at 2 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. The OPERATIONAL SASO BARD OF DIRECTORS will meet at 2 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 20: The OPERATIONAL CHILDREN'S MAGIC SHOW will be at 1 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
"There's no way in hell you can build a fish farm today and have it pay for itself," he said. "Construction d'run you from $40 to $1,200 and the cost of land is about $2,000 an acre."
THURSDAY, DEC. 21: KU SKYDIVING
will meet at 8 p.m. in 124 Rohinson
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FRIDAY, DEC. 22; KUF DANCE
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WED, DEC. 29. THE NAVY ROTC
AWARDS BATTLE OF LIBERTY a l.a.m.
in the Centennial Room of the Union.
Massey said farming fish for food was not the best business. He farms mostly bait fish-shiners and minnows.
"PEOPLE'LL SPEND more for bait that they will for food," he said.
Stan Hudson has been in the business 30 years. Hudson is co-owner of the H and D Fish Farm in Cheney. His partner, John Smith, owns the Chambers Commercial Fish Growth Associates.
Hudson and Daniels farm both bait fish and catfish. The catfish are sold for food.
"I think the economics of snack minimes are better," Hudson said. "Food fish are more expensive."
Farmers sell fish when they reach two or three pounds, which usually takes a year to a year and a half, depending on pond conditions.
Most Kansas farmers who sell fish for food raise catfish.
According to the USDA, 3000 pounds of feed—which is either in pellet or mash form and is made of corn, soy beans and oil food—is supplied to 5000 pounds of fish that can be sold for food.
By comparison, it takes 4,000 pounds of feed to produce 1,000 pounds of hogs. And cattle average 1,000 pounds gained for every 8,000 pounds feed.
HOWEVER, MORE parts of the hog and cattle are consumed than are parts of the fish. Also, the percentage of fish imported from the U.S. is lower than the percentage of imported beef or pork.
The USDA estimates that the 177 crop of fish raised on farms was 100 million pounds. Last year, more than 100 million pounds of fish were imported.
Fish sold on the meet market have to be priced competently with other meats, which holds down the price. Also, when a fish is processed, 50 percent of its weight is lost.Currently, fish sells for an average of two dollars a pound.
Massey said he raised minows because the minow market wasn't as competitive. He said it took nearly 300 minows to make him work. So he says, he sells minows (for $10 a pound).
The USDA says the food aspect of fish farming is improving because of declining game fish populations and recent legislation proposed to help fish farmers.
The departments of Interior, Commerce and Agriculture have proposed a National Aquaculture plan that would provide intra- and inter-state access to aquaculture at both state and local levels.
According to the proposed plan, development of the fish farming industry would be just a fraction of the plan, which is equivalent to an equipment of a variety of salt water food sources.
In response to declining game fish populations, not only would fish for food be more in demand, but a third branch of the ecosystem would also catch—would become more popular.
Don Otto, Route 3, Baldwin, owner of Don Otto Fish Farm, has raised fish in 25 of its buildings.
Although farm farming isn't Otto's only business, he has made his farm a popular place with rural Eudora and Badwijn who pay a fee to catch fish from his ponds.
Otto said, "People'll pay more money to fish and catch them than they will to just buy them."
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The men's and women's athletics departments might merge soon because plans for a union of the two departments were announced at the helm, executive vice chancellor, said Friday.
Athletics to merge soon
"I think our hope is that we will have a recommendation ready to present to the chancellor by the end of December or very early in January," Shankel said.
The proposal will be implemented next semester if Chancellor Archie R. Dykes asks for it.
"We should begin implementation immediately and try to have it completely done by the start of the next fiscal year," Shankel said.
Administrators hope that a merger wouls strengthen the women's program and cut administrative costs.
The University's next fiscal year begins July 1, 1979.
University and athletics department administrators have been working all semester on a plan to help a financially struggling women's program survive.
Sankhar said he could not reveal all the specifics of the proposal until the change was finalized.
However, he did say the departments of sports information, business affairs and other functions.
Shankel has been meeting this semester with Bob Marcum, men's athletic director, and Marinian Washington, women's athletic director, to work on the proposal.
Sahkelai he said he could not elaborate on how the departments would be organized under the proposal, but said the proposal did not contain concerns concerning upper level administrators.
"We won't try to decide where each person who whom employee of each person will work.
Marcum and Washington also would not reveal specific of the proposal but both have said that they had a
Washington said, "The last proposal Dr. Shankel has presented to us, I think, is much better than what we worked on in the past. The one area—the organizational chart that he proposed to both Bob Marcum and myself—I am pleased with."
Marcum said, "I think one of the things about it is that you centralize a lot of things, and also a lot of problems. Right now, we have some scheduling difficulties with the field house. At least we will be all under one umbrella."
Shankel said because the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation deftly solely with the men's department, some minor changes would be needed in the corporation's bylaws when the departments merged.
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Millions lost in airport robbery at Kennedy International Airport
NEW YORK (AP)—Five heavily armed men overpowered a guard and nine workers at a high-value cargo area of Kennedy International Airport yesterday and made off with $25 million in cash and jewels, authorities said.
The robbers—brandishing a shotgun, a pistol and three revolvers—beat a guard and bound him and the nine other workers at the Luftfahne Airlines cargo area. They said one worker was forced to reveal the combination to a safe.
Some $3 million in American money being flown from Frankfurt, Germany, to the Chase Manhattan bank here was reported stolen. A policeman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport, said it was believed jewels were also involved. He explained the value of the goods at close to $3 million.
Felix Becker, a Lafhana spokesman, said it was not immediately known exactly what was taken but said that some canceled checks and cash were missing. He said the thieves seemed to know what they were looking for.
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Gas Co. defends rate increase
TOPEKA (AP) — The chairman of the board of Gas Service Co. said yesterday that the utility needs a $12.8 million a year rate increase if it is to continue to provide a service, keep up with normal growth and make up for an increasing number of bad debts.
The chairman, Jerry Dugan, was the lead-off witness in the Kansas Corporation Commission hearing on the rate request for equipment purchased. The rate it was granted an increase of $3.99 million a year. Dugan said the application for the product was based on the cost of rapidly increasing operating costs.
Gas Service provides natural gas to 212 communities in Kansas, including the state's most heavily populated areas: City, Northeast Jordan County and Toonek.
WHEN THE APPLICATION for the rate increase was filed, Gas Service officials told regulators that it would not be denied.
Dugan testified that the amount of gas sold by the utility declined from 151.63 billion cubic feet in 1978 to 143.67 billion cubic feet in 1982, and that it was considerably colder in 1977.
$1.59 per month for the average residential customer.
He said the reduction was a result of efforts to promote conservation of gas.
He said a further decline in the sale of gas to large users may be in the offing. Duggen referred to the Board of Public Utilities of Kansas City, Kan.
"We've just about priced ourselves out of the market as far as the Board of Public Utilities," she added.
He said a price increase of more than 30 cents per 1,000 cubic feet that is expected to take place as a result of federal action could result in the Board of Public Utilities' switching entirely to coal in the production of electricity.
UNDER QUESTIONING by a Legal Aid
GOP inspects KC for '80
KANASS CITY, Mo. (AP)—The Republican committee looking for a site for the 1980 GOP national convention inspected convention facilities and hotels in Kansas City yesterday and received a guarantee of than 13,500 hotel rooms for the convention.
committee previously inspected facilities in Minneapolis, New Orleans, Detroit, Miami Beach and Dallas, and was expected to consider a late bid from New York City.
Kansas City is one of seven cities expected to be considered by the GOP. National Republican Convention in Kansas City.
The site committee meets next month in Washington to recommend a site to the town.
The committee arrived in Kansas City Sunday after its tour of the Dallas area.
Society attorney representing low-income persons opposed to the proposed rate increase, Duggan said most of the bad debts caused impaid bills for gas used in residences.
He said he could think of no instance in which there was a large unpaid bill by an employee.
Dugdan said his salary is $95,000 a year.
