12
Skiing the Kaw Snow and cold temperatures have brought about some enjoyable after-effects. Cross
Staff photo by TRISM LEWIS
country skiers took advantage of the wintery conditions yesterday, as they made their way down the frozen snow, covered Kaw River. See related story page 12.
A LITTLE WARMER
Kansas remained in a state of emergency yesterday after a blizzard Friday night brought sub-zero temperatures and dumped 12 inches of new snow on top of the seven inches that fell New Year's Eve, leaving about 29 inches on the ground.
Campus, city dig out of winter onslaught
Gov. John Carlin declared a state of emergency Monday after the storm hit and called out the National Guard to rescue stranded motorists. The Highway Patrol closed most highways in Kansas and encouraged driving on secondary roads.
KU HAS A contract for interruptible natural gas service with the Kansas Public Service Co. KU's service can be curtailed or uncurtailed, however the demand is high for natural gas.
Facilities Operations officials would not say whether the University was running low
However, William Salome, vice president of Kansas Public Service, said yesterday that 16 days was an unusually long time for KU to rely on its own fuel oil reserves. Salome said gas service to the University usually was curtailed for three or four days at a time, but might be curtailed for as many as 40 days a year.
"BUT IF L'fascination doesn't have an extremely cold February, gas reserves should be adequate and the University should be able to receive natural gas," Sallaine said.
When gas service is curtailed, KU uses fuel oil stored on campus to fire its generating boilers, which supply heat to campus buildings.
Although the National Weather Service predicted another snowstorm for early this week, no snow has fallen since Sunday. The snow again will not snow again until tomorrow or Friday.
Enrollment at KU was held as scheduled, but University officials said they expected about 1,300 students to enroll late, about 500 more than the usual number.
One victim of the cold weather has been the heating system at the University of Kansas. Since Jan. 1, KU has been using its own fuel oil as an alternative heating fuel.
However, sorority rush activities were
postponed for two days because of the weather. Rush activities are to be enclosed, today and tomorrow, according to Katie President of the Panhellenic Association.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"WE WORKED clearing parking lots this weekend because there weren't many students around," Mathes said. "Now that we are helping we'll work more on the sidewalks."
FO has had 38 persons working on snow removal for 14 to 20 hours a day during the weekend. They have been dumping snow in the basins of Lake Ontario and in areas south of Allen Field House.
PO personnel have worked since Saturday, clearing snow from campus streets, sidewalks and parking lots, Jim Mathews, assistant director of grounds maintenance said.
Mathes said the only places that remained slick were intersections and steep hills. Workers have not been able to salt these areas, but they may be able to do so again. Salt will not melt ice in extreme cold.
"WELL WE WORKING two to three more weeks hauling snow away and then we should finish, unless we get more snow," he said.
Many Lawrence streets also remained under a blanket of snow yesterday. Highways around the city were open, the Kansas City signal said, but still were ice in many spots.
Vol. 89, No.74
Mathes said because the crews had been working on parking lots, snow would not be hauled away from Haymarket Boulevard and campus streets for at least a few weeks.
Mathes said most of the snow had been cleared, but the crews still had to finish building the airport.
Towing services in Lawrence reported they had kept busy during the early part of the week and yesterday were running two days behind on calls.
KANSAN
The Hillcrest Wrecker and Garage, 1120 E. 23rd, towed at least 144 cars Monday. Belinda Parks, dispatcher, said, and still had a waiting list of 96 cars.
Parks said the service was taking only
See SNOW back oage.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KU's spring enrollment expected to exceed 22,000
Staff Reporter
By JOHN LOGAN
A large late enrollment is not expected to affect KU's final enrollment, which officials estimate with top 2,000 on the Lawrence University KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
KU has many students from the Chicago area, Dyck said, many of whom are still snowed in by a blizzard that dumped 24 inches of snow on the city last week.
"We've had several calls from Chicago and even from Wichita and western Kansas from people who've said they can't make it back in time to enroll," he said.
Enrollment officials said they could not tell if the final enrollment totals will be higher than last spring's figure of 23,881. The enrollment probably will not be higher than Michael's enrollment, which brought 25,480 to the two campuses, they said.
Preliminary enrollment statistics are expected to be released today but the official count will not be available until after the 20th day of classes.
As many as,1,300 students might enroll late this semester because of the bad weather, Gil Dyck, dek of admissions and records, said yesterday.
DYCK SAID many students who usually fly to Kansas City were stranded when Chicago's O'Hare Airport was forced to shuttle them to the airport runway, only four of the airport's seven cars were cleared of the snow, which had forced O'Hare to close for the sixth time in its history.
Between 600 and 800 students usually enroll late each semester, Dyck said, but this semester an estimated 500 more students would come rather than be trained in last week's storm.
AFTER THAT date, KU will be able to
figure its full-time equivalency number. The number is reached by dividing the total number of credit hours being taken at KU by 15, the average number of hours taken by a student. The result gives KU an equivalent number of full-time students.
All six state universities, enrolling on the same schedule for the first time, use the equivalency number as the basis for their budget requests.
Most of the students who will be enrolling were kept out of Lawrence by the writer.
Men, women win holiday tourneys
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said university officials had discussed
moving the last day of enrollment from
Monday to Tuesday but had decided against
it after learning that residence halls were 96
percent occupied. Officials said the high
occupancy rate indicated that most students
had arrived.
Late enrollment will begin today and
through Feb. 27. Students enrolling today
will not be charged the usual $10 late
fee for missed classes. Amber,
vice chancellor for student affairs.
The $10 fee will be charged students enrolling tomorrow through Feb. 13. After that date the fee is $25.
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
To enroll late a student must fill out an add slip for each course he wants. Each slip must be approved by the appropriate department.
Dyck said the University hoped to make the process easier by setting up a later enrollment center in 112 Strong Hall. By using two computer terminals in the center, students will be able to tell students enrolling late which sections and classes are closed.
Officials suspend handouts policy
By JOHN LOGAN
Staff Reporter
A controversial policy that banned the distribution of literature in campus buildings was suspended Monday by KU administrators, pending review by the University Events Committee.
But members of an academic freedom group announced that despite the suspension they would hold a series of demonstrations for free speech, which would have violated the old policy.
pursuicy Del Shankel, executive vice cchancellor, announced the administrators decision to the University Senate Executive Committee in a letter sent to SenEx Chairman Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction.
In the letter, which asked SenEx to study the Events Committee's review, Shankel said the policy had been in conflict with the Faculty Code of Conduct and the Code of Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities.
See stories page 13
Shankel said he expected the policy to be changed to allow literature distribution inside campus buildings, but he warned that distribution could not interfere with classes or cause a disturbance.
THE POLICY, which outlines the place and manner of distribution of literature on campus, was introduced by the Events Committee and approved by the administration in October.
Although it was a part of University guidelines for several years, the distribution policy did not attract much attention until the Events Committee decided to make it a formal restriction last semester.
The decision sparked several quiet demonstrations by the
KUBY SAID he was happy the policy had been suspended, but he questioned the need for a review.
"We certainly consider that a positive step," he said. "But I think it's ominous that it will be reviewed. I just can't understand why we need a whole new policy."
Kuby said the demonstrations would continue as planned to let the administration know there were persons on campus concerned about free speech.
Kuby said a table would be set up in the Union and Strong Hall and coalition members would distribute copies of the Bill of Rights, the Fourth Amendment Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities, as well as copies of a Kahneman editorial last semester that criticized administration policies.
Friday's rally has been tentatively scheduled for 11:15 a.m. Kuby said all 40 members of the coalition probably would attend.
Ron Kuby, a spokesperson for the coalition, said the group planned three similar demonstrations for this week. Kuby said two members of the group would hand out literature on free speech in the Strong Hall rotunda today and in the Kansas Union lobby tomorrow. A free speech rally in front of Strong Hall is being planned for Friday, he said.
"We want them to know that should an episode like that occur again, that there will be demonstrations," he said.
Academic Freedom Action Coalition, whose members deliberately violated the rule by passing out literature in campus buildings. In early December the coalition handed out 175 copies of the Bill of Rights in Strong Hall. The bill was attached to copies of the literature policy.
Iranians' funds slow to arrive
Even though Saeed Pirnazar, Tehran, Iran, graduate student, has not been home since last summer, the political strife there has had a major financial effect on him.
Many of the approximately 240 Iran students at KU also have financial difficulties this semester, according to Clark Coan, director of foreign students. Some students have been waiting for more than three months for mail from Iran.
Because the postal services are on strike in Iran, Pinaraz had not received the tuition money his parents sent three weeks ago to him and his sister, Haydey, a freshman. He said he was able to get his education online, but he could not have dig to his亿美 savings to get enough money to pay her tuition.
Coan said many Iranian students were borrowing money from friends for tuition.
MOHAMAD AHMADIAN, Esafah Iran, graduate student, said he had been able to pay the rent for his Stouffer Place apartment, but that he had borrowed money from friends to pay for his college. He was waiting for money from his parents for more than 2½ months.
According to Pernazar, a student could get money from Iran by having friends who are traveling abroad bring the cash outside the country. Ahmadian said he had borrowed his tuition money from a friend who had been in Iran recently.
Coun said another option for an Iranian student would be to apply for short-term loans from the office of financial aid. These loans must be repaid by the beginning of the following semester.
loving self-esteem.
However, Coan said, the money from these loans might not be enough because the maximum amount available to an undergraduate student without a co-signer was $400. A graduate student can get the full amount for tuition.
A few students have sought loans from Lawrence banks because of the loan policy, Coan said.
the most recent book on this semester.
Cann said he thought most Irian students could make do by borrowing from friends. According to Ahmadian, most of the students he knew had been able to enroll successfully.'
The last resort for some students, Coan said, is to transfer to other schools, where the tuition might be substantially lower than out-of-state tuition at KU, which is $850.10 this semester.
Funding, wages '79 goals
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
Battles over bucks by the University ... Kansas and its students are expected to be the KU top concerns in this session of the KU's deplurate, several area legislators say.
The University's battle is for formula funding, a new method of figuring budgets for Board of Regents schools, and students who want to get minimum wages for student workers.
State senators Paul Hess, R-Wichita, and Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, and representatives John Vogel, R-Lawrence, and Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, agree that formula funding and student minimum wages will be among the most important and controversial issues of the session for KU.
Formula funding will go before the Legislature as part of KU's 1980 budget. Past budgets have been based on the results of students enrolled at the University.
Formula fundscompares the financial status of KU to five "sister schools", the universities of Iowa, Oregon, North Carolina, Colorado and Oklahoma. A standardized formula determined that KU was underfunded last year by almost $4 million in comparison to the other schools. A request of $2 million to help make up that deficiency will be included in the 1980 KU budget request.
remain at $2.65 because the Regents did not request additional money from the bank.
Another student issue is the minimum wage. Although the federal minimum wage increased from $2.65 to $2.90 an hour Jan. 1, wages for students at Regents schools will
Hess said he supported the minimum wage for students because it could help improve them.
"I view University jobs as a kind of work scholarship, so I would support anything
See related story page 15
that we can do to get people through school," he said.
HE SAID he was "open-minded" toward formula funding and called it a more honest and realistic way of funding higher education.
Because KU has a heavy concentration of master's and doctoral programs, he said, the University should get more funding under formalis funding.
"My initial reaction is that it will have tough sledding." he said.
"I think we should pass formula funding not because the universities want us to, but because it may be the best way to fund higher education," he said. "I will require more sophistication on the part of the Regents and the Legislature and it will not be an easy road, but I think it will be worth it."
Although Berman said he "didn't see anything wrong" with formula funding, he predicted it would encounter opposition in the Legislature.
"There is a school of thought in the legislature that formula funding was more important."
enrolment, mainly at the other tegents\
enrolls," Berman said.
Because the present funding system is based on the number of students enrolled, funding would decline if enrollment declined.
BERMAN SAID it was difficult to predict how KU's bid for formula funding and minimum wages would fare.
"It will depend on the Governor's budget message and on whether a state spending lid is passed," he said.
Glover said he was not sure how successful the minimum wage issue would be in the United States.
"I'm sure it will come up, but KU's minimum wage probably will lag behind the federal minimum wage," he said. "We'll have to work with parents to support from students and their parents."
Glover then he favored formula funding because it was an opportunity to put in his name. He did not
"Our old system, because it was based on enrollment figures, tended to prostitute academia because universities could offer students that attracted a lot of students," he said.
However, he predicted that formula funding would have difficulty in the Legislature because it made the Regents be "changing horses in midstream."
"NOW THAT enrollment is declining," he said, "it looks like we're trying to find another way to get money."
2
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wre reports
Date set for Carlin's address
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin and Kansas legislative leaders have agreed that Carlin will deliver his legislative and budget messages to a joint session of the House.
Carlin had suggested scheduling the joint session Friday, but Senate President Rush Doyen vetored the suggestion because the Senate will not be in
Under state law, the governor must deliver his message within the first three weeks of the legislative session.
Bill would require meditation
TOPEKA-Kansas public school teachers would be forced to declare one minute of silence each day for meditation or prayer under provisions of a bill sponsored by the House.
The bill, by *Sens* John Croftoof, R-Cedar Point, Neil Arasmith, R-Philipkins; Ross Doyen, R-Concordance and Merrill Wicks, R-Junction City. (2014)
The proposal would require classroom teachers to announce the period of no more than one minute during which strict silence would be maintained and during which no other activities would be performed. During the period, students would be allowed to meditate or pray.
Ban on moneu aames sought
TOPEKA-Calling money games inflationary and a nuisance, a legislator from western Kansas introduced a bill yesterday in the House that would outlaw the money games operated by some food stores and radio and television stations.
Rep. Dean Searl, D-Minneola, with his principal targets the games operated by food stores because of the cost of the food for the conference and stores.
Shelor, a farmer and rancher, said he was not taking aim at the radio and television game money, but that it was impossible to correct the food store inventory.
House disagrees on food tax
TOPEKA—Proponents of plans to remove the sales tax from food in grocery stores disagreed yesterday about whether to implement the proposal.
House Speaker Wendell Lady R, Overland Park, was the spokesman before the House Assessment and Taxation Committee for a bill to remove the 39 percent exemption.
And two Wichita Democrats, Horn Jarchow and James Holerman, spoke on behalf of bills to reduce the state tax on food from 3 percent to 2 percent for one year, then cut it to 1 percent for another year before eliminating the tax altogether.
Game ends in youth's death
TOPEKA-A A game of Russian roulette with a 357 caliber gunman handgun loaded with a single bullet entered in death yesterday for a youth who put the gun
Police said the shooting occurred at the youth's apartment, where the youth, 17-year-old Gregory Essman, was giving a party of about five guests.
The shooting was listed as an accidental death and police have ordered an autopsy.
Farmers head for Washington
COLBY=Colorado and Kansas farmers pushed through western Kansas on yesterday for way to Washington to demonstrate for better farm prices.
Oklahoma and Nebraska farmers also have gotten started on their way to Washington. They are carrying arms and shouting slogans ranging from "Don't Tread on Me" to "Make America Great Again."
Other tractocarriers were reported en route to Washington from the Dakotas, Texas, Michigan and Florida. They are scheduled to arrive in February.
Explosion rips Arkansas town
HARRISON, Ark. — A massive explosion reduced the Allied Telephone Co. to a slab of concrete yesterday and shattered windows up to 10 miles wide in the city.
The explosion, which injured two persons, extensively damaged several businesses within a two-square-block area and reportedly could be heard as far as 100 meters.
Damage was expected to run into the millions. Telephone service was knocked out to between 5,000 and 6,000 customers in the community of about
Patients to be given marijuana
SANTA FE, N.M.—Capsules containing federally grown marijuana were invited to four cancer patients yesterday under provisions of a New Mexico law that requires state medical facilities to dispense them.
the maximum dose to be given to the four patients will be 15 milligrams three times a day, which is the equivalent of about three strong marijuana cigarettes. New Mexico has ordered marijuana cigarettes, in addition to the capsules, for the cancer patients' use.
Three other states—Florida, Illinois and Louisiana—have passed laws allowing the use of marijuana and its basic chemical component, THC, for use in the production of cannabis.
Allergic boy bursts his bubble
DENVER—the parents of a California boy who has been encased in a plastic bubble for one and a half years due to acute allergies, took him out of a diagnostic clinic at National Jewish Hospital yesterday, apparently in protest of doctors' wishes to conduct further tests on the boy.
The child, six-year-old Jared Reisman, and his parents have left Denver to return to their home in Sacramento, Calif. Their car is specially equipped with air filtering devices so the boy can travel without a space-type suit and the plastic bubble.
129 die in Iranian earthquake
TENRAN (AP) - At least 129 people were killed in an earthquake in northwest Iran yesterday while the nation's capital was celebrating the departure of U.S. troops from the country.
The broadcast report said the quake demolished three villages—Bazabad, Khorramahrad and Ebrahimabad—in the Quae'n area 350 miles east of Tehran. Foreign seismological observatories reported the quake was between 6.8 and 7.5 on the Richter scale.
Employees of the Tehran University Geophysics Institute were on strike alone with other civil servants omitted to the shah.
Beer tax to vau for prisons
It was the second major quake in eastern Iran in four months. An earthquake around the town of Tafiqa rikheer scale on Sept. 18 killed more than 15,000 people around the town of Tafiqa.
OKLAHOMA CITY—Beer drinkers in Oklahoma may be helping to pay for prison construction if bills introduced in the state state Senate Monday pass the
A $30 million bond issue was introduced yesterday to improve living conditions for prison inmates.
A 2 percent sales tax on 3.2 percent beer would pay off the bonds, if the bill is approved by the legislature and the people of Oklahoma.
Weather...
It will be clear to partly cloudy today with a high expected to be in the mid 30's. Tonight's low should be in the mid teens, with no precipitation expected. The winds today will be about 10 miles an hour. Tomorrow's high will be in the 40's.
Hijackers free 75 aboard jet as protest ends
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—Six Moslem hijackers released the passengers and crew members of a Lebanese jettier early today, ending a seven-hour drama they had staged to protest the disappearance of a religious leader.
The hijackers freed all 66 passengers and nine crew members after their leader told an airport news conference that Libya was taking religious leadership, Ibn Mosou al-Sadr.
After the brief statement, the hijackers left the Boeing 707 and surrendered to the United States.
THE LEADER told the news conference that inman, 34, had been kidnapped in October when she was attacked in Khadjah "in defiance of all international law." He said. "It is a crime
The jelcher was refuced at the hijackers' demand after Cyprus and Turkey refused to贮存.
An airport spokesman said the hijackers had not indicated in their talks with government officials whether they planned to leave again.
The plane was on a secluded runway and was cordoned off by police.
ACCORDING TO THE negotiators, the hijackers said they wanted to publicize the five-month disappearance of a Sadr, leader of Iraq, the largest Mosque sect in Lebanon.
"We hold Libyan strongman Col. Moammar Khadaby responsible for the imam's safety and we want him back alive because he unnamed the unarmed leader of the blacksans."
The hijackers, described by airport officials as three young men who identified themselves as Lebanese nationals, told the imam that they convinced the imam that being held up requested
The imam has been missing since he flew to Libya in October to attend the anniversary celebrations of Khadify's 1969 coup against the pro-Western monarchy.
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Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Shah leaves Iran, stops in Egypt
From the Kansan Wire Services
TEHRAN, Iran- Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, a keeing king driven from his kingdom, flew his royal jet out of Iran and took a journey from which he may never return.
His departure set off an explosion of joy by millions of his people. If his triumphant force have their way, the shah's flight means the ruler's control in a land ruled by kings for 2,000 years.
Jubilant Iranians poured into Tehran's streets, singing and dancing, cheering each other in celebration of victory in the bloody, violent struggle against the man who has ruled since 1941.
The 59-year-old monarch took the controls himself and piloted his "Sahab's falcon" Boeing 727 jettier into the skies over Afghanistan. The country was welcomed by President Anwar Sadat.
Sources said the monarch will meet with former President Gerald Ford before the State Council for the People's Republic of China.
THE SHAH, wearing sunglasses, a dark suit and a fixed smile, was greeted by a 21-gun salute at the airport in Aswain. The guards were waved the shah were waved away by Sadat.
The two heads of state and their wives were driven to an island hotel in a motorcade that passed small but enormous crowds scattered along the 18-mile route.
Sadat and the shah switched from a closed limousine to an open car as they drew close to the city of 150,000 and stood to receive the king. The king later which were directed at the Egyptian president.
Hastily erected posters of the shah and a few Iranian flags lined the route but banners welcomed Sadat and 'his noble guests' without mentioning the shah by name.
The shah, Empress Farah, Sadat and his wife travelled by boat to the 150-room Oberoi Hotel, which had been cleared of its 360 guests Monday night.
FOUR OTHER members of the shah's family, accompanied by dignitaries, flew to Texas yesterday and then were taken to Camp Pleasant, Prince Reza Pahlavi's secluded retreat.
Sources said security for the arrival of the shah's three younger children and his mother-in-law was so strict that landing in their city was not allowed on only as the plane prepared to land and
were extinguished as soon as the jet was on the ground
desert estate of multi-millionaire Walter Annenberg.
The family will stay with the crown prince until the shah comes to the United States.
There were indications the shah and his family might take sanctuary, at least from the attack.
The shail's arche foot, the Moslem religious leader Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomani, said he would return to Iran from his Paris exile and be promised from Iran to his children as minister of Premiere Shaipour Kakhtari.
Nixon to dine with Teng
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Predent Carter invited Richard Nixon to a Jan. 29 White House dinner honorizing China's vice premier because "it seemed like the decent and proper thing to do," Jody Powell, White press secretary, said yesterday.
"President Nixon has taken the first step in normalizing with China," Powell told reporters.
Powell said former President and Mrs. Gerald Ford also were invited to the dinner for Vice Premier Tien Hsuap, but they did not attend. It was not clear whether they could attend.
Powell said Nixon had accepted the acceptance of Mrs. understandings. The Mrs. will not be in touch with him.
Also invited was former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who made the first breakthrough trip to China. Kissinger accepted.
Powell said Nixon and Ford had "taken the first steps" toward U.S. recognition of China.
"This visit is very symbolic of the completion of the recognition," he said.
Powell said the invitation to Nixon, who resigned from the presidency following Watergate scandal revelations, might be an affront to some of the American people.
"There isn't any decision that he has
there, that wouldn't make some people
muddy."
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LEVI'S
No. 12 of Chapter IX on P
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
JANUARY 17, 1979
Nuke questions linger
Two chapters were added last week to the saga of the Wolf Creek Nuclear Generating Station near Burlington. Neither incident was designed to warm the heart of even the most optimistic utility official.
The most publicized of the incidents was the arrest on Saturday of 36 demonstrators for blocking railroad tracks and refusing to allow the passage of a train carrying the Wolf Creek nuclear reactor vessel to the plant site.
The demonstration marked the first incidence of civil disobedience protesting the Wolf Creek plant, and was the latest in a string of demonstrations in Kansas highlighting the dangers of nuclear power in general and the Wolf Creek plant in particular.
THE KANASS Natural Guard, an antinuclear protest group, had planned the protest for months and had camped in a farm field adjacent to the railroad tracks for most of last week. For the protesters it was a well-planned action that garnered more publicity for the anti-nuclear cause.
For officials of Kansas Gas & Electric and Kansas City Power & Light, co-owners of the power plant, the protest was an effective sign that the anti-nuclear movement in Kansas has not been dimmed.
Utility officials have other problems on their minds, however. Tests performed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission revealed that samples of the concrete slab that will support the plant's nuclear reactor failed to meet
the necessary strength tests. Utility officials have maintained that the tests used on the concrete were faulty, but NRC officials rejected that theory.
THE NRC'S findings have prompted the Mid-America Coalition for Energy Alternatives to ask the NRC to suspend the construction permit for the plant pending further investigations of the plant site.
Construction officials at the plant, while denying that there are any inadequacies in plant construction, also have bemoaned the increasing maze of federal regulations that govern projects like the Wolf Creek plant.
But while a construction project the size of the one in Burlington is bound to have occasional deficiencies, the very nature of nuclear power also mandates that no deficiencies in plant construction be tolerated.
A PLANT with the potential dangers of a nuclear power plant must be a very safe plant indeed, as must the process for storing nuclear wastes. The fact that no satisfactory method for the storage of those washes has been found, combined with the prospect of deficient construction in operational plants, add up to an impressive case against the need for nuclear power.
As a sign carried by one proteron on Saturday asked, "If you can't pour concrete, how can you store nuclear wastes?"
It is a question that utility officials are having an increasingly difficult time answering.
After what seems to have been an all too short vacation, the grid begins once more. For a number of us in 112 Flint Hall, that means a nightly vigil in the newsroom — too little sleep, too much coffee and too many classes to read for that early morning class.
But we'll survive, and each weekday morning, from now until May 8, we promise you that the Kansas will roll off the presses and send us another edition of our campus. What we think could be America's only mid-morning daily newspaper is back. Today's Kansas mann the beginning of what we hope will be one of the best newspapers in the tradition of journalistic excellence.
Kansan staff strives for excellence
AS A STUDENT newspaper, much of our coverage will be directed at campus issues. We will strive to bring you not only the news, but features and picture pages on people, places and happenings in the area. You'll find a list of campus activities and meetings throughout the summer, and each Friday we will bring you a page of entertainment news and listings.
The Kansan will again cover the Kansas Legislature this semester to bring you more information about the law and Lawrence. We think local coverage of University issues in the Legislature is important to our readers. We want to tell them what makes Theopka and Topeka it affects you as a student.
Of course, we'll rely on our wire services, the Associated Press and United Press International, to help us report national and world issues. But when news breaks, if it's fit to print, you'll be able to find it in the Kansan.
BUT TO HELP us do these things, we'll need your help. Despite our best efforts, we're bound to make mistakes. When we do, let us know and we'll correct them. If you know of some feature that might interest our readers, tell us so we can tell them.
Traditionally, the editorial page has been a forum where our writers can comment on and analyze the news. It will remain that, with editors representing the Kansan's opinions and with by-lined columns representing the opinions of our editorial writers.
But more importantly, the editorial page is a forum for your ideas and opinions. We encourage you to comment on our work and we would like your comments or by drop in the newsletter at any time.
If you drop by, you'll find a staff of more than 50 reporters and editors from varied backgrounds, most of whom are journalism majors. You'll also see Kansan and other newspapers. So here's an
Barry Massey
introduction that, I hope, will make us more familiar.
DIRCK STEIMEL, Wright senior, will be managing editor, responsible for directing news operations. He has worked for the Hutton campus and is a faculty campus editor for the Kansas last semester.
John Whitesides, Lawrence senior, will be editorial editor, in charge of the daily production of the editable page. He spent last summer with the Kansas City Star and you may remember him from last semester when he was an editorial writer for the Kansai
Mary Hoen, Iowa City, Iowa senior, will be campus editor. She has worked for the Wichita Eagle and Beacon and the Chute Tribune, and spent last fall at the Modern Media. St. Petersburg, Fla., she participates in a newspaper management program.
Hoenk and her assistants are responsible for the reporters on the paper and for directing news coverage, Pam Manson, Overland Park senior, will be associate campus editor, Carol Hunter, Parsons senior, and David Link, Lawrence graduate student, will be assistance campus editors. Manson has worked for the Topoka Daily Capital and the Fort Scott Tribune. Hunter spent two years with K.C. Young before just finished an intercession internship with the Kansas City Times. Link is a veteran Kansan reporter and copy editor.
NANCY DRESSLER, Kingman senior, takes over as sports editor after serving as associate sports editor last semester. She has worked for the Hutchinson News and the
Her associate will be John Tharp, Toplea junior, who spent last summer with the Leavenworth town and has been a sports coach. He played baseball at Beacon and the Kansas City Star and Times.
Our ever vigilant copy chiefs, late night protectors of grammar and style, will be Linda Finestone, Prairie Village senior, Paula Southerland, Toperka seniand, Leon Unrub, Pawnee Rock senior. Finestone has worked for the Kansas City Times and the
Pittsburgh Morning Sun, Southerland spent last summer at the Wichita Eagle and Beacon and Urhahn has worked for the Mineapolis (Minn.) Tribune, Hays Daily News, Topika Capital-Journal and the Larned Tiller and Tailer.
RANDY OLSON, St. Louis senior, will be graphics editor, a new Kansas position. He will be responsible for providing guidance with the paper's make-up and will help students in artists and photographers. Olson spent last fall as a photographer for the Milwaukee Journal.
Alan Zlotky, Topeka senior, will be the Kansan's chief photographer. He is in charge of a staff of four other fine photographers and just finished an interes-
sion internship with the Kansas City Star
and Times.
And me. I've been on the Kansas staff for several semesters, most recently as editorial officer. I've had internships with NASA and in the University of N.Y. TimpeLingh and the Charge Editor.
The Kansan abounds with talented people, many of whom I wasn't able to mention. But we're looking forward to this semester and I'm grateful for making the Kansan serve you, our readers.
SHAH OF IRAN
MOLED LANTED DREZA PALEV
King worked to bring peaceful integration
Every now and then I guess we all think realistically about that day when we will be victimized with what is life's final common denominator—that something we call death.
The scene and the subsequent encounter were arresting.
Awaiting them was Public Safety Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor, a man who was the epitome of police brutality, and who reflected the seething hatreds of a city where acts of violence against blacks were the order of the day.
On a downtown Birmingham, Ala., street on a hot, muggy afternoon 2000 blacks gathered to protest the racist policies of the most rigidly segregated large city in America. The protesters came to Birmingham to protest with them, with the knowledge his presence was unknown even with the knowledge his presence probably would be met with repression.
Connor watched with growing impatience as the crowd of black men, women and children in their Sunday best filled the streets. On one side of the street stood the police, a team of Connor's policemen with their growling dogs, and firemen ready with their hoses.
We all think about it, and every now and then I think about my own death, and I think about my own funeral. And I don't think about it in a morbid sense. And every now and then I ask myself what it is that I would want said and I leave the word to you this morning.
"Freedom!" shouted a black boy, raising arms toward the heavens. "Get white hair."
THE FIREMEN moved, and instantly water shot from the nozzles with the sound and fury of gunfire. At first a powerful stream rattled elm trees with such force that pieces of thick, black bark were striped off. Then the firemen ined on in their targets. A slim black girl braced herself against the jet stream but was unable to withstand the brute force of the water. The blacks were swept down the street as if they were litter.
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 letter is after a period, it should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Vernon Smith
Finally, satisfied that the blacks had been pushed back far earlier, the water was shut off. "God bless America," a reporter mumbled in disgust.
If any of you are around when I have to meet my day, I don't want a long funeral. And if you get somebody to deliver the eulogy, tell him not to talk too long.
Thus did the civil rights movement of the Sixties come to the attention of America and the world, and into the spotlight was thrust a young black minister who would become perhaps the greatest spiritual leader the world has known. Martin Luther King Jr.
KING WASN'T present when Connor unleashed his firebuses. But he had spent weeks carefully planning the assault on a large group of men, and supremacy. Day after day, blacks of all ages cheerfully would go downto them to be arrested for offenses such as parading without a permit. More than 3,300 blacks, including many from the South, were ever arrested in an American racial protest.
And every now and then I wonder what I want him to say. Tell him not to mention that I have a Nobel Peace Prize. That isn't so important.
the battle, for the most part, appeared to be over in Birmingham. In but every large city in the North and in other places in the South, a wave of embezzlement erupted rapidly. Blacks began to demand an end to school segregation and better jobs and housing. A movement was growing in America, a movement whose time had come when the South seemed unable to symbol to millions, both black and white.
In the days that followed the Birmingham roots, the tension eased, and an agreement was reached.
Tell him not to mention that I have three or four hundred other awards—that's not important. Tell him not to mention where I went to school.
He was born on Jan. 15, 1929, in Atlanta, a city haunted by the Negro and the Negro cause. As a boy, King grew up in one of the most prosperous cities in homes. But though he was sheltered economically, he was not sheltered from those experiences that outrage and demoralize human dignity, and that later would play an important part in shaping his
THERE WAS the time when he was eight, when he went downtown with his father to buy a pair of shoes. Father and son took the shoes home and approached and said he would be happy to help them if they moved to the socks in the rear. The elder King refused and they left the store in anger. Such incidents made it difficult for him to walk about with him insight he would retain years later.
There were places he could not go, things he could not do, instruments, objects and books.
I'd like somebody to mention that day that Martin Luther King Jr. tried to give his life to people.
A BRIGHT student, he skipped through high school and at 15 entered Atlanta's Negro Morehouse college. His fatherMorehoused an educator who thought he wanted to study medicine or law. "I had doubts that religion was intellectually respectable," he said. "I rejoiced against the emotionism of Negro religion, because it was not what I didn't understand it and it embarrassed me."
Although raised in the warmth of a tightly knit family, King appeared to be a sensitive and complex youth. Twice, before he was 15, he tried to commit suicide. Once his brother had been murdered by his grandmother, Jenne Williams, unconscious when he slid down a bannister. Martin thought she was dead, and in despair he ran to a second floor window and jumped out—only to land unhurt. He did the same thing, resulting in a result, on the day his grandmother died.
At Morehouse, King searched for "some intellectual basis for a social philosophy." He read and reread Thoreau's essay. Civil Disobedience, and concluded that the ministry was the only profession in which he develop his growing ideas on social protest.
AT CROZER Theological Seminary in Chester, Pa., King built the underpinnings of his philosophy. Hoeck and Kang impressed the community for laying innatably into Gandhi's books.
I'd like for somebody to say that day that Martin Luther King Jr. tried to love someone.
On Dec. 1, 1958, a seamless named Rosa Parks boarded a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama. She had just finished a day of shop cleaning and would have returned home to rest. As the bus picked up more passengers, the black passengers were taken out. The whites getting on could sit down. When
"From my background," King said, "I gained my regulating Christian ideals. From Gandhi I learned my operational technique."
I want you to say that I tried to be right on the war question. I want you to be able to say that I did try to feed the hungry. I want you to do it in my life to clothes who were naked.
driver told Parks to get up, she politely and sternly refused.
I want you to say on that day that I did try in my life to visit those who were in prison. And I want you to say that I tried to love and serve humanity.
"I don't know why I wouldn't move," she said later. "There was no plan or plot at all. I was just tired from shopping. My feet hurt." She was arrested and fined $10.
The incident proved later to be the catalyst that united a people who for years had been the beat of burden of the dominant white culture. Within hours, the blacks embarked upon a bus boycott that was more than 90 percent effective and that almost every yorkie's bus line. Blacks walked, rode mules, drove wagons, and traveled in carpools.
THE BOYCOTT soon became the Montgomery Improvement Association, and King was elected president without a dissenting vote. King and others suggested that King should have been identified with the community and was not identified with any faction of the bitterly divided black leadership. It also has been suggested that King was named because almost no one wanted to be identified publicly as the owner of a new venture with an uncertain future.
In the beginning, many Montgomery citizens, both black and white, thought the boycott eventually would fold. When this event to happen, white Montgomery turned mean.
Yes, if you want to, say that I was a drum major. Say that I was a drum major for justice. Say that I was a drum major for peace. Say that I was a drum major for righteousness.
The mayor and other city officials publicly became members of the White Citizens Council, and a "get tough" policy was announced by the mayor.
King was arrested on a charge of driving 30 miles an hour in a 24 mile zone. Four days later, the bomb exploded. The bomb was thrown on the porch of his home. When King arrived home, an enraged crowd of blacks with guns, rocks, rods, knives and other weapons poured in, ready to take to the streets in protest.
POLICEMEN, FIREMAN, city officials and Mayor Galse also were present, their faces grave with apprehension. It was clear that Montgomery was on the verge of exploding in a blood bath, and it seemed there was nothing anyone could do to stop it.
Assessing the situation and realizing all that was needed was a spark to set things off. King raised his arms and controlled the crowd.
"Don't get panicy," he said calmly. "Don't do anything panicy at all. Don't get your weapons. He who lives by the sword will perish by the sword."
King continued, "We are not advocating violence. I want you to love our enemies. Be good to them, love them and let them know you love them."
And all of the other shallow things will not matter. I won't have any money to leave behind. I won't have the fine and luxurious things I want, but I just want to leave a committed life behind.
The crowd fell silent, wondering what manner of man could speak this way, especially just after his wife and child had narrowly escaped injury and perhaps death.
WHEN HE FINISHED, cries of "innen" and "God bless you, son" floated up from the crowd. It began to disperse, its anger defused and dissipated.
Thanks to King 's invenolent direct action philosophy, blacks had an effective means of protest. As a powerless group dominated by a powerful majority, blacks could not stage an open revolt. To go into the streets under those conditions with open demands for change was suicid. King and the students staging sit-ins were used in the national resistance movement in the disarming, appealing garr of love, forgiveness, and passive resistance.
King became famous worldwide, for the parable of the porch went over the wires of the news media. And in less than a year the Supreme Court upheld an earlier order forbidding Jim Crow seating on Alabama buses.
And that is all I want to say, If I can help somebody as I pass along, if I can cheer
s somebody with a song, if I can show somebody he's traveling wrong then my living life is a story.
Even after victories were won at the lunch counters, in classrooms and public buses, civil and voting legislation was enacted to allow the nation a day, seven days a week in the struggle to secure basic human rights for all Americans. He was in Memphis, Tem., on April 4, 1968, preparing for a demonstration in Washington to问 an asasman's bullet ended his life.
THE VOICE of the prince of peace, the idealistic dreamer, the consciousness of a man who is caught in the shadows.
King once ended a talk by quoting the words of an old Negro slave preacher who said, "We aim what we ought to be and we aim 'n where we ought to be and we aim 'n what we want to be and we aim 'n what we are going to be. But, thank God we aim 'n what we
No, never again would the black American be where or what he was, thanks to Mara
If I can do my duty as a Christian ought.
If I can do my duty as a Christian ought,
I can bring salvation to a world once
If I can spread the messages as the master
If I can spread the messages as the master taught.
Then my living will not be in vain.
February 1968
Ebenezer Baptist Church
Atlanta, Ga.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
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| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
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| 5'6" x10'1" | Wedgewood blue plush | $72 | $32 |
| 6'6" x8'10" | brown mist hi-log shag | $92 | $45 |
| 6'9" x12" | sugar brown plush | $165 | $70 |
| 5'11" x9'5" | semic green hi-lo shag | $93 | $60 |
| 5'4" x11'4" | dark green hi-lo shag | $116 | $75 |
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29th & IOWA, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 843-9090 Open 'til 8 p.m. Monday & Tuesday
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RECREATION SERVICES
Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation
SPRING 1979 RECREATION CALENDAR
BEST SELLER
JANUARY
BESTWAYS
Tuesday 16 Facilities resume regular operations. AFH opens at 7:10 p.m. Robinson Complex opens at 5-10:30 p.m.
Saturday 20 Basketball Free Throw Contest 8 a.m.-12 noon Robinson North Gym
Tuesday 23 Intramural Basketball Manager's Meetings Recreation League Meeting—5:15 p.m. “A” League meeting—6:00 p.m.
Wednesday 24 Intramural Basketball Manager's Meeting "B" League—5:15 p.m.
Thursday 25 Officials Basketball Clinic—5 p.m. Robinson North Gym
Saturday 27 Basketball Free Throw Contest 8 a.m.-12 noon Robinson North Gym
Saturday 27 Basketball Free Throw Contest 8 a.m.-12 noon—Robinson North Gym
FEBRUARY
Saturday 3 Basketball Free Throw Contest 8 a.m.-12 noon Robinson North Gym
Saturday 10 Basketball Free Throw Finals—8 p.m. Allen Field House
Monday 26 Intramural Swim Meet—7:30-10:30 p.m. Robinson Pool
Tuesday 27 Intramural Swim Meet 7:30-10:30 p.m. Robinson Pool—Tentative
Tuesday 20 Intramural Softball Manager's Meetings Recreation League Meeting—5:15 p.m. "A" League Meeting-6:00 p.m.
Wednesday 21 Intramural Softball Manager's Meetings "B" League meeting-5:15 p.m. Co-Rec League Meeting:6:00 p.m. Deadline for entering Intramural Golf is at 4 p.m. today
Thursday 20 Softball GOLF is at 4 p.m. today
MARCH
Thursday 22 Softball Officials Clinic—5 p.m.
APRIL
Friday 6 Intramural Track Meet—7:00 p.m. Allen Field House Deadline for entering Intramural Handball is today at 4:00 p.m.
Saturday 7 Intramural Home Run Derby—11 a.m. Quigley Field Intramural Track Meet—3:00 p.m.—Allen Field House
Saturday 28 Intramural Wrestling—Robinson South Gym
Sunday 29 Intramural Wrestling—Robinson South Gym
FOR ADDITIONAL INFO—DIAL REC INFO 864-3456
SPORTS CLUBS
Recreation Services sponsors ten sports clubs. If you are interested in belong- ing to one of these clubs, please contact the person listed below
CREW... Chris Dippel. 864-4836
CRICKET... Ammie Singh. 843-5191
FENCING... Mary Elliot. 864-3311
FRISBEE... Wayne Gaul. 842-0765
HANG GLIDING... Chris Curtis. 842-1718
KARATE... Doug Brown. 842-5225
RUGBY... Paul Diedrich. 864-4295
SOCCER... Tom Boogher. 843-4050
VOLLEYBALL... Bob Lockwood. 843-3560
WEIGHT LIFTING... Bob Franklin. 843-1926
Weekday
The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
January 17, 1979
2025 2025
STOP NUCLEAR POWER
POLICE DEPT.
Story by Lynn Byczynski Photos by Randy Olson
After being arrested during the protest, Mary Harren, W. Michita, left, watches as her friends are frisked and photographed. Fifteen Kansas Highway Patrol troopers and 10 sheriff's deputies worked overtime Friday to assist with the arrests.
"I'm going to lie here till they take that damn thing back to Chattanooga." Francis Blaufus, a 57-year-old Coffey County farmer, above, said. He and 33 other persons blocked a train bringing a nuclear reactor vessel from Chattanooga Tenn.
After waiting three days for the train, which was delayed by freezing temperatures, protesters who were arrested, below, flanked by reporters and photographers, wait to be processed in bus that took them to the Coffey County courthouse in Burlington for arrangement.
10:42
Rising 140 feet into the air, the concrete nuclear reactor structure will house the reactor vessel that arrived by train Friday at the Wolf Creek nuclear plant. The nuclear reactor is expected to be operational by 1983.
Kansas Nuke
Burlington.
A train bearing a 340-ton reactor vessel equipped to use protesters with air horn blaring, drowning their chant,
Behind the 36 persons blocking the tracks, a small group of construction workers from the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant site near Burlington booded and shouted, motioning for the train to drive through.
"I think it would be great if it was someplace else," Bill Docker, one of the construction workers said. "But it's a good place."
Although the protesters on the tracks were much more emotional about the Wolf Creek plant, the demonstration staged last Friday by the Kansas Natural Guard remained peaceful.
The protest went off exactly as the Kansas Natural Guard, the Coeffey County sheriff and the Kansas Highway Patrol.
The "track-sitters"—those who were physically blocking the train—had taken a six-hour nonviolence training course, arranged by the protest group, to insure that their arrests would be peaceful.
The protesters came to the demonstration site, 10 miles from the plant, intending to be arrested, and they were. As they were led quietly from the tracks, they introduced themselves and talked quietly to the men arresting them.
One man carried a sign that read, "If you can't pour concrete, you store your nuclear waste?"
The officer inscribed him joked. "He can pour concrete, but I'm not saying they can pour it right."
Samples of the concrete base of the reactor failed strength tests, but officials from Kansas Gas and Electric, the Wichita-based utility building the plant, maintain that the fault lies with the tests, not the material.
The issue of the concrete that will provide a base for the Wolf Creek reactor is one that "could change things dramatically," according to Ron Henricks, head of the Mid-America Coalition for Energy Alternatives.
Bill Ward, an attorney for that group, filed a complaint with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission requesting that all construction at Wolf Creek be stopped until the concrete was proven safe.
"I have two questions," Ward said. "First is the concrete
safety. And second, what is the nature of their quality, con-
trol."
New tests are in progress and concrete pouring at the plant has been stopped pending their outcome. Other tests have not been conducted.
Robert Rives, vice president of systems services for Robert Gas and Electric, said "Fund evidence indicates that we have a clear roadmap."
Despite the delays, Rives said the plant would begin operation as scheduled in 1983.
Kansas Natural Guard members who tried to disrupt that schedule last Friday said their arrests had a more important effect than detaining the reactor vessel for 20 minutes.
"I think it served to increase opposition," Bill Beems, Lawrence senior, said. "This is the first time there's been any notice of the significant dissent about the construction of the plant."
Beeams was one of 10 Lawrence residents arrested and charged with criminal trespass for blocking the train. He and 19 other demonstrators pleaded not guilty to the charges, a courtroom inquiry found (Courthouse and bad to post between $150 and $200 bond).
The rest of the demonstrators played no contest and were released Friday night after paying $40 in fines and
Bill Higgins, Spring Hill senior, and Jeanne Green of Lawrence, said they paid their fines with loans from the
Only seven demonstrators spent the night in jail Friday and the last three posted bond and left Sunday. One of them, a man from Boulder, Colo., had been on the tracks but had not been arrested until he requested that an officer do so.
On Saturday, for the second time that weekend, sheriff's officers and National Guard vehicles were called to the protesters' campsite, this time to rescue four people and vehicles from the foot of snow that had fallen overnight.
"It's good that we've developed a good relationship with the law officers," Green, who was caught in the snowstorm, said. "You can hear us from here."
NO NUKES
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
7
Moore to get offer
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
Moore, who was fired Nov. 16 from his job as KU's head football coach, should get a letter from Bob Marcum, KU's athletic director. The letter is a second try by the University to settle its financial obligations with the former coach.
Bud Moore might be watching for the mailman more closely than usual today.
At the time of his firing, Moore still had two years remaining on a five-year contract. In salary alone, KU owes Moore about $7,700, according to the contract's terms. And that figure doesn't include some fringe benefits that Moore says are due him.
KU officials have already tried to settle with Moore by making an offer in December, about a month after the firing. But Moore, reached at home Monday, said that offer was "considerably less" than what the judge ordered for and thus was unacceptable to him.
"A contract is a contract," Moore said. "I had opportunities to not honor my portion of it. I could have gone other places but I didn't. I stayed here."
No one is saying just how much the settlement offers Moore, who has threatened to leave if he doesn't accept.
WHEN ASKED this week if he still in
tended to go to court, Moore said, "I would like to avoid any public controversies at our side."
Marcum said a second settlement offer was mailed late Monday and that Moore would be prompted to make another offer was prompted by Moore's response in a newspaper story to his request.
The story was the first time he became aware of Moore's reaction to the offer, more.
But it appears a court action may result unless the University offers Moore the full amount as stated in the contract, even though Moore has yet to hire an attorney. The court would not have seen the second contract offer but said that he would still hold out for the full amount.
Moore was hired in Dec. 1974, replacing head coach Dam Brombaugh. Fambrough has been rehired to replace Moore. In his first season, Moore led a 7-5 season mark, including a 33-19 loss to Pittsburgh in the Sun Bowl. Moore was Big John's co-champion and runner-up for national titles.
"After I read it in the paper, I talked to Mike Davis (University counsel) and Chancellor Dykes and we decided we should make another offer." Marcum said.
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Monday Jan.22 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Tuesday Jan. 23 Scratch 7:00 pm
Wednesday Jan. 24 Greek 6:30 pm
Wednesday Jan. 24 All Campus 8:30 pm
Thursday Jan. 25 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Friday Jan. 26 TGIF 4:00 pm
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Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
SALE
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Committee to face Regents dispute
The renominations of two Board of Regensers will go to a Senate committee today for consideration, the first step toward a dispute between former Gers. J. John Carlin over who can name the new board members.
By LEON UNRUH
Staff Writer
And Norman Gaa, R-Westwood, the Senate majority leader, thinks that one of Bennett's choices, Glee Smith Jr., has a good chance of keeping his membership despite the new administration.
On Jan. 5, three days before Bennett was to leave office, he nominated republicans Smith of Sarnoff and Walter Hierstener of Fairway, to another term. Carlin clamed the new regents and said he would fight Bennett's move.
If the Senate approves Smith's and Herstein's
carolin will not be able to nominate anyone for those positions.
Carlin's two nominees, Margaret Glades of Yates Center and John MacDowall of Hutchinson, also are Republicans. Hutton's replacement, if two Republicans are chosen by the full Senate when it votes in the next two weeks, will have to be a Democrat, to maintain a mandatory 5-4 split along party lines.
"I'd say that or the one has a good chance or being appointed," Gaar said yesterday. "I'd say that Smith has been selected."
The term of a third board member, M. Prudence Hutton,
Newton, also expired, but Bennett did not name her suc-
Before he was named to the Regents, Smith was Senate president pro-tem, leaving him with good legislative connections, Gaar said. His positions on education also seem to fit well with Bennett and Carlin's policies, he
Smith probably will fare well, at least better than Hiersteiner, "not only from past performances but also
from his ability to work under the present governor," Gaar said.
"My personal tendency is to take an independent view and look at the different criteria."
Gzaar said that not all the present regents met his criteria. The candidate must reflect Carlin's confidence and views, understand policy-making in higher education and under law. He should be a Legislature, not the Regents, has the last word in fund.
Smith is one of three Regents who attended the University of Kansas, Hiersteiner attended Iowa University and Harvard School of Law. Hutton was one of four members who attended Kansas State University.
The Regents recently passed to the state budget director the seven Regents schools' request for $4,235 million in operating funds and $35 million in capital improvement funds for fiscal 1980. After the budget director makes his cuts and Carlin his recommendations, the Legislature will pare them again.
Of Carlin's nominations, only MacDonald attended KU.
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Army ROTC teaches you leadership. Practical leadership. How to deal with people how to make things happen. Business and government always pay a
While you take the Advance Course, you also earn up to $2000.
You are required to complete your course. You must do the
You earn your commission while you learn your degree. You have the option of an Army career with all the pay, prestige and travel opportunities of an officer.
There are plenty of other reasons why Army ROTC makes sense for a young man or woman determined to get ahead. We list to tell you more.
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Wednesday, January 17, 1978
University Daily Kansan
9
Only McCollum open for break
University of Kansas housed offices decided not to keep all residence halls open during Christmas break as hard as possible.
McColumb Hall, which had 200 students sign up for the program, remained open, Fred McElhenee, director of the program, said.
About 40 members of the seven other residence halls signed up to live in their hotel over the holiday, but were not allowed to do so.
"WE DECIDED there was no way we could justify keeping all the bait open 24 hours a day, including deck service and security, for only 60 or so students," he said. "The cost would be tremendous and wasteful."
No food service was available during the break, but security monitors and desk assistants were on duty. The rest of the hall was open for the break residents, who filled McCollum to about one-fourth of its capacity.
The decision to keep all the residence halls open during university holidays this year was an experiment by
According to J.J. Wilson, housing director, the experiment resulted from student complaints that all holidays should be kept open free of charge during the holidays.
Students who had signed contracts for the spring semester were not charged for the housing in McCollam. However, new residence hall members or students living on campus were charged for other living arrangements were charged $8 a night.
DURING THANKSGIVING break, all halles except Gertrude Sellars Pearson and Corbins halles were kept open free of charge. About 545 residence hall members took advantage of the program.
McEllenie said the length of the Christmas break accounted for the lack of student interest in living in the halls.
tored for the lack of interest in living in the town. He said many students who live far away did not travel home during the Thanksgiving holiday because of its short duration, and he encouraged them, however, encouraged those students to leave the campus.
Currently, university hall officials are making plans for the third official university holiday, spring break. Mar. 10
"We're going to get a definitive number of students who
are interested, then we'll determine once again whether to keep the halls open," McEhene said.
HE SAID the length of spring break made it difficult to know what the student interest would be.
The prospects for keeping the hall open next year free or charge during vacations appear bleak. MeiFhiono is
"I have to think that next year we will not be able to afford this luxury," he said. "There are too many things to do."
One of those things is a lack of funds, he said.
"Originally, we had included the expense of keeping the halls open during breaks in our proposed rate increase for residence hall rooms for next year," he said. "But because it was a new room, we had to cut something, and that was the first to go."
McElhenie he thought the policy used in previous years concerning vacation housing would be followed in
In that policy, a minimum number of students must sign up to stay in a hall in order for it to remain open. If the hall is kept open, the student is charged on a per night basis. In many years, that charge has ranged from $6 to $8 a night.
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SUA
10
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
City to upgrade existing park
More than 100 people crowded into the Lawrence city commission room and stood outside in the hall last night to support upgrading an existing park instead of establishing a new one.
In a 3-2 decision, the commission decided to use money left in the city by Myra B. Hobbs for the improvement of a bridge over the river.
The East Lawrence Improvement Association had supported upgrading the three-acre park at 100d and Delaware. A spokesman for the group, Tom Averill, 1224 Brownsville Road, said that it was a buffer on an industrial area and a housing
Marnie Argersinger, city commissioner, and Donald Binns, mayor, said they spending money on the park because it was next to the Stockley Van Camp factory. However, Jack Rose, city commissioner, said, "We built a parking lot here and we're proving the park. It's not an ideal site, but it is as good as any. I don't think anything new is going to come up."
Argersinger said Hobbs' will had directly directed that land be purchased for a park. The will states that the money cannot be used for anything else unless at least four commissioners approve.
Because the city already owns the park at 10th and Delaware, the commissioners said, they will wait for an agreement from the city.
In another 3-2 decision, the commission upheld a city ordinance that calls for the elimination of all billboards in urban areas.
Tom Martin, president of Martine Outdoor, a sign company based in California with billboards in Lawrence, MA. (Brantley)
Rose and Barkley Clark, city commissioner, had suggested that the commission compromise to prevent a long and costly court fight. They suggested that the city should invest in new courts and that Martin Outdoor add three billboards
elsewhere in the city in exchange for removing the billboards from the downtown area.
Martin said he was willing to compromise but thought the city ordinance banning all billboards was unconstitutional.
In other business, the commission approved an additional $75,000 to help the Lawrence Unified School District 497 build an indoor swimming pool. The commission has already even the district $100,000 for the pool.
Under federal law, the city and the federal government must compensate the owner for each sign he removes. The city must pay 25 percent of the cost of the sign and the federal government must pay 75 percent.
The commission deferred until next week any action on a request to revoke the cereal malt beverage license of Uncle Mily's, 2246 Barker, a tavern near Haskell Indian Junior College. Officials from the college and neighborhood said the license was in violation of a city liquor ordinance and a zoning ordinance.
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Charges dismissed in HEW investigation
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday that he had received a letter from Taylor August, regional office director for the University of Texas Medical Center, filed by Rebecca Burke, had been dropped.
The charges led to an investigation by HEW in KU athletic care and treatment programs, including staffing budgets and job descriptions.
cerning two other complaints filed last year with HEW that alleged discrimination between the KU men's and women's athletics programs in coaches' salaries, team funding cuts, facilities, training, scholarships and travel funds.
William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor in charge of women's athletics, said an assistant trainer and a student trainer had been added to the women's training staff. The women's trainer's salary also was increased to $11,400 a year, he said.
Charges filed by a former KU women's athletics trainer citing alleged discrepancies between the KU men's and women's athletics programs have been dismissed by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
Marian Washington, women's athletics director, said last night that she had not seen a copy of the report. She said it was wrong to believe that the charges would have been dropped.
Reports have not been released con-
Bomen's training facilities, scheduled to be completed July 1, 1978, should be finished the following year.
KU was to be compiled by July 1, 1978, with Title IX of the Education Amendment Act of 1972, which states that equal athletic for both sexes must be provided.
An institution risks losing federal grants if it does not comply with Title IX provisions.
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Wednesday, January 17, 1979
11
Slight delays slow legal program
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
A prepaid legal services program for KU students is running a few weeks behind schedule, according to Mike Harper, student body president.
"I said last semester that a lawyer would be hired by January 15." Harper said yesterday. "I expect to have someone hired by the end of the month. We haven't missed it."
Harper blamed the delay on problems encountered last semester with the legal services board. He said board members should also provide a proposal for the program and its services.
He also said the weather had slowed the progress of the program. Harper and
several board members had been away from campus longer than expected because
Bob Rocha, Kannas City, Kan,
sophomore, acting chairman of the legal services board, agreed with Harper's executive committee that he was impressed by the applications received.
"WE HAVE SOME every good applications," Rocha said. "Many of the applicants have been involved in consumer research and have submitted theirs. That will be a factor in our decision."
Harper said he would meet with board and search committee members within a week to discuss the 23 applications received for the legal services attorney position. The attorney will be paid between $15,000 and $18,000 a year.
"The board will conduct interviews with five or six of the applicants and submit its recommendations to me. Then I will hire the attorney." Harer said...
The attorney's staff will be a full-time secretary and four part-time assistants or
Funding for the program comes from student activity fees. Harper said 60 percent of the students polled in October 1977 said they would pay up to $3 a semester for legal services.
The program will operate on an annual budget of $4,000. Harper said. Staff salaries for the program are $1,650 and $2,000 located for the program. Harper said the university would ask the Kansas Board of Regents for a 25 cent increase in funding to fund the legal services program next year.
"AS FAR AS I know, that is the only increase to be requested in the activity fee. The Kansas Union and Watkins Nurses have not requested increased." Harrison said.
The program will be reviewed before July 1, the beginning of fiscal 1980, at which time the board plans to recommend that a portion of the $54,000 budget be used to expand the services of the attorney to include courtroom representation.
Harpal说 the budget should be able to cover litigation expenses in addition to the costs.
- Preparation, drafting or review of legal documents,
- Conferences, correspondence, or negotiations with adversary parties, before
- Legal research and counsel to students,
* Notarial note and
- incorporation of KU student organizations for nonprofit purposes.
PAELA
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police Beat
Compiled by Laura Stevens
Michael D. Groner, Roundake, III.
graduate student, reported Monday to
Lawrence police that a padlock was cut
from a storage bin at Bristol Terrace between Dec. 15 and Jan. 15, and Jewelry,
statues and paintings valued at $800 were taken.
Connie L. Campbell, Prairie Village senior, and Lisa C. Burcher, Lawrence senior, reported that a burglar entered their office at 5:15 p.m. in the fifth St. at about 6 p.m. Sunday and took $5.
James O. Burns, Lawrence special student, reported that camping equipment valued at $1,065 was stolen from his home at 630 Arkansas St. between 8 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday. The burglar apparently cut a lock from a door to gain entry.
Stereo equipment valued at $800 was taken from an apartment at 200 W, Sixth St, BOSTON.
day. The apartment, occupied by Abdurrahmmann S. Nasr, Tripoli, Libya, senior, was apparently entered with the use of a key.
Susan G. Hall, Overland Park freshman,
reported that jewelry, clothing and
household goods valued at $1,082 were stolen
from her locked apartment at 1703 W. 24th
St. between Dec. 21 and Jan. 3. The burglar
apparently entered through the door.
Thomas K. Pratt, manager of Grampy's Pancake House, $320 W. Sixth St., reported Monday that a bank bag containing $896 in checks and currency had been taken from the business Sunday night. The bag was in an unlocked file cabinet.
was taken from her car between Friday evening and Sunday afternoon while it was raining.
Diane Olmsted, Woodridge, Ile., senior,
reported that a $40 tennis racquet was stolen
from her apartment at 1603 W. 15th St.
between Dec. 24 and Jan. 1.
William R. Kipp, Lawrence graduate,
student, reported that a battery and tools
worth $80 were stolen from his car between
Jan. 10 and Jan. 14, the vehicle was parked
in front of the garage (FAH).
Auto batteries were reported stolen in two incidents. Nancy K. Baxter, Great Bend Incident Investigator
Charles R. Carpenter, Lawrence senior,
reported that his car, valued at $4,500,
was stolen between 5:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.
from outside an auto shop at 92% $2,88t. E28.tl
KU Police responded Monday to a determined call when an unidentified person reported she was sliding near Potter Lake. The victim apparently jumped into a tree. The victim was taken to the hospital.
An unidentified person slipped and fell Monday on a wet floor at the entrance to Wescue Hall. The person reportedly broke down and was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
POSITION OPENINGS
K.U. Residence Halls and Scholarship Halls
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
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ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTORS must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
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All applicants should evidence above-average academic achievement, residential group living experience, and availability for the entire 1979-80 academic year (August-May).
Applications and job descriptions available now in the Office of Residential Programs, 123 Strong Hall.
FEBRUARY 15, 1979, for Residence Hall positions
FEBRUARY 28, 1979, for Scholarship Hall directors
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12
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Cross-country skiing snowballs
By DAVID EDDS Staff Reporter
Snow has slowed down almost everything in Lawrence, except skiing.
Because Mont Bleu, a ski slope southeast of the city, hasn't opened this winter, Lawrence skiers have taken to cross-country skiing.
Equipment for cross-country skiing is available at First Serve and Sunflower
Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts St,
charges $7.00 a day for the rent of boats,
skis and poles. First Serve, 2120-D W. 25h,
charges $8.00 a day for the same equipment.
Jerry Riggs, a salesman at First Serve,
said yesterday, "Part of the fun of cross-
country skiing is that you can make your
dog go as well as you do before
everyone started camping in parks."
According to both Sunflower Surplus and First Serve, the demand for skis in Lawrence has been heavy since the snow hit.
"we just had nine people in here this morning to get skis. There's a pretty big pile of tickets for his ski rentals," Ian Howard, a salesman at Sunflower Surplus, said.
RIGGS SAID there were many locations in Lawrence for cross-country skiing, Athens Golf Course, 3706 W. 23rd, and the Mountains of Iowa are both good locations, he said.
“Really, anyplace for cross-country skiing,” he said. “One of the best places is Burich Park (Second and Third Avenue). It’s not too hilly, but you have a good trail.”
Yesterday afternoon about half a dozen skiers were sking on the Kansas River. However, Dallas Murphy, Douglas County undersheriff, waked KU students against
"To my knowledge we've never told anyone it was safe to ski or skate on the river. On the river you would never know if there were because of undercurrents," Murphy said.
Because snow has made driving on some streets almost impossible, people have
"AN ENUMBEROF First Serve got stuck, and walked to work," Rigs said. "It snowed more, so we gave her some skis and she skied home. Some farmers who haven't been able to get home because roads were snowed shut, came in and rented skis to get
One cross-country skier said he skied because "There isn't anything better to do."
Jane Mitchell-the, Lawrence sophomore, said, "I like to cross-country ski because it is beautiful outside this time of year. It is so beautiful outside this time of year.滑雪 is non-polluting and it's free."
Although SUA doesn't rent ski equipment,
According to the SUA, the trip is filled now, but anyone wanting to go on the trip
it is sponsoring a ski trip to Summit County,
Colo. at spring break.
can get on a waiting list at the SUA office.
The cost of the 6 day trip is $192, and includes transportation, lodging, lift tickets and skirt rental.
Textbook sales remain normal for bookstores despite weather
Textbook sales have been as heavy as usual for this time of year in spite of the weather, according to two local bookstore managers.
Bette Brock, manager of the Kansas Union bookstore, said yesterday that the Union bookstore was closed Saturday because of the snow storm. However, employees were working to stock textbooks and supplies. The Union bookstore opened again
Brock said the weather had caused problems in shipping books.
Bill Muggy, co-manager of the Jawahrah Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, the only other local bookstore that stocks textbooks, and the only bookstore that was open Saturday and July 10th full好价格!
"Anything we've ordered out of Chicago is
lated," she said. "The data books we give out
of Chicago are always the same."
somewhere between Denver and Lawrence," Brock said.
She said there was not a big problem with instructors handing in their book lists late
"No one is deliberately late handing in their lists," Brock said.
She said the main problem in dealing with the faculty has been a communication gap.