He asked eight or nine Gas Service employees
Others opposing the proposed rate hike are Midwest Industrial Gas Users Association, Seymour Foods, General Motors, and the city of Wichita.
Kansas Corporation Commission officials said the hearing probably would extend through the remainder of the week, then recess until Jan. 15.
receive a salary in excess of $30,000 to
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Mayor seeks tax increase
CLEVELAND (AP)—Mayer Dennis J. Kucinich, trying to avoid financial default, will ask Cleveland voters to approve a 50 percent increase in the city's income tax.
The revenue would be used as collateral for loans.
weekend it would be the first major American city to do so since the Denningstro
City Council President George L. Forbes said yesterday he had learned that when Kucinich unveils plans to resolve the city's financial problems in a televised speech on Tuesday, voters to approve higher taxes in order to increase municipal revenue by $30 million a year.
BUT FORBEES NOTED that three attempts to win voter approval for higher income taxes since 1968 failed over-whelmily.
Joseph Tegrine, Cleveland's finance director, met yesterday with local bankers, who hold $15.5 million in notes that must be repaid or refinanced Friday.
Earlier yesterday Forbes said it was a foregone conclusion that the city would default on its debts and that bankruptcy was around the corner.
"The city of Cleveland's financial advisor, the First Boston Corp., and its managing underwriter, Salomon Bros., have constructed a financial plan that will enable the city to defend default as well as manage our short- and long-term improvement obligations." Toreen said.
CLEVELAND SAID it did not have the money, but the banks have already rebuilt the city twice on requests that the loans be made to them, been seeking assurances of repayment.
He did not elaborate, but according to reports last week, the plan calls for the Ohio General Assembly to double Cleveland's funding, without submitting the issue to the public.
If Cleveland does default on notes by this
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Eastern to be third big bidder in National sale
MIAMI (AP) - Eastern Airlines stunned the airline industry yesterday by becoming the third major carrier offering to buy National Airlines, Eastern's prime competitor on the highly profitable routes between the Northeast and Florida.
IF EASTERN BENT bought National the company to install the second-largest U.S. defense building in Japan.
Pan Am, which owns about 22 percent of National's outstanding stock, has entered into an agreement with National calling for payment of $41 per share.
Eastern Chairman Frank Borman said the firm would pay $5 per share for National's outstanding stock, a total of $26.7 million. The firm would have to borrow much of the money.
The move, which came in a surprise midday announcement, further complicated one of the most dramatic takeover attempts in recent years. Pan American World Airlines already are seeking federal approval of their attempts to acquire National.
"We have the process in motion," said Borman, the former astronaut who has brought Eastern back into soaring profitability from near bankruptcy since he took over early in 1976. "We are confident we can come up with the money."
Texas International, which owns about 24 percent of National's stock, has not made a firm offer for the balance but has said it will fight for majority control of the carrier.
In Civil Aeronautics hearings, Eastern has opposed the merger proposals of the other two carriers. And National treasury had begun to express doubts about the merger with Pan Am, saying it entertain offers higher than Pan Am's $1-mar share bid.
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Tuesday, December 12, 1978
13
officials extend then
e hike Users general
percent of entered killing for
Gas rate boost to be approved
," said who has soaring since he unfident
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
earings,
proposals
National
s about
it would
m's $41-
1
about 24 made a said it of the
The 16,000 Lawrence area customers of the Kansas Public Service Gas Company will face a $3 percent increase in their gas prices due to Wright's Lawrence City Commission meeting.
The new gas rates will mean an average monthly rate increase of 50 cents for all cars.
The new rates are being called for in an arbitration report that will be presented to the Commission by Drees, Dunn and a Kansas City, Kan., accounting firm.
The Commission has no choice but to approve the rate boost because of the city's charter with the gas company, Lawrence's privately owned utility.
Under the franchise agreement, when the city and the utility disagree on a rate increase, the disagreement must be submitted to a third party for arbitration. Both sides are required to accept the arbitrator's decision.
THE PUBLIC Service Company had requested a 4.8 percent increase in September, but the Commission voted to have the request arbitrated.
"The city felt that because of the tremendous complexity of recent gas regulation changes, experts should look at the request to get a fair rate of return." Buford Watson, city manager, said yesterday.
Ball Saleh, vice president and general manager of the utility, said that while the lower increase would not hurt his firm, he was not pleased with the decision.
"It's something we can live with."
Salome said. "But I can't say that we're
going to do it."
Salome said he hoped to be able to put the new rates into effect as early as next year, which will also increase one of the utility's largest customers, the University of Kansas.
THE UNIVERSITY could pay as much as $12,000 more for gas next year, according to Salome. University gas purchases run between $250,000 and $400,000 yearly, he said. The amount of gas the University buys varies from year to year because the school is under an interruptible contract.
Under the contract, the University must use its own reserve fuel oil for its boilers for several days a year when peak demand occurs. The university will take its priority customers, as residences.
Although the University operates only a few days a year on fuel oil, Facilities Operations has 230,000 gallons of the fuel used in most month's supply, according to FO officials.
In other business, the Commission will consider a proposed ordinance that would require Lawrence homeowners to fix up the exteriors of their homes.
"THE ORDINANCE would require
the paint or fix it on their bases when we
get home," she said.
Commissioner Jack Rose said the ordinance was a response to the decaying of the Oread neighborhood, immediately east of campus.
"The ordinance would be enforced uniformly over the city," Rose said, "although the greatest problem is in the Oread neighborhood."
Brent McFall, assistant to the city manager, said the proposed ordinance
would be enforced by the city inspection department.
"They would investigate complaints and give the owner a notice with a certain amount of time to clean it up," he said. "If that doesn't work, the work can go in and charge the owner. Or the owner can request a hearing before the Commission."
Currently, the only direct route to the center of the city from the area is north of Kasol Drive. But commissioners said last week that they were worried that a short, steep hill on Kasol north of 32rd Street would be impassable during snow.
THE COMMISSION will also discuss proposals to prevent residents of south-west Lawrence from being trapped in their neighborhoods by a snowstorm.
The Commission has proposed that Kasold Drive south of 27th Street temporarily be graveded to 31st Street to provide an alternate route out of the area.
The graveling, which would cost $10,000,
would be removed in the spring to allow
construction on that section of Kasold to
continue.
KU students plan KC bus safety
Bv LYNN WILLIAMS
Staff Reporter
Companies that reward their employees for safety on the job may benefit in reduced costs.
That is the finding of two students at the University of Kansas and a KU alumnus who are helping the Kansas City Transit system to train its employees to drive more safely.
Bob Haynes, Lawrence graduate student, Pat McGregor, Lawrence graduate student, and Randy Price, KU alumnus, are being funded for one year by a $39,000 grant from the Urban Mass Transportation Administrator to the federal Department of Transportation.
The grant is to finance the development of
the that the Kansas City bus system can
open.
Part of the safety program that Haynes, director of the program, and his co-workers have devised is a reward system for drivers who do not have accidents.
They divided 100 randomly selected drivers for the Metro in four teams. The drivers received tickets, accidents receive their choice as rewards, such as tickets to professional basketball games, movie tickets, free gas, free oil certificates and meal tickets at restaurants.
The teams are evaluated every two weeks for the number of accidents they've had.
"WE'RE GOING to change the gifts about every two weeks," Pine said.
Pine said rewarding the drivers on a frequent basis was probably more productive than not.
"Preliminary indications are that the incentive program should reduce the amount of accidents by about 10 to 25 percent," Haynes said.
Before the study began last June, the Metro was chalking up from 1,000 to 1,200 accidents a year and spending a half-million dollars a year on insurance claims filed by bus passengers and people involved in accidents with buses. Haynes said.
"They basically have two types of accidents," he said.
The first type is accidents with other
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"We function as 'part of their staff,' Haynes said. "All the instructors are really interested in our work."
Haynes and Pine have written a new training manual for the drivers, help touch
THE INCENTIVE PROGRAM helps bus
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reward them often after deriving
Haynes, Pine and McGregor also are helping computerize the accident records of the Metro, planning passenger-bus driver role plays to educate drivers in passenger relations, planning brochures and signs to educate passengers in bus safety. The installing of buzzer to warn passengers when a bus is stopping on materials, such as maps and route descriptions, for substitute drivers taking on new routes, is also planned.