The bookstore made progress toward eliminating that problem when it hired a book coordinator to work with faculty members ordering textbooks, she said.
Although the Jayhawk Bookstore pays the Union bookstore for copies of the book lists, Muggy said he has had problems getting the lists.
"We pay to Xerox the professors' cards (which list books required for a course), so we're supposed to have the same information the Union does," Muggy said.
Brock said the Union bookstore this semester began stamping textbooks with an invisible fluorescent ink when they were purchased.
She said the stamp proved the book had been purchased at the Union and indicated the state of purchase. This way, she said, she could have the stamp shipped back to the publisher unblemished.
Mental examinations were ordered earlier this month for a man charged with the November 1977 murder of Samuel诺尔Wood, 30, who was the manager of the F.W. Woolorth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts St.
The suspect, Lee E. Harris, 25, Denver was ordered to undergo the examinations at the request of his attorney. Dennis was arrested and he had difficulty understanding Harrison.
Suspect to take mental exams
Harris and Charles E. Moore Jr., 13, also of Denver, are charged with murder, kidnapping and aggravated robbery. A lawyer in Boulder died of a death, which occurred Nov. 28, 1977.
Moore was sentenced in Colorado on Jan. 4 for his involvement in a jewelry store robbery in Littleton, Colo., which involved a few days before Norwood was killed.
Harris is being held in the Johnson County jail in Olathe because a third person, Terry A. Avery, 20, Denver, has been charged with the Johnson county jail as a material witness in the case.
The Douglas County district attorney is using an agreement between Kansas and Colorado to try to get Moore moved here for trial. The attorney dropped extradition proceedings in lieu of the agreement.
Educational films survive blaze
Film Rental Services, 746 Massachusetts St., a division of the KU Department of Continuing Education, survived a fire that devastated it to destroy 6,000 educational films.
Rodger Oroke, director of facilities planning, estimated yesterday that the fire was over.
After a first examination, officials of the Lawrence Fire Department said the fire apparently started in or near the boiler room in the building. The cause of the blaze
The damage consisted primarily of a large hole in the first floor, above the boiler room, according to Howard Walker, dean of the building. The boiler is in the basement of the building.
Walker said there was no electricity,
telephone service or water service for the bolt-
house.
Firefighters reached the unoccupied building about 1:50 a.m. and brought the fire crew inside.
The 6,000 films were in a steel vault that protected them from serious damage during the war.
Committee to begin application reviews
A 12-member search committee will begin reviewing applications early next month for the position of vice chancellor for academic affairs, according to Jeanette Johnson, assistant to Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel.
Ron Caligaard, who currently holds that position, has accepted a job as president at the company.
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 delicacy of Peking's famous foods, the hot and spicy dishes from Central China, or engulf yourself in the rich natural flavor of foods from Southern China. Visit Cathay and explore new worlds of dining pleasure.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
13
'Hawks get road victory
By JOHN P. THARP
Stillwater, Okla., should be the datetime for this story.
That is where the University of Kansas men's basketball team ended a curse, of sorts, last Saturday by winning an edge on the road from Oklahoma State, B7-20.
KU swept the three games in Kansas City's Kermena Krena in the last Big Eight Conference. Holiday Basketball Tournament, but as five league coaches agree, a neutral court, just 40 miles from LAway, and also near Manhattan and Columbia.
Before the victory in Gallagher Hall at OSU and the title at the final holiday tourney, KU was winless away from Allen Field House.
THE ONLY thing more surprising than KU's disastrous road trip to sunny California, where the Jayhawks dropped an 84-83 overtime game to the University of San Diego, and an 81-69 decision to San Diego State in the league play-open at Norman, Okla.
There KU was methodically picked to pieces for 40 minutes by the University of Oklahoma, 68-45, for the 'Hawks' lowest-scoring game of the season. That loss caused fans to do a double at the same team KU had completely dominated in the
second game of the Holiday Tournament, 86-75.
KU was the talk of the tourney in Kansas City. In one newspaper's poll, all 45 writers and broadcasters polled selected the winner of a conference race. Many writers praised
sophomore Darnell Valentine as the only "great" player in the league.
VALENTINE LIVED up to that billing by snaring the unanimous selection as the tourney's most valuable player. He averaged 7 points a game,败出 23 out of 41.
Center Paul Mokeski helped pace KU during the tourney by averaging 13 points a game, shooting that helped him make the all-tournament team.
PETER C.
After an easy tourney game against Iowa State, which easy KU won 75-55, and the victory over OU, KU kung on in the final 40 seconds to defeat Colorado 72-66 for the championship. Up to their old trick of late-in-the game clutching, the Jayhawks kept their act together to snare the trophy for the 13th time in the tournament's 33-year history.
Darnell Valentine
Before going into the tourney, KU won its last game at home in 714-4, from Southern Michigan.
THAT THAT game, KU head coach Ted Owens has gone to his bench and found out that Mac Stallcup, a three-year veteran, can play against him. "He freshman David Maples might pan out."
It has been Valentine, possibly the best sophomore basketball player in the country, who has led KU. His effect on the team's play was evident in Norman, when he scored only eight points, his poorest showing of the season.
Fighting Irish take over poll's top spot
SOUTH BEND, IND. (AP) - Notre Dame's Fighting Irish are ranked No. 1 in basketball for the first time this year, but Coach Digger Phelps doesn't expect them to stay there.
"I think we are a good team, and I hope that being No. 1 could help us be a better team," Phelps said yesterday after the Irish team lost to the weekly Associated Press college poll.
"But there are a lot of very good college basketball teams, and you're going to see the rankings being shuffled each week throughout the season," he said.
ALREADY THIS Year, Duke University and Michigan State. University have occupied the No. 1 spot before suffering losses. The Irish inherited the pressure position
Gymnasts win meet
Led by freshman Jackie DIPinto, KU's women's gymnastics team won a three-peat.
KU's Rene Nemev took third place in the competition for the four events at 29.45 mph.
after the Spartans lost two games last week to Illinois and Purdue in the Big Ten.
DiPinto swept all four events she entered, garnering a score of 32.20. KU was first in the meet with 118.90 points, followed by Colorado State University with 107.15 points and Emporia State University with 77.3 points.
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"I'm sure the experience of being No. 1 and then losing, will help Duke and Michigan State down the road," he said, "because now you know what it's like."
this year's two meetings. With another game against the Bruins, along with San Francisco, Maryland, North Carolina State and Michigan still on the schedule, Phlebs knows it will be difficult to stay No. 1 going into the NCAA tournament.
"I think our players are ready to be No. 1," Philip said. "We are ready to taste it. It's the next step in our program. I wouldn't want to be No. 1 all the way through the regular season, but we need to have the experience of facing up to the pressure."
"It helps you withstand the offensive pressures as well as the different offenses and defenses other teams will throw at you. You don't have to pressure the pressure of being undefeated isn't good."
Nore Dame, meanwhile, moved up from second place with its victory Saturday over Marquette. The Irish took an 8-4 record, the first time they, into last night's game against Lafayette.
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Semester break didn't slow down KU's women's basketball team.
OPEN 8:30-5:00 p.m. Mon-Fri
10:00-4:00 p.m. Saturday
Closed Sunday
Women dominate holiday games
By NANCY DRESSLER
In the Student Union on Level 3
In fact, the Jayhawks, who were 6-3 before Christmas, were almost unstoppable during the holidays, winning one tournament and taking second in another. Both tournaments were on the road.
KU returned home and maintained its perfect record in Allen Field House this season by first downing Nebraska 85-67 on Jan. 9, and then repeating the performance last Friday night against an A83-62 victory. Kansas is 44 at home.
Sports Editor
On the road, KU took second in the Queen's College Holiday Tournament Dec. 27-29 in New York against at least two nationally ranked teams. Kansas beat Fordham 87-42 and handily beat then-128anded College 86-58.
CHEVNEY STATE, at that time ranked first in the country in Mel Greenberg's Philadelphia Inquirer poll, and KU in the championship game, 70-58.
Since then, however, Cheyney has been knocked to 12th in the poll.
KU continued to shine in the Shocker classic in Wichita Junction. 3-5. The Jayhawk breezed to the tournament before winning three games that weren't even close.
The Jayhawks closest competitor was the University of Nebraska-Omaha, who could only come within 20 points in the
KANSAN Sports
championship game, 78-88. In an opening round game, KU demolished West Texas State University 119-30 to score in the first period and scored in one game and widest margin of victory. The KU total is also the most successful a women's team in Henry Lefevit Athena.
KU ALSO BEAT Wyoming by a 40 point margin, 94-54, in a Shocker Classic semifinal game.
Head coach Marian Washington said yesterday that her team's play has been satisfying, especially against traditionally strong east coast teams.
"We did a super job against Queen who were ranked 12th then," she said. "We didn't come back with the same intensity against Chevrolet."
Washington attributed KU's overall success to the team's intense training, which includes regular weight training and distance running.
"I'm finding maybe one of the secret ingredients in maintaining conditioning. You can't rely on play on the court or practice," she said.
Another factor that has boosted the Jayhawks has been a strong bench and opportunities to take advantage of it.
"We've had several games when I've been able to get everyone in. We're
She exploded for 92 points in the three games of the Shocker Classic, including a 40 point game against Wyoming at Wichita State and a most valuable player for her efforts.
All-American Lynette. Woodard has been a prime factor in the Jayhawks' recent 7-1 strike. Woodard scored a total of 85 points in the three Queens tournament games, including a 41-point performance against Queens.
TEAM DEPTH has been bolstered by the addition of transfer Katy Cullen, 5-10, from Philadelphia area junior team. The play back up to center Shirah Velde.
"Lynette's having a better year than last year," Washington said of Woodward, a 6-1 sophomore. "Her defense is much better and she's becoming a more rounded ball player. And she keeps getting better."
Woodard leads the KU team in every offensive category and besides averaging 349.9 points a game, she pulls an average of 14 rebounds a contender.
Kansas' record is 13-4. KU is averaging almost 83 points a game while limiting its opponents to 65 points.
The team travels to Lincoln, Neb., today to begin play in this week's Big Eight tournament. KU returns home on Feb. 2 for a game with Iowa State University as a preliminary to a men's game.
deeper than we've been in the past," Washington said.
Jayhawks glad to be back home
Echoing singer John Denver's lyrics that it's good to be iname again, KU head basketball coach Ted Owens said yesterday that it is great to be back in Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks, ranked 19th this week by UPI and 20th by AP, face Missouri at 7:35 tonight. KU, now 94 overall, hasn't played a game in Game for a month. The Tigers
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Missouri's lone conference win came last Saturday against the team that handed KU its conference loss - Oklahoma.
One reason the Tigers have the same league record as everyone else is that former forward Curtis Berry has been moved to center. Berry is the league's leading scorer in conference play, averaging 20 points a game.
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14
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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Advertising and
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BETTER DAYS
Wednesday, January 17. 1979
15
KU lobbies ready for job
By CAROL BEIER Staff Reporter
By CAROL BEIER
The opening of the Kansas Legislature last week was a green light for increased efforts by two University of Kansas lobbying groups, Concerned Students for Higher Education and Associated Students of Kansas.
Representatives from the seven schools included in ASK will meet at Emporia State University on Jan. 26 and 27, according to Jean Chahay, KU campus director for ASK.
The seven schools are Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburgh State University, Wichita State University, Oklahoma State, Washburn University and KU.
ASK PLANS TO lobby for five items:
- Minimum wage for students
* Decriminalization of marijuana
* Voter registration by mail
* Invocation of Harvard-Dordford-Tenant Act
* Increases in state scholarships
KU will be represented at the meeting by Chanay and 22 others, including Steve Young, board of directors member, and Bob Frigo, chairman of the assembly.
Chanay said the purpose of the meeting would be to get groups from all of the member schools together to discuss the issues and to hear suggestions for improvement.
"Then we can go to Topena on our own and be more effective," Chamay said. "We can only speculate about our chances of success, the legislators have been very receptive."
RON ALLEN, EXECUTIVE director of
students' education for his wife for
students also is priority for his house.
"Right now, everyone's waiting on Gov. John Carlin's budget proposal. We expect to hear on that by Friday," Allen said.
Carlin might suggest cuts in the
University's proposed budget or restore some funding cut last month by James Bibb,
students involved with these halls to write letters to their legislators asking them to support this funding. This is a student issue." Allen said.
CSHE plans to lobby for funding for building renovations and increased building access for the handicapped, in addition to supporting the minimum wage. Allen said.
The University has requested that $27,700 be spent for improvements in MAM's infrastructure.
'IT'S IMPORTANT for us to encourage
He said increased access for the handicapped was needed to comply with the Federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which mandated nondiscrimination on the basis of handicap.
"It is no longer a question of unfairness. It is a question of law," he said.
BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL -
Greenbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
Eat in or carry out
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SUN-THURS 11-9 FRI-SAT 11-10
841-8271
Any Sandwich and Soft Drink
$2.00 with coupon save up to 55c Good till 1-31-79
This Coupon Good For
15% OFF any sandwich and soft drink EVERY SUNDAY IN JANUARY Good till 1-28-79
"I'd rather be
sailing . . ."
The KU Sail Club invites all interested people to attend their first meeting, Thursday, Jan. 18 7:30 in the Big 8 Room of the Union.
SUA
KU Sail Club Meeting Thursday
Nigerian students face 'deregistration'
Eighteen Nigerian students at the University of Kansas will be registered "unless the Nigerian government pays the money it is offering."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said unless KU received the money from the Nigerian consulate in New York within 20 class days after the beginning of the semester, the students would be taken off the class roles.
"My feeling is for the students because it's no fault of theirs," Ambler said.
Ambler said the 18 students whose tuition had not been paid were on scholarships from the Nigerian government or from state universities.
"We've been told there was a problem with the money bein
transported," Amber said. "The consultate has given it
the answer."
Ambier said the Nigerian government had a history of being late with payments. He said that in the past Nigerian students had been allowed to enroll without paying their tuition. After graduating, he would send a bill for the upaid tuition to the Nigerian consulate.
"This is one of the exceptions you make for foreign students." Amber said. "We just felt it was time to call a halt to it."
Amber said KU's decision to let the students enroll was "an act of faith on our part."
Other U.S. universities have called a halt to it also. Several universities, including Kansas State University, have announced that Nigerian students would not be allowed to enroll this semester unless tuition was paid at enrollment.
The Nigerians are on student visas that require them to be enrolled in order to remain in the United States.
At the JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE YOU CAN:
---
1. WIN a free one-week trip to Hawaii Enter every day until Feb. 20
USED USED
2. Buy more used books than anywhere else on campus
3. Find help if lost in the aisles
HELPI
21
MENU
4. Purchase any two "same priced" spiral note books for the price of one. (Bring ad)
100
---
5. Save 10% on any calculator in stock (With copy of this ad) Not valid for calculators already on sale.
6. Save $1.00 off any T-shirt or sweat shirt over $4.00
(Bring ad)
Special Hours
8:30-8:00 pm Jan. 16 through Jan. 18.
Regular Hours 8:30 am-5:00 pm Monday-Friday
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kranan are offered to all students without regard to sex. Applicants should complete ALL CLASSIFICATIONS TO 111 FIRST HALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine
12 words or fewer $0.60 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.60
each additional .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
*
NO DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The IDE will not be responsible for more than two intersect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found there can be advertised FREE of charge for the day, not exceeding 10 days. Three additional can be placed in person or arranged by the UDP business office at 943-855.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
IDDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Mall 864-4258
Jardine, search for college graduates. Write
Sarage's 81 W. Sienna, Pearlia, 41605. -12
www.jardine.edu
FOR RENT
Planned granulated bedding funge. Newly rounded
bedding base. Bed frame with mattress. King size.
Give made promotion. $125 per month, 48Hrs.
$300 for room & up.
FRONTER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
Apartments from $170. Two room, large,
commercial space. On Kitchener Road.
NGO RISE INFO ON NGO RISE INFORMATION call 214-144 at or visit 524 Fronter Road. Next day.
Charlottesville, Very close to campus. Call 842-723-5000,
lives at 1 & 3 Fm. Keep calm. Going home.
N. W. Lesterman - Houston Health - W.W. car-
rer - Los Angeles - A.C. Car Gurage - Family or
Residence - RCA Hospital
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
appropriate. Karen and Kevin tow,
phone: 852-767-7671
Eight year old old biples. Four birtal late-
mors. One adult. Two single singles.
Single singles. No Pets. B2-609-8000 1-23
Two BR Duplex; Low rent; now Remodeled;
Two BR Flat; cheap (short) interest Call 1-800-324-5678 keep trying
Two-battery turbofan equipped aircraft, close to air traffic control areas, can land at Knoxville (uplifters) weekends between 8am and 10am.
Room for rent: Share kitchen and bathroom.
Room for rent: Shared bedroom. Closed. Carriage
8606 or 842-6700
1-25
Nice. Single apartment adjacent to compu-
sion building. Paid sublet three May-12th $435.
843-6433 1-23
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to read in Western Civilization 31. Prepare for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at TopSat.
Border Medallion Basker Guitar with strass, cables, strings and wires. Boxed with medallions, cards and coasters. Good quality finish. Sold by Jerry's Music. (2)
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Hewlett 40 N. Lawrence
Across from Iodafon's
Nakamichi 500 Cassette (new $480) for $280. For E-Book.
Machinery Equipment and State corporations have
Machinery equipment and State corporations have
SunBeds - Sun-glasses are our specialty. Non-prematurely, please contact, reassurance. 818-570-9700
818-570-9700
Alternator, starter and generator Specialists
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-760-2000, 200 W. 60 hp.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-760-2000, 200 W. 60 hp.
WATERED MATHHESSS $29.8, 2 yr.
wrapped at WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 843-156-294
e-book, $10.00
camaro. Snow tires. Kansas inspection.
$295.00. Call 843-7657 - 123-
$90.00. Call 843-7657 - 123-
BONCIS at WHITE LIGHT are 10% off with
704. Maxes 838-1268. 1-24
HELP WANTED
Immediate openings for person to work with
quadditional staff in coordination with
setting up a schedule include weekend
& evening & week nights. Provide own time-
management software 4:30 p.m. on A-
dult Services.
72 VW Super Wing B, clear car. Also needed
to be able to get the door open 841-253-7220,
72 TW RV 2C, call 641-0925-1722
Countryside wanted. Western Colorado boy *camp*
signed with a university basketball team in college years. A square interest in working with children and adolescents. All-enrollment was amended (18) enrollees, with input from co-investors. HORSON CAMPUS GAMES 'GUMLIS' 23-04-18 ADDICT 8167
A student assistant for female quadriplegic individuals with cerebral palsy and WED morning classes job includes taking care of students in a van (car), teaching with research, preter junior training, 843-1429 or 843-1011; and evenings.
G. P. Loyd's is now hiring cocktail waitresses, bartenders and J.D.'s. Experience preferred but no experience necessary.
Part time job. Excellent pay. work where
you have you time. no obligation. Write
Seniority. Box 203, State College, PA 14001.
Do not apply next week. Please email
handling charge
Cookbook-Hotels. First class restaurant, must be
prefered over 21, platinum, evening. $79.00-$85.00.
MEN WOMEN JOBS** CRUISE SHIPS
FREIGHTERS No experience. High pay! Send Europe, Australia, Sa. America, Winter.
US Pacific, Mexico, US South America. Box 60153, Sa. Caverna. 980-4-17
Cherk wanted to work evening 12-20 noon.
Call Caller Retail Laundry Store #843-272-1921
Call Caller Retail Laundry Store #843-272-1921
The KU Library System Currently has a large number of College Work-Study student assistant libraries. Students qualified for the College Work-Study should pick up application forms in room 201, padded with their names and pictures are posted on a bulletin board located just at the student Employment Center. JB Strouse and his staff will work to ensure EMPLOYEE INTEGRATION EMPLOYEE is matched without regard to race, color, sex, disability or veteran status.
J.B.'s big day now taking applications for part-
time waitresses—apply in patients at 740 rooms.
Delivery, drivers needed. Agile in person at
2418, 2409 No calls. Call time: 1-19
The Lawrence, Open School has a limited number of openings. Undergraduate third grades for each month. School loans are 8.39-3.26; after school loans are 5.79-4.14. Law in teacher education, development of basic skills, individualized instruction. Do you need a law degree? Licensed assistance may be available to qualified
The Lakeside: Grant belonged in our war wartime policy and in the award of scholarships. Appreciated by the University for his virtuosity and philosophy as committed in his education, he was awarded a national prewar, national citation, academic prizeworthiness
Furthermore, we are an inclusive rather than exclusive about, and therefore, we actively ask different cultural, ethnic and socio-economic different cultural, ethnic and socio-economic differences who are diverse in mortality or physicality. 1-17
MISCELLANEOUS
SUNNY SIDE UP!
Topless dancers with lunch. Nponto 2:00
Only at FLAMINGO
501 N. 9th N. Lawrence
TEFFER BUNDING, FOPMING: The House of
Teiffer, building and commissioning in Jersey
City, New Jersey.
EATING OUT IS GREAT!
Topplets dinner with dinner at 3010-10.000
Only at FLAMINGO
501 N. 4th St. Launier
NOTICE
J. HOOO BOOKSELLER wishes to welcome all new and returning students for the spring semester of 2018. Attend any class on Monday, Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, Closed Monday; Come down and browse the library's online resources in town--both face cover and jp paper books. Remember, too, we buy books everyday!
Hit the slopes
FU
Colorado Ski Trip, March 9-12, 1979. The trip is set
The Topeka Parks and Recreation Department announces a
9-12, 1979. The trip is set up for beginners or experienced skiers aged (17) years or older. Three and one half days of skiing at Winter Park, Colorado with round trip bus transportation, lodging and 2 meals per day
Room Accommodations
2 Per Room - $155. Per Person
4 Per Room - $130. Per Person
6 Per Room - $125. Per Person
Contact: Topeka Recreation
Department
Room 259 City Hall
Topeka, Kansas 66603
919-235-8938
PERSONAL
Deadline: February 9,1979
Color Photography, Silks, Prints. You name it.
Highest quality, good prices, fast service #283
www.silksandprints.com
Direct rules 7th annual Art Expo Equestrian Park
Directors' meeting 1st January 2018
Rustic Blond Bardist, born 1st Jan. 2016, 8-20/12.60, Urban
Bardist, born 1st Jan. 2016, 8-20/12.60, Urban
Margaret B. Billin and George Goulas are running
the 2013 Women's Golf Association. The
Tie is interred in your vaults. Margaret
B. Billin is 54 years old.
POX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control, Communicating. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call 800-623-5241. 480 W. St. Overland Park, Ks. 718-423-3993. Wardens care tailor-
Gate/jr/sonette Switchboard, coaching and general training.
STRAIGHT LEFT DENYS. Straight leg cords on Sale Now! AT LITTLEW'S Downtown. 1-18
Get the hell bottom ballz! Get to LiLawn's.
Watch this game for details on KU's Winter SUA
Backgammon Tournament.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three years professional tutoring experience. 842-3541. If relax Let me type your term paper, dimerations, mitr. Fast Service. Mr. Nixon. 842-1541
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Akira at the House of Youri/Quick Copy Center. Akira is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
TYPING
I do damned good typing: 842-4476
Typhil/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work.
Typhil/Editor, thesis. Desert research welcome.
Malloy 402-8217 2023.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Master's degree in Law papers, term papers, M.S.
Master's, 84/72.
Experienced Ttypist—term papers, thesis; misc.
tapes; online courses; spelling competed
84-86% of the time. Mrs. Wright
Expertized typed, with scientific background.
*correcting* Selective *C* Call *Jan 84*321-312
*demonstrate* correct selection.
WANTED
Female roommate for Jayhawk Towers 995 all-123 rooms paid. 843-3675.
Gale Male to share large 3 BR apartment with 2 girl students $70/month plus 1.3 unit mattens. Must rent DR K.O. Box 1122, Lawrence, Ks. 60514. DR O.F. Box 1123, Lawrence, Ks. 60514. Roommate wanted to share house; furniture. Contact Joni Meyer at 842-219-1. 1-23 Rooms share 2 bedroom Apt. $80 per month. Call 842-219-122 or 842-219-4 p.m. 1-23 Roommate needed. 3 BD Depot $80 per month. Call 842-219-427 morning. Female Roommate needed quick! Call Julie—842-1130.
16
Wednesday, January 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
PLEASE MR. POSTMAN,
I couldn't get out to buy
a stamp
F 8
E 2
E 9
Photo by BILL FRAKES
Postage due
Heavy snows left many people stranded in Lawrence this week. Unable to reach the post office to purchase a stamp, an inventive and desperate resident of the West Hills moved to an abandoned farm in southeast Lawrence.
Snow...
From page one
police calls and calls from persons 'who are strained out in the middle of nowhere.'
SHE SAID, "We're not starting cars on changing tires. We're only taking extreme weather."
Jim Robinson, owner of Robinson Wrecker Service, BZT Mangle, said he was told to wear a mask.
"We're backlogged," Robinson said. "We have emergencies that we have to take and deal with."
Robinson said he did not think his workload would lighten in the next few days.
"It's getting worse because it's warming up a little and the streets are getting slicker," he said. "There's no relief in sight."
George Williams, director of Lawrence Public Works, said the street department had been clearing Lawrence's 200 miles of streets since the first snowfall Dec. 31. The department has three motor graders, three snowplows, four sand and salt spreaders, five snowmowers and snow breeders. The department also rented some trucks from private contractors, he said.
DON FARRIER, a street department supervisor, said the trucks were used to haul snow after the plows have cleared the road. A few days ago, almost empty at 11th Street and Haskell Avenue.
"There's a pile there you wouldn't believe." Farrier said.
The street department has spread about 900 tons of sand and salt on Lawrence roads since Jan. 1, Farrier said. The city is running out of salt, he said, but has enough sand. The city will not use salt until it gets a new supply in March, he said.
Lawrence has hired extra workers to help the city's 24-member crew, Farrier said. The crew worked overtime to clear the snowfall, but now is working regular hours.
Williams said the city spent $9,200 for overtime and equipment rental after the first snowfall. That figure does not include salts, salt, or wages for regular hours, he said.
ALTHOUGH CITY streets were being cleaned, residents in the Palmyra, Willow Springs and Snohomish areas were
Excessive snow causes changes in bus routes
For information about route changes, call the Lawrence Bus Company at 843-044 or www.lawrencebus.com.
All buses will be running today, but some bus stops have been changed because of snow that still clogs some side streets, a street called the Lawrence Business Company said yesterday.
VALUABLE COUPON
The bus normally going to 24th and Ridge Court will be loading students from Park 25 and Gatehouse apartments in the parking lot of Gibson Discount Center, 2525 Iowa Street. The Meadowbrook bus will load at Westgate apartments. The Frontier Ridge bus will load in the parking lot of Russell's East restaurant, 2400 W. 6th St.
"These changes have been made because the streets have too much snow to be safely navigated."
FREE!
Small drink with purchase of 1 Burrito.
Taco Via'
YOU
1700 W. 23rd St. 841-4848
CAMPUS KINSPORT
CAPITALIZING
PARKING
Events
KANSAN
On Campus
TODAY: GRADUATE STUDENTS ART EXHIBIT will be displayed in the Art and Design Building gallery through FEB. 2. Gallery hours are at 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. FINE. Music concert will be at 10 a.m. with Leifisher, pianist will be at 2 p.m. in Swarovski Recital Hall in Murray. SUA SPECIAL EVENTS COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room in Murray. Guests wishing to preFERENCING will take place at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union.
'TONIGHT: KU GO CLUB will meet at 7 in Parior C of the Union. FINE ARTS MASTER C of the ASSOCIY will present Leon Pearson, painted at Murphy in Saworthock Recital Hall in Murphy.
TOMORROW: FINE ARTS MASTERS CLASSES will present Leon Fleiser at 9:30 a.m., :1:30 and 4:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy, STUDENT RECITAL featuring Steve Gordon, trumpeter, will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy, KU SKYDIVING CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in 124 Robinson.
Begin the Semester in Style
25-60% off
COORDINATES
DRESSES PANTS
NIGHTGOWNS SWEATERS
CLOTHES ENCOUNTER HOLIDAY PLAZA 25th & Iowa HOURS 10-5:30 Mon. thru 10-8:30 Thurs
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
N81024
Face it you've always wanted to fly! Many of us have had the feeling ... and for some it has never gone away
The program is an EXTRA for caors who can qualify to become Air Force Pilots through Air Force ROTC
Ticket during the senior year in college, PIP is the first step for the caor who is going on to Air Force Jet pilot
mission.
If you have that feeling, then you're in the air. Air Force ROTC Flight Instruction Program (HP) is available to it as designed to teach you the basics of flight through flight lessons in small aircraft of a civilian operated facility.
AIR FORCE
ROTC
ROTC Gateway to a great way of life.
southern end of Douglas County still were stranded yesterday because of the snow, according to a spokesman in the sheriff's office.
This is all reserved for the caddie who wants to get his life off the ground, with Air Force silver plot mats.
*Sophomores and Juniors. Apply now for the 2-year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. If you qualify, Call Capl John Macke 864-4676, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108.
Road crews began clearing county roads at 4 a.m. saturday. Since then they have been working 12-hour shifts. Small crews were able through Saturday and Sunday nights.
Mike Dooley, Douglas County engineer, said, "It's hard to visualize what will happen if we get another heavy snow. We're doing really well now."
In Palmyra, the hardest hit of the three townships, two bulldozers have been hired to clear seven and eight foot drifts from the roads.
Dooley said crews were pushing snow as far off the roads as possible so there would be a place to pile any new snow that might fall.
SALT AND other dry chemicals have not been used because the rands are not icey, Dooley sand. Sand is not being used either. Snow has been dumped-down snow is providing enough traction.
Mike Elwell, associate judge of Douglass County District Court, will decide at tomorrow's hearing whether there is sufficient evidence to try Hunter, who would be tried as an adult. If sufficient evidence is found in formal arrangement and trial will be ordered.
Hunter was arrested by police Dec. 22, when he was seen walking near Lawrence High School.
Lawrence's 20 inches of snow, along with a low temperature of minus 10 and low windchill factor of minus 57 this winter, have broken no records, but the director of meteorology at NASA has said Lawrence may surpass its total snowfall of 1978 within the next few days.
There have not been any stranded motorists on the county roads, he said.
The other incidents occurred earlier in the month in the 1100, 1200 and 1300 blocks of streets east of the KU campus. Entry was quickly unlocked doors in some of the incidents.
Prosecutors said four of the incidents occurred Dec. 21. Physical evidence was provided.
The youth, Charles L. Hunter, 1228 Tennessee St., is charged with eight counts of aggravated burglary, four counts of rape and two counts of attempted rape.
The total snowfall for 1978 was 24 inches. And, Larry Cosgrove, director of the weather service, says there is a storm form that could cause more snowfall that may cause more snowfall for the Midwest.
Bond was set at $30,000 and Wesley Newwood, a legal lawyer, was appointed as a permanent counsel.
Cosgrove said the snow should reach the Lawrence area by tomorrow or Friday. But
after that, Lawrence can expect warmer temperatures in the 40s for a expect fehde, he will keep it.
Hearing set for tomorrow on rape case
An evidence hearing for a 16-year-old Lawrence youth arrested last month in connection with a number of sexual assaults on the campus tomorrow in Douglas County District Court.
Stock up for School
- General office supplies
- Engineering supplies
- Architecture supplies
WELCOME BACK TO BOOKS!
HILLS
TOWN CRIER
- Art supplies
DOWNTOWN
930 MASS
9:30 AM-9:00 MON.-SAT.
9:30 AM-5:30 PM SUN.
sua films
Wednesday, January 17 THE MISFITS
(1981)
Dr. John Husbon, with Clark Gable,
Martin Monroe, Montgomery Curtt.
Written by Arthur Miller. The last
movie for Gable & Monroe.
Thursday, January 18
MODERN TIMES
(1938)
Dir. Charles Chaplin, with Charles
Chaplin, Pauletta Goddard, Plus:
"The History Book, v. 1."
7. 30 & 9.30
Friday & Saturday, January 19 & 20
THE RESCUERS
3:30 & 7:00
Dir. Wolfgang Reiterman, John Loussberry, Art Stevens, with the voices of Bob Newhart, Eva Gabor, Garaldine Pape.
Animated Sci-fi
WIZARDS
(1977)
(1977)
Dir. Ralph Bakshi. An animated fantasy of the future.
Tuesday, January 23
9:30 & 12:00 Midnight
LITTLE CEASER
All films M:R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
(1931)
M. Dervyn LeRoy, with Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Faintkens, Jr. Glenda Farrell. The Gangster film that wrote the vocabulary for the genre.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
Need a Programmable Calculator?
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
81415921-03
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TP 504
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Save $7.00
Available only at your Kansas Union Bookstores
on Texas Instruments
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
TI-55
advanced slide rule calculator with programmability
Now Only $43.00 with coupon below
- Fast analysis of relationships in data with mean, standard deviation, variance, and correlation capabilities.
- 8 commonly used conversions are preprogrammed for convenience.
- Statistics, financial math.
- 32 programming steps.
- 10 user-accessible memories.
BEST QUALITY * BEST PRICES * BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
TI-55
Save $7.00
Reg. $50.00
SALE $43.00
Good Jan. 17-30, 1979.
---
KU fuel reserves dwindling
Staff Renorter
By DAVID SIMPSON
The University of Kansas has only five days of fuel oil reserves left with which to heat the campus, Richard Perkins, associate director of plant maintenance, said yesterday.
KU's contract with the Kansas Public Gas Service Company allows the utility to halt the flow of natural gas to the University during periods of peak demand. The university has been using its reserve fuel oil supply since Jan. 1, 2007.
Perkins, who is in charge of buying fuel oil and natural gas, said the University was having trouble getting additional supplies of fuel oil to replace what the University had been using.
"We've got 60,000 gallons of fuel oil that has been purified and is coming," Perkins said. "However, we're not running out yet."
"If we run out of oil and the gas company does not continue service we will not be able to heat most of the campus," Pellins said. "The Chancellor would then have to decide what the University should do."
Perkins said that the University had never been closed because of a fuel shortage, and that if it were closed, the
Dykes said the University was receiving consistent ships of oil and the situation had not yet reached the
final decision would be made by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
"I've been aware that we can get enough to meet our needs," Dykes said. "Either with gas or oil, we'll be able to do it."
The University's fuel problems began when officials were told by the gas company that the University's rasing system had been changed by the federal government. As a result, the natural gas would be cut off at lower demand levels.
Under the University's contract, the gas company can cut off service during periods of heavy demand, but this year the University was cut off at a lower demand level than last year.
"The University was not informed of this decision until the cold weather came," Perkins said. "This is the first year this happened. The cuts have hurt us for we don't have the reserve capacity to work under these conditions."
The University now has a reserve capacity, when all tanks are full, of 120,000 gallons of fuel oil, which would heat the campus for about 14 days. The University also has two tanks of 300,000 gallons, but neither tank has been usable this year.
"The two tanks have leaks that we have not been able to fix." Perkins said. "Our problem is that when fuel oil cools it's like tarnish. The leaks have to be viewed from the inside and you have to come up with some way to clean oil off the outside."
Perkins said that the University had asked for more money for oil storage capacity but that KU had not received any money yet. He also said that if money were available, it would be difficult to find a place for additional tanks.
"Puel tanks must have a skit prevention system if they are not built underground," he said. "We would need a water supply system."
During a fuel shortage, the University has a three-part program that can be implemented if the situation worsens. The program is open to all students.
Stage 1 involves full operation of the University, using fuel oil and reducing temperatures in all buildings. During this first stage, five buildings on campus would be closed down and their heat reduced.
In the second stage, more buildings would be closed, but residence halls and classes would be kept open. In the final stage, the University would be closed and only essential services would operate.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, January 18, 1979
Vol. 89, No. 75
KU solar project springs a leak
By RON BAIN Staff Reporter
An experimental solar energy project at KU's Slouffer Place apartment complex developed a leak Monday night, but the problem is minor and will be repaired soon, according to Donald Whiple, director of architectural services.
Whipple said yesterday that cold weather may have caused the leak. About 50 gallons of water and anti-freeze solution spilled from the project's liquid circulation system at Stouffer Place, the married students' housing complex.
The Stouffer Place project supplies supplemental heating and cooling to one building of the complex. The project cost more than $400,000 to build, but the University paid only $6,500 in site preparation costs for the project.
The remaining construction costs, about $350,000, were paid by a federal grant, which was supervised by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Whiple, the project's coordinator, said the project was designed by the Honeywell Corporation and installed by a local firm. Huxtable and Associates Inc., $15.9 F.12h.
A spokesman for Huxtable and Associates said the leak was the first big maintenance problem since the project began operating in September 1978. The spokesman, Lynn Olson, project manager for Huxtable, said the leak was one of many were routine with experimental projects.
"THEIS IS A one-of-a-kind installation. This one is a first, and because it's a first, it takes some de-bugging and some troubleshooting," Olsen said.
Repairs on the project, which has been operating at partial capacity since the leak developed, will begin as soon as the water flows in. Honeywell arrive in Lawrence, Olson said.
The solar energy project, when operating at full capacity, supplies 90 percent of the 12-unit building's hot water needs, 60 percent of its cooling needs, and 40 percent of its air conditioning. Whipple said.
"If there have been cloudy days and we don't have enough solar energy, then the system will call for the (natural) gas to come on." Whipple said.
One resident of the Stouffer Place solar project said KU housing officials had promised him a 50 percent savings on heating costs. However, the resident, Doug Greer, Lawrence graduate student, said he thought his heating bills had been too high.
"WEVE USED more gas, but it's been somewhat cooler, I guess." Greed said.
Recently, the solar panels have remained covered with snow for as long as two days
However, another Stouffer resident, Bruce Hollenbeck, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said he thought the solar project worked well.
"Our utility bills are down," Hollenbeck said.
The residents of Stouffer Place where apartments are connected to the solar project pay only for the natural gas and heating to J.J. Wilson, director of KU housing.
Wilson said the solar heating provided to Stouffer residents was free.
Snows delay work on gyms, satellite union
Bad weather has stopped construction of the Robinson Gymnasium addition and has slowed work on the satellite union, but the buildings should be completed on schedule, according to Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning.
Lawton said yesterday that both construction projects were about a month behind schedule when workers were forced to stop by the recent heavy snowfalls. But he said the companies could make up for the delays and complete the buildings on schedule.
The Robinson addition is scheduled for completion in early 1860. Lawton said the satellite union, northwest of Allen Field and completed this spring and ready for next fall.
Lawton said the roof of the union had been finished before the bad weather hit. He said the workers had hung plastic from the roof and installed wires for installing ductwork and laying concrete.
A SPOKESMAN for the Douglas Construction C Man. Topoka, the general contractor.
weather halted construction for 11 days in 1878. He said no work had been possible then.
Merrill Harris, vice president of Douglas Construction, said the state architecture had given the company an 11-day extension on its plans to construct the days no work had been done in 1978.
Harris said the company was "about even" with its schedule when the snowstorms forced the company to stop work.
"We may be 10 to 15 days back from what
Harris said construction would resume
"just the minute we can get back in there."
"Hopefully, we'll have an early spring and lots of sunshine."
A spokesman for the B.B. Andersen Construction Co., Inc., Topeka, general contractor for the satellite union, said some work was being done despite the bad weather.
we predicted but 11 of those days we get an extension on," Harris said.
He would not say how much the snow had slowed the construction schedule.
MISSOURI 15
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
Wilmore Fowler applies defensive pressure to Missouri's Steve Wallace last night in Allen Field Houston. KU didn't apply enough pressure though, and MU won the game, 38-27.
Unpaid fines may bite faculty, staff salaries
The University Senate Executive Committee, hoping to recover more than $36,000 in unpaid faculty and staff parking fines, decided yesterday to support administration attempts to withhold the money from the paychecks of faculty and staff.
The action was in response to a request from Del Shankel, executive vice chair of the law firm's solutions to the problem. SenXt had written an earlier proposal from Shankel that those owing money should have their names listed on the Kansan and Lawrence Journal World.
Approval from the Kansas Legislature is needed before the University can deduct fines from employees paychecks, but some students said they would support the legislation.
“There is nothing sacred about faculty, especially those who owe the University money,” F. Hutton Barron, professor of business, said.
collecting the unpaid faculty and staff fines.
Students who do not pay parking tickets may have their transcripts withheld and may not be allowed to enroll.
In reaching the decision, SenEx members debated several alternatives, including the use of a collection agency to collect the funds. At present there is no procedure for
The only resource available to the University for recovering unpaid faculty and staff parking fines has been to withhold parking permits from those owing money.
Also, a car parked on campus may be towed if its owner owes money on at least five tickets, even if it is parked legally. The driver must retreive his car until the fines are paid.
The latest action is the result of a report to SenEx last spring by Mike Torres, former head of the Parking and Traffic Board, who has been appointed as upset over the unpaid faculty and staff fines.
However, Torres said then that only $15,000 of the $36,000 in overdue fines were owed by KU employees. Torres said many of the fines were owed by persons who had left after working at KU for one or two years.
Parking fines are responsible for 35 percent of the Parking Board's budget, Torres told Senas, and the loss of revenue is a result. The recent increase in parking fees and fines.
Tribal
Tubular Bells
Houston Bells
Job Matusaw will perform "Structured Improvisation" on his collection of 165 bells to raise funds for the Lawrence Open School. The program is at 7:30 tonight at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
Bell ringer brings love to Lawrence
Staff Reporter
By RHONDA HOLMAN
He's a journalist, bell collector, storyteller, historian, wanderer, actor, cemetery commissioner, and disabled veteran. But, most of all, Job Matusow is a man of love.
Love is what brought Matsusow and his Honda car filled with 165 belts to Lawrence to raise funds for the Lawrence Open School, 14th Street and Monterey Way, through a series of benefit programs of bell-playing and story-telling.
He sits on a pillow, surrounded by his instrument of tarnished brass shell casings, orately engraved English and Tibetan bells, Thailand gongs and bells made of metals of Japanese and Vietnamese wars. The earthenware is complicated structure of ropes and metal rods.
"Even in the implems of war, God has found love," matusaw said last night before he died. "The congregation at Plymouth Congregational Church, 225 Vernon Street. This instrument is designed to
Matusow's last program is to be at 7:30 tonight at the church.
He also said harmonies and rhythms of
MATUOSW SAID his program, called "The Bells of Armach's Garden," began as a dream he had during his service in the intrepid Air Force. He also acquired actual metals of war become "bells of love, peace, God—you name it," with gifts from Army and other friends around the world.
It’s a way of expressing myself without words, he said, “I like the silence—that’s a nuance.”
Matsuwan said he did not call his bell-playing music but rather spoke of "structured improvisation" and the "excitement of sound."
many cultures added to a culture's tendency for violence.
"I've been searching for the truth all my life." he said.
BESIDES HIS tours, he has been on radio programs and has written four books. He said one book, "False Witness," was written in 1985 by his friend Jean Lichtenberg and has been translated into 32 languages.
"I worked for the senator for a while but I felt my conscience run me, and I helped put it off."
He also said he invented the "stringless y-y-yn", better known as the Wheelo, and a more flexible instrument called refusing to give information about a suspected Russian manufacturing of the device.
Matsuson, who was born in New York's Bronx, has lived in England, and various parts of this country during his 52 years. He said he served in two wars and enjoyed it, even though his only brother was a victim of World War II.
"I can say I'm proud I helped in the demise of Fascism in 1944 and '45," he said. "World War II was something special—it was our last romantic war."
MATU/SOW SAID he once appeared on the Howdy-Doody Show* and was the first national English touring England and a member of the original staff of the East Village Other, an underground studio.
"Before the underground press, journalism was in disrepute," he said. "There was a need for a free press and I think we have that now."
Matsuwon said he had a historical interest in Kansas because it was "the microcosm of the Civil War before it began" and because "I like the sky here, it's big.
"I lawrence has a lot of truth to it, you just have to look around and touch it."
2
Thursday, January 18. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Capsules From staff and ware reports
Clashes threaten Bakhtiar
TEHRAN, Iran—Pro-shah troops clashed yesterday with anti-shah demonstrators, creating a major threat to the stability of Prime Minister Khatami.
At least 30 people were reported killed or injured in the violence, which took place on the first full day of Shah Mohamad Reza Pahliya's forced military crackdown.
The shah, now staying in an island hotel in Egypt, left Iran Tuesday, bowing to pressure that may make his extended "vacation" a permanent exile.
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and his wife joined the shah and Empress Farah for a cruise on Sadat's yacht down the Nile.
The shah is expected to meet today with former President Gerald R. Ford, who arrived in Cairo yesterday. Although it is not known how long the shah will remain in Egypt, the monarch is scheduled to step in on Morocco on his way to the Palm Springs, Calif., estate of Walter Allenberg, former U.S. Ambassador to
Khomaini formina government
PARIS (AP)—Iranian opposition leader Ayatullah Khomiani said yesterday that the "provisional" government he is forming would begin work
An aide to the Khohnai, the self-elisted religious leader, also said the kohnai government would refuse to allow any nation, including the United States, to visit it.
Khominai has said he wants his government to take over for Iran's civilian government under Prime Minister Shahpour Bahktiar.
In a statement yesterday, Khomani, who is based in Paris, did not specify when his provisional government would be announced. But Sadigh Gholtab, the chief spokesman for Khomani, said:
However, there was still no word about when Kohmaini might return to Iran, the homeland he left more than 15 years ago.
President Carter, in a press conference in Washington yesterday, called on Khomaini to support the Bakhtiar government.
Carter said Bakhtiar had won the support of the Iranian military "and many of the religious opponents," after the departure of the shah on Tuesday, ending
He said he be did not know how long the shah would be away from Iran, but said the United States supported the Bakhtiar administration.
Oil shortage may force action
WASHINGTON-Tough government action may be needed if Iranian oil production is not restored by this summer. Energy Secretary James R.
Schelsinger told the Senate Energy Committee the United States was not facing an immediate oil crises because of increased imports from Saudi Arabia.
Unrest in Iran has shut down most of that country's oil production.
Schesinger said a successful voluntary conservation effort could easily offset the loss of Iranian oil and avoid the need for direct government action.
Carter saus budaet meets aoal
WASHINGTON—President Carter said yesterday that his proposed fiscal 1980 budget being sent to Congress next week will more than meet his goal of cutting the deficit below $30 billion without neglecting the needs of the nation's poor.
The president told a nationally broadcast news conference that funds for the poor actually would be increased by $4.5 million in his proposed budget for the war.
'78 earninas beat inflation rate
Carter also said his budget would be one year ahead on his pledge to reduce total federal spending to 21 percent of the Gross National Product by 1981.
WASHINGTON - The government reported yesterday that Americans earned slightly more than was lost to inflation in 1978, reducing the prospect of a recession.
The Commerce Department said the average American increased his personal income last year by 11.7 percent. The increase, which was the third in a row, was driven by a decline in corporate debt.
A Federal Reserve report showed that the nation's industries operated at 85.9 percent capacity in December, the highest level since June 1744. This was an increase from 76.5 percent capacity in May 2014.
NEW IBERIA, La. -More than 50 members of a Louisiana State University
internship team visited in the funeral of a frienship pledge killed last
month as a fraternity member.
Bruce Wiseman, 18, was one of six Theta Xi fraternity pledges struck by a car as they were walking blindfolded across a two-lane bridge across the Mississippi River. Three of the pledges suffered broken legs and two others were sl�tly injured.
Sam Cashio, West Baton Rouge Parish district attorney, that his office was continuing to study the incident and that he would decide later this week to dismiss it.
1 hurt in Atchison train crash
ATCHISON A three-train crash dumped grain and wreckage at a Missouri Pacific railyard yesterday, injuring one crewman.
After its brakes failed, a train pulling 78 grain cars crashed into a switch engine, which was thrown onto a nearby track and then slammed into another
Although all crewman jumped from the train before the crash, one engineer suffered a cut leg.
The incident, which is still under investigation, left six diesel engines demolished and 35 grain cars derailed. No damage was reported by the police.
Davis jurors still deliberating
to resume today after the 12-member panel failed to reach a verdict last night. Davis, a Fort Worth, Texas industrialist, is accused of plotting the death of Judge E Joeids, who had presided over Davis' divorce case. Davis was arrested last August.
HOUSTON—Jury deliberations in the trial of millionaire T. Cullen Davis are to resume today after the 12-member nalel failed to reach a verdict last night.
If convicted, Davis could receive sentences ranging from five years probation to life in prison. He was acquitted in 1977 of shooting and killing his wife's daughters by a previous marriage during a shooting spree at the Davis mansion in which four other persons were shot.
Morris Kau to seek GOP job
Kay, who is the only contender to publically declare candidacy for the position, is building to succeed Jack Hanson, Wichita investments executive, who is resigning.
TOPEKA-Morris Kay, Lawrence insurance executive, yesterday released a letter publicly seeking support to become state GOP chairman.
The election will be during a meeting of the GOP state committee in Topeka Jan. 27.
Kay is a former state representative and Republican nominee for governor in 1972.
Weather ...
The weather service has issued a winter storm watch for this afternoon and tonight. Freezing rain may produce considerable glazing, making driving conditions hazardous. The rain is expected to change to snow tonight. The high today is expected to reach 32 degrees, with a low tonight in the mid 20s. The chance of precipitation is 60 percent this afternoon and 70 percent tonight. The high temperature tomorrow is expected to reach the upper 20s.
Missile fuel leak a human error
WICHTA-Human error allowed an O-ring to clog a disconnect valve and leak thousands of gallons of toxic missile fuel. The official Air Force investigation said yesterday.
The 200-page accident report, written by a team from Whiteair Air Force Base in Missouri, said the aug. 24 Titan II oxidizer leak resulted because a maintenance team failed to install a required filter in a fuel transfer line.
From Kansan Wire Services
The report said the absence of the filter allowed an O-ring to clobber a disconnect valve, freeing the toxic gas into the underground silo.
The fuel leak killed Staff Sgt. Robert Thomas and Airman 1st Class Erby Hepstall and caused an evacuation of about 200 Rock residents.
An AIR FORCE summary said, "An O'Ring seal, which fits around the bottom of a filter element in the oxidizer service line, helps prevent contamination during an earlier maintenance activity.
"During the oxidizer operation, the O-ring 'flowed through the line when the maintenance team failed to filter a filter as it was installed." The 'ring' lodged in the shutoff valve which
BANKOK, Thailand (AP) - Heavy fighting was reported yesterday between resurging Cambodian forces and the Vietnamese forces occupying Cambodia.
Vietnam strikes Cambodia port other key areas
Thai and Western sources in Bangkok reported sharp battles and heavy air strikes in and around Kompong Som, the nation's largest airport, and other key areas in the country.
But the Pol Pot government pledged to carry on a guerrilla campaign and there were unconfirmed reports that its leaders had set up a headquarters in the mountains of southwest Cambodia or on islands off the southern coast.
The Vietnamese invaders instilled a pro-Hanoi provincial government in Cambodia on Jan. 7, replacing Pol Pot and other leaders who had ruled the country since 1975.
prevented full closure of the valve and resulted in the oxidizer leak when the line is disconnected.
The report said Thomas, who died after helping rescue another airman, and Lt. Graham Sorensen, a site maintenance officer, had left a trainee in charge during a critical step, and that Sorensen had allowed him to transfer to the transfer to be performed out of sequence.
THE REPORT said administrative actions were taken against five airmen—apparently three "senior managers" and two "supervisors"—but did not name them.
Scallorn said in the report that he "found no evidence that prescribed procedures were inadequate to have precluded this case," and found no evidence of material failure."
Air Force sources said the basic regulations relating to the refueling of the massive Titan II intercontinental atomic missiles were sound and need not be
But Jim Lifsey, a former Titan II missile commander who privately has been investigating the accident, said he had seen several technical orders that had been emphasized to provide specific attention to filters and the disconnect procedure.
REP. DAN GLICKMAN, D-Kan, said yesterday he had scanned the report and confirmed that one section detailed apparent malfunctions in full-body protection
The report said one suit was deteriorated near one cuff and glove and had several scuffed areas on the left leg, and another suit had a cut at one knee.
However, the report did not conclude whether the suits were improperly manufactured, were damaged during escape maneuvers or were damaged by rescuers dragging the victims out of the toxic fumes.
A STATEMENT from Strategic Air Command headquarters at Omaha, Neb., said Heptall was killed and an airman, Carl Malinger, was injured because they removed their helmets in a contaminated atmosphere—reportedly because the pressurized oxidizer had partially melted helm viewpoints.
The release said Thomas was outside the silo when the leak began and quickly donned a suit two sizes too small to engage in the rescue efforts.
The SAC release said defects in the suits "cannot be entirely ruled out, but the best available evidence is that they were in good condition."
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Thursday, January 18, 1979
3
City's billboard ban angers firms
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
The manager of the Virginia Inn, 2907 W. Sixth St., said yesterday that he thought the city commission "acted irrationally" when she Tuesday to enforce a ban on billboards.
Staff Reporter
"I'm disgusted," said Ed Pociejewski, manager of the Virginia Inn. "I think some of the commissioners did not listen to what they were saying night. They had their minds made up."
Pieciewski is concerned that the Virginia Inn will lose its billboard on U.S. Highway 59 just off the west exit of the Kansas Turnpike and ordinance banning the signs is enforced.
The ordinance stipulates that all billboards within the city will be removed by the city.
Pociejwski said, the Virginia Inn
capped a 70-day stay in U.S. 40,
extended and keep the model in its
presence.
"NOBODY KNOWS where the hell U.S. 40 is," he said. "We would lose many customers, if the sign were removed. People tend to act on what they see."
Martin Outdoor, a California-based company, has 38 billboards in Lawrence that would have to be removed because of the ban. Tom Martin, president of the firm, said he tried to compromise with the city, but commissioners refused to accept any of the billboards. Tuesday that the company would sue the city if the billboard ban were enforced.
Martin Outdoor told the commission in December that it would challenge the ordinance in court on the First and Fourth Amendments if the city enforced the or-
Tom Murray, a Lawrence attorney for Martin Outdoor, had no comment yesterday on his report.
Another Lawrence businessman, Steve Cochran, owner of Overland Photo, 1741 Massachusetts St., also said he was disappointed by the commission's action.
"I THINK THE decision was wrong," he said. "I don't think the commissioners who passed the original ordinance intended to put Martin out of business. They didn't give any thought that this is a business—a company whose business is signs.
"I wouldn't want anyone coming along and taking away my business."
Cochran said he advertised on billboards occasionally and removing them would hurt his business, although he could not pinpoint how much.
"Billboards are one of the media," he said. "They are one of the most inexpensive and accessible forms of information."
"If it were me," he said of Martin, "I'd be insured." He'd fight them in everything.
Brent McPail, an assistant to the city manager, said he expected Martin Outdoor
And Donald Binns, Lawrence mayor,
appeared to welcome the chance to test the ordinance in court. He said the controversy brought the entire ordinance into question.
"IF THIS company can vary from it, then we will have trouble when we try to enforce the other sections of the ordinance that regulate the size and placement of signs." We need to going to enforce the ordinance. We need to know what kind of authority we have."
Expansions could bring new jobs
Expansion plans announced yesterday by spokesmen for two Lawrence companies.
The two companies, King Radio Corp. and Packer Plastic Ink., announced their expansion plans at a breakfast meeting of the Member of Commerce in the Kansas Union.
King Radio, an aircraft electronics firm at 724 Connecticut SL., is scheduled to move to a new building at 31st Street and Haskell Avenue in November.
Packer Plastic is moving its Kansas City Mo. operations to a plant at 230 Plaza.
George Lewis, plant manager for King Radio in Lawrence, said he expected to hire 40 to 50 new employees after the move was made.
"We have always had some part-time students working here and we would anticipate some new jobs possibly opening up for students," he said.
Jim Schwartzburg, president of Packer
manufactures the plastic cups used for soft drinks at KU sports events, employed KU students and more may be hired as a result of the move.
He also said his company, which
Plastics, said his company's move would mean from 100 to 150 new jobs for the company.
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Hope your Vacation was Super
Bliens said the courts might rule that the ordinance would have to be rewritten.
University Daily Kansan
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"If the ordinance is in violation of all laws, then we would want to revise it," he said. "Of course, we might win a court fight."
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The commission's attorney reportedly told Bins yesterday there was a 50 percent chance the city could win a court case, and at Tuesday's commission meeting, Barkley Clark, commissioner and KU professor of law, said the court might decide either way.
good through February
BINNS SAID, "I think a court fight would be worth it to get rid of those ugly billionaires."
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
VALLEY WEST GALLERIES
UNLESS YOU PRINT YOUR OWN . . .
loan from AARBOTS scholarship. And while you write it don't ask the Air Force to learn more about you but more to make your financial future worse when you return home.
almost looks like a student now comes up with enough money to cover school expenses and have money left over to use today.
You find a challenge responsibility, a demand for your teamwork and a high rigor when you are contributing. More as an officer in the Air Force you have on your shoulders.
$ $
"Symphonies and Jumpers" apply now for a 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission
to purchase your gear. You can visit www.BACKBAT64, or by visiting the
Military Science Center at 180 W. 36th St., Chicago, IL 60607.
ROTC
AVOR PROJECT
February
Gateway to a great way of life.
If the city removed the billboards, billboard owners might be able to bill the city for lost revenue. But the city does not compensate Martin Outdoor for its signs.
But a lawyer for the Kansas Department of Transportation told the commissioners Tuesday that a recent federal law required compensation for removal of billboards.
"The city is not prepared to pay a thing," McCall said.
Pociejwick said he would wait to see what Martin Outdoor did. If the billboards have to be removed, he said, the Virginia Inn would "seek compensation from the state and federal government, and from the city."
"I'd ask for quite a bit."
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ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING
Introductory session
Jan. 28, 1979
Sunday afternoon, 1:30-5
Kansas Union—
Jayhawk Room
Jayhawk Room FREE Open to all KU students call 864-3552 for more information
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SUPERMAN
"A marvel of stupendous film-making..."
- REX REED
N.Y. DAILY NEWS
"SUPERMAN is a hit..."
- ROY BARRETT
ABCTV
PG
Eve at 17:54 & 8:45
Sat Sun Mid 2000
Granada
THE ODDS AGAINST THEM
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BUT WHAT THE HELL!
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IN THE
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Cintail Wood and Sondra Locke
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“ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE” Cinemas Tu
Exc 71.8 & 91.5 Sat/Sun 2/30
When Hugo decides to pedal it, all the girls want to go
IT'S SKIN-FLICK TIME!
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS—12:15
BEST COMEDY OF THE YEAR!
Rugo's Magic Pump X
(As always — we'll post a warning if it turns out to be a dog)
Boxoffice opens
at 11:45
1st Hillcrest
FREE SPEECH DAY
friday 19 january
at KU
RALLY:
11:15 a.m.
strong hall
For several years we have seen a steady erosion of commitment to freedom of speech on the part of the KU administration. In the name of public relations, KU seems to have lost track of one of its most important jobs; providing a forum where many different ideas can be expressed and debated.
Not everyone at KU has forgotten that a university should promote, not restrict, free speech and thought. The Academic Freedom Action Coalition urges you to support Free Speech Day by attending the rally and speaking out to support the freedoms we must defend if we are not to lose them.
Join us!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanass
Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
JANUARY 18, 1979
Carlin should choose
The 1979 edition of the Kansas Legislature opened last week amidst the usual pump and ceremony, but new and returning legislators barely had time to find their offices before they were given the first political controversy of the season.
Bearing the gift was Gov. John Carlin, who announced the appointments of Margaret A. Glades of Yates Center and Peter Macdonald of Hutchinson for two of the three current vacancies on the Kansas Board of Regents.
Unfortunately for Carlin, however,
outgoing Gov. Robert F. Bennett had
already reappointed Walter Hiersteiner,
Fairway, and Glee S. Smith
Jr., Larned, to the vacancies five days
before leaving office.
Who savs politics can't be fun?
Understandably angered by Bennett's action, Carlin has said he will attempt to persuade the Republican-controlled Senate to reject Bennett's appointments and approve his own.
Both sides have played down the role that partisan politics will play in the upcoming decision. The nominees of Bennett and Carlin are both Republicans, as mandated by state statutes prohibiting more than five members of
the nine-member board from being members of one political party.
Apparently the resentments stored during the long, hard-fought election campaign were difficult for Bennett to dismiss, however, leaving Carlin facing an early battle in the Legislature.
Of course, this early in his term the outcome of the squabble could not possibly be decisive for Carlin's administration. But a governor's ability to choose the members of his own administration can be crucial to his effectiveness.
While Bennett had the authority under state law to make the appointments, Carlin has justifiably claimed that he should have been given the courtesy of choosing his own nominees.
Bennett started the political gamesmanship early this year with his appointments. The Senate should now end the gamesmanship by ignoring partisan politics and approving Carlin's appointments.
But neither side can play down the importance of the appointments to Carlin, who will be working with the Regents during the next four years and must take responsibility for the actions of his administration.
Doomed Skylab alleviates anxieties
By CARYL RIVERS
N V Times Feature
WINTHROP, Mass.-It was with a sense of relief that I read the recent headlines proclaiming that Chicken Little, long ago, had been a paranoid, manoid, was right. The sky is falling.
To be more precise, Skylab is falling. The huge satellite is wobbling about up there like a drunk at a NASA Christmas party, and one of the biggest problems is Kaput and Skylab will come tumbling down.
One NASA official did a television interview in which he smiled wanily and said everybody hoped the thing would come true. NASA's mission control in Houston filled with guys praying. NASA's appropriation could be in trouble if the thing landed on the East Coast.
NASA'S PROBLEMS aside, I was relieved when I read the story because it was the perfect candidate for what I call my dream. "I am going to be about all next year: Will I get beaten by a manned orbiting space laboratory?" Several times a week I will glance nervously upward, looking for a great shadow against the sun or the moon and go on about my business, feeling better.
Let me explain about prime anxiety, which is my own personal technique for coping with the stresses of the modern world. It is basically a way in which to amalgamate your anxieties—something like the beatles' every month or the ninety-second every month instead of a lot of numben ones. My mother taught it to me when I wait in the fifth grade.
TO INSURE THAT we would wash our hands after going to the bathroom, she told us about the little girl who didn't; she抱 epierse. Sophie Francette described, in lurid detail, how the girl's fingers turned yellow and dropped off.
In that year, my spiritual and physical edification was in the charge of one Sister who was a Catholic nun. The good sister was much concerned with proper hygiene, and she used what might be called the Cotton Mather method for getting her point across to her students. Scare the other nun.
The little boy who didn't brush his teeth was struck by such a fearful malady that his tongue had to be cut out. And so it went, through a whole list of unhygienic practices. I woke up screaming in the middle of the night for weeks.
Finally, my mother sat me down and suggested that since it was impossible for
me to come down with all of Sister Frank's and worry about it pickily out one and worry about it exclusively.
I chose leprosy and dutifully worried about it on Wednesdays and Fridays, which left my psyche unbroken the rest of the week. And I was surprised by anxiety ever since and I can recommend it.
The problem, of course, is that everything is getting too close for comfort these days.
THE SECRET IS to pick an anxiety that is modish, dreadful, but not really too close for comfort. They don't want you. You could confide to another person and have him think you merely a garden-variety
I used nuclear holocaust for a while, but gave it up at the time of the Cuban missile crisis, for obvious reasons. The killer bees were a good idea until I heard they were moving north. Carcinogens lurk in soft drinks, bacon and sunlight.
Choosing the right anxiety is not an easy task. One walks a fine line between worries that are either too plausible or outlandish.
For example, I live near an ocean, so that rules out sharks, tidal waves, hurricanes, and storms. But my girlfriend gets abducted by a UFO or shot by the Red Brigades just seems to defy the odds of probability to too great a percentage. A prime anxiety must have some verbiage.