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Senate will consider SBA amendment veto
The Student Senate will meet in a special session tonight to consider student body president Mike Harper's veto of an amendment the Senate passed two weeks ago.
But Harper, saying the amendment
imited the individual rights of SBA
members to the terms of the contract.
The amendment was attached to the Senate revenue code. It stipulated that the Student Bar Association would lose Senate funding if any member representing the SBA attempted to persuade the governor to move the Jimmy Green statue.
BARRY SHALISKY, Lawrence law student and the senator who introduced the
According to Senate rules, once the student body press voices an official "disapproval" of a Senate action, the Senate must act on it. Gregg Robinson, student vice president, said it would take a two-thirds majority to override the disapproval.
admittance, said last week that he would vote to unhold Harper's veto.
But Shalikny said that he was still very opposed to moving the statue and that he was considering proposing an amendment at the next regular Senate meeting in August, she says. BSA from the list of groups that receive yearly block allocations from the Senate.
Harped said he thought the Senate would uphold his veto at the meeting, which will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
"I'm still adamantly opposed to moving the statue," Shalinsky said, "but I don't see why that provision needs to be in the revenue code. What I did was to use a law that would put a past precedent in the Senate — I didn't expect it. I just wanted to publicize the issue."
'I do intend to investigate the SBA's use of money. I'm not convinced they deserve a job.'
T.
Prin.
Chris
sl
so.
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1-5:30
14
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Legislators tell county about lawsuit bills
Staff Reporter
By BILL HIGGINS
Three Kansas legislators told the Douglas County Commission yesterday that legislation was being planned for one of the bills of county governments to lawsuits.
The legislators who met with the Commission were State Rep. Mike Glover, 44th Legislative District; State Rep. John Vogel, 42nd Legislative District; State Rep. John Solobach, 49th Legislative District.
The meeting was requested by the County Commission to give county department
heads a chance to question the legislators about problems concerning county liability
Questions were raised by Ted McFarlane, manager of the Douglas County Ambulance Service; Mike Dooley, engineer and chairman of the Commission; William Whiteenight, chairman of the Commission.
RECENT COURT cases in Wichita and Parsons have stripped state governmental powers.
Glover said a law concerning governmental liability would be proposed in the 1979 session of the Kansas Legislature, which begins Jan. 8.
The proposed law, he said, would limit liability to $500,000 for cities and counties in
Kansas. Another part of the proposed legislation, the Kansas Tort Claims Act, would set a two-year statute of limitations on claims against a government agency. The proposed legislation is in interim committees.
Glover said the liability of individual government officials had not been legally changed by the stripping away of governmental immunity.
But, he said, individual officials are probably less likely to be sued now because a plaintiff could obtain more money by suing the government involved.
"naked," and that some type of liability insurance should be bought for county of residence.
Whitenground said that the county had insurance to cover the costs of a legal defense for officials who were sued, but not damages if they lost. He said the county was considering a blanket insurance policy especially designed for counties, but that the blanket county policy was not yet approved in Kansas.
In a related discussion, McFarlane told the legislators that county ambulance service will not interfere if they were included under the state's definition of a medical practitioner agency.
MCFARLANE SAID that agencies under that definition were eligible for state aid in payment of malpractice insurance. He said that the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center was the only county agency eligible to receive the aid.
GLOVER SAID that the $500,000 limitation on governmental liability would protect individuals by making a governmental suit more lucrative than an individual suit, but that governments would be protected from excessive suits.
Whitentight said, however, that the lady counselured, Daniel Young, said he thought she was a lawyer.
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McFarlane also requested that the legislators look into requiring Car-
"It's been proved that the training can be lost in the winter and are lost every year to heart disease," McKenna said.
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
dipolunorum Resuscitation training in high school. He and other states had passed law to permit resuscitation.
McFarlane also asked the legislators to investigate the possibility of getting state funds to help pay for ambulance communication equipment. He said other communities in the state had received such funds.
Whitengen asked the legislators to consider enacting state laws that concern possession of explosives. He said that last week Rex Johnson, county sherd, had
learned of a cache of stolen dynamite, but that Johnson was unsure of his power to confiscate the dynamite because of an absence of state laws regarding explosives.
and have enrolled as full-time students should receive grants.
"We got rosters last week showing who was eligible for the scholarship and there are 61 additional students," she said. "We had only one of our 61 students who filed before April 27 who did not enrol in enough hours."
Aid packets available; state grants awaited
The grants currently being awarded are from scholarship money that was not claimed or was not awarded because a failure to enroll as a full-time student.
Students who want to apply for financial aid for 1979-80 need to complete the new American College Testing financial aid application packet during the semester break, Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said yesterday.
Farrall said the $250 scholarships would be awarded as soon as the eligibility rosters from all state institutions were tabulated. Those students who receive the grant this semester also will receive a grant next semester, she said.
State of Kansas scholarships are awarded to students statewide who have been named state scholars based on American College Standards. Financial need must also be established.
The packets will be available today at an open house in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union until 4:30 p.m. and at the office of financial aid, 26 Strong Hall.
JOHNSON WAS NOT at the commission meeting, but he said later that legislation would be passed.
While most students are filling out applications for next year, some students will still be waiting for State of Kansas scholarships for this semester. Some should receive their checks soon, Kathleen Farrell, assistant director of the office, said.
"I think people who are storing dynamite should have to notify their local law enforcement."
Last week, an informant told the sheriff's department about a cache containing 15 cases of dynamite. Johnson said his department had learned during the weekend that the 700 pounds of dynamite had been stolen.
At least 60 KU students who were awarded State of Kansas scholarships and have not received the grant money should get checks for the scholarships this semester, Farrell said.
KU to contest '80 budget cuts
University of Kansas officials will be in Topeka today attempting to restore proposed cuts in University funding budget, by James Bibb, state budget director.
Bibb recommended that $4.5 million of KU's $7.4 million request for fiscal 1980 state funding be cut. But Chancellor R. Dykes said yesterday that he had accounted for the funding would be restored at KU's three-hour budget hearing today.
"I feel relatively sure that some of the money will be restored before the budget goes to the Kansas Legislature," Dykes said. "The attitude of the restorations are not known."
Dykes asked the priorities at today's hearings were faculty salary increases on KU's Lawrence campus and at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Bibb recommended that KU's request for an increase in faculty salaries be trimmed from 6.5 to 5 percent. Bibb also recommended that wage increases from 0.9 to 5 percent.
DYKES SAID a special effort would be
made to restore a 1 percent cut in other operating expenses at the Medical Center and the Lawrence campus.
Dykes said, "We are greatly concerned that we have adequate funds with which to open the new hospital. We are also grateful for your support of the Wichita branch of the Med Center."
KU also will try to justify the need for a $1.9 million request for formula funding catch-up funds that was cut by Bibb. KU requested the money to bring KU up to the funding levels of its peer institutions across the nation.
Formula funding was recently approved by the Kansas Board of Regents. It compares KU's funding to five peer institutions.
Results of a recent comparison of KU to its peer institutions indicated that in fiscal 1800, the Lawrence campus was underfunded by almost $4 million. KU was able to make up half of this deficiency, but Bibb recommended that it be cut.
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Sen. Pearson to teach at KU
After 17 years as a U.S. senator, James Pearson, R-Kan., will come to the University of Kansas next semester to teach.
Pearson recently accepted an appointment as a visiting professor next summer and area study classes, Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Under area studies, Pearson will lecture on East Asian and Latin American studies,
Pearson announced last August that he would not seek re-election in the November election.
Shankel said Pearson would bring his practical knowledge of the workings of the Senate to the classroom and would be able to give additional information and consultation.
"It is an incredible opportunity for us to have a man with such qualifications," said Ms. Grace, the University's a deep knowledge of government, particularly in international affairs. He'll begin in January and will participate in the discussions about the exact details have not been worked out."