SKYLAR CAME along just in time. It is very big, it is falling, and it has to land somewhere. Even if it misses me, what if it crashes into a house? Our entire fortune is invested there.
I can hear our insurance agent now, thumbing through the policy: "Let's see—fire, water, termites, theft, broken sewer pipes." The laboratory orbiting laboratory falling from the sky.
"Couldn't it come under act of God?" I ask.
"Act of God, Subsection 2. 'Damage must be caused by objects or conditions produced or manufactured solely by the deity, in all materials must be of natural origin.'"
"Nope. God doesn't make orbiting laboratories. He makes trees whose hungry mouths are pressed against the earth's surface." You didn't get bit by a tree. Tough luck.
The agent thumbs again.
"Skvlab doesn't make it?"
Caryl Rivers is associate professor of journalism at Boston University.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas Lawrence 68045
(USBP 650-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Friday. paid at USBP 650-640. Subscription is $12 per month paid at Lawrence, Kentucky 69045. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $33 a year out county. The student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student account.
Editor Barry Massey
Managing Editor
Direk Steinem
Editorial Editor
John Whitesides
Mary Hoenk
Pam Manson
Carol Huntner
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
Business Manager
Karen Wendarott
Retail Sales Manager
National Advertising Manager
Classified Advertising Manager
Media Marketing Advertising Manage-
Advertising Manager
Ron Alman
Bret Miller
Kitty McMahon
Duncan Butta
Jeff Klous
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
For years a proposed Tallgrass National Park in western Kansas has not been considered by the House Interior Committee because of the influence of former Rep. Joe Skubitz, R-Kan., as the ranking Republican on the committee.
Odds for prairie park improving
BUT THE concerns of other groups, including Save the Tallgrass Prairie, an environmental group based in Johnson County, are gaining the interest of not only environmentally concerned, but also a large number of environmentally concerned, out-of-state legislators.
Skubitz's successor, freshman Rep. Robert Whitakter, has been lobbying ranking Interior Committee members and leading House Republicans to support his campaign to unify the committee so that he also can use his position to block any consideration of the park.
Skubitz had continually said the voters in the Fifth District of Kansas do not want the park. The Fifth District includes the four counties that would contain the park.
But even if Whittaker is appointed to the committee, the Tallgrass Prairie park's chances of coming into existence will be improved with the absence of Skubitz.
NATIONAL PARK Service officials have said they will now push for the proposed park, something they had been reluctant to do with Skubitz on the committee.
Mary
Ernst
usually at fat prices—is the cause of his political support in the Fifth District.
Rep. Larry Winn Jr., R-Kan, and already the author of a bill proposing the park, has said that he hopes a revised form of the bill, which should be ready within a week, would attract more support than the old bill. He has received a promise from the chairman of the park to submit a committee that hearings about the park will be conducted by the subcommittee.
However, despite Whitaker's stand and the Kansas Legislature's firm three-to-one opposition to the park, Kansas congressman John W. McKinney of at least the idea of creating the park.
No doubt Whittaker will continue to oppose the Tallgrass Prairie National Park in Kansas and be appointed to the Inheritance Committee or Committee on his opposition will continue to gain him votes.
Rep. Keith Sebellius, the senior Republican on the National Parks subcommittee, is against the idea of condemnation of the land by the government,
but supports the idea of preserving the land if donated. The Nature Conservancy already has acquired some of the tracts of the 187,500 acres Winn proposed, but not much chance is given to the rest of the land being put together by private interests.
REP. DAN GLICKMAN, D-Kan., also opposes condemnation in favor of negotiating private purchases. He, along with Sens. Bob Dole and Nancy Kassbaum and Rep. Jim Jeffries, is waiting to see Winn's new bill.
Much of the chance for the park seems to rest on the response to Winn's revised bill. There is a possibility the bill will not include condemnation of the land, because the in-place residents in the area will play a major role, whether Congress will accept the park.
Although Whitaker has said a dangerous precedent would be set by the purchasing of privately-owned land to establish the park, four parks recently established all included in the Whitaker development privately owned. The fact that some land would be bought from private landowners—
Whatever the response to Winn's bill, it should at least be given a chance to be discussed in a congressional committee. As with those smokes, his has cleared from those discussions, and he agrees that Kansas will preserve a great part of its natural beauty in its first national park.
But even the combined opposition of Whittaker and his constituency will not come close to matching the political clout of the other parties used to block consideration of the park.
MACNELLY THE 24 MONTH FREEDOM MAGAZINE.
THIS TIME I THINK COMRADE TENG HAS GONE TOO FAR.
U.S. needs energy pact with Mexico
Next month in Mexico City, President Carter and Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo will meet for talks on energy, immigration and trade. The cornerstone issue to an eventual agreement between the two countries, Specifically, Mexico's natural gas and oil.
Mexico's proven reserves of oil and gas that can be recovered at existing prices and with the present technology, amount to 20 billion barrels a year. It ranks among the lower oil-producing countries.
However, a recent discovery of new oil and gas reserves in the Chinotepec field near the eastern coast boosted Mexico's potential reserves to 200 billion barrels.
With the predicted energy crunch in the mid 1980s and the current instability among some members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the United States no doubt would benefit from an agreement. Increased oil and gas exports would create jobs and increase earnings in Mexico, providing a boost to its alluring economy.
BUT OPPOSITION is being voiced within the administration against any imtradite managemennt of staff.
A 1978 Central Intelligence Agency report estimated that Mexico, by 1989, may be able to produce 10 million barrels of oil daily. That would equal the present production capacity of Saudi Arabia, the current top exporter of oil.
Phillip Garcia
gas. The source? None other than our Energy Secretary, James R. Schlesinger.
As energy secretary, one could assume Schlesinger would work in the interest of the consumer, mainly seeking out and obtaining sufficient energy sources at reasonable cost. In his jobbing and policy efforts seem to be in the interest of the oil and gas industry.
Studies last year by Congress and the Department of Energy compared the cost of producing and transporting Alaskan gas to the cost of purchasing Mexican gas. The
In a New York speech last week, Schlesinger said the policy priorities of the United States should be completion of a $12 billion budget to develop and develop of domestic natural gas. This should be done in order to reduce American dependency on imports, he said. Only after the pipeline is completed should the United States purchase Canadian gas or gas from any other exporter.
OFFICIALS FROM Carter's corner were quick to note that Schlesinger's comments did not coincide with the president's attitude toward the talks.
Still, Schlesinger contended, Alaska gas would be more beneficial for the American economy. More beneficial for oil and gas industry at the expense of the consumer, that is.
results pose a problem for Schlesinger's policy.
The sources said that Mexican gas, by 1985, could be about $1 less for 1,000 cubic feet that Alaskan gas, because of lower prices in the American gas and deregulation of American gas.
The secretary's comments, which will draw Portilla's attention, may present a snag in the talks. Essential to the negotiations and general relationship between the two countries is a natural gas pact.
MEXICO IS peculiar because increased production of either gas or oil leads to further production of the other. But Mexico is not monoally, has yet to find a big buyer.
Two years ago, petroleum Mexicanos and six U.S. distributors tentatively agreed that the United States would purchase gas at $2.60 for 1,000 cubic feet. The Mexican government was nearing the completion of a pipeline from southeast Mexico north of the border with Argentina to the Schlesinger and the Energy Department blocked the deal. They refused to allow the gas companies to buy the gas, which, at that time, cost 44 cents more than Canadian gas
Brzezinski's optimism a risky balm
He says a "massive awakening of man politically and socially" is the most fundamental force of change in our lifetime. As a result of this awakening, he says much of the once colonized Third World is beginning to self-determination, urban growth and prosperity to the extent that it is "more susceptible to mass political mobilization."
That is the message from a New York Times interview published at the end of the year in which Brzzeniak gave his thoughts on the importance of foreign policy would take in the next decade.
The president's national security adviser is "basically optimistic" for the future of international politics. In and around the U.S., Republicans are pushing the West depends, there is unhappy bickering and fighting; Russians are in Afghanistan and South Yemen, Cubans are in Ethiopia, and there is growing unrest in Zimbabwe Brzezinski is "optimistic."
HIS DESCRIPTION is plausible. but
Vernon Smith
PETER SCHWARTZ
hardly grounds for optimism. He is
an inexperienced internal stability is a best question mark.
Brzesniski believes that a SALT agreement is of critical importance to the United States and the Soviet Union. But he also acknowledges that even with an arms agreement there will be continued disagreement and friction.
"The point is not to become paranoid about," he says.
those countries living under the fear of Soviet dominance to tread that fine line
True, to quote U.N. ambassador Andrew Young, we shouldn't "get paranoid about a few communists." But there is no question that the sustained growth of Soviet military power has made it a more threat. And as Soviet subversion continues it becomes increasingly more difficult for
and almost $1 more than gas regulated by the United States.
Perhaps. But Iran's spiritually yearning protesters have been responding more to the voice of Ayatollah Khomeini than to Carter, Khomeini, who is in self-exile in Paris, seeks to establish an Islamic republic in his homeland.
IN THE recent wave of religious fundamentalism swearing the Middle East, Brzezinski sees a "a massive reaction" to the Islamist extremists who characterizes our times. He detects in the Middle East turmoil "an increasing yearning for something spiritual," and he seems to feel that this yearning for the Muslim world is Carter's personal human rights campaign.
Since that time, Mexican gas has increased to $2.90 for 1,000 cubic feet. Schlesinger wants Petroleum Mexico to increase its price to $2.35, which is closer in price to U.S. gas.
With the headlines switching from Iran one week to Rhodesia the next, Brezinski's optimistic forecast is just what the doctor expected. But with the spread of good news. Only time will tell, if his predictions become long range curses or just another placebo.
Partly as a result, Mexico now burns off 300 million cubic feet of gas a day, which, according to one national publication, is energy supply Vernort with energy for eight months.
U. S. OFFICIALS think Petroleum Mexicans will not increase its oil production if a large market for her natural gas is not found. Therefore, a natural gas company should purchase the United States to buy thousands of barrels of oil from just across the border.
The gap between the two countries needs to be bridged. An added problem to the talks is the presence of a strong sentiment among students in the country, resources should be used only by its people.
Also Petroleum Mexicanos will not back down on its price, it seems. The company has announced plans to up with the world market, meaning OPCC. Currently, OPCC countries sell their oil at $13.33 a barrel, while Mexico sells its oil for $13.70. Negotiations should be
With the crisis in Iran, the potential energy shortage, which Schlesinger himself promotes, and price increases by OPEC, an energy producer, its energy would benefit the United States.
MEXICO COULD have many advantages from an agreement.
Its economy cannot keep pace with its 66 million people, and the population is expected to double by 2000. According to one study in the United States, most of whom are seeking better economic conditions. If Mexico could fortify its economy with gas and oil profits, it could then develop its agricultural and industrial sectors, and machinery, no doubt, would be helpful.
Mexico may very well look for other large markets for its resources, a development the United States may not like.
During the 18 month ordeal of the Carter energy program in Congress, Schlesinger called for reduced consumption of gas and oil to reduce greenhouse gases and take painful actions now—meaning higher gas and oil prices, even though domestic oil and gas are available—to avoid greater fuel costs.
Schelsinger must cease his act of placing industry's special interest ahead of the consumers, especially when that attitude is tempered by a friendly country that shares our border.
Thursday, January 18, 1979
5
Panel repairs awaiting go-ahead
O
A three-step plan to correct faulty panels on KU's Green Hall has been developed, but workers are awaiting a response from the building contractor before repair work can begin.
In a Jan. 9 letter, the state asked Casson Construction Co., Topeka, the chief contractor for the $5 million law building, to reinforce and seal 18 defective panels.
Besides asking the company to fill cracks and support some exterior panels, the state asked the firm to re-texture the entire building to ensure a uniform appearance.
John Casson, an officer of the construction company, said yesterday that correcting the panels was the company's top priority, but the team had not permitted him to review the plan in detail.
The letter ended a year-long investigation by KU and state officials of ways to fix the problem.
"We certainly plan to do anything and everything to make the building satisfactory, responsibility or obligation we have. Everyone is anxious to bring this matter to a
Carter esesinger gas and we must higher esthetic oil greater
placing of the attitude country
Although no deadline has been placed on the contractor to complete the repair work, the contractor will be notified.
No estimates have been made on the cost of repairing the building, but the investigation of the Green Hall panels has cost Kansas taxpayers an estimated $10,000.
rapidly and an answer to the Jan. 9 letter,
outlining the plan, would be made "in the
tongue."
KU officials have said they were unhappy with the appearance of the panels and have
Five months after construction started, the contractor failed a final inspection of the building.
questioned the panels' structural soundness since the building was begun in March 1977
A report made last year by one of two
realtors consulted showed some of the panels
work.
In November 1978, the construction
company put fencing and blockades around
Greece Hall after 94 officers decided to
move the building.
The fences and blockades remain and Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said a meeting with Casson would be held and repair work would be scheduled as soon as the contractor responded.
This Fri. — Two Exceptional groups for the price of one!
11th STREET RHYTHM METHOD USED PARTS
This Sat. Great Country Rock with POTT COUNTY PORK & BEAN BAND
The Lawrence Opera House
and 7th Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
Jan. 26—GEORGE THORGGOOD &
THE DESTROYERS
with FAST BREAK
Tickets now available at Better Days and
at the Opera House
KANSAN Police Beat
Compiled by Laura Stevens
ARRESTS
Jerry L. Black, 39, 1610 W. 2nd St. Terr., was arrested Tuesday on a charge of theft of services after a Jan. 9 incident at University Fina, 1819 W. 23rd St., according to Lawrence police. Jack Webb, owner of the gas station, told police that Black had taken his car from the station without paying its costs. Black was released on $1,500 bond.
Lawrence arrested Daniel D. Henderson, 19, 2209 Harper St., after Darrell K. Achety, an employee at Dillon's, 1312 W. Sixth St., told police that Henderson had left the store Tuesday with a pack of cigarettes valued at 50 cents without paying.
KU police arrested Bradley D. Swisher, Lyons freshman, on charges of resisting arrest and throwing missiles. According to police, Swisher was throwing snowballs late last night. He was taken to the Douglas County Jail.
Alaina L. Ellis, DeSoto, was arrested by Lawrence police on charges of carrying a concealed weapon and possession of drugs from a seventh-seventh Spirit Club, 6½ by E. Seventh St. According to police, Ellis reportedly was seen removing a handgun from her pocket.
Police arrested Bradley A. Pistotn, Lawrence law student, after he allegedly struck Jamie J. Coulter, Wichita sophomore, in J.B.'s Big Boy restaurant, 740 Iowa St., early yesterday. Pistotn was disorderly conduct.
Sharon Beasley, address unknown, was arrested Tuesday after a security officer at Rusty's IGA 23rd and Louisiana streets, pleaded guilty to the package of cigarette papers without paying.
Robert Koontz, house manager at Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, reported to police that a front bumper from a fire engine, parked at the fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave., was taken between 1 p.m. Monday and 2:30 p.m. Tuesday. Estimated loss was $30.
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Money saving coupons to use at Godfather's Pizza all month long. Coupons for free Coke, free salads, even $1.00 off on any large size variety of the thickest, richest, most mouth-watering pizza your two lips ever put a lock on. Use 'em now!
Godfather's Pizza
free coke
A pitcher of Coca-Cola free with the purchase of any medium or large size Godfather's Pizza. Present this coupon when ordering. Give coupon per customer per week. Coupon valid first January 31, 1979.
711 W. 2nd St.
Laurentia
Phone • 843-6282
Godfather's Pizza
$1.00 OFF
Any large size variety of Godfather's Pizza. Present this coupon when ordering. One coupon per customer per week. Coupon valid first January 31, 1979.
711 W. 2nd St.
Laurentia
Phone • 843-6282
Godfather's Pizza
free greens
But you gotta get a slider first. Present this coupon when ordering. Any medium or large size Godfather's Pizza and a Tiger jelly beverage of his healthy green juice. Give coupon per customer per week. Coupon valid first January 31, 1979.
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Laurentia
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Are large size variety of Godfather's Plan.
Present this coupon when ordering. One coupon per
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free greens
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But you get gift box a pizza free. Present this coupon when ordering a medical or larger Godfather's Pizza or any other specialty pizza.
111 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence
Phone: 845-6282
One coupon can be get with vip. Coupon valid for $0.99
films sua
Thursday, January 18 MODERN TIMES
(1938)
Dir. Charles Chaplin; with Charles
Chaplin, Paulaite Goddard; Plus.
"The History书, v. 1," 7:30 & 8:30.
Friday & Saturday, January 19 & 20
Disney Animation:
THE RESCUERS
(1931)
Dir. Wolfgang Reitheman, John Loirbunberry, Art Stevens; with the voices of Bob Newhart, Eva Gabor, Geraldine Park. *'330 & 780*.
Animated Sci-fi
WIZARDS
Wednesday, January 24
(1977)
Dir. Ralph Bakshi. An animated fantasy of the future. "9:30 & 12:00 Midnight.
D. Menny LeLouis with Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Glenda Farrell. The Gangster film that wrote the vocabulary for the genre.
Tuesday, January 23 LITTLE CEASER
(1970)
Truffaut:
THE WILD CHILD
Dr. Frances Truftauf, with Francois Truftauf, Jean-Pierre Cargol. Photography by Nestor Almendros ("Days of Heaven"). Frauntsubiales.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
VALGABLE COUPON
FREE!
Small drink with purchase
of 1 Burrito.
Taco Via'
1700 W. 23rd St.
841-4848
FIRST CITY BREWERY
CYMNUS
BISSPORT
CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S CLASSIC COMEDY
THE GENEVA MACHINE
MODERN TIMES
with Paulette Goddard
written directed and scored by Charles Chaplin
Thursday, January 18
7:30 & 9:30 Woodruff Aud. §1.00
At the JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE YOU CAN:
I
1. WIN a free one-week trip to Hawaii Enter every day until Feb. 20
USED USED
2. Buy more used books than anywhere else on campus
HELPI
3. Find help if lost in the aisles
2 1
4. Purchase any two "same priced" spiral note books for the price of one. (Bring ad)
12
5. Save 10% on any calculator in stock (With copy of this ad) Not valid for calculators already on sale.
6. Save $1.00 off any T-shirt or sweat shirt over $4.00 (Bring ad)
Special Hours 8:30-8:00 pm Jan.16 through Jan.18.
Regular Hours 8:30 am-5:00 pm Monday-Friday
6
Thursday, January 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
LITWIN'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
LEVI'S
STRAIGHT
LEG
SALE
$ 11 99
style
no. 519
Steadv Missouri dismantles Kansas, 58-55
Kansas discovered last night that it could play basketball as poorly at home as it has in college.
CORDS & DENIMS
28-38 -- 25-38
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
SINWIL
Missouri, probably the worst team in the Big Eight, led KU the entire game and finally sent the Hawks to the dressing room from again, with a final score of 58-65.
The game wasn't nearly as close as the final score. The Tigers, 6-9 overall, led by as many as 11 points and use a sagging zone defense to convince KU to put up shots so far outside that the 'Hawks may have had snow on their shoes.
DOWNTOWN 831 Mass.
Out of 48 shots, many of them parking lot specials, KU sank only 25. MU scored four fewer points from the field, but stayed hot early in the second half to protect a 30-25 intermission lead and finish with 51.1 percent shooting from the field.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Sports
KU head coach Ted Owens was grim after the game. He had just spent about 20 minutes talking to his players before they held a conclave. After the players' meeting, he announced that only played three minutes, announced that no player would be talking to the press.
Owens did talk, but he was a bit happy.
"We're not going to have a good
"We're not going to have a good
basketball team," he said, "until we learn to sacrifice a little bit. We had no patience on offense—32 percent—that's the kind of shots we're taking."
By sacrifice, Owens said, every individual would have to give up shots and work for the better percentage shot. Remembering better times, he mentioned Ken Koenigs, a starter last year who was willing to sacrifice and give up shots.
Darnell Valentine, who hit six of his 10 points from the field, seemed to be the only one in the first half.
Meanwhile, the Tigers collectively took apart KU, ranked 19th by UPI and 20th by AP.
Thanks to Curtis Berry, who apparently used 20-20 vision to lead the game with 20 points and 20 rebounds, MU jumped to an early 29-9 lead. Berry, who was listed at center but played like a wing forward, erabbed 17 of hisrebounds in the first half.
"I can't remember anyone getting that
THE KINSAS UNION
THE KANSAS UNION
Bowling Leagues
★ SPRING 1979
★
Spring Leagues Begin on the Following Days
many in a half," MU head coach Norm Stewart said.
Monday Jan. 22 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Tuesday Jan. 23 Scratch 7:00 pm
Owens had to substitute early when four starters got three fouls each in the first half. But the bench could only muster 14 points and 10 of those came from freshman forward David Magley. Fouls didn't plague Kansas in the second half.
Wednesday Jan. 24 Greek 6:30 pm
Wednesday Jan. 24 All Campus 8:30 pm
Valentine, who was the only starter who did not foul in the first half, picked up his first personal and KU's first team foul in the second half with 9:51 left.
Stewart said that his team didn't intentionally clog the middle, forcing KU to take so many outside shots, but that MU instead tried to shag whoever got the ball for
"We were impatient with the ball," he said, "and we were not moving."
Thursday Jan. 25 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Friday Jan. 26 TGK 4:00 pm
Johnny Crawford, who kept KU in the game by hitting 11 of his team-high 15 points in the second half, was one of the only players to comment after the game.
Friday Jan. 26 TGIF 4:00 pm
Join in the Fun Leagues for Everyone
Larry Drew, who twisted and turned for 15 points and seemed to be the only MU player who didn't throw an occasional elbow or any other part of his anatomy into an opponent, pegged the main reason for his team's victory.
SIGN UP AT THE JAY BOWL NOW!! or call 864-3545 for information.
Friday Nite Special
6 games for $3.00
6:00 pm-11:00
Rent A Lane $2.50/hour
1:00-6:00 Daily
OPEN Bowling $.60/game
OUR PRICES CAN'T BEAT
Crawford said the players decided to have the meeting after the game to "get something in our minds on what we have to do if we're going to be successful."
Jay Bowl
"We got the big men in foul trouble," crew said, "and also they couldn't hit their opponents."
MU
or call 864-3545 for information
POWER
What they got in their minds will be tested Saturday in Manhattan when KU, now 9-4 and 1-2 in the conference, plays Kansas State.
Women go to tournament
KU has won seven of its last eight games and has been led by the play of sophomore forward Lynette Woodard, who averages about 35 points a game.
Kansas puts a five-game winning streak on the line at the 1 p.m. when the Jayhawks face Colorado in the opening round, putting the sports basketball in Lincoln, Neb.
Leon Lachman Washington said Tuesday she hoped KU's improved depth would carry the team to the tournament's finals. There, the game was a close one, with Missouri for a repeat of last year's championship game. In that game, MU beat KU
py three points.
"We had problems with officiating." Washington said of last year's championship game. "We had several players out early in the second half."
KU has not been listed in the top 20 teams, as ranked by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer, despite its 13-4 record. The team's victories from at least two top-ranked teams.
--must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
Probable KU starters in today's game are Kathy Patterson and Cheryl Burnett at guard, Woodard and Adrian Mitchell at forward and Shyra Holden at center.
--must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
7th Annual
ART ESCAPADES
PELICAN
CALYPSO
Masquerade Dance
Music by
BLOCKDOOR
HAND
Sat. Jan. 20th, 8:30-12:00
Union Ballroom $2.50
THE BLAIRDOTTA
HOLLYWOOD
--must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
The Wildcats also lose last night. Nebraska beat K-State 55-43 at Lincoln.
Elsewhere in last night's conference action, Oklahoma held off rival Oklahoma State, 64-59, at Norman. Iowa State's Ante Jones scored a touchdown and 18-59 ISU victory over Colorado at Armes.
Kansas 25 30 - 55
Michigan 25 30 - 55
FG PG FT REB PF TP
Dreamer 2-4 3-8 6-4 9-6
Shawer 2-4 3-8 6-4 9-6
Berry 2-12 6-11 20 1 10
Drew 7-10 6-12 2 1 10
Drew 7-10 6-12 2 1 10
Walley 4-9 5-13 2 1 10
Walley 4-9 5-13 2 1 10
Foster 5-13 9-9 2 1 10
Foster 5-13 9-9 2 1 10
| Athlete | Number of Games | FT | REB | PP | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Guy | 13 | 1-0 | 12 | 2 | 12 |
| Crawford | 13 | 1-0 | 9 | 1 | 9 |
| Mokushi | 5-15 | 0-0 | 7 | 1 | 3 |
| Fawcett | 10-15 | 0-0 | 10 | 3 | 10 |
| Fowler | 10-15 | 0-0 | 14 | 3 | 10 |
| Neal | 16-17 | 0-2 | 2 | 3 | 2 |
| Maggiu | 5-17 | 0-1 | 2 | 3 | 10 |
| Kapu | 5-17 | 0-1 | 2 | 3 | 10 |
| Giles | 1-3 | 0-0 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
| Sanders | 1-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Andrews | 10-19 | 0-0 | 42 | 21 | 55 |
| Andrews | 25-79 | 0-0 | 8 | 21 | 55 |
Missouri:
Officials: Clymer, Dabrow. Attendance: 15,28
- 54
Two KU women swimmers have qualified for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.
Janet Lindstrom qualified for the nationals in four events and Lanny Schaffer qualified in three last weekend when the KU basketball team beat the Arizona Invitational Meet in Austin, Texas.
Swimmers qualify for AIAW nationals
Both swimmers are on the women's swimming team and they broke KU records with their performances. Teammate Erin McMorrow also set a school record.
Although no team total scores were kept at the meet, coach Gary Kemp said it was the team's best showing of the season. He said the meet was open to any college or AAU team in the nation and some of the best teams in the country were represented.
Lindstrom qualified for the national with times of 4.53.8 in the 500-yard freestyle, 4.30.8 in the 400-yard individual medley, 4.28.8 in the 300-yard freestyle and 17.60.8 in the 1,560-yard freestyle.
Lindstrom's time in the 1,650-yard freestyle was a KU record.
Schafer's first-place finish in the 202-yard backstroke was the only individual victory
Schafer qualified with times of 59.3 in the 100-yard backstroke, 2.05.4 in the 200-yard backstroke, and 53.2 in the 100-yard freestyle. All were KU records.
The 400-yard freestyle relay team of McMorrow, Schaffer, Maureen Sheehan, and Lindstrom also set a KU record of 3:37.0 in placing fifth.
THE KANSAS CITY STAR AND TIMES
S
McMorrow narrowly failed to qualify for the nationals, but set a KU record in the 50-12 loss.
Spring 1979
SEMESTER RATE
PLUS TAX
$13.39
- MORNING • EVENING • SUNDAY
Student Discount
Please send payment to:
I agree to subscribe to The Kansas City Star and Times for the full semester at the amount upon billing by the carrier or agent. This price includes consider-able meals, supplies, and suspended for holidays, fall or winter breaks and other periods when service is not requested. The offer becomes after September 15th. I am unable to expire the last day of finals.
DATE:
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE: APT:
STUDENT LD. #
UNIVERSITY:
PHONE:
--must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
POSITION OPENINGS
K. U. Residence Halls and Scholarship Halls
1979-1980
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS must be sophomore, junior, senior, or graduate student for 1979-80 academic year
ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTORS must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
SCHOLARSHIP HALL RESIDENT DIRECTORS
All applicants should evidence above-average academic achievement, residential group-living experience, and availability for the entire 1979-80 academic year (August-May).
Applications and job descriptions available now in the Office of Residential Programs, 123 Strong Hall.
APPLICATION DEADLINES:
FEBRUARY 15, 1979, for Residence Hall positions
FEBRUARY 28, 1979, for Scholarship Hall directors
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
EMPLOYER. APPLICATIONS ARE SOUGHT FROM QUALIFIED PEOPLE REGARDLESS OF
RACE, RELIGION, COLOR, SEX, DISABILITY, VETERAN STATUS, NATIONAL ORIGIN, AGE,
OR ANCESTRY.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 18, 1971
7
Groups oppose dropping food tax
By CATTLIN GOODWIN
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A Kamas House of Representatives bill, which calls for the removal of the 3.5 percent state tax sales on all food items, was opposed yesterday by several labor groups and KU student body president, also spoke out against the bill.
The lobbyists, which included representatives of Kansas municipalities and state grocers, spoke to the House Committee on Assessment and Taxation, which had heard proponents for the bill on Tuesday.
The bill, introduced Jan. 8 by Rep. Homer J. Earjouch, D-Wichita, would exempt all retail food sales from the state sales tax. This would not include prepared food sold in restaurants.
In Lawrence, Harper said yesterday that he opposed the bill because it could detrimentally affect the University of Kentucky.
"IT WOULD MEAN a $4 million cut in state revenue," he said, which would cause a reduction in funds for the state.
He said he would be asked the Associated Students of Kansas, a study lobbying group, to lobby against the bill.
"We don't want to make it a major issue, though," he said, "because that would automatically divide the forces into those who support higher education and those who don't." Under the current, we might have a little more influence."
The major argument against the bill expressed by the League of Kansas Municipalities was that the bill would create a negative impact on locally-leved sales taxes. There are 53 municipalities in Kansas with a sales tax.
ERNIE MOSIER, spokesman for the league, proposed an alternative to the bill, which was backed by all the opponents at the meeting. He said an income tax rebate system, dependent on the average adjusted gross income of an individual, would alleviate tax pressures without the added problems of the tax-exemption bill.
"A rebate puts the matter before the public," he said. "It preserves municipal interests and inequalities."
The Kansas Food Dealers Administration gave more of a business argument against the bill.
Frances Kastner, director of governmental affairs for the food dealers, told the committee that for Kansas grocers to comply with the bill, they would have to make equipment changes that would increase prices of all items.
SHE SAID the major change that grocers would have to make would be cash register modifications, because the current models were unable to separate food items from non-food items for tax purposes.
She said she also supported the rebate system.
"The grocers would have to increase prices on items in the grocery stores so that they would be as much as, if not more than, the 8.3 percent sales tax," she said. "It would also make it easier for the grocers to the grocers of doing business would be unfit."
"The bill to exempt food from sales taxes was proposed to benefit the poor," she said. "The rebate system would benefit the poor just as much without the expense to the retailers."
106 AND
THURSDAY
JANUARY 18
THE LAWRENCE
ANIMAL HOUSE
PRESENT A
BACK TO ZOO
FEATURING,
FREE BEER FROM 8:49,
CHUGGING CONTEST, AND...
TOGA PARTY
ALSO GIVE AWAYS
AND CONTESTS
ALL NIGHT
FLASH CADILLAC
PLUS
USED
PARTS
The
Lawrence
Opera House
and 7th Spirit Club
$3.50
DAY OF SHOW, OR
A TOGA OR YOUR KUID
GET YOU A $1.00 OFF
THE COVER.
Go For
A
Winner
Rossignol Skis
and Nordica Boots.
Why settle for less
than the best?
Complete Ski Rental Dept.
first serve
TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE
Two Locations
In Lawrence
Topeka
Wichita
Kansas City
COLUMBIA. Mo. (AP)—About 1,000 University of Missouri students temp- tured the night before a transformer caught fire and filled two seven-story residence halls with smoke.
p. m. and students were not expected to be allowed into the halls until late last night.
Students move to shelter after MU electrical fire
The students used other nearby halls and buildings for shelter.
The fire was contained near the transformer, but smoke filled the two buildings, fire officials said.
The fire was discovered about 5:15
Fire officials estimated damage to the twin structures at $10,000.
Bring this coupon for a
Free!
3 Pc. CHICKEN
BASKET
Good thru Sunday
Jun 21, 1979
when you buy one
at the regular
price
OR
A Single Order ½ Price (Reg. 1.89)
(includes French Fries & Rolls)
baked beans .25 extra
NOW OPEN!