He said the University also would rely on Pearson to help it work more effectively with government agencies that it contacts during the year.
Pearson probably will not have the total responsibility for a single class, but will lecture primarily in foreign affairs, in which he has indicated an interest, Shankel said.
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KANSAN
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
15
Police Beat
Compiled by Henry Lockard
University police yesterday reported that few thefts occurred on campus last weekend.
Also reported Saturday that campus was $25 damage done to a window at Joliflore Hall.
A student resident of Eldsworth Hall reported the theft of a book from a room in the residence hall. Police said the theft was committed by a student.
Pollice said a ground floor window on the building's east side had been broken Friday night.
Police said the student valued the cameras at $300.
The theft took place Saturday between 6-8:30.
cars that had been seen in a fight.
Thefts that took place last week but were not reported
A PAINTER employed with University Facilities operations reports the theft of a gold ring from a church.
POLICE said the painter had left his ring in the room because he was gone at 12:40 p.m. Thursday while he was going to see his girlfriend.
until the weekend included thefts of a 12-volt battery amu
a gold ring.
and another 12-volt battery theft were reported during the weekend.
Police said Lloyd Bilhimer, pastor of Lawrence Assembly of God Church, 1242 Massachusetts St., reported the theft of two bank cards which contained $810.
Police said that the bank bags were kept in a desk drawer in an office in the church and that the theft occurred at the library.
Lawrence police reported that a burglary, a food theft
A student reported that the battery of a car, which had been parked in front of Lewis Hall since last Wednesday,
Amy Fatton, chef at the Eldridge House restaurant, at a home in Seventh and Massachusetts street reported the theft of $700.
POLICE SAID the stolen food was 15 pounds of
The battery was valued at $60.
patt told police the theft occurred between 11:30 a.m. Saturday and 3:38 a.m. Sunday. The foot was kept in a cushioned corner.
Cheddar cheese valued at $33, 114 pounds of tenderloin steaks valued at about $243, 56 pounds of roast beef valued at $112 and 40 pounds of barbequed ribs in sauce valued at $48.
A 17-year-old Lawrence youth reported the theft of a 19-year-old Lawrence from his car, which was parked in the Malibu School District.
Police said the theft occurred 6 p.m. and 10:15
a.m. Saturday. The battery was valued at $69.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Klan are offered to all students without prior PRELEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FURNITH HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
time times times times times
15 words or
each
Easier additional
word ___ $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
___ $0.85 .03 .03 .04
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or online by the DK business office at 864-3238
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864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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Employment Opportunities
FOR RENT
December Engineering Grads. We have openings for positions on the construction and our fees are paid by the companies we represent. Please visit www.engineeringcontract.com by appointment. Courtesy & Associates 431 after 6:30 p.m. Call or in Lawrence 12-12-12
December Business Grads. We have openings for the following positions at U.S. companies up to $10,000 and our fees are paid by the company. We represent you in standing for these positions. Contact Amy McCormick at Comcast & Associates Consultants, 186-784-1078. Or call Amy at (800) 295-7322.
Extra nice apartment next to campus. Utilities
are excellent, with a free WIFI, one-on-one
a one hour efficiency. 830-797-6014.
Two bedroom apartment, 6-1plex. W2. W14th.
Bathroom, 8-1plex. W17th.
No pets. Call Mark Schmidt, 844-4144
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
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NEXT door to Russell's E-424. Front Road
Next door to Russell's E-424.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimuthi's office is located in the heart of the year. Stop by and look on over the manor of the year. Stop by and look on over the manor of the year. Stop by and look on over the manor of the year.
to give you all the details and send us your information at 1020 Maimuthi Hall, 1020 Maimuthi Hall, Drive 645-8559
OPEN-HOPE-TOWN HOUSE, 3200 W. #18.
Short-term lease and reduced rent until Aug. 15.
Breakfast and dinner, breakfast and casino money for a three day vacation in Las Vegas. Offer expires at 4-19-79.
Dining room, kitchen, bathroom, garage, bathroom, drapes, full kitchenette, laundry room, Call Ron, 6197 or Becky at 843-8787. 12/12
Christian Housing, Very close to campus, Call
841-652-092, between 1-3 p.m. 12:12
Sibilee - Quit, furnished, two room efficiency.
Sibilee - 480. All utility paid. 842-457. Keep try-
ing.
For Rent-2 bedroom duplex at 1833 Missouri,
kick off south KU of South Park at 12:15,
841-2107.
Sublease—need 2 female roommates for 2 BR
Roommate—need 95 $3.45 per person
challenges utilities 841-8377
SPACIOUS, LIGHT QUOT ion bedroom. 7
481-7841. Available May 7. 12-12
181-7841.
SPACIOUS three bedroom furnished apartment, near city limits, carpeted, with fireplace, washer, dryer, dishwasher, infirmary, utility pool, non-smoking grade friends, preferred 12-12.206.
room apartment with ceiling and refrigerator.
Utilities call 841-6719 at 7:00 p.m. 12-18
phone.
Getting married! Must sublease one 1-bedroom
Guest room, quiet room, close to campus $185/
month plus meals. Available Jan. 1,
lease runs through May - last month's rent.
Call 811-446-1462
Bedroom: Full house rental, starting Jan 1st.
Bedroom: Single room rental, starting Jan 1st.
$30/month / 1. utilities | $84-92/month | 12-13
Sublease: 1 bedroom apartment, available now.
Fronteridge R, on bus route C41 Call 841-572-12-12
Group an a bug in modern 4-best-
tone with the bug.
Use with 1/7 expenses and 841-6700. 12-12
1/7 expenses and 841-6700.
BH home near Deepetal village, uninurited
student with 10 credits in school, prefer family,
6-8-15, BH-6315, BH-6315, BH-6315
Must subluate, comfortable 1 BR apt. on bus
route. Call 841-2713
12-12
Available for substitute Janane 1. spacious IB rn柜.
Kitchen. 2 patio, on bus route. Call 672-394-8750.
Our BB ap closes to campus and KU has line.
Our BF ap closes to campus and KU has line.
Our BF ap closes before 3 PM, or may also
close after 2 PM.
2-3 HR api, with kitchen, bath, fireplace, closet, laundry room, space 1345 Vampire. Ap 1284-8470-6768
Studio apt. close to campus. $140 + util. 12-12
841-3232
2 BH apt. unfurried. KU bus route. $195 +
call. Call 841-8709. 12-12
Abt. to subleave-nire - nire 1 ABR on bus route
Abt. to subleave-nire - nire 1 ABR on bus route
Gatouboutel on bus route
843-0225 or 841-8991
12-12
Sacrifice busse—cay 1 BR furnished apt. ad-
locating campus, must wait until $175, $435 or
$625.
1 BB furnished apt. sublease until May, University Terrace, $190, Scott or David, $140, 300-762-5800
SUMMER RATES IN JANUARY. Beautiful new
hotels offer 2 baths, 2 kitchens, privacy fence,
2 eat-in rooms, 2 laundry machines.
Sublease-6 mos. old 3 Bedroom House.侵
蔽 Available, Jan 14 on bus route. Call
121-275-9800.
2 bedroom apartment, carpet, draps. CA, ref.
stove, convection to KU and downtown.
Cabinet, desk, TV.
Several brand new 2, 3, 4-bedroom houses available. One apartment with central air conditioner and floor heaters BN-0521-021
Sublasee Spacious 2 bedroom apartment at Trallridge. For information, call 842-5472 or email info@sublasee.com
Susacie 2 bedroom apartment 115 baths, sunken
garage. Located in desirable area with corp-
creting. Available immediately 804-127-103.
Roomy Park 25 apartment, furniture must include:
1. bedroom, January 1, 2 bedroom.
841-612-0042
Calls: 12-12
Single bedroom in apartment close to campus.
Apartment furnished except bedroom. Share with
a Calif. Sue Gray at 84-403-4288 or by
$1,599 monthly. Univariate housing. 12-12
Louisiana #34
One bedroom furnished apartment (converted)
one-bedroom furnished apartment
parking. No pets. Available Jan 1, 8 month
lease required including immediate payment of first
and last month. $8 a month. $25 cleaning费.
$20 per person.
1 month's rent free. Must substitute Jay Hawker Tower apartment for spring semester. We pay $4,950 a month for rent.
BEAUTIFUL, compartmented studios for subway
lines. Kitchen, laundry, on bus route. Call now 843-259-
7001 or visit www.braultstudios.com.
1. Bedroom apartment with balcony, pool
$197.50. Available December-January. 841-290-5563
Need one person for roommate $5 monthly, plus
utilities. Call Mike, 841-5415. 12-12
Sublease—one room kit, next to campus, $85, 12-
bills paid. B41.7947 events.
12-12
Available for second room, completely new
building. Call 843-893-1212 on bus rent
utilities paid. Call 843-893-1212
Sublease -1 BR furnished apt for spring senses.
7531. Close to college, $465 monthly, 12-12
Bisquete or one female roommate preferably, 2-story townhouse, Traillight, Diane Dile, 843-395-0767
2 & 8 BR aparts, new three bedroom houses. Units
furnished. Includes office and furnished.
For further information 841-600-9000.
Six brand new 2-bedroom duplexes, available, by the month. The first unit costs $240 per unit / C/A and new kitchen appliances are included.
*1-bedroom*
Need 2-3 people to publish newly recreated 3 Bedroom apartment $300/month + 12 months $12,499
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Two pots available for second semester in a
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baking trays included.
Imported, Genuine Hudson's Day hammock. cool,
new, double bed cover. Hoods size 10 x 12.
10 x 12.
Sunday 21 May New leading for Jan 18 occurrancy
12 month leave if required. 12 month leave if
18 month leave only Call 841-5250
841-5250
SMART PEOPLE DON'T BUY THE BEST STEREO . . . unless they have an opportunity to hear it come to Audio to唱 and hear the music at Rhode Island and record it, studios 8th and Rhode Island.
Western Civilization Notes-Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization #1 make sense to Western Civilization #2 make sense to Ration 3. For exam preparation *New Anhydria* #1, read *Anhydria* #2, Criteria, Merla Booksstore, and Great Bookstore. ff.
FOR SALE
SunSpees-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-precision only, eye selection, reasonable price and quality.
2 matching red formalis, worn once by brides-
dresses. Size 13; partition size. 8-12
13-14. Bargain. 842-942-041.
For Sale, Real Estate TR-781 - 9-Truck tape recorder
with Bluetooth. See description.
for sale $109. Also, assures tape logs. 841-2727.
or call (855) 334-1000.
Pender Mutant Stain Glass Guitar with straps, cordia,
metal picks, strings and covers. Very good condition.
Jacket JACK 439.
Michigan Street Music solls and service guitars,
violins and other stringed instruments. We have
the following instruments: T.-F. Gibson L-48, Gibson L-7,
and Mossman T.-F. Gibson L-68. We also have a good selection of violins and accessories Michigan St. Music 647 Michigan 843-
645, T.-F. Gibson 647 Michigan 843-
p.m. Thursday till Christmas. 12-12
*motor, starters and accessories. Specialists
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-900-3600, 2000 W, eth. ftt
or tft.
COLOR PORTFOLIO, Slides or prints, custom processing, professional quality, lowest price
JEWELRY! anything made to order for Christine
Brown. High quality, creative, reasonable
prices
Positively the lowest prices in Kannan City for
Store Compairments-Maxell Tidy Memoery
Storeroom-Components-Maxell Tidy Memoery
Hibiscus Quartz Watchcase -4 outlet off -off ifl
Hibiscus Quartz Watchcase -4 outlet off -off ifl
Kalloo 2622 Johnston Station M-12-12
K91 913-384-0500
Girl! The best " T" Shirt In Town Regularly
$6. Now $49.0, the $39.2 Mass. 327 Mass.
Golden years '66 WK Camper. Needs motor, elec-
tric, fuel. 12-15 days. WK-B183-WK-B322 at 1129 Oregon. Mint. 12-12
1972 Mercedes 220 D 50m Sun roof, steter, rebuilt engine with a month's warranty. Laws require 40k miles per year.
Gulare and case. Conqueror 6 steel strings, ex-
cellent sound. Must miss. $55, Cable 12-12
4400 after 5:00.
Large antique display table with dining table & chairs. Excellent condition. $200 - 842-992. 12-12
Stores. Yamaha TC1515, YPD10, Pioneer XSS55
Pioneer XS753, Kodak and Headlamp stores.
5732
1975 Motorcycle Kawasaki 240 for $35 with
a Yamaha motorcycle luggage rack. CaHarry 8-12
after 7 p.m.
10-12
BOOKS! Thousands of used books for holiday shopping, used music for $1, Science Psychology Biography History, used tech products at bargain prices. OBSALOSAO MOCK BAM* high off Highway 92-29. Every day from a tow truck.
Couple coat-size 38 knel length, worn once,
must sell 843-610-600 or 423-929-800. 12-12
Snow trees — 2.5 6.13" 4 ply Phillips 66, barely
used $30 both. 841-5235 12-12
Classic 1505 Charge, great transportation. New
condition. No rust, price good. 846-0023
condition. No rust, price good. 846-0023
Leaving country, must sell 1973 Impala, AC,
good condition, call 841-8773
Epiphone high guitar lead guitar with case, prized to
call. Sell Audie, 842-7113. 12-12
For Sale—Used electric piano--j80-key-perfect
condition. Call Knii Roe. M141-8833. 12-12
FOUND
I found your gloves. The man's brown leather jacket has a white zipper. Come and get them at 1430 Ishmael Street. (21-22)
Needlepoint picture in front of Watson. Call 8-340. Ask for Kike. 12-12
Calculator used in Walkin Hospital just before Thanksgiving vacation. Call Walkin. 12-12
HELP WANTED
PSYCHIATRIC AIDS, LICENSED MIDDLE AGE
PERSONAL ACCOMPANYING ENCOURAGEMENTS
Made encouraged to apply. Application apply
to director of nursing. Topeka State Hospital,
813-296-4376. Opportunity Employer
May accept.
OVERSEAS JOBS--Summer-filled time, Europe,
Australia, America, Asia, etc. all fields, $600-
$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free
travel to see the US. Contact Bailie, Box 12-12
K. Berkeley CA 94704. www.bailie.com Bailie
A student half-time work achieve assistant position is available with the Achievement Place research program evaluation research. Responsibilities will include data analysis, program evaluation research. Responsibilities will include data analysis, program evaluation research. Files located in several communities in the northwestern region will include data summarization and preparation of data for computer analytic data analysis. We are seeking qualified professionals who have at least a bachelor's degree in an area related to who has had research experience and who has a master's degree in statistical package for data analysis. Special experience with the use of ANOVA, COVAR, Pearson correlation, or other statistical package for data analysis. Special experience with the use of remote terminals capable of work cooperatively as part of a team able to work cooperatively as part of a team starting December 15, 1978. Salary $300-$400 depending upon qualifications of the applicant. D. Krigman Application deadline December 12, 1978. Opportunity Affirmative Career Employee. 12-12
NEEED EXTRA XMAS MONKEY? Suiertely caterer-
needs you to provide a special Christmas party in December for Christmas parties. Expires in three months from the date of your application, or in three months from the date of your request, 25 to 30 may limit its appearance at the Calm Attic #84-6560 for such occasion.
Drivers needed. Must be 18 years old or older Must have a driver's license in person (if no, please call 4:30 p.m. Office) Cabin Code: 1446
Kansas City office director Xenia breakthrough
changing the way women in the city view
Worthington World Trade Center Citi Hall 1137
Ballardway West, Kansas City, MO 64108
Administrative Assistant, Office of Institutional
Management. Req's bachelor's degree or equiv.
ability required. Familiarity with University Pro-
grams and resources is required. $360/mo. Full job description available in 409 Hallway Hall. Applicant deadline December 15.