Iowa Street Drive-In
A FULL MENU DRIVE-IN Specializing in Fried Chicken
After K.U. beats K. State Saturday night, just tell us the score and we will add a small drink of your choice to any food order. Good through Sunday Jan. 21, 1979.
Plus a full sandwich menu; hamburgers, pork tenderloins, hot dogs.
Plus a full sandwich menu: hamburgers, pork tenderloins, hot dogs, and ham & cheese.
We also feature: breaded shrimp, mushrooms & fresh baked apple pie.
HOURS:
Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Fri.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 8 p.m.
We have 22 carry out windows to serve you fast
2554 IOWA (next to the University State Bank)
KANSAN WANT ADS
Ammoniumaldehyde, good reaction and rapidity.
Citrate is used in the preparation of potassium citrate.
WILKINGTON'S CITRATE, 100 mL PETROLEUM TEA SUPPLEMENT,
WILD BERRY, 200 mL PETROLEUM TEA SUPPLEMENT,
WILD BERRY, 50 mL PETROLEUM TEA SUPPLEMENT.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times
15 words or
power
economical
word
exponential
word
$2.60 $3.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.60
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Monday 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 oil.
Employment Opportunities
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
FOR RENT
Job search inti for college graduate. Write
Sargenty, RI; BWs; Wilmington, Pc. I 6005. 1-23
Private rentals holdings form. Mostly residential.
Private rentals are available on private patio. Gate moulded protected. $125 per month. All rooms include TV, DVD and WiFi access. No smoking. Please call 800-796-1011.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW NENT-BEST
UNIT FOR RENT. 820-719-3450. Available from $170 Two bedroom, large
bedroom unit. On KKW. INFO@FRONTIER
RIDGE ATTENDEE.COM Call now at 643-444 or
at 621 FRONTIER Front. Next door 643-444
Appartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
interior facilities, KU and rear floors.
Photos.
Christian House, Very nice to camper. Call 812-6022 between 1 & 3 pm. Keep Visiting.
S. W. Lawnery, forrunsum 4 bibroom. W-W carriage,
boxcar. B-Carriage boxcar. C-Garage Family car.
Boxcar. G-Carriage family car.
Eldight year old house. Four bedrooms. Large
kitchen. Wet bar. Living room. Single bedroom.
Singles bedroom. No P.O. Box. 4138-123
567.
Two HR DLuxe. Low rent, Newly Remodeled.
Officer desk back (plus) interest. Call 855-267-3000.
Mail resume to: HRD Luxe, Inc., 100 S. 4th Ave., NY, NY 10024.
Two Twins furloughed assignment斜 to play in
the NCAA tournament. The Twins won the
Kentucky B (1) against weekends between 8
and 9 on Friday.
Hear for rent. Share kitchen and bathrooms.
Eat meals at Deli and Close to campus
1,255
960 or 487-6700
Nice, Single Apartment, adjacent to campus.
Cash paid,UBI thru May 13 $15/Month
m-8422 m-8423
Sacredia top of hill location. Semi-public bathhouses. Quarter studies. uppermanor rooms 143-7827
Pack 25 on bus plus bus parking, 1 bedroom apartment
at 650 W. 4th St., Buffalo, NY 14209,
Union Depot, Union Station, 800-823-6756,
800-823-6758
Brand new duplex, suite and 3 bedroom house; located on campus, new kitchen appliances.
JAVAHWAKE TOWERS has an apartment for
Sputnion. Sputnion two bedrooms, all amenities
paid for and fully furnished.
FOR SALE
Two b-drum unfurnished. 3205 Mo - electric.
Call Bill. 843-7780.
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization notes to arrive soon after the annual rally 31 For exam preparation. New Analysis for Western Civilization. New on sale. Cornell, MA. Mallia Booksstore, & Oread Booksstore. tfr
Need nominate for 2 bedrooms apartment. $21.60
Me includes water and earl part. Mott Rent $149
per month. Please include check-in date.
Fendry : Mardand Bass Golfer with straps, cords,
wire ropes and covers. Very good condition.
Cards and covers. Very good condition.
Furnished kit, 1 bdr., may MK. un pets. available immediately 842-397 or 842-398 (abbr. 120) at 560-722-6466
Female for NiV. No Ap. 2 ldr. KE1
$117 } callles Catl. 842-6867 KE1
112 } calls Catl. 842-6867 KE1
Nintendo 500 Series (now $299) for $298. D
Nintendo 1000 Series (now $349) for $349.
Motion Control equipment and Stick capacitors
Saint Pierre. Sun photos are our speciality. Not
available on the web or in person. Please contact:
2023 921 817-5700. www.saintpierre.com
Alternator, starter and generator Specialist
MOTIVE 432-8500, 2960 W, 610 H
MOTIVE 432-8500, 2960 W, 610 H
WAKEFIELD MATTHEWEN HALL 340-741-8300
WHITE LIGHT, 790 Mile, B45-8303, 1-264
SANTA FE, 790 Mile, B45-8303, 1-264
188 Cimamu Stone, Sweet Green, Kawaii Importation
Price $90.00 Call 743-7637 1-253
189 Cimamu Stone, Sweet Green, Kawaii Importation
Price $90.00 Call 743-7637 1-253
HELP WANTED
A studentinstructor for female quantitative biology students will be needed. Needlen for Women and Wed. must be filled by instructing papers, taking student to school then transferring to college. Call 851-4522 or 851-4523 (101) after interview.
1990 Perth Ticketmaster. New lauren finish, morn-
ing, mini-taxi ride, pick up, sunset. 224-358-3750.
www.perthtickets.com
BOWS are white turtles that are buft with orange skin. They feed on small fish and crabs. The 75 VW Sower Nur, New chen, can also breed.
72 VW Super Bike. Nine, sleek car. Also needed for touring car. 2 L = 1890 kg, 2426 J/km², 825 W/km², 8413 kJ/km², 8413 kJ/km².
Immediate openings for person to work with quadripsy and/or nursing home. Must be able to operate a variety of devices & evenings & week nights. Provide own transportation. 832-6511) before 4:30 pm. Ask for info at www.homeloans.com.
Cameron bays wanted. Western Colorado boy's camp emphasizing outstretch and river programs. Two girls in the camp required. Include self-adhered children. AUGUSTA CAMP. ADVERSOR CAMP. GYMPIUM. CALDWAGO CAMP.
Part time job: Flatlandier (work week 18-20)
Work as a front office clerk, working with client data to help clients make decisions. Please excel at the use of spreadsheets and time-tracking tools. Please exert yourself in all aspects of the job.
G P Lloyd is now hiring earmacked waiters and bakers, and D.J. S. Experience preferred. FAX (800) 725-1196.
MEN WOMEN JOBS** CHIUSE SUPPS
Hibernate. No experience. High pay! Seville, Haiti. Australia. So. Americas. Winter. Job description: Job position on site for box 60153. Caen. Sa 98006. 4-17
Delivery Drivers needed. Apply in person at 6:48a. 2490 Iowa call phase.
Cocker-Elatefess: fine acre restaurant, must be at least 21. food board #21, plate number, evening.
Clark wanted to work eveningues, 12:20 noon -
Chuck wanted a shift or second vacancy for
4016349124 or 4016349125.
J.A.'s Big Boy now taking applications for part-time
workings. Apply in person at 740 723-8516.
The KU Library Systems Corporation has a large number of the Computer World Wise Workstations, such as the KU Library Workstation and the KU Library Workstation 2. Students qualified for its Computer World Wise should prepare an application to the college library and are required to have a job offered by the college library. Labs are provided on a faculty based basis for these students. The KU Library Systems OFFICIAL SYSTEM OF COLLEGE LIBRARY AND TECHNICAL PATENTATION, INFORMATION AND APPLICATIONS, PROTECTED
HAVE A GREAT PEAR!
Topless dancers with lunch
Moon-2.00
Only 2.00
Flamingo-
SPE N Ou
N. Lawrence
The KCI Lafayette Square currently has a larger location, offering open spaces in Waltham and the Hamilton Heights. The school is interested in applying to Study Program who are interested in employment opportunities at Waltham Library. Job Note: For current positions visit www.walthamlibrary.com/careers/become-a-partner-in-the-engagement-of-Waltham-Library-School. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AUTHORIZATION AWARD MAY BE DONE OUTSIDE OF BRAZIL REGION. COURSE REQUIREMENTS TO BE SUBMITTED ON TERM BACKGROUND TO BACE REJECTION. COURSE IS NOT FOR NATIONAL STATUS, NATIONAL ORIGIN AGREEMENT.
The Lawrence Osprey School has a limited number of positions available. The following positions are available for tuition from $600 to $1200 per year:
• Master's degree in Computer Science or a related field; available online.
• Information science equivalent education;
• Bachelor's degree in computer science, digital technology, or information technology.
• Bachelor's degree in a related field.
LOST
Large reward for a return of loyalty and that surrogate
No questions. 5453-6485 *Lost your Christ*
*Please re-contact*
MISCELLANEOUS
TIFFIS HUNDING. COPYING. The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for treasury bonds and equities in Lawrence, Mass., will cost $218 Mare, or about $462K. Thank you.
NOTICE
J. HOOD DOOKSELL welcomes to welcome all and a training aid for the spring season at Hood Doorkell on Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday. Closed Monday. Come down and browse in town. Hard cover and .25 price paperback in town. We buy books. ever > 140! Mail: 811-3041
Gay Service, in Kuwait, general meeting, Jan.
23, 7:28. Kuwait University Jawahir Hall,
1:25
PERSONAL
Color Photography. Silks Prints. You name it.
Colorful and good prices, fast service. #82,
81, #79, #78, #77, #76, #75, #74, #73, #72, #71, #70, #
Margaret Birlin and George Gomez are running for student body president and vice president. They are interested in your idea. Margaret-863-1254-4265, Pad for you at 1-233 Step Continental
Dana's role. His annual Art Exposures, Performers
and Educators program is held annually (June 20th,
August 19th, October 1st, Jan. 26th, March 19th,
April 25th). 8-12-90-18-90.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to
17 weeks' frequency. Fertility, Birth,
Complaining. Total Ligature. For appointed call:
800-254-9686. Stevensville KS. 801-254-9686.
Sevillainville KS. 801-254-9686.
1-233
Gayz, J. blonde hairstyle, counseling and general
instruction. #4112. 11
Eating Out is Great!
Topplers dancers with dinner.
4:30-10:00
nose at
501 9th St.
Lansing, MI
M. Lawrence
Watch this tape for a tally on KU's Winter SIAK 149
Gumball Tournament
Got the bolt bottom blunt? Got to Litwin?
Right for sale.
1-38
STRAIGHT LEG. DEMIS. Straight leg cordos on
wall. SAIT 'AUT'LUW'S Downtown. D-18
1-18
Back by Buzzs daily for Paint Hour 2-3 P.M.
Small $1.99; Medium $2.99; Large $5.99; Small
DARKROOM: BUILT INAUDIBLE, a complete phthalocene darkroom with 800mm and paper for film processing.
Dear Joff, You thanked the Muff Drew's initiative,
to help us to straighten up in Comet, come, dropwe...
E-18
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR MA in math, patience, three
year professional tutoring experience. 832-2411
Relax. Let me type your term paper discussion.
Rekon. Fast Past Server. Mime. N42. 165-148
PHINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with:
Alice at the House of Ubiqui/Ohcary College Center.
Aisle is available from 8 a.m. to 5 a.m. Monday
to Friday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
Mass.
TYPING
I do damned good tying 842-4476.
Firman/Editor, IBM PCA Elite. Quality work
receiving calls. Teach dissertation welcome.
Email: jon@ibm.com
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-1900
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Rp customer law papers, term papers, MPa
terms and conditions apply.
Experienced typist with experience background IBM certifying Scheduler II. Cell Call 831-3128 IBM certifying Scheduler II. Cell Call 831-3128
WANTED
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8
Thursday, January 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Committee faces
Bv TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—Members of the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee were formally introduced yesterday to formula funding programs in a way becoming better accounted with the system.
The committee is studying a 76-page analysis of formula funding, a new method used to figure the 1890 budgets for the Kansas Board of Regents schools.
Formula funding compares the financial status of a university in seven program areas to other "peer schools." Before 1980, only 6 percent of students of number of student enrolled at a university.
The analysis, prepared by the legislative research department, said the advantages to formula funding were that it attempted to zero-base expenditures and establish minimum funding levels, it ensured greater access for teachers and students lessened the impact of declining enrollment and reduced competition for funding between schools.
However, the analysis also reported drawbacks to formula funding. Disadvantages include the formula's complexity, the need for expert judgment and costiness to implement and its tendency to
base future decisions for Kansas schools on decisions of peer states.
Some committee members expressed concern that the plan would not be possible if a 7 percent state spending lid were implemented.
However, Julie Mundy, a member of the legislative research staff, said that the plan would work under a spending bid but that the school's ability to "catch up" with its peers.
funding
Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, agreed and said that the formula is correct.
"As far as I can tell, formula funding is an attempt to assess where the greatest need is and a series of suggestions as to how those needs be met," he said.
MIKE GLOVER, D-Lawrence, said he favored the system but that it should be more automated.
"The selection process was not prostituted." Glover said, "by looking at the bottom line and saying, 'Hey, what will make me look bad.'"
The coalition members were protesting a University of Kansas policy, suspended Monday, which banned the distribution of literature in campus buildings.
Miller said the policy was a direct solution of Article 10 of the Code of Student Rights and the Declaration of Respect.
"I think the thing we need to get across is that the Legislature asked that a new formula be developed." Glover said, "The program will be used, with this to offset declining enrollment."
Several members of the Academic Freedom Action Coalition quietly demonstrated in support of free speech yesterday for four hours in the Strong Hall rotunda.
The article states that "A student group or organization may distribute written material on campus without prior approval."
Handout policy protest target at Strong Hall
Glover also said that it was important that legislators understood that peer institutions for the Rengis schools were selected before making their decisions, and that they would make KU's funding appear insufficient.
John Vogel, R-Lawrence, was dubious of the formula system. Vogel has said he thought legislators might view formula enrolment as a gimmick to offset declining enrollment.
The policy, which outlines the proper place and manner for the distribution of literature on campus, was suspended, pending review, after University administrators decided the policy conflicted with faculty and student rights.
Miller said that because of Article 15, any kind of literature distribution policy was
Mundy said that more than half of the states chosen as peer states used part of the formula system to determine funding but that "this particular conglomeration" had been specially designed to meet the needs of Kansas schools.
Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies, who helped hand out leaflets, said the protest more than distribute literature in buildings.
Five teams are officially in the running in the election for student body president and vice president at yesterday's filing session. The chairman of the elections committee,
Mark Hazelrigg, Emporia junior, and Christopher Jon Fleisher, Lawrence junior, were the last team to declare their candidacy when they submitted a petition with 500 signatures Tuesday in the Student Senate office.
Hazelrigg also said that he didn't care if he jumped to go vote. 14 and 15 when the Republicans were defeated.
5 teams entered in Senate race
"The University has gone for 110 years without the policy," he said. "What is the problem that should lead to something like this? The university has yet to hint that there is a problem."
"Most of the people don't vote," he said. "So, obviously, they don't care. We thought those people needed representation and we're providing that service."
"We'll be there if they decide to vote," he said.
Lawrence legislators had mixed views on the subject.
Harzelring said yesterday that he and his running mate would call their coalition
"We'll have to wait and see what the tomorrow, Vogel said. Maybe we'll have to wait."
Other presidential teams are: Margaret Berlin, Bonner Springs junior, and George Gomez, Topeka junior; Clair Keizer, Lawrence junior, and Craig Templeton, Topeka junior; Robert Tomlinson, Mission junior, and John Bhmighwitch, Wichta junior; and Ron Allen, Sabeth junior, and Dave Kenner, Maryville, Mo., junior.
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"I'd rather be sailing . . ."
The KU Sail Club invites all interested people to attend their first meeting, Thursday, Jan. 18 7:30 in the Big 8 Room of the Union.
SUA
C
KU Sail Club Meeting Thursday
On Campus
Events
TODAY: FINE ARTS MASTER CLASSES with Leon Fleisher, pianist, will be from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Swarthock Hall in Raleigh.
TONGHT: K.JKH STAFF MEETING will be at 6 in the Council Room of the Union. SA BOARD will meet at 6:30 in the Walmut Room of the Union. COUNCIL will meet at 6:30 in the Governor's Room of the Union. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7:1 in the Oread Room of the Union. STUDY SKILLS ENRICHMENT WORKSHOPS will be held at 7 in the Jayhawk Room and at 7:30 in the Walmut Room and Partners A, B and C of the Union.
FIRST SESSION OF FLY FISHING
Admiral Car Rental
When was the last time
you rented a car for
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We have a few late model
cars for sale
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862-2511
If you're a single, Full-time student getting B's or better, you may qualify for Farmers' 25% discount on auto rates
Jim Pilch 842.9777
Anthorah Omar 843.2170
Don Freeman 842.8285
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---
WORKSHOP with Philip S. Humphrey and Robert Mengel of the Museum of Natural History will be held at 7:30. The 12-week workshop fee is $22.50 for Museums Associates Members or $22 for non-members. COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WORKFORMS AT ROSENBERG ROOM of the Union, KU SKYDIVING CLUB will meet at 8 in room 124 of Robinson STUF.
DENT RECITAL in supporting Steve Gordon, trumpeter, will be at 8 a.m. Nw Recital Hall.
TOMORROW: KUF FOLK DANCE CLUB
will meet at 7.30 p.m. in room 175 of Robinson
MASTER'S RECITAL featuring Susan
in Swartwout Recital Hall p.m.
in swartwout Recital Hall in Murphy.
Padre island Spring break $149 March 9-18
3
Trip includes; 7 nights lodging, round trip bus transportation, 1-day trip to Mexico, T-shirt, and beverages on bus. Sign up by February 5 in the SUA office.
sua films
The movie can be heard on the radio.
Ralph Bakshi's film and the director's vision are in his hand. Ralph Bakshi is the director of this film.
Director: Andrew McKay
RELEASE DATE: MAY 13, 1980
A RALP BAKSHI FILM
WIZARDS
Directed by Robert Hoehn and Ralph Bakshi
Music and sound by Andrew Belling
Woodruff Auditorium
Friday 19 & Saturday 20
9:30 & 12:00
Admission
$1.50
sua
films
DAZZLING
ADVENTURE...
from the depths of Devil's Bayou!
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS'
THE RESCUERS
A new animated comedy-thriller
Technicolor®
© 1977 WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS G
Woodruff Auditorium
Friday 19 & Saturday 20
3:30 & 7:00
Admission $1.50
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
only at
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass. Upstairs
Tonite: Jam Session—no cover!
Friday: Piana Bar—no cover!
Saturday: The Gaslite Gang DixieLand Band
Admission only $4.00 (Bring this Ad. in for $1.00 OFF!)
Free Beer./Peanuts./Pop Corn./Soft Drinks
Call 843-8575 for reservations.
STILL WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Track squads start indoors
Vol. 89, No. 76
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See story and photo page 7
Friday, January 19, 1979
Tractorcade's farmers undaunted by rain, cold
Staff Writer
By LORI LINENBERGER
TOPEKA—They came from farms throughout the states of Colorado and Kansas to join their colleagues yesterday. They were the tractorcade headed for Washington, D.C.
They are the farmers of the American Agriculture Movement and they have many things in common, but their most interesting thing is that win what they think is duly their. Their number is gradually increasing as they travel across the country in a caravan of tractors, pickups and mobile homes to protest low farm prices and to seek parity.
Their spirit is irrepressible and they proved it yesterday as they chugged their 80 or so tractors into the Ben Mar-a-Lon mine. Topeka for a hot meal and a night's rest.
IT WAS COLD and wet, but the womans, clad in blue jean coveralls and muddy work boots, seemed oblivious to the weather as they jumped down from the cabs of their tractors and shook and stretched their joints and muscles loose.
All denied being bothered by the pouring rain.
"We're used to this. We work outside every day so we getba" Laveur gets the bag out and just thinking about rolling my sleeping bag out next to my tractor to keep it com-
Larry Williken, a farmer from Williamsburg, said he had the same sentiments as Walker.
"This is just another day for us," he said. "We've had years of experience with this kind of weather, growing food for you to eat."
One farmer from Leota said he was eager to get back on the road to Washington.
"YOU KNOW WHY we're going to Washington?" he asked. "To save rural America, that's why, and in doing so, we'll be saving the rest of it."
The symbols of the protest movement—the tractors—appeared to be the real messengers for the farmers.
They carried brightly colored flags and large posters explaining, in varying ways, the mission of the tractorade
"No farmers, no food, no kidding," one poster said. Another asked, "What in the hell does Sara Carter know about human beings?" The government demanded, "We want parents, not charity."
One tractor supported an outhouse on its back with written directions telling Carter to "stit on it." The lead tractor was the same model as the American flies described the back.
After spending eight hours on the road yesterday traveling from Salina to Topeka, the farmers were ready to eat, and they headed to Kansas City this morning.
THE TRACTORCADE, which started in Colorado and is just one string of the total caravan traveling from different points in the country to Washington, will travel as far as St. Louis today if the weather permits.
A spokesman for the American Agriculture Movement, which organized the demonstration, sounded hopeful that the rain would not be impaired by the freezing rains.
"We may get iced in, and in that case,
we'll just lay over for a day," she said.
"But we'll get started again as soon as
possible."
The tractorcarade traveled Interstate 70 in Kansas, but Missouri Governor Joseph Teasdale ordered the caravan off 170 while crossing Missouri, the AAM headquarters.
The farmers plan to reach Washington by Feb. 2 for an extended rally.
"We're going to try to get him to change his mind," she said, "but we aren't going to do anything without anyone's permission."
TEASDALE TOLD the AAM that the minimum speed limit of 40 mph on 170 would have to be followed to insure the safety of both the tractorcade and regular motorists. The tractors and regular motorists travelring at an average speed of 15 mph.
those traveling highways today, but the zeal and spirit of the farmers remained undaunted.
of problem from Salina to Topena," LL. Carl G. Gray of the Topeka office on the Highway Patrol said yesterday, "And, we were able to be smooth all the way through the state."
"we can't get the Interstate, we'll have to use Highway 50," the spokesman said. "Being safety conscious, we don't like the idea of using 50, but we have an important message to carry, so we'll follow orders."
Travel through Kansas was unentevil as far as the Kansas Highway Patrol was concerned. The tractoracar apparently presented no problems for other travelers zoining by the crawling caravan.
"It could be pretty treacherous," one farmer said, "but we'll be ready for whatever happens."
The freezing rain will pose a threat for
"We have not heard reports of any type
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
FARMERS
KIALSH
COLORADO
WARE OFFICE
Ann Arbor
Travelina tractors
Tractors from as far away as Colorado began arriving in Topeka yesterday afternoon a rally supporting the American Agriculture Movement. The tractorcade will continue
Ice storm hits Lawrence
From Staff and Wire Reports
A new winter storm struck Lawrence with rain and freezing rain, causing some flooded night and last and leaves streets glazed with ice.
Lawrence's storm was part of a storm which spread ice across western Kansas yesterday and later struck eastern Kansas and Missouri, while road crews still battled snow left by last weekend's storm.
Flooding occurred last night at 19th and Naismith streets. Although resident directors at Oliver and Naismith hills said neither residence hall was threatened by the water, several cars stalled near the intersection.
Kai Voeol, Kansas City freshman, was driving east on 19th Street when he drove into the backed up water, stalling his car.
"I had water up to my door, all of a sudden. It was so dark I couldn't see the water until I was in it." Vereen said.
Pizza Hut, 804 Massachusetts St., was the only business to report water backed up into the building.
RICK BROWN, manager of the Pizza Hut, said the flooding occurred because of a low spot behind the building.
"There is no place for the water to drain when it gets behind the building—except in our back door," Brown said.
Elsewhere in the state, Topeka and Kansas City also had problems with stalled traffic and flooding because of the storm.
"There was about two feet of water at a lot of intersections and cars are stalled all over town just at quitting time," a Topeka
Police in the Kansas City area reported numerous minor accidents and cars stalled in several flooded intersections and low-lying
In Overland Park, several intersections were covered with water and power outages caused problems with traffic signals, snarling
THE STORM ALSO knocked down power lines, leaving more than 10,000 people in the Kansas City area without electricity.
There were several live wires down and KCP&L crews were working to restore power
A spokesman for Kansas City Power and Light Co. said power
advisors covered a large area, including Johnson County in Kansas.
A spokesman for Kansas City Power said the company
The National Weather Service issued a traveler* warning for today, saying that driving conditions would be hazardous. Light rain and snow will occur.
There is a chance of snow flurries tonight and low temperatures will be in the teens.
KU oil reserves boosted
By DAVID SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas received more than 25,000 gallons of much needed fuel oil yesterday to add to its dwindling supply, and the university plant of plant maintenance, said yesterday.
We received four loads of fuel oil today and we're anticipating getting two more
On Wednesday the University was down to a five-day supply of fuel oil reserves to heat the campus. On a peak day, KU might be 18,000 gallons of oil in its heating process.
The University, which has been using fuel oil reserves since Jan. 1, to heat the campus, has an interruptable contract with the Kansas Public Service Gas Company that allows natural gas to be cut off when demand is high.
RODGER ORKE, director of Facilities Operations, said that even though fuel supplies had been dwindling, the University was able to adequate reserves for the rest of the winter.
Oroke said that in addition to the reservers received yesterday, another supplier would have given them their payment.
per day to the University beginning in a few days.
"I don't think the University will run out of fuel oil," Groke said. "As long as supplies are available and can be replenished there will be no cutbacks. When we know that we need more machines to make papers, we will then have to begin accelerating implementation of contingency plans."
OROKE SAID there were no plans now to use the contingency plan devised for the disaster.
ASK briefs presidents on issues
See FUEL back page
Staff Reporter
By CAROL BEIER
TOPEKA-Six of seven student body presidents from Board of Regents schools were briefed yesterday morning on student issue legislation by Hannes Zacharias, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobbying group.
Legislation discussed at the meeting included minimum wage and state scholarship increases, decriminalization of marijuana, amendments to the Landlord-Tenant Art and the Small Claims Court Act and removal of the sales tax on food items.
Zacharias explained information on the status of priority issues to the Student Advisory Committee to the Board of Regents, which is made up of the student body presidents and one other student representative from each school. Representatives did not attend yesterday's meeting.
See related stories page three
A strategy session is scheduled for today, to consider introduction of a bill that would decrease the penalty for possession of less than an ounce of maijuarrion. Zacharias said.
ZACHARIAS SAID the minimum wage and state scholarship issues were waiting on Gov. John Carlin's budget address, planned for Tuesday in the state capital.
"One possibility would be to introduce the bill through the Judiciary Committee in the Senate and have it referred back to that committee before it goes out to the floor," he said.
The governor is expected to support reduction of the present penalty for possession. The penalty would be changed from a $2,000 fine and possible year in prison to a $5,000 fine.
Zacharias expressed optimism for the passage of four proposals concerning
reform of the Universal Landlord-Tenant Act and the Small Claims Court Act.
The proposals would amend the current statutes to eliminate some of the problems involved in small claims court suits by raising the limit on claims from $300 to $1000 and eliminating the need for an attorney's services in collection of claims.
One of the proposals is aimed at making termination more equitable for the clients.
UNDER CURRENT laws, a landlord can terminate a rent contract with 30 days of the termination and 14 days of the termination date. However, the tenant can terminate only after the next
"We just want the same provisions for the landlord and the tenant." Zacharias.
However, he was not optimistic about the chances for passage of a bill allowing voter participation.
See ASK back page
Iranian can't leave troubles behind
Staff Reporter
Rv MARK L. OLSON
He shifted in a soft, cloth chair, one leg draped over the wooden chair arm, but he was not relaxed.
"I was in the street, in Teheran," Hassan said in broken English. "I heard a lot of people. There were some demonstrators down the street shouting 'Down with the shah.' Then I saw some soldiers shoot one of them down.
"The soldiers—they are all illiterate, some of them are like animals. It is because of the shack they kill the people. They don't
Hassan, who would allow himself to be identified only by his first name, is not a stranger to the stifte that has rocked Iran during the war with Iraq. He was born in the city of Hammam, near Hassan.
"THEY ONCE arrested my brother," Hassan said, "but they released him."
A senior at the University of Kansas, Hassan spent semester break at his family's home in the poorer southern section of Teheran. In his lap he held a handful of snapshots which showed the scenes of war that had been raised with the pictures and pictures of those recently killed by soldiers.
"The economic condition is very bad," he said, "but the people are satisfied because they would rather be poor than live under the ruins."
He said he went home to see if he could aid the movement to remove the shank from office, and found a city nearby brought to its doorstep.
HASSAN WAS quick to say that the Iranian people do not support the interim leader of the government, Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar, who was appointed by the shah shortly before he stepped down from power this week.
Hassan was speaking of exiled Moslem leader Ayatollah Ruhabli Khomrani, who has led the opposition to the Hakkarat.
"He's a lair. He's the same as the shah," Hasan said. "Nakhtar is doing the same killing as the shah and the people won't accept it."
An avatollah is the highest priest in the Moslem religion.
"Iran is the most Islamic government in the world," he said.
"The revolution in Iran is 100 percent Islamic, except for maybe other countries."
THE MOSEM LEAD people have been directed by the ayatollah not to work with the communists in any way, Hassan said. According to Hassan, the Moslem Student Organization at KU is the only student group on campus that represents the revolutionary movement in Turkey.
He said he thought the people of Iran would like to have the Soviet troops in their allies, but not if they supported Dahl or were only interested in supporting them.
"Americans say 'Give us oil.' They are killing us by helping the clan and they take our oil and they give us nothing." Heeza said.
"Except for a few, Americans don't care about anything except their girlfriends. I really think that," he said.
Hassan said he was initially attracted to an American university after being turned down by Teheran University. He said it was not unusual to fail to get into an Iranian college. He estimated only 50,000 of 400,000 applicants a year were accepted.
"There are just not enough universities in Iran," he said.
STUDYING IN THE United States involves a lot more than many people realize, according to Hassan. The forms themselves are "a hassle," he said. There is an English exam, a paper stating that Hassan's father can pay his son's fees and his passport, which receives a visa stamp whenever he enters the country, Hassan said.
But the most important document, he said, was Form I-94, which must be renewed every year to certify that he is still a student. Hassan said he could be deported by the immigration authorities for not filing Form I-94.
"Yes, I know of two teachers in the school that don't give me my
grades," he said. "If my paper was an American paper, I
wouldn't have it."
According to Hassan, the forms do not guarantee he will be treated the same as his classmates.
He said that during tests, the Iranian students were separated from each other.
"I think they think all Iranians are cheaters," he said
HASSAN SAID his degree from KU will help him get a job when he returns to Iran...
As for the Americans in Iran, he said, most of them are military advisers, their to train SIS and the shan's secret police, to kill. He added that many had been taken by ISIS.
"In Mashhad, the government and the SAVAK agents burned a prison with the prisoners inside," he said, "but no one knows how."
Hassan said he had lost many of his friends, even those he knew in high school. He said there were about 45 in his high school class who went to a university where 15 of them were put in prison by agents and tortured. He said some of them had been released.
"THEY WERE jailed because they had some books, and wrote some leaflets." he said.
Despite the risk of reprisal against himself and his family by SVAK, Hassan said he would continue to protest the government,
Iranian soldiers have a new weapon for dispersing demonstrators, he said.
It is a machine that, according to Hassan, looks like a water nozzle, mounted on top of an arroved car. This model, however,
2
Friday, January 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From staff and wire reports
Food program said inadequate
Indian leaders told a news conference that new regulations proposed last month violated the spirit of the 1977 Food Stamp Act, which provided that Incurred food stamps be paid directly to farmers.
Bob Price of the Papago Tribe of Arizona said the proposed regulations lacked quality standards for surplus commodities distributed to malnourished Indians. He said the government should provide money so Indians can eat regional foods, such as nutritional native cactuses and wild spinach.
War continues in Cambodia
BANGKOK, Thailand- Vietnamese-plumed American and Soviet warplanes darted over the skies of Cambodia yesterday, bombing remnants of a Cambodian army still resisting the huge Vietnamese invasion force, according to analysts.
Units of the Cambodian army reportedly were engaged in ground battles in widespread areas of the country with Vietnamese and their Cambodian rebel forces.
process. The Vietnamese took over the American jets left behind when Communists conquered South Vietnam in April 1965. Soviet allies are allies of the Vietnamese and they have been a significant ally since then.
Thailand has expressed concern about the fighting, which has come as close as six miles to its frontier. The Prime Minister Kriangsa Chokman said yesterday that his government would "resist fiercely" if the fighting spills over to Myanmar and Vietnam. The Vietnamese in a news conference Wednesday against crossing the Thai border.
Weather hinders Iranian search
TEHRAN, Iran—Rescue teams yesterday struggled against severe weather and lack of fuel, trying to supply approximately 1,000 people injured in Tuesday's
About 1,000 people were killed in the earthquake, which registered 6.8 on the Richter scale. Relief officials say they have managed to pull only 57 percent of the debris.
The quake reportedly shook 26 villages in northeastern Iran where demonstrators were engaged in a violent movement to overthrow the shah.
Senate hears bill on liability
TOPEKA- Legislation to extend legal protections for people rendering emergency medical care was introduced yesterday in the Kansas Senate.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Mike Johnston, D-Parsons, states that any person, who in good faith renders medical care at the scene of an accident or other emergency, will not be liable for civil damages for simple negligence, unless the errors are wilful or grossly negligent.
Similar protection is currently provided for health care providers who give assistance in emergencies, but Johnston's bill allies to all people.
Included among the incidents covered by the bill are injuries received during competitive sports and emergencies in a hospital when a physician is not
Regents' fate in Senate hands
TOPEKA-Kansas Senate leaders said yesterday that they want to move as quickly as possible toward Senate action on confirmation or rejection of two persons former Gov. Robert F. Bennett appointed to the Kansas Board of Regents.
The names of Glee Smith, of Larned, and Walter Hieratenet, of Fairway,
were formally submitted to the Senate yesterday when it met briefly before
the vote.
The names will go Monday to the Senate Select Committee on Appointments, where Sen. Tom Rehorn, D-Kansas City, the chairman, said he would move rapidly to hold hearings and let the panel decide whether to recommend confirmation.
Gov. John Carlin criticized Bennett for keeping two of his appointees on the board, and is fighting confirmation of Smith and Hersteller—on grounds a new constitution would be necessary.
Tenn. gov. can't stop pardons
NASHVILLE, Tenn.—The new governor of Tennessee, Lamar Alexander, said yesterday that he probably would not be able to block the 52 pardons and commutations issued by his predecessor, Blay Anton, two days before Blaton was ousted from office in disarray.
But Alexander said he would be able to delay the release of 17 prisoners who became eligible for immediate release under Blanton's order Monday.
A federal grand jury reconvened and continued to investigate whether Blanton had received money in exchange for granting clemency.
Baltimore took office Wednesday in a hastily arranged ceremony to keep Blunton from releasing more prisoners.
Senate to get spending lid bill
TOPEKA—A bill limiting state expenditures to 7 percent more than the previous year could reach the Kansas Senate floor as early as next week.
the bill, which means committee yesterday unanimously approved the bill, will require only a simple majority for the Legislature to exceed the 2 percent limit.
The bill has 39 of the 40 senators as co-sponsors. Only Sen. Charlie Angell, R-Plains, did not lend his name to it.
The bill must still pass the Kansas Senate and be signed by the governor before becoming law.
Gas increase decision soon
TOPEKA—Hearings before the Kansas Corporation Commission on a request by Gas Service Co. for a $12.6 million rate increase are nearing an end.
the company has estimated its proposed increase would raise the average residential customer's monthly bill by $1.59.
by Gas Service Co. for a $12.9 million increase are heating oil.
The final public hearing will be in Wichita Tuesday.
Kansas Legal Services is urging the commission to force Gas Service to place a larger share of the burden of increased cost of natural gas on the big industry. The legal services firm has an annual fee of $4,000.
GAO opens free fraud hotline
Justice Department officials estimate that federal spending programs are losing up to $25 billion a year through fraud alone.
The new program is part of the GAO's Special Task Force for the Prevention of Fraud, which will screen the phone calls, determine the validity of the tips and refer the information to the Justice Department or to the respective agencies for a followup.
WASHINGTON - The General Accounting Office today opened a free nationwide hotline that taxpayers can use to alert federal officials about fraud.
KC Star says dam could fall
The toll-free hotline number is 800-424-5454.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Utility companies that own the Bagnell Dam at the Lake of the Oarsks have been aware since last summer that the dam would collapse under maximum flood conditions, but the companies did not inform the public, the Kansas City Star reported yesterday.
In a copyrighted story, the Star said Union Electric Co., of St. Louis, which the firm knew about the problem last summer and proposed a three-year, $1 million loan.
Federal officials said chances of such a flood occurring were extremely remote.
The large lake behind the dam, which was begun in 1929 and completed in 1931, holds about 600 billion gallons of water at normal levels and is responsible for cooling the city.
Weather
There is a traveler's advisory this morning with the rain changing to light snow today. It will be cloudy and the high will be in the 40s. Winds will be northerly at 15 to 20 miles an hour. There is a chance of snow flurries tonight and the low will be in the teens. Temperatures will reach the mid 20s tomorrow.
TEHRAN, Iran—Armored troops ramped down protesters' cars with their tanks, royalist guns rampaged the streets and guerrillas attacked from across the Iraqi border yesterday as Iran, sinking deeper terrorists corroborated for a way out of its political limbo.
Between seven and 21 people were reported killed and more than a dozen others wounded in bloody fighting throughout the country.
From the Kansan's Wire Services
"Because of the chaos, the nation is needed for a new type of dictatorship."
Bloody fighting continues in Iran
BAKHIIRI'S SHAKY government, desperately trying to assert control, was dealt a new blow yesterday by Ayatulcah, who had insisted that drive Shah Mohammad Rami Pahlavi from the country. Bakhlari had sent an envoy to try to negotiate with the exiled Khomini in France, but the Moroccan holy man rejected any discussion of a recon-
declared in a nationwide broadcast address
test nicht.
Aides said Khamini still maintains that the ue-shad endorsed, U.S. backed government officials to take control of the airport.
Economic growth rate up
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The nation's economy turned in a surprisingly strong performance during the final three months of the Obama administration, up, the government reported yesterday.
The robust fourth growth rate of 6.1 percent nearly eliminated any possibility of a recession during the first half of 1979. It also may force the administration to boost its 1979 growth projection, currently about 2.5 percent.
Growth during the October-December period—which was paired by strong consumer spending—was sharply higher than the feeble 2.6 percent quarter pace.
percent, almost exactly on target with the administration's most optimistic projection.
Economic expansion for all of 1978 was 3.9
Inflation, meanwhile, increased at an 8.1 percent annual rate during the fourth quarter after slowing to a 6.9 percent rate during the third quarter, the government
For all of 1978, inflation, as measured by the GNP price deflator, increased by 7.4 percent compared with 5.8 percent in 1977 and 5.2 percent in 1976.
The Gross National Product is the output of the nation's goods and services, adjusted for inflation. It is considered to be the most important measurement of U.S. economic activity.
Glickman introduces bill
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., today introduced a bill he said was designed to establish a board of directors Board in the Department of Agriculture.
Such a board, he said, would insure farmers a voice in what he called one of the most important policy-making areas of the administration.
Gickman said the proposal was similar to he introduced during the last session of
Sen. Robert Morgan, D-N.C., introduced an identical bill in the Senate.
Under both proposals the board would be
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composed of 15 members. It would make recommendations to the secretary of agriculture on the fairness and accuracy of cost-of-production formulas and calculation.
Those formulas and calculations are used in setting target prices and loan rates.
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to establish an Islamic republic. His statement was a rebuff of President Carter's appeal to Khomini Wednesday to give him the official government "a chance to succeed."
THIS AFTERNOON
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T.G.I.F.
AT THE HAWK
While bloodshed continued in Iran, the United States began proceedings yesterday to deport an Iranian who led a group of 30 people from Alamo in San Antonio, Texas on Wednesday.
Friday & Saturday,
January 19 & 20
Disney Animation:
THE RESCUERS
(1977)
sua films
Dir. Mervyn LeRoy; with Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Glenda Farrell. The Gangster film that wrote the vocabulary for the genre.
Dir. Wolfgang Reitherman, John Lounsberry, Art Stevens; with the voices of Bob Newhart, Eva Gabor, Gardeine Park. *3:30 & 7:00.*
Animated Sci-fi
Tuesday, January 23 LITTLE CEASER
Dir. François Truftauf; with Francis Truftauf, Jean-Pierre Carlegol. Photography by Nestor Almendros ("Days of Heaven"). Francissubtiles.
Admiral Car Rental When was the last time you rented a car for
WIZARDS
(1977) Dir. Ralph Bakshi. An animated fantasy of the future. *9:30 & 12:00 Midnight.*
Friday & Saturday,
January 26 & 27
GONE WITH THE WIND
Dr. Victor Fleming; with Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland, *3·30* and *7·45*; Friday matinee will be shown in the Forum
Wednesday, January 24
Truffaut:
THE WILD CHILD
$5.95 per day plus mileage
Midnight Movie:
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
(1931)
We have a few late model cars for sale
(1968)
THE WILD CHILD
Dir. George Romero; with Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea. The Complete Uncut Version. "12:10 am."
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
who has represented Iranians in Texas and Oklahoma the past year, was expected to negotiate today for a reduction in bond for Jafnanf.
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Hossein Jahanfar, 29, was arrested by undercover immigration and naturalization agents enforcing an order to march from Manhattan to Antioxio College. The agents said Jahanfar was suspected of taking part in a violent demonstration outside Beverly Hills, Calif., after another earlier misbehavior.
JAHANFAR, WHO IS in custody, has refused to eat until he is released from the Bexar County Jail. Jahanfar spent the night in jail for 5 days before beingGoldstein, a local American civil Liberties Union attorney said the ACLU would represent Jahanfar in administrative proceedings.
Nancy Hormachea, a Houston attorney
IN PALM SPRINGS, Calif., authorities were quietly builing up security for the expected arrival of the shah. Area law enforcement officials said the shah's presence could touch off bloody riots by anti-shian Iran students, want to be sure they can protect the 200-acre estate belonging to Walter Annenberg, a former governor, where the shah reportedly will stay.
Jhanfarad led a march of about 25 Iranian students who ignored angry objections from several townpeople and American students on the march to the Alamo. He shouted in a bulrush asking for American support to ban the slam from the United States.
There has been no official word on the shah's plans but State Department sources in Washington say the shah has decided to build a 300-acre spring area, 100 miles east of Los Angeles.
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4435 N.W. Hwy. 24 *P.O. Box* 1436
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---
Friday, January 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Legislator to unveil new district map
By GENE LINN Staff Reporter
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, will literally redo the political map of Douglas County this morning when he turns in one or more maps showing proposed changes in accordance with Kanaş' House reorientation.
Solbach is responsible for redistricting Douglas County for a subcommittee of the Apportionment Committee. The subcommittee is drawing up reaportion plans for most of northeast Kansas.
Sobach's maps will be given to the legislative research office, which will take maps with proposed changes for them and put them together into one state map.
The Apportionment Committee will discuss any need for changes in the maps when it meets on Monday.
At stake for Douglas County is the possibility of an additional house district to go with the three existing ones.
IF THE new district emerges, Solbach said yesterday, it could become an issue in partisan politics, with party leaders in the university student vote at the University of Kansas.
Solbach explained that Douglas County and a small part of another county would merit four representatives if reapenting the area about the rural population growth.
"Douglas County has enough people for 3.7 representatives," he said. "We could pick up the .3 from someplace else."
How the districts' boundaries are
drawn will be politically important,
Solbach said.
He said the two districts that include most of Lawrence could consist of a safe Republican and a safe Democratic seat, or of two seats that could go either way.
"The Republican leadership seems to like the idea of having one safe Republican seat and one safe Democratic seat in Lawrence," Slochah
HE SAID the other two districts were basically rural and tended to vote Republican.
One of the keys in apportioning the Lawrence districts is the student vote at KU, which Solbach said was somewhat of a boc vote.
"Students voters are probably more liberal than other voters in the county," he said.
Despite all the room available for partisan maneuvering, Solbach said, rapportment in the county and in the state will be fair.
"We're working in a spirit of cooperation," he said, adding that partisanism was "below the surface."
He also said there were checks and balances at work in the political system this year, with a Republican legislature and a Democratic governor.
"And, the state supreme court has to approve the final plan," he said.
Solbach said he did not think the Kansas House would hold a secret meeting to make its own reap-
ishment. As the Senate had done last Wednesday.
"I don't think the House leadership would do that," he said.
By TAMMY TIERNEY
TOPEKA- Although they had spent a day reviewing formula funding, members of the Kansas House Ways and Means committee reviewed the cost and implementation of the program.
Staff Reporter
Formula funding is a new method of figuring the budgets for Kansas Board of Regents schools. The system compares the program expenses with other "peer schools" in program areas to other "peer schools."
Panel reviews formula funding
During a two-hour meeting, committee members spent nearly an hour questioning Tom Hawson, a representative of the committee, made a presentation before the committee.
The leaders of each of the Regents schools were present at the meeting in a show of support for the system. Formula funding required the 1980 budgets of all the Regents schools.
Also attending the meeting was Del Shankel, University of Kansas executive vice chancellor, who said that he thought the presentation was good and that he hoped committee members would examine the new system carefully.
Among the concerns expressed by legislators was that formula funding had been designed to offset declining enrollment.
"It is not an easy concept to grasp," he said. "But it is clearly important to the universities and needs to be completely understood."
However, Shankel said that if enrollment declined in Kansas, it would also decline at the peer schools to which Regents schools are compared.
Other formula funding questions raised by the legislators concerned the cost of the program, its complexity, the selection process of the peer schools and the
In his remarks, Rawson tried to assure committee members that the current process did not create problems in those areas.
possibility that Kansas schools would base decisions on what peer states were doing.
"The PROGRAM could cost five million, or it could cost 15 million—that is a choice that will be made annually by the Legislature," he said. "It is difficult to equal to a dollar amount, but we have shown evidence that the two are related."
Although the new system is complex, he said, other states are using funding methods that do not require a central bank.
"People have been critical of the complexity of formula funding. I have no answer to that except that higher education finance is complicated," he said. "At least 20 other states use some kind of formula and others are more complicated."
When selecting the peer institutions for the Regents schools, Rawson said, the
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characteristics of both the school and the state were considered. Population and enrolment decline or growth were not correlated. The numbers vary too much from state to state.
Rawson said the purpose of formula
funding was to make Kansas schools like
this one more accessible.
"WE'RE MERELY trying to provide a framework within which the governor and Legislature can make more responsible decisions. We didn't pick five schools so we would be forced to emulate their states," he said.
The reason formula funding was developed, Ruwson said, was to obtain an appropriate level of funding for the Repubs to make sure funds were equitably distributed.
He said the existing system did not do that because it was incremental and had no provisions for determining the correct level of funding for a school.
"Two hundred million dollars of general use money is tied up in the operation of the Regent's学院," he said. "That is a lot of money." The simple-minded look at how it will be spent."
Lawrence legislators agreed that it could be an uphill battle for formula funding if other legislators were unconvinced of its merits.
Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said that although several parts of the formula probably would be adopted this year, it would not be used before the entire formula was implemented.
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AIR FORCE ROTC — HERE ARE THE FACTS
When you're discussing something as important as your future, it's urgent that you get the straight answer. "And that you understand them," we wrote. "And that is an important part of your future. We would like to know how you look to into an environment."
It's a fact the Air Force needs highly qualified, dedicated officers, men and women. It's a fact we need people in kinds of educational disciplines. It's a fact we are prepared to offer financial help to those who can
Get together with an AFROTC representative and discuss the program. We will give you an idea of
could be one of the most important talks you've ever had with anyone about your educational plans.
AIR FORCE
ROTC
Gateway to a great way of life
Uphomers and Juniors: Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. See if you qualify: Call Capt. John Macke, 846-4678, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
Several friends have suggested that we change the title or text of this column, and made good suggestions for another. However, the further we go along the more appropriate we think the above one is, it not only fits any situation that arises, but also taken with its context explains it, giving greater meaning and curse, and pointing the way to blessing and safety.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" is the opening words of the Second Paimon of God's Book, The Bible. God asks this question of Jesus in his Gospel: "Do you the God you will have to meet and give account of the deeds done in the flesh when your asprit leaves the body and returns to God who gave it? The heart in your bosom is a relic of Christ that you will receive from the appointment the Almighty has made for you to appear before His judgment ask God communal Heaven's people and Heaven's people meet with Him! GOD — WHETHER ANY HEAR, OR FOR ANY BEWARE!"
Webster says a heathen is "one who does not believe in the God of the Bible," and this file in with what God Himself says in this Psalm: "Who imagine a vain thing, kings and rulers who say that God is the Lord of His Commandments." The results of this rebellion is God's laughter, God's derision, God speaking in wrath, and God sexing mankind in His awe displeasure. But in mercy God informs the heathen that God speaks in their words to the kings of the earth to be wise, the judges of the earth to be instructed
and" SERVE THE LORD WITH FEAR—LEST HE BE ANGRY,
AND YE PERISH FROM THE WAY, WHEN HIS WRATH IS KINDLED BUT A LITTLE. BLESSED ARE ALL THEY WHICHPUT THEIR TRUST IN HIM."
We cannot hear God laugh. We can with the "eye of faith" see evidences of His Derrision, and the exections He sends or permits to come upon man; and with the "eye of Faith" we can hear Him speak in wrath. We think God "spoken in wrath" to him; we know that he was a willed enemy to Kennedy to be suddenly cut off, and this Provident Act was a rebuke to the nation for departing from the "faith and foundations of our founding fathers." Since the tragedy we have continued traveling away from these land-marks. Our ancestors knew not what they were preparing to meet God? Or, does pride and prestation cause you to feel you are already "just right"?
So, we submit our title "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" is applicable to the crime problem, juvenile problem, child protection problem, etc. etc. However, THUS SATH THE LORD: "YEIL WILL NOT BELIEVE, YEIL SHALL, NOT BE ESTABLISHED. The hope of our nation and generation in those who "TRUST AND OBEVY, FOR THERE IS NO OTHER
1) also WARNS OF THE CURSE AND WRATH OF GOD AHEAD, BUT URGES THE PEOPLE, KINGS, RULERS, and JUDICIES TO BE INSTRUCTED, TO TURN TO GOD AND GOD CHRIST TO BE THAT BLESSED PEOPLE WHOSE GOD IS THE LORD."
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Saturday, January 20th 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union
Any one is welcome to attend. For additional information, call the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064.
STUDENT SENATE SPRING ELECTIONS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors.
JANUARY 19.1979
Dump handouts policy
But that may not last for long.
The policy is scheduled to be reviewed by members of the University Events Committee, which developed the guidelines. Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, has said he expects the policy to be changed to allow literature distribution inside campus buildings, which has been the prime point of contention about the policy. Yet, he still supports some guidelines for literature distribution.
"THERE DO need to be some guidelines for the distribution of literature," Shankel said. "I think students in residence halls don't want people to come into their rooms and hand out material. I think the faculty would resent people walking into their classes and disrupting them by passing out literature."
This, of course, is true. Classes should not be disrupted. Students
should not have to answer a knock at their door and receive a pamphlet promoting political opinions or personal crusades.
"We have supported the rights of controversial speakers on campus and we have also repeatedly supported the rights of controversial material," Shankel said.
OF COURSE, it is assumed the administration would not overtly attempt to suppress controversial ideas. It says it would not.
But disruptive behavior by individuals can be handled by existing regulations. The administration simply is overreacting to a situation that easily can be controlled without impairing the open distribution of literature.
But the actions of the administration in the Jonathon Kozol incident last semester and in several other recent incidents do not bear those words out.
On a campus already burdened by a multitude of regulations, further guidelines concerning literature are not needed. The Events Committee would be taking a step in the right direction by abandoning the literature distribution policy.
Students substitute God for intellectual curiosity
BY SHARON NIEDERMAN N.Y. Times Feature
DENVER, Colo.—I am finishing one of those semesters which makes me think I should leave teaching. I know at least 783 people would line up for my job teaching economics, administration, urban college. As I have no particular inclination to go into either ‘sales’ or ‘the business world,’ my prospects would indeed be limited. So just imagine how emotionally worn-out and toxic I must be to even think of putting.
Clearly, taxpayers and politicians agree that education is no longer a priority. It is frightening and heartbreaking to realize what is now top priority with many college students.
Only someone on the front lines in the classroom everyday knows for certain that a girl is on her way to school it is dead. It died just one short generation after my own, along with curiosity, spirit of inquiry and imagination, all the values of education, all the love and tried to cultivate in my own life.
YOU THOUGHT IT was jobs and economic security? Guess again--it's the
With the job picture grown so dark, students are now applying to that great employment agent in the sky, in hopes that they can get hired. Students tell me she cannot accept Darwin's theory of evolution because the Bible says we were created in six days, then I ask: How can I, an ordinary, questioning, understated state employee, compete with the Lord?
Lest anyone misunderstand, I am not objecting to faith or religious practice. What shocks me is that students use their backpacks when they need to see information presented in absolutes. I have not had the experience of being "born again," so I cannot share what President Carter knows, or what Craig Nelson knows, about the hardback in the land of Bronconiaism, knows.
IN THEIR PUBLIC praise of the Lord, both the president and the quarterback neglect to attribute their own efforts toward their success—the years of perseverance, study, and questioning, which enabled them to become instrument of the Lord.
My 28-year old student has been born again, and since that day nine months ago, she has been off heroin and high on Jesus. She tells me that once you've found the Lord, you need look no further. Maybe that's the answer. D on the midnight–thenook looked like
When she came to my office to complain that the course wasn't what she expected—she wanted "a class where we all sit in nets and walk take objective notes," not this seminar where she's expected to ask and answer questions — I suggested that perhaps she could give her students a challenge. "No," she replied, "it's only taught me to painter harder."
LISTENING TO HER speak, I sense that the divinity and the accompanying rhetoric all came to her in a flash; suddenly her daily actions acquired meaning. We'd all like to have a clearer focus on the purpose of life, and I thought one of the purposes of her work was to receive the long and short views, the details on the landscape, the perennial visions.
As this young woman's teacher, I want badly to ask her the questions that would compel her to think—but she already has all the answers; she is so fragile that I am afraid to disturb her balance andjar the terrific anger she is clutching so tightly.
A FELLOW INSTRUCTOR, who earlier this semester had his life threatened by a student, grimly confided over coffee one morning: "You've got to either be totally impersonal with these students or go crazy!"
It's all so simple, really. Acquire the Lord and live in a state of grace. What need is there to trouble with inquiry and scholarship? Say, "I believe, therefore it is true," and deny all hope of the intellect, gain absolute certainty. Life becomes easier when you know at least God loves you, that he loves you more than any other need you all need do is call on Him and He will, in His infinite wisdom, provide the answers on the final exam.
If I've got to turn off my caring impulses in order to collect my paycheck, somebody else should have my job; either somebody who is capable of doing that, or somebody who can keep up with the students who ask. "Why read books?" That learning doesn't go with you when you die."
Sharon Niederman's first play, "Family Jewels," was produced in Denver in 1977.
Once again the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled in support of perhaps the most controversial issue it has had to decide: abortion.
Anti-abortionists must promote views
In a 6-3 decision, the high court last week struck down a Pennsylvania law that held a physician liable for prosecution for aborting women who have been able to survive outside the womb.
In its ruling, the court said that the term "may" was too vague and that the statute itself "conditions potential criminal liability under a law which requires major opinion, written by Justice Harry A. Blackmun, on went to say that the law presented "serious problems of notice, discriminatory application and chilling action" on the exercise of constitutional rights."
The Pennyvian law was first enacted in 1974, one year after the court's controversial decision that prohibited the government from interfering with a woman's choice to get pregnant or during the second trimester of pregnancy or during the second trimester if her health is in serious danger. The
Phillip Garcia
PETER B.
January 1973 ruling also stated that state legislatures could enact laws to protect a fetus once it is able to survive outside the woman's womb with or without artificial aid, which was the basis for the Penneviania law.
THE COURT, in exercising its duty within the judicial process, ruled against a statute it considered unfair to physicians, and one that did not respect to physician's constitutional rights.
However, the court has conversely ruled unjustly against the rights of the unborn child and once again has interfered with the most basic process: life.
With this most recent decision, the court has increased its stature as the authority on criminal prosecutions.
It is up to the churches, anti-abortion groups and individuals to replace the court. Unfortunately, the court has been providing more than the moral and ethical community.
The court's responsibility is to deal with civil and criminal laws and to rule on violations that people commit against each of these areas, not to rule on moral issues.
NINE MEN cannot determine at what
mature life may be terminated
during premature death.
But if the court has no responsibility to rule on the abortion issue, why did it have to rule in the first place? Obviously, the issue was brought before the court because enough people believe that abortion is a solution for getting rid of an unwanted child. More and more people began to challenge the existing anti-abortion laws.
The anti-abortionists have failed to promote their ideas to the extent that few people think as they do. Those who do not believe in abortion can be forced to speak out against this injustice. Anti-
abortionists must increase their efforts for the rights of the unborn child, they must begin to provide more direction then they have.
THEY MUST further promote the idea that abortion as a solution for keeping a child out of poverty and dismal environment, due to a maldistribution of goods and services, communities, is false. The problem is not a child born but the environment he is provided.
They must further promote the idea that abortion is not a responsibility, but many
They must further promote the idea that although a woman has her choice to abort, she cannot claim it her right when another life is killed.
They must promote the idea that the goal is not to condemn the pro-abortion, but to support it.
They must work to discard the notion that eliminating life is not a solution to insure the health of humans.
That is the challenge that anti- abortionists face.
BAKHTIAR
NEW
GOVT.
MARINUDX
Rape laws leave wives defenseless
An Oregon rape trial which drew the nation's attention recently is thought to be the first time a wife charged her husband with rape.
Greta Rideta, 23, charged her 21-year-old husband, John, with first degree rape, a crime with a maximum penalty of 20 years in jail and a $2,000 fine.
As a result, a 1977 amendment to the Oregon rape law, which removed marriage as a defense in a rape case, received its first test in the Rideout case.
At issue was the question of whether a husband could be charged with rape after exposure to blood.
Although Ridout was found innocent, the principle still stuck. A man charged with rape should be prosecuted by the law, re-enslaving him and marrying to the woman with whom he had sex.
RAPE is a violent act of aggression that invades an individual's human right of
Jake Thompson
choice. The law should punish anyone found guilty of that act.
But, in most states, it does not
Oregon and a few other states are the only ones with laws denying marriage as a defense in rape cases. Since the decision, Oregon legislators have been closely examining the issue and are working on a bill that would provide a lesser charge in the homicide defense case, but would have a more specific definition of rape in that situation.
The Rideout decision could deter the success of similar cases in the future, but the
New Times magazine in its closing issue called this decade the "decadent age," and the decade has often been billed as the first century of what is probably most astute observers of recent American society, has suitably called these eight years the "me decade."
Indeed, after the first four years—which might better be described as the spasms of the explosive '60s than the beginning of the '70s—there have been few events that could explain the '70s. And to me, and to most of the events is the best definition of the '70s.
But there is something wrong with a society that feels that only by improving one's own condition will the world revolve smoothly. There is much validity in the
The beginning of a New Year has prompted me not only to look optimistically forward to the remainder of the year but I also want to make sure that we made up the 1970s. But in looking back, not only am I uncertain about exactly what the 70s have meant to me and the world I live in, but also I am dismayed that when 1979 was over, I will still be left with this same uncertainty.
Not that something is wrong with the citizens of a society who work to improve themselves. Indeed, the current American love affair with jogging is one of the most encouraging trends to emerge recently in this food-crazed country.
Self-interest eclipses activism in '70s
---
BOOKS SUCH AS "Looking Out for Number One," which she saired to the number two best-seller spot for 1977, and others devoted to self-improvement—with an eye on using it to get ahead—have been selling at all-time highs.
Mary
Ernst
However, there still are thousands of Americans, and countless others throughout the world, who live below the poverty level. We need to stop them from finding who find it nearly impossible to live on limited incomes. There is still wide-spread racial and ethnic discrimination. And there is an alarming percentage of American children who end up in a job because they are functionally illiterate.
psychological argument that it is impossible for a person to help and be happy with others until they have helped themselves and are happy with the end result.
There may not be an active American involvement in the Vietnam War. There may not be the mass violations of black America. There may not be a presidential crisis.
BUT WHERE IS it written—other than in "Running and Being"—that a brisk fivejole jog is the only way people can find the fulfillment that readies them to help others.
Incredibly, on Jan. 9, two weeks after the emotional trial in which husband and wife did not speak to each other, the Rideouts announced their reconciliation.
THERE USED TO be a time when Americans found it self-rewarding to paint the peeled steps of a house that had not seen paint for years because of a lack of funds. Because of that they felt it self-rewarding to take an elderly woman to the store for her groceries.
And there used to be a time when Americans found it not only self-rewarding, but vital, to maintain an active voice in a government that was founded on the principle of the active—if not direct—participation of its citizens.
THEY ALSO announced that a divorce petition, filed the day after Rideout allegedly raped his wife, would be withdrawn.
Regardless of what one thinks about Christianity or faith in any god, communication in a relationship, be it marriage or friendship, is essential. The Rideouts seem to have redeveloped the communication that had been missing from their relationship and their prospects for a future together are encouraging.
In a decade that finds itself without causes, it has become convenient—even vogue—to turn all attention toward one's self and away from that obligation.
Yes, the 'me decade' label seems to best explain a decade that has left little else to happen.
What brought the two back together?
"I am a born-again Christian and John has always been a Christian," she said. "We had no outside source to take our problems to before the trial and they just stayed bottled up. We didn't have any communication before the trial. Now we do. We're trying to work it out together because being apart would be harder for both of us."
two principal witnesses may have reduced its importance by their own actions.
In a television interview Jan. 15, both said the emotional intensity of the trial and a new sense of religion, which surfaced as a result of the trial, brought them together.
We can only hope that as the 1970s wane with this final year, the 'me decade' will end.
A collapse of communication led them in the courtroom in the first place, then after the trial a secret meeting rekindled their commitment to each other.
The two met at Mrs. Rideout's request, to discuss their divorce.
But, when communication breaks down in a marriage and the husband demands his "rights to property," the woman's rights are ignored under most state's laws.
THE TWO agreed to a reconciliation with the stipulation they would always talk with each other when problems arose, Greta Rideout said.
Rideout said, "We realized we couldn't meet in public because everyone in Salem knew who we were, so we just drove around for a few hours and talked about everything under the sun. I realized I couldn't live outside and asked if we could not work things out."
it is time for a change in states that do not penalize for rape in marriage.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 600-540) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May
bonded Thursday through June during July and June except Saturday, and Sunday and
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Mend changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall. The
University of Kannan, Lawrence, KS 66453
Editor
Barry Massey
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John Whithese
Mary Horcik
Pam Mannon
Carol Hunter, David Link
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Friday, January 19. 1979
5
Delays leave equipment unused
By BARBARA JENSEN
Staff Reporter
Even though the University of Kansas has taken steps to comply with Title IX, Jacqueline King, head trainer for women's athletics, still stalls in her office amid training equipment she is unable to use.
"I have a new whirlpool that's been sitting in boxes for three months and a storefront of new equipment. But there's no place to put them, so we can't use them," King said Wednesday.
TITLE IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 states that equal athletic opportunity for members of both sexes" *means*
AN INSTITUTION risks losing federal grants if it does not comply with Title IX provisions.
"In August," she said, "I moved from the women's locker room into this office and I was told I wouldn't have to be here more than five weeks. Then they said I would be able to work on my computer definitely by being moved by the first or second week in January."
King said she had been told new training facilities would be completed before classes been last fall.
The women's training equipment will be moved to the physiology laboratory in Allen Field House. But William Hogan, executive vice chancellor in charge of women's athletics, said yesterday that the physiology lab had not yet been moved to the second floor of Allen Field House because of construction delays.
"ONE REASON it has taken so long," Hogan said, "that construction work can be done only at certain times of the year."
He said the physiology lab should be moved within the next two weeks so that construction could be completed to meet requirements.
Hogan said there also had been delay because neither a training facilities nor the construction for the physiotherapy clinic was available.
The new training area is part of a commitment made in the University's Title IX self-evaluation study.
The director of the post-secondary education division of Health, Education and Welfare in Kansas City said Wednesday that even though the new training facilities had not been completed, a case involving a complaint made a former teacher for women's athletics, had been closed because the University had made plans to improve the facilities.
The former trainer, Rebecca Burke, filed a complaint in August 1977 alleging that training facilities for women were inadequate, that staffing for the women's training program was insufficient, that salaries for the men's and women's head trainers were not equal and that financial funding for the women's training program was minimal.
“WE PLAN to monitor the progress at KU and make sure they follow with the commitments they made,” the teacher said.
The complaint prompted an HEW investigation in January 1978 at KU.
Burke received a letter, dated Jan. 11, from Taylor the regional director for HEW, asking KU was complying with the rule.
"THE LETTER from August makes me look foolish."
Burke said. "But at the time I made the charges, the University was not in compliance. No one should have had to pay."
The University's Title IX self-evaluation study, completed by 19% of made commitments that were to be fulfilled by July 1, 1978.
The commitments included new women's training facilities that would be equipped with stationary equipment and a women's area; the addition of a graduate assistant and a student instructor in the training program; salaries for women student assistants that would be the same as for men student assistants; and a training program of the women of the head trainer would be adjusted to $11,400.
Hogan said that as soon as the women's training facilities were completed, KU would have compiled with the com-
Anne Levinson, a member of the women's team ten years team, filed one of the complaints and said she expected to find out the results of an HEW investigation within the next three weeks.
REPORTS HAVE not yet been released concerning two other complaints filed last year with HEW alleging discrimination between the men's and women's athletic facilities. HeW also accused campus cuts, facilities, training, scholarships and travel funds.
University Daily Kansan
"I hope that they eventually will find my charges to be no longer valid either," she said. "That would mean they forced the University to take action to eliminate the discrimination."
FacEx wants larger role in replacing administrator
Members of the Faculty Executive Committee passed a resolution yesterday condemning a process used to form a selection committee to find a replacement for Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Calgaard has accepted the presidency of Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas.
The FaceEx resolution was aimed at Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, who had asked FaceEx to nominate several people for the committee.
F. Hutton Barron, professor of business,
said at the meeting that FaxEc should have
had a more active role in the selection
of the team members and adequately represented on the committee.
members and took recommendations from FacEx and other groups for the remaining members. But Barron said Shankel should not interfere with FacEx to discuss the nominations.
Shankel chose several committee
The resolution charged that Shankel had "and" common courtey, but not conferring her authority.
Shankel said the selection process was fair and said he had chosen several members of the committee because the list of names should contain any women or members of minorities.
"I think it's a good committee," Shankel said. "I'm sure the faculty would like to see more representation than five out of 12, but more representation would like more representation also."
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Friday, January 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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'Hawks romp in tourney opener
By NANCY DRESSLER
The Jayhawks couldn't seem to find the basket for the first several minutes, according to head coach Marian Washington. But once the scoring began, Washington said, the game's outcome was never in question.
Kansas overcame an early cold streak and crushed past Colorado 89-64 yesterday in a first round game of the women's Big Eight football being held this weekend in North, Neb.
"the first few minutes were tough. We couldn't get anything down," Washington said. "But we broke loose in the last 10 minutes of the first half."
"Once we got the lid off the basket, we could take advantage and get everyone on the floor."
games. The loss drops Colorado's record to 10-4.
Eleven Jayhawks played in the game, which booed KU's record to 14 and exonerated the team.
Sports Editor
KU was led by sophomore forward Lynette Woodard, who began a 21-point first half with a goal at 16.15 in the left. Woodard ended the game with 32 points, 13 goals, eight steals and three assists. Corky O'Korneke led Colorado scorers with 19 points.
Washington had planned to use a zone but instead opted for a man-to-man defense. The choice proved to be an effective one as Kansas stole the ball 23 times. The aggressive defense forced Colorado into commit-ment and slowed quickness on offense by running and scoring 34 of 73 attempted shots for 47 percent field goal shooting.
Colorado had problems both on and off the court. O'Rourke was charged with a technical foul. The Buffaloes' bench was slapped with four technicals and assistant
coach Bob Foley was ejected from the game midway through the second half.
In other tournament games yesterday, Kansas State moved its record to 10-4 by beating Oklahoma State 86-64, Missouri, the top seed, beat Iowa State 91-69.
It appeared likely late last night that Kanaas, seeded second, would face Nebraksa tonight at 8 in a second round game. The Oklahoma Sooners 14-18 at halftime
Kansas (85)
| | FG | FT | REB | TP | PP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Burnett | 5-0 | 6-1 | 1 | 6 | 1 |
| Knox | 4-0 | 1-9 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| Mason | 4-0 | 3-3 | 4 | 2 | 11 |
| Mason | 4-0 | 3-2 | 2 | 1 | 11 |
| Sanders | 0-3 | 2-4 | 2 | 0 | 7 |
| Mitchell | 4-14 | 2-7 | 9 | 12 | 13 |
| Marsh | 3-4 | 1-7 | 9 | 0 | 14 |
| Jamison | 3-8 | 1-6 | 1 | 0 | 12 |
| Johnson | 4-12 | 0-9 | 1 | 0 | 14 |
| Holden | 2-9 | 3-4 | 6 | 3 | 7 |
| Washawan | 2-9 | 3-4 | 6 | 3 | 7 |
| Venkata | 34-73 | 14-30 | 47 | 18 | 98 |
Owens says KU ready for 'Cats
by JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
KU coach Ted Owens likes to use a former Kansas State basketball coach's example of readiness when he says his team should be ready to play K-State tomorrow.
Owens recalled the "happy warrior feeling," an idea that Tex Winter, who coached in Manhattan for 15 years, had about a fine line in game preparation.
"It's looking forward to the competition and the game with delight, knowing it's going to be a fun game."
It should be very tough for KU, who takes its 9-8 record into ancient Ahearn Fieldhouse, where only seven visiting teams have won games in the past five seasons.
Both teams are young and are 1-2 in conference play. The game, a sellout, will be televised on a seven-station network on channel 13 with a 7:48 p.m. tipoff.
Both teams are starving for a league win. U of ottawa is starving since 1975, with its losing record at 13-23.
practice habits, which he described as good,
into the game this weekend, and play more
like a team and not break down under
pressure.
Still reeling from a surprise 58-55 loss to Missouri, the Jayhawks have been listening to Owens talk in practice about shot selection and sacrifice, something he says his team hasn't been doing enough of fately. Owens said he hooled his team would take its
Even though the Wildcats, 8-7, are one of the lowest scoring teams in the Big Eight conference, they should put heat on their head with a win over the Giants at 6-6, leads K-State in scoring with a 16.2
average. Last year, in four games against KU he averaged 15 points. In the second round of the post season tourney in Kansas, he scored 19 goals with 23, his best scoring game last season.
Owens said Kansas would use the same lineup that started against MU: Darnell Valentine, Wilmore Flower, Tony Guy, Johnny Crawford and Paul Mokeskul.
Swimmers' hectic vacation ends
It probably would be a good idea to talk a member of KU's men's swimming team about the topic.
While most students gloated over turkey and watched football games on television, KU swimmers were practicing—twice a day for Christmas until classes resume Jan. 16.
"We practice harder than any other team," Bill Spahn, head coach, said. "We start in September and practice until spring or summer. We also provide a program to keep in shape for next year."
Kansas will put its hours of practice to use in a dual team tonight against Oklahoma State. The meet is set to start at 7 p.m. in Robinson Natorium.
Kansas not only practiced more but also
"It's tough to practice when no one is around," Spahn said. "We had all that snow New Year's Eve and couldn't get out but the team has a really great attitude about practice."
Despite dual meet losses to powerful Southern Methodist and Iowa State that have put KU below the 500 mark, Spain is well-positioned by the Jayhawks can defend their Big Eight flight.
practiced for longer periods of time during the break, in addition to lifting weights three times a day.
"Missouri will be our toughest challenge," Spahn said. "They probably have the best talent but we train harder and have more depth and versatility. We have swimmers that will place in three different events."
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University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Januarv 19. 1979
7
A
Photo by CHRISTOUL
Tracksters open indoor season
Jeff Buckingham, freshman from Gardner, attempts a 16-foot pole vault in preparation for tomorrow's men's and women's indoor track season coach in Allen Field House. Buckingham, who has cleared 17 feet, will be one of several KU entrants in the field events, which begin at 5:30 p.m. Running events will follow at 7 p.m.
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
Sports Writer
Soaring high
After weeks of practice and preparation,
most of KU's men and women tracksters
still have only an unofficial intersquid meet
to show for their efforts.
But that should all change tomorrow when the two track squash kick off their 1979 tour in Birmingham.
The men will be host to national powers Wyoming and Southern Illinois universities and the women will be host to Kansas State and Fort Hays State universities and Barton County Community College. Field events at 5:30 p.m., and the running events at 47 p.m.
“It’s our first competition since December, and we’re really excited,” said Bob Timmons, who enters his 14th camp as men’s head coach. “It’s a very important meet because it’s our first one and we’re going against two fine teams.”
According to Timmons, Wyoming has an abundance of talent, especially in the distance events. Southern Illinois traditionally fields strong, well-balanced teams, and Timmons said this year's team would be no different.
"WE JUST want to go out and do well and avoid any serious problems with injuries."
Last year, KU had a bumper crop of injuries but still captured the Big Eight Indoor Championship. Heading into tomorrow's opening triangular, the Jayhawks are basically healthy, even though spinner shots and goalie saves have been sidelined with minor injuries.
Hogan has a slight hamstring pull, and Bauer is still recovering from a nose operation during Christmas break. He should be ready to be ready for KU's second meet Jan. 27.
Freshman triple jump Sanya Owolabi, who last month broke the freshman school record on his first collegiate jump, is nursed a bruised heel but is still scheduled to
Injuries have already hit KU's women. Sheila Calmese, the defending Big Eight champion in the 60-and 300-yard dashes and the American record holder in the 300, is out
KANSAN Sports
for a month with a pulled hamstring. Women's head track coach Teri Anderson is counting on freshman Lori Green and sophomore letterman Amy Miles to offset the loss.
"THIS IS our first actual competition," Anderson said. "What's important is we're using it to train and gain experience for the future." He added that meetings it should be a good meet for us.
Since the meet is designed mainly as a training and experience gaining tool, Anderson said, every athlete on her team will participate in one event and team scores will not be kept.
Anderson is expecting first place finishes in the shot put, 60- and 300-yard dashes, 60- yards hurdles and the mile and two-mile runs. She is relying heavily on outstanding performances from Linda Newell in the shot put, Danielle O'Brien in the dashes, Lori Lowrey and Gwen Poss in the hurdles, and Karen Fitz and Louise Murphy in the mile and two-mile events.
"WE HAVE an extremely strong and talented team this year." Anderson said. "We're well-balanced, KU has always been good in the sprints, but we're starting to really improve in the weight and distance events."
"We might be young but more importantly, we're talented." she said.
Despite having just nine returning lettermen and one senior and four juniors competing in the initial meet, Anderson will be the new team's overall youth as a bandicap.
Timmons has 26 lettermen returning. Timmons the Jayhawk is defending Big Ten coach Jason Kidd and the NCAA INA Deer All-American Lester Mickens. Also returning are Outdoor All-Americans Kevin Newell, Anthony Coleman, Stan Bauer, David Bluchter, Tom McCall and Bo Loota.
MICKEENS, freshman pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham, and five of their teammates got an early jump on the 1979 indoe season in two major meetings during Christmas break.
Buckingham, who recorded the nation's second best effort by a preper perform last year, traveled to Saskatoon, Sask., Dec. 31 for the Knight's of the Columbus Invitation, an amateur meet. Even though he was the only collegiate competing in his event, Buckingham tied for third with a vault of 16.5. Former world record holder Earl Bell
won the event and Canadian Olympian Bruce Simpson took second.
On Jan. 12, 123, Buckingham captured it in the East Tennessee State Invitational Relays at Johnson City, Tenn., with a vault of 17 feet.
Owolabi and Whitaker also competed but failed to place.
Mickens placed second in the university 440-yard dash in the relays. Newell took fifth in the invitational 690-yard dash while Hogan took sixth in the high jump. Steve Rainbow took sixth in the high jump.
National powers to face gymnasts in home meets
By BRETT CONLEY
Sports Writer
KU's women gymmats get a chance to prove that their victory in a triangular meet last Monday was no fukke when they meet Boston University on Saturday. State University tonight in Springfield, Mo.
SMS should prove to be a formidable opponent. The team is ranked in the top 10 in the country and finished fourth in the world for Women national tournament last year.
"They're not as tough as they were they last two years," Ken Show, women's gymnastics coach, said. "We will be competitive with them for the first time since I have been here. I think they are overrated."
KU scored 118.9 points in a victory over Colorado State and Emporia State in last Monday's meet, CSU scored 107.15 and ESU scored 77.3. Kansas was led by Jackie DePinto, who swept all four events on her way to the all-around title.
KU'S MEN'S team also returns to action this weekend in tomorrow afternoon's dual meet with nationally-ranked Iowa State in Robinson Gymnasium. The meet starts at 2
It will be the Jayhawks' first competition in more than a month. A scheduled meet with Central Missouri State University was cancelled because of an injury only three gymnasts were not injured.
Bob Lockwood, men's coach, said he was worried that the long layoff might leave the
"I'd hoped to have at least some kind of competition before the Iowa State dual and I am a little concerned we haven't," he said. "We're going to be the right mental attitude, we'll be all right."
Flip special is off
Flip Wilson isn't going to quarterback the Amasas Jayhawk to a football victory over the Warriors.
The comedian came to KU in September and filmed a television special, "Flip Wilson's Salute to Football," that was to be shown before Sunday's Super Bowl.
However, the Canadian company that produced the special has announced that no network has bought the film. There is a chance that it might yet be sold to an independent network, the company said, but it probably won't be shown this year.
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An Evening With
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& Special Guest Danny Cox
FARM
Take one toke over the line...
January 25th...8:00pm...in The Ballroom Admission $3.50...Beer will be served Tickets available: SUA, Kief's & Caper's in K.C.
SUA
8
Friday, January 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Yerma de Garcia Lorca
Los estudiantes de habla hispana interesados in participar en el montaje teatral de
Yerma están invitados a tomar parte in las audiciones que se llevaran a cabo:
FECHA: Enero 22 y 23/79
LUGAR: Wescoe 4020
HORA: 7:00 p.m.
Patrocino los departamentos de Espanol y Drama
Parentesis tes superimputés de supérieur
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After K.U. beats K. State Saturday night, just tell us the score and we will add a small drink of your choice to any food order. Good through Sunday Jan. 21, 1979.
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Karel Blaas
Prof to perform last viola recital
Blaire Blaas fell in love with music during a time when there was "fewer sources of sound" and the great musicians one heard weren't so easily erased by car radios and television commercials.
"I'm glad I lived through the era of old wind-up Victorias," Blaas, professor of violin and viola, said yesterday morning. "After all, it's the music that counts."
Blaas was born in Holland and grew up in Rochester, N.Y., where he earned his bachelor's and master's degrees from Brown University. He began playing the violin when he was 12.
Blaas, who has been a music faculty member since 1949, will present his final viola recital as part of the KU Faculty Series at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. He is retiring this year.
The show will end Feb.18.
While working in Paris, Kertesz purchased one of the first Leica 35mm cameras. He set precedents with the Leica M20 and an influence on contemporary photography.
"I found out when I was 40 that my aunt gave my dad $25 to go down and buy a half-size violin for me," he said. "I was a sensitive-looking kid when I was young."
Although he is respected for his photographic ability and is widely published, Kertesz never has received the fame experienced by some of his peers. His subtle style may have kept him from gaining widespread success, Southall said.
While in Rochester, Blaas said, he taught at the Rochester School of Music and played in the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra for 21 years under such conductors as Leonard Bernstein, Erich Leinsdorf and Sir Thomas Beecham. He
He said that after his formal retirement this spring, he planned to travel, give private lessons and continue his work as a violin and viola maker.
The show features Kertesz's early work, done in Paris in the late 20th and early 30s, as well as his recent work.
Blaaas will be assisted by Richard Angelietti, professor of piano, and Don Schield, professor of clarinet and choir at the School of Fine Arts, in his rectal Monday night.
said he took the job at KU for various reasons.
Photographs on display at Spencer
“Oh, economics weren’t so hot and then aesthetics weren’t so hot either,” he said. “I got tired of being just a cog in a wheel in an orchestra.
In America, Kertesz worked for several magazines as a free-lance photographer. His work reached the pages of Harper's Bazaar, Vogue and Look magazines.
Kertesz left Hungary for Paris in 1925. He worked in Paris until he moved to New York.
Blaas said he had been pleased with the quality of the students he's had over the years, despite a decline in string programs across the country.
"There are more and more talented students all the time," he said. "The quality and the quantity have increased across the country of strings in the universities. A lot of it is because of an increase in the number across the country of strings." How many... "Kuray, there's my kid.-You know."
"I loved the people here. It was so delightful to come to a place where people had more time to be friendly."
An exhibition of 50 original photographs,
taken between 1925 and 1975, opened
Tuesday in the White Graphics Gallery of
the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of
Art. The photos are the work of Hungarian-
born André Kertesz.
"The thing I'll miss the most will be my students," he said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spare Time
Night Life
Lawrence Opera House, 644 Massachuset St.
- George Thorpeog and the Destroyers;
Fast Break, Jan. 26.
- Fast Break. Jan. 27.
- Lost Gonzo Band, Feb. 1.
- Lost Gonzó Baro, Feb. 1.
- Cole Tuckey, Feb. 2-3.
- Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts
St.
- Gaslite Gang, Jan. 20.
- Jam Session, Jan. 25.
Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
· Berkeley, Crary, and Hickman, Jan. 22
· Fallon, Jan. 24
Bullwinkle's, 806 W. 24th St. Private Club and
Disco.
J. Watson's, Hillcrest Shopping Center,
Private Club
Private Club:
"Shenanigan's", 901 Mississippi St. Bar and
The Sanctuary, 1401 W. Seventh St. Private Club.
Brewer and Shipley, Jan. 25, 8 p.m. Union Ballroom.
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Peter and the Wolf, Concert for Young People Jan. 21, 2 o.m. University Theatre.
- Little River Band and Ambrosia, Jan. 23,
8 p.m. Memorial Hall.
**Kansas City Philharmonic, Brittany's War**
Require. Jan 30 at 8 p.m., and Jan 31 at 7.30 p.m.
- Jorge Grese. Spanish dancer, Feb. 8, 8
p.m. Music Hall.
- Angel, Feb. 16, 8 p.m., Memorial Hall.
- Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Feb. 22,
Bell 40, Convocation Center, Rockhill
College, Ft. Lauderdale.*
- Outlaws, Feb 23, 8 p.m., Memorial Hall
Theatre
Coming this semester
- Poor Murderer by Pavel Kohout, Febu-
rival and 13-17, 8 p.m., William Inge-
l Theatre.
- Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare;
* February 23, 24 and March 1, 8 p.m.
University
- The Love of Three Oranges, an opera by
Problefe, April 6 and 13, 14 bpm, University
of Pennsylvania.
- The Fianights by Rene Marques, April 10-12 and 17.21, b. William Iomega Theatre.
* Equus by Peter Shaffer, April 27-28 and May 3-5, b. University, Theatre.
Films
SUA
- The Rescuers, an animated film directed by Wolfgang Reitherman, with the voices of Bob Newhard and Eve Gabor. 3:30 and 7 p.m.; Wizards, or by Ralph Bashkind. 8:30 and 11 p.m.
- Little Caesar, dir. by Mervyn LeRoy with
Edward G. Robinson and Douglas Fairbanks
Jr., Jan. 23, 7:30 p.m.
- The Wild Child, dir. by Francois Truffaut,
Jan. 24: 7:30 p.m.
Exhibits
Art and Design Gallery, Visual Arts building, Graduate students from the department of art, through Feb. 2, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. monday through Friday.
Kansas Union Gallery, Art department faculty study, through January 31, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.p. to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Lands Gallery, 918 Massachusetts St.
Watercolors by Judy Bothwell, through Jan.
31, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday through
Saturday.
Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets. Works on Paper by Shirley Scheier and Patricia Scooby, through Jan. 25. China photography by Kohl Hiul, beginning Jan. 28.
7 East 7 Gallery, 7 East 7th St., Oils and watercolors by Raymond Eastwood, through Feb. 6, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday.
Valley West Gallery, 2112 A West 25th St.
Portraits and Southwest scenes in oil,
by Martin Layn and frene Selokon, through
a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Saturday.
Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., Lawrence history exhibit. Part 2, open Jan. 28, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.
To get into Medical School you probably read over 2,000,000 words. Read just 112 more and you may get a full Scholarship.
The Armed Forces need physicians. And we're willing to pay for them. Full tuition. Books. Fees. Necessary equipment. And $400 a month tax free. Once selected for a Health Professions Scholarship-available from the Army, Navy or Air Force - you are commissioned a second lieutenant or ensign in the Reserve. Serve a 45-day active duty period annually. And agree to serve on active duty for a period dependent on the duration of your participation in the scholarship program As a fully commissioned officer you receive excellent salary and benefits. More importantly, you get the opportunity to work and learn beside
For more information merely mail in the coupon below.
ARMED FORCES
Armed Forces Scholarships, P.O. Box 1776, Valley Forge, PA 19481
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*Podiatry and Psychology not available in Army Program*
WASHINGTON, DC - JOHN G. HOLT, DUKE OF MARYLAND, AND RYAN SMITH, CITY OF WASHINGTON, SHARPENED THE FOUNDATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES WITH A SUCCESSFUL CONFERENCE ON ADVOCACY AND SOLIDARITY.
ORU for Law
Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Okla. opens a law school in 1979 with
- Outstanding faculty
- A philosophy of development for the whole person - spirit, mind, and body
- Excellent facilities one of the finest practice courtrooms in America and one of the largest libraries in the southwest
- A goal of preparing students to react to persons in need in all nations
- Well-developed skills-oriented curriculum
- And a possible place for you in the 1979 entering class!
To find out more, send the coupon today.
Please note the three abbreviations above.
School of Law at Oral Roberts University.
Please tell me more about the O.W. Coburn
Name
City State ZIP
Return complaint to Office of Admissions/Law
UHL 2777 South Lewis, UHl 7411 KAULT
OUI considers all applicants without regard to race,
color, sex, age, handicap, or ethnic origin or religion.
Note: ORU's code number for LSAF scores is 6532
THE SPACE STATION
BEGINNING OF THE CENTURY
ORAL ROBERTS UNIVERSITY TULSA • OKLAHOMA • 74171
0
Patronize Kansan advertisers
Friday, January 19, 1979
9
Med Center branch sites studied
The Kansas Board of Regents will hear a report today by KU officials on possible sites for a permanent home for the Wichita Center of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The Wichita branch is housed in E.B. Allen Memorial Hospital. The state has been renting space since 1974 in E.B. Allen Jacksonwgick County, which owns the hospital.
However, the Regents will not recommend a new location to the Kansas Legislature until they view the site, Calvin Lowman, chairman of the board, said.
"We have appointed a special committee to view the sites and report at the February meeting."
Richard Von Ende, KU executive secretary, will present the University's report at the Regents monthly meeting in Topeka. KU investigated possible sites at the request of an interim legislative health education committee.
KU officials investigated 15 to 20 sites for the branch, Von Ende said. The report will include estimates of the cost of establishing a branch at each location. Although KU rejected some of the sites because of their unforeseen costs, the department will not recommend a site to the board.
"We're going to present the Regents with the sites and let them decide," he said.
University Daily Kansan
Think Valley West for Fine Arts & Furnishings in HolidayPlaza841-1870 Mon-Sat 10:5:30
Von Ende said it probably would cost $4 million to $7 million to establish a permanent Wichita branch. The cost will depend on the size of a building a new one, he said.
plans to put the branch in the East Pike Building, on the east side of Wichita, after an engineering survey showed that the building had structural problems.
The University and the Legislature have previously investigated the possibility of establishing a permanent home for the Wichita branch. Last year KU canceled
The Regents also will consider a request by KU to renovate six rooms in Snow Hall. The renovation is expected to be paid for by the grant from the National Science Foundation.
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Admiral Car Rental
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We have a few late model
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843-2931
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• Metal frames (colors available)
• Dry mounting • Oval mats.
FRAME
WORKS
HOLIDAY PLAZA
25th & Iowa
(next to Klefs)
842-4900
FRAME WORKS
--one two three four five
time times time times time
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Small drink with purchase of 1 Burrito.
Taco Via'
1700 W. 23rd St.
841-4848
OMRUS
MISSPORT
A MILITARY ACADEMY PROGRAM
THIS WEEKEND!!
USED PARTS and 11th STREET RHYTHM METHOD
Tonight—Two Exceptional bands for the price of ONE!
2. $ ^{ \circ} $ gen. adm. 1. $ ^{ \circ} $ Spirit Members
Tomorrow—Great Country Rock with POTT COUNTY PORK & BEAN BAND $^2.00$ gen.adm.
The Lawrence Opera House and The Sound Club
7th & Mass.
Next Fri.—Jan. 26 GEORGE THOROGOOD &
THE DESTROYERS with
Tickets now on sale at Better Days. Records and at the Opera House.
FAST BREAK
KANSAN WANT ADS
Aceimmunizations, goods, services and employment
certificates required. Please contact ACE
ATTENTION: 191-876-5200 TIME: 10AM - 4PM BIRTH
DAY: MAR 31 2018 EXP: MAY 31 2028
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These items can be played in person or called by calling the TYE business office: 864-5348.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
TOFLF Fresh Market offo info laid in Lawrence new at industry Mercantile 700 Lane 1-26
Job search list for college graduates
Write surgery's NURS, Peoria, Illinois. 61665
61665
Research Assistants. Student assistants need for research with preschool children. Should have marring or alternates free moth-16-20 hours per week. Applicant must have Haworth Ainey C. Equal Opportunity Employer.
A WINFIELD FESTIVAL IN JAN '97. No, but how
BENNETH CUNNINGHAM and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Dan Craxton and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stokes and John Hickman Jr. Jan
22, Danielle Stock
ENTERTAINMENT
Private + Bedroom in private home.
Newly remodeled kitchen. Fireplace, piano no.
smokings or pets. Gay male preferred. $125
evening. All allitions available. Maturity 9-18.
evenings.
FOR RENT
FRONTIER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW HENRY
M. STUDIO; 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished
and equipped with private parking. On KU has a
wilmington walker closet, garage parking. On KU has a
bathroom en-suite. On KU has 842-4444 or see at 342 Front Rider. Neck door
or bathroom.
Christian university. Very close to campus. Call 842-8244.
Phone: 842-8244. Keep calling. Phone: 842-8244.
Phone: 842-8244.
Park 20 and bus route 1, high school apartment
Park 25 and bus route 8, high school apartment
Park 35 and bus route 9, high school apartment
Unity 4865 = $1650 or bus = $1500
Unity 5176 = $1500 or bus = $1400
Two hundred, furnished and timetable rooms
from 155 to 165 Kentrock St. (9) accommodations between 6-9 o'clock.
8 (upstairs) weekends between 6-9 o'clock.
Eight, high old house. Four bedrooms. Large kitchen. 1/2. Bath. Central. Air. Drive-in. Bedroom. Kitchen.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
available. Phone 843-7067 and near town.
Phone. 843-7067
Room for rent Share kitchen and bathrooms
$90.00 per month Close to campus 452-
828-6730 828-6730
Nice. Single apartment, adjacent to campus,
Nice.Gas paid, sublet through May $135/month.
No taxes. 24 hr. tenant permit.
Spaecion top of hill location. Semi-private bath-
teriae, quiet. studios upperclass on
443-7827 1043-7827
Brand new duplex units and 3 bedroom house-
ware. New kitchen appliances. 1-800-
642-0211
Need roomsat for 2 bedroom apartments $124.00
Mo. include water and cart rent Must Host
Phone: (317) 566-2995
JAYHAWKER TOWERS is an apartment for
Splacetown two bedrooms, all utilities paid
and furnished. Call 718-594-2100.
S. W. Lawson, Lautenbach 1078, W.-W. Carr,
Roe-Hootch, C-4, Car Garage, Family of
Friedrichs, 639-562-4300
Two-bedroom unfurnished $205/Mo | electric
Call Bill 843-7780 1-24
Furished up, 1, bfr. wear, KU, no pets, available immediately 841-5287 or 843-5288 (available for ages 6 and older)
Female for vih Vie Sa 30 Apr 2 bpr KU kus bag
milites; militis Call 591.8467.0687 ing
mg
Bleeping from snow to kitchen, one block from
parking lot. 24-hour room service. No booklets.
Days B15-83 AF197 No fire No notp. Day B15-83 AF197
1. a romeatman who is responsible and quiet
864-2540 after 4 p.m. $75 mo. includes utilities
923-3830 after 4 p.m. $125 mo. includes utilities
FOR SALE
Roommate requires for pick up mobile home. Wash-
room supplies include: dish soap, dish towels,
utility Calls Nilson at 812-1067 1-25
Sobri - HR陪 Hir (or uniform) at Frontier
1-25 - HR陪 Hir (or uniform) at Frontier
full rent no. deposit Call 812-5972 1-26
FURNISHED ROOM FOR MALE. Walk to KU
14th and Kentucky. Has wash basin. Sare refrigerator, both Clean, newly painted. warm $200
Bathroom, with shower. beddings. 841-3388
841-3388
Roommate, own bedroom in 3 br. house, 13th & 14th Floor, $190.64/month a 1/2 month Call: 855-527-1212
Pender Multiaint Multiaint Guest with draps, cordes,
pincers, and mittens. Very thick. Sweatcords, mats,
curtains, and covers. Very good condition.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization. Makes sense to read in the Eastern Civilization 31 for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at TopTeller.
Need a roommate $30.60 call 841-5145
1.96
1988 Camaro, Snow Tires, Inspection,
1984 Corolla, Independent, Capable
Price: $650. Price: 887-701-6770
I-425
SunSports - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
resistant 4212 Airbus B511 811-5700
Alternator, starter and generator Speakers
Speakers Motor, generator MOTIVE, ELECTRIE, 443-800-2690, 290 W #4
MOTIVE
WATERED MATTRESSES $69.8, 2 yr. guardian
at WHITE LIGHT, 794 Mass. 843-138, 1-24
1-20
1-20
Nakamori 500 Couchs new $1490 for $280, D
Medium Furniture new $799 for $369, M
Methanol equipment and SIX arboreses.
72 VW Suier Bar WO. Nice car clean. Also needed
35 VW Suier Bar WO. Nice car clean. Also needed
RCA TV 55 call 641-9039 1-22
RCA TV 55 call 641-9039 1-22
1970 Fender Telecarcer. New lacquer finish, midsize. Fender logo on front panel. Paint job: 280-$19.99, 320-$19.99, 340-$19.99.
BONC'S at WHITE LIGHT are 10% off with this
704. Masson 643-1386. 1-24
Hockey goalie equipment. Excellent condition.
Dress in professional team attire. I can walk
separation stretchers.
Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan, sales and
advertising. Instruments. Complete line of strings and
instrument music.
Maytag gas dryer, 6 months old—almost new
Call Marilyn, 841-452-101. Must saffron.
1-248
Stereo