Lithography Immediate part time help. Graphite
separation, separation 1, 2nd and 3rd
boards. 842-7529 10-12
12-12
Part time liner store clerk. Would prefer grade
part time or B-school major. Apply in
12-13.
SUMMER JOB, FORSTE RESPONSE HIRE. How are you? Please indicate your location: Mo. Chi. Th. K. Fergusonville, Calipiun, Md. 39879. (914) 255-3000. www.forstere.com/jobs/21139.
JB Big Boy is now taking applications for full and part time help. Apply in person 740 fax.
Part time food service personnel need. Starting pay $2.90 per hour and up. Part time table service, dish preparation, and job plus time to experience helpful App. in person. Schumun Foods, 7195; Apply in. 12-12
Sumbia's new hiring waitress, walters, dish maid
person. 101 W. 23rd. App. April 19th.
person. 101 W. 23rd.
Part time ountry sun and dry cleaning attention
Apply at Norge Village 41, dhcw 12-18
Position opening. Assistant director of facilities position in Architecture or Engineering, two years experience in Architecture or Engineering, two years experience in Architecture or engineering, one year experience in Construction, or architects' or owner's equivalent work design. Familiarity with job requirements for further position application is required. For further position application, job description must be submitted by September 15th. Facilities Planning, University of Arizona, Box Tract 3046, Phoenix, AZ 85029. Equal Opportunity. Affirmative Action Enforcement.
Programmer Assistant (student basically, 16-20 years old) responsible for program programs changes, resulting and maintaining program programs changes. Identifying demonstration reports into text-processing for programming responsibilities. Requires coal and knowledge of PORTRAN text processing and knowledge of PORTRAN for text-processing. Should be sent to Lee Lieu, Roberts. Academic work on or before December 15, 1983. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. All of air trays and persons with disabilities are welcome.
Flexible hours for maintenance position at large complex. Respond with phone number 813-925-4000. 12-12
The Lawrence Open School is hitting two aids. Position one - Kindergarten. We offer a pre-certificate day care experience. Position two half hour and half day designing and making applications for the Lawrence Open School. Applicants must qualify for CETA Title XII Service Certificates. Legal Agent: Employer
12-12
Waltres work to *work, over holiday*, season
Gratitudes excellent. Phone 811-365-12-12
LOST
Lost, one pair of gold pierced earrings. Reward offered, on one British penny. $83-8419
1355 Doberman puppy, black and tan male, 12
1355 Has cropped ears with bandages, 12
1357
Dec. 4, KU Hustleball Game | BLACK
PURSUIT BOWL | 12:17
Caller: 841, 5834, 18934. Beamed! 12:17
Small red billfolds-like case with I.D. credit,
other small cards. Wed, eve. 11/29 $35 for return
of case & cards, only or cards only or if KN are
included. Call 434-7630; Lawrences
8:18 p.m.
Lost in Warehouse 1. We heavy, blue winter coat
in pouch in pocket. $10包裹. 12-12
[841-869]
MISCELLANEOUS
CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Choose and eat your beautiful fresh tree this year. Drive on east of K-10 inapproximate miles to the South Farm. Open weekends till Christmas. PINE HILL FARM
NOTICE
INTERSESSION - GUATAR, Maucelón, or Bernabe
INTEGRITY - GUATAR, Maucelón, or Bernabe
electric guitar 1 bass guitar 1 first pitch
bass guitar 2 electric guitar 2 first pitch
Give a gift of listing service a book on free paper or digital downloads available. Greet every day at 10am, 18am, 2pm, 4pm, 6pm and 9pm EST.
Bunnyflower Surprise wishes you Seasons Greetings & invites you to visit our store and browse through our selection.
visit our store and browse through
Builders Collection of great gifts
Woolrich shoes
Tailorise posed down garments
Sweaty Army Jackets
Armored jackets and blankets
Dancer shoes
Buckle jacket
Work shirt country skis, backpacking and camp
gang, canes, and accessories on all kinds, a very quality gift for the outdoor person or people
with special needs
Don't waste your final week outside on a holiday. Join us at Potter Lake for the Dance and Fund-Raiser Help us raise funds to help our students in need. Help us set a new world record made inside.
Sunflower Surplus
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Downtown Lawrence
Tired of feeding yourself? Your Hall is offering:
For the first time ever a boarding plan. 19
weeks free. You can apply to our weekly
week can be you or if you choose this plan. Stop
and see us or give us a call: +44-8350-1234.
12:23 AM
PERSONAL
EXPERT TUTORS We tutor Math. MG 000-768
SAT II Physics 100-954, CHEMISTRY 100-694, QUALIFICATIONS
B.S. in Physics, M.A. in Math, Call 843-903 for
math or Computer Science; Call 843-524 for
Math 843-524 for Math.
JAMROC SPECIALS. $60, Mon, Tues, and Wed.
$75, Mon-Fri, Saturdays. See list for
MADIS'S BLAIR NIGHT. Weed. $160 picture.
Michigan Street Music. 647 Michigan. 813-255.
string instruments. 12-12
Gad-Leishman, Switchboard. Counseling and general information. 841-8727.
SISTER KETTLE CAKE Fresh food organic
water, spring, water, and milk. Open 10 a.m to 9 p.m.
on Saturdays.
COLOR PORTFOLIO SLiders or prizes, custom
invoice, original quality, only 12-12
Call 841-735-8600
Don't forget to pay your gas bill. Remember what happened to Pier I - Illuminates Z.L.F.
Do you have a favorite paint course that you love? I need one for me. 841-7823-2 after 2 p.m.
I will be there on Sunday.
Yet another disappointing football season? No
Way George Allen for Head Coach. 12-12
DAT HARBOURIZATION—The consumption of mass quantities of alcohol until total loss of basic psychological self-awareness, attainable only at the age of 21. CHECK THE SPECIALS 12-12
Gay Services of Kauai presents "Day Rights" in
2019. Pointe Hilo, Hawaii; 7:30 p.m.
2100 Causeway Drive, Kauai; 8:00 p.m.
Speaker: Jennifer Jackson, Unison; Speaker:
Kathleen Brennan, Temple Beth Israel.
SHIY! The Californias Social Learning Center's diverse curriculum provides a variety of proven, particularly to you, help you become more open,敏捷 and successful in establishing excitement, rewarding relationships and improving your skills in an unanticipated environment, just as a postcard would be sent in the mail. Bridle St., Suite 215, Burlington HI CA 80211
NISTER KRAFT CAFE, YOUR CAPE, YOUR
MUSEUM, THE MUSEUM, MUSEUM,
MASS, OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 F.M.
12:12
B. V.O.B. Bring your old bottles and jars to the KU Biology Club. Chad Recycles Water from the Wilderness River in Iowa on Ivine Hill Road between Iowa Street and the KAU route into December 16 & 17. between
Doug. Merry Christmas and may our friendliness
continue. A little bible. 12-12
A SINCECHE THANKS
to all the Greeks,
businesses, new jobs, your next year, David Bernstein.
Wanted: Female Christian roommates for a 3
female room, camp; $45 per 1/2 apt and
$825 per female room.
Arm Warm. How lucky! I am now with 20000
Arm Warm. How lucky! I am now with 20000
'1M'
Coconut Man You're on your own kids. Merry
Man to you. Have a wonderful day of
medicine, school or Cone Country and see
your friends. You are welcome.
Denise Good luck on getting the "perfect" Job.
You devise it. I wait for' that in a Good New
Job!
Shawnee Mission North High School and the Shawnee Mission Senior High School will hold an Amount Open House to welcome former formats who are attending area schools. Thursday, January 4, 1979 in the Gold Coast Regional Library, 3:30 p.m.,
Lori-Oil Dear God-it looks like we made it
GOD morning, evades bales, encamps on our
cars, sleeps in our beds and even leaves in the
matter of the wander and lot of luggage. IXE been
bitten by this. We own it its insatiable 12-12
bitterness bitten.
Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle all the way—I am just so happy to have to have any Cut Morrison" or "and Wunderbach" or "German's you perches," "Dreamcatcher" or "Germany's you perches." Na na na na na na!" 12-12
Dear KU, Well my time here has to come to an end, with very excited emojis. There have been many times in our lives when I had buttons on my life that I like to reflect on a few moments before I die. I introduced into eclipse life, in the people who steered me to the athletic foot in the road. In them I knew so much, they knew these have been very full years, they knew how I would carry your coworkers, Dee Dew, Mike, Emily, and John. We always cared for that I love and what I'll always keep in touch with you, know who you are; those who I'm not too. To the former, I with you could realize how great this is. It is easier to cope with the people in the latter, sometimes to be extremely proud of Life, Ann. something to be extremely proud of Life, Ann.
MIL-hermitage 21 is the word-hippeaked of Birth.
A big organization that "I see you," Your best
friend. You've got it. You're the best.
To the girls of GSP-Cohin. It's been real and it's been fun. Good back on all your memories. Marry Me! Marry Me! Only one dessert and don't forget my LD. You only one dessert and don't forget my LD. You only one dessert and don't forget my LD. You only one dessert and don't forget my LD. You only one dessert and don't forget my LD.
12-12
She's a fun person, mature, and a cheerful resident. But the grating and needs a girl to replace her. But the grad
BETH. Indeed angel, we ARE. It doesn't matter if we are today, tomorrow or yesterday. It only matters that we are My wish in that the ARE even Foreverman, with Love, Paul. 12-12
SERVICES OFFERED
STATISTICAL TUTORING Call 843-9036. if
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can
help you with your math or CS problem. Canada
41276 - 41278
EXPERT TUTORS: we tutor MATH 600-700; WE SCHOLARSHIPS: we tutor PHYSICS and CHEMISTRY 100%-95%; QUALIFICATIONS BS in Physicus MA in Math. Call 843-906-396 or Computer Science, CA if 842-531-394
CONTEMPLATING MEDICAL SCHOOL2 WE ARE
CONTEMPLATING MEDICAL SCHOOL2 WE ARE
information $ 50.00 WIDFAN SCHOOLS, Box
1393, New York, NY 10026.
DON'T GIVE HIPPED OFF UPET UMC Security
Services. Keep an eye on your apartment over
the week with the UMC Security Services.
TYPING
I do damned good typing—Peggy. 842-4476. 15
Typist/Editor IBM PIM *Eclipse* Quality work.
Typewriter Illustration, dissertation welcome.
812-927-1208
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. tf
THEISIS BINDING COPY-ING - The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at $8 MON, or phone 412-303-7600.
Experienced typist will type term papers, resumes, dissertations, etc. 760 page. 842-948. .bqp
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Hybrid tutor. Law papers, turn papers. Mrs.
Jacob Kawasaki
Typing--finnest host. Hawkwee Typing Service.
642-8759-2100 after 5:30 p.m.
12-12
Experienced Typist-term paper, letters, notes, music.
Experienced Typist-email spelling, proofreading, corrections.
834-7654 ma. Mr. Wright
Magic Fingers Manuscript服务;techs;
Magic Fingers Sample service drafting. FF
quality typing cut 846-789.
MASTERMINDERS PROFESSIONAL TYING, Qual-
timing low risk, Call us when typing.
3387
Past accurate lypid. Papers, under 20 pages. Ip
Past accurate lypid. Papers, under 20 pages.
Ip 843-6438 after 5 p.m. (12:12)
*Nurse* 1972
1 DO A HELLUVA TYPING JOB-CAROLYN
842-1217 12-12
Typin needs work. Quality work, necessitate
Work Will, before 7 am. 443-4726 (Jay)
(800) 310-9454, jay@workwill.com
Koreeellth Bypass, proofreading, spelling corrections
Nokia Mobile under 30 page. Cell: 12-128
"Fast Service."
WANTED
Male roommate will to share furnished Jayde-
nise $125 per month. Call John, 841-762-8800,
12-12
Female roommate for large, three bedroom home.
Downstream on arc bus. route $107. monthly $125.
Semi-private apt in 4-bedroom home.
1 or 2 female roommates needed, Jahawkier
Towers. $90/mo. utilized call - Call-Marie. 841-
365-7457.
Roommates needed Immediately! Leaving male,
roommate alone will cost $30.00 (8 Mistruc 6-30-19)
and may result in a broken car.
Roommate wanted to share nice 2 bedroom apartment in Westchester with me. Prefer kitchen, dishwasher. Call $175.00
Clean, non-smoking female inmate wanted
for prison visit. Walking distance Catl
Cell #841-7678 12-12
or 2 or 3 roommates wanted for Jayahawk Towers
apartment 2/month, all utilities 841.6722
(phone) 841.6722
PART-TIME COOK WANTED to prepare two
breakfasts for beginners. You will be
brought to begin early. Good Call 822-790-
5143.
Roommate wanted, Spring roommate, 2 bedrooms,
1 bath, apartments $110 per month.
Cell Phone: 1-855-765-3456 12-12
2 male roommate $83 + 1/3 utilities, U/A
room duplex. w/m carpeting, dunwinder, U/A
room suite.
Wanted: 1 female roommate to house with
2 other girls; $100 a month;Utility $33. La
Suite $49 a month;Room $50 a month
Liberal female roommate wanted to share two bedroom apt female Taylorowers Towers 811-462-2390
House member wanted for 5-member cooperative
Call 843-2278 for details
12-12
Female roommate needed: 2 IRL, bath, spacious Park 25 kb. On KU bus route. Pay rent and utilities. Residence fee required.
Want to buy large abstract paintings, acrylic or oil on canvas. Call 642-855-108 for details.
Female remote wanted to share Google Gmail account with male remote. Available immediately. Call 825-491-6120. If no response, email resume to johngregory@google.com.
LIVE IN STYLE, show beautiful new 3 BR
home with kitchen and laundry room;
privately private property; neighbor-
hood amenities; two-story home.
Male to share 2 bedroom furniture, Jan. 1 to
summer. Heated pool - Bus line. $80/month. 12-12
weeks.
Powder male to share 2 bedroom apartment for 2nd roomier. #841-895. 12-12
Female roommate for 2nd semester 2 bedroom
apartment, #110 (mio. price) 843-2856, 12-12
Roommate wanted to share ebm two bedrooms
apartment in seattle 901-841-5232 901-841-5232
roommate wanted to share ebm two bedrooms
apartment in seattle 901-841-5232 901-841-5232
Female nurse needed for two bedroom
part that gets heated. January 19, or
summer holiday. Please call (342) 655-8010.
WANTED *Tutorial Coordinator for SpringSeason Social Science Major*, functional knowledge of large blocks of time above average academic ability, and ability to work large blocks of time above average academic ability, and ability to work large blocks of time above average academic ability. Apply via the Job Board or discharged students. Applications due in 10RH. Apply in 2022 Carroll College's application form. Alternative action employee. Qualified men and women. Send resume to carroll.edu.
Female roommate to share two bedroom auditim-
ment on bus route 2901
847-9509-3650
12-12
2 roommates for modern 3 level, 3 bedroom
townhouse. Flipkey, central 12th floor,
12-12, 12-12, 12-12
Male need to share room at Jayhawk Tower.
Only $63 a month. Call Mickey 812-855-mix
Up to four KU-SMU basketball tickets Contact
Mike Galloway. 841-600-7600
12-12
Ferns vocalis vocabilis the ElemuRou Hairi, Ron-
nels and Peregrine. He smee dava D Lakekhan 12:12
m 362 or m 425-91
I nerd bouncing for just over the Xmas break.
I need information call Nurseries 842-802-602. Leave
me a message.
Roommate for nice, fully furnished house
on bus route, 841-3958
12-12
ROOMMATE WANTED to share 3-bedroom house $75 monthly, & 4 utilities. No pet tolerance. Quaint not necessary. Prefer female grade or college. Quiet not necessary. Prefer female grade or college. 6121; after 4. Available after 11. 12-12
Formal Voucher of the Emirates Harte, Harris,
and Mackay Airlines. A nominee must be nominated, needed, must be willing to work for an organization that would nominate me.
Female quiet roommate needed, must be willing
to stay the bedroom, 92, within reach.
0750 12-12
1
agagement. On bus route, distance to shopping area. Call Charleen at 814-8289. 12-12
1
16
Tuesday, December 12, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Saia ...
From page one
As a union organizer—he quit school when he was 13 and went to work in the coal mines—Salaa had at least three confidants who were occupied of workers who were ready to kill.
He single-handedly settled workers' grips. The most famous incident occurred when 1,200 miners threatened to tar and feather two government Workers' Representatives, who represented Joe Polzer and Evan Griffith. His followers are quick to reminisce.
GRIFFTH HAS long been dead, but Poizer, 74, retold the story from his home in Kansas City, Kan., where he's still a practice attorney.
Poizer said he and Griffith were sent to settle a miners' strike. As the talk began, he said, a "roar" went up from the miners and the platform on the platform the WYA team were standing on.
He said Saia jumped up and fired a pistol over the crowd, drew an imaginary line with his foot and said, "The first s.o.b. to this line, I'm gonna kill 'em dead."
Sara remembers the incident, and he says, "I've never been afraid to stand up for what I believe, you know. When I went to hear the first sermon, I thought everyone one guy to say, 'Let's get him,' and it hell."
He has handled individuals in the same you-wanna-fight-about-it manner. Commission meetings have been brawls at times under Sala's chairmanship.
---
Perhaps it's because of those explosive moments that Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, Lyndon Johnson, George McGovern, Richard Daley and Kansas politicians have clung to his shirt tail to win Kanes's votes'.
SAIA SAID he has endless stories he could tell about his political experiences but is waiting to put them in a book that is in the works at stages at Pittsburgh State University.
Panel to seek someone to fill Calgaard's post
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
announced yesterday the appointment of nine members of a 13-member search committee. The RU vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Shankel said he hoped the committee would begin reviewing applications and nominations by late January and would reach a decision in mid-March.
Those on the search committee are: Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction; Joel Gold, professor of English; Robert Cobert, dean of the College of Liberal Arts; David H. Schultz, professor of the School of Pharmacy; Walter Crockett, professor of psychology; Charles Michener, professor of entomology; Mike Harper, student body president; Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs; Mary Green, assistant dean of libraries.
Shankel said he expected the three additional committee members to be a graduate student, a faculty member and a representative of the office of student afd-
Shankel said he thought the search would be within the University, but he did not want to rule out an exceptional person from outside the University.
The committee will be searching for a replacement for Ron Calgaard, who will leave KU this summer to become president of Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas.
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He can't get all politicians to koww,
however. He said he wondered why Vern
Miller—the former Kansas attorney general
whom he warned to stay out of car trunks
because "someone's going to slam one down
on your throat"—didn't back Schneider.
Saiya says he doesn't have any enemies and that politics is like football. "After the campaign's over, why hell, you ought to help each other and be friends," he says.
Schneider says that is pure Saale." He says a master at neutralizing enemies," he said.
Attempts to get alleged Sala enemies to attempt to about Saya Sain provided the evidence for about Scheidung of
In fact, Vernon Grassie, Girard, who formerly was Crawford County attorney until Saia moved to remove him from office, said the person who would talk about Saia's bad habits.
SAIA FLINCHED at the mention of Grasie's name, then said he was really proud to know he had enough power to get Grasie removed from office.
Grassie said that anyone who met Sai couldn't help but like him. But Sai, he said, was a great friend of her.
Grasa was one who said he thought
Sola's defeat in November signaled the old-
time rivalism.
The friction between Grassie and Saia began when Grassie made allegations against Saia's spending and won an investigation, aided by then Attorney General Vern Miller's office, into Saia's past handling of county funds.
Of course, Saim said the inspection with an unblemished record. As for his duration, Saim said it was 18 months.
Until then it'll be business as usual, he said, up with the sun and down after the last call has been heard. Six telephones spread out to his home allow for easy access wherever he is.
A telephone hung by the door. Above the hatch was a December 1977 page from a Playboy magazine.
He scurried ahead, through a small hole and down some steps. He was concerned that his visitor couldn't get along in the dark.
SAIA WAINTED to show off his wine. He went out through his garage, past a variety of vegetables grown in his two-acre garden and to the wine cellar.
"Wait here, kid. I give turn the lights on.
I used to work in the mines lower than this,
you see. But I had a light on my head, you
know," he said.
Siaa学习 to make wine from his stepfather. He said it was tradition. When he dedicated Joe Siaa Boulevard and Overpass he smashed a bottle of his dry "Dage Dro" on the bridge and sprayed people who stood too close to him.
HE TALKED about his businesses: an appliance store that he built, a nursing home, a Holiday Inn, other real estate and business. His business that he's owned since his mining days.
In the cellar he displayed three wines—white, dry and sweet. His favorite was dry.
"You should have seen it. Man, you could smell that stuff a mile away," he said.
He ains he's slowed down from the way he used to get around and tend to his business. "What are you going to do?"
As he handed out samples of his wine he talked about moonshine. He said miners were notorious for running "deep shaft" stills.
On the way out of his cellar he boasted
that he would please everyone would live on—he's got twelve grandchildren.
But he said his drink was Wild Turkey.
He said he didn't respect anyone more than he respected anyone else because he liked all people.
"You know, I'm always here. People always come. I don't turn away no one. You know, that my life. I got food and wine and make hoopy," he said.
That's how the man who says he "is a self-
made son of a bitch" lives like a legend.
Russell C. Mills, University director of support services, sent a letter of resignation yesterday to Chancellor Archie R. Hancock, who planned he to stay planed at KU in some capacity.
As director of support services, Mills is in charge of the KU police department, the University printing service, personnel and Facilities Operations.
director since 1978, said he and Dykes were still talking about what position he might have when his resignation takes effect.
Mills said that he wanted his resignation to be effective Jan. 1.
effect.
"It's been a big job," Mills said. "I don't know what I'll be doing. The chancellor and I are still talking."
Dykes and his office would conduct a
placement of all film replacement within and
outside of the facility.
Mills resigns post; plans to stay at KU
ous came to KU in 1946 as a professor of biochemistry. He transferred to the Medical Center and organized the office of research administration.
Touring Puppet Theatre canceled after three years
A three-year-old continuing education,
Puppet Theatre was cancelled Nov. 22 because it lost money every year, according to Wallace. The conferences and events were cancelled by Co-opting Education.
Puppet Theatre was a touring group of three persons who put on various puppet shows, including "Shadows of My People," written by an American Indian playwright
May made the decision to cancel the program.
The program was directed by Terry Asia, Newberg, Ore., a special graduate student. Nancy Ettlinger, St. Louis junior, performed and did technical work. Matthew Jones, a Kiowa Indian from Wichita, wrote the theatre's scripts.
Dykes said he thought Mills might help the University secure research grants from federal agencies and private foundations, which was Mills' previous job at KU.
Ettlinger and Jones resigned their positions when they were told the program was canceled. Alaa has been placed in another division of continuing education.
HOWARD WALDER, de of Continuing Education, said, "Somebody has to pay the fiddler. After a while, if a program can't support itself it has to be cancelled."
James Nabors, coordinator of art museum programs, was booking agent for the theatre. He said the program was experimental and was set up to pay for itself. After three and a half years, he said, its deficit was about $10,000 annually.
support treated. A result to
However, Asla said there were other
programs in continuing Education that
not self-supporting.
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Asla said the puppet program was needed to bring ethnic culture and live theatre to places where people were not exposed to it. He said it also offered a chance for Indian playwrights to create their own form of theater.
May said there were no bookings for the theatre for next semester, even though Nabors had tried to get them. Nabors said that at one point, he sent 75 inquiries out to find bookings and got no responses. He said the program was too expensive for many communities and did not meet the needs of other communities.
MAY SAID EACH performance cost about $400 in wages to produce and the group charged $200 for the performance. The program must be allotted the ways to keep the program going.
Asia said he would try to continue running the papar theatre because there was a great need for it.
"I'm hoping I can find another home for it," he said.
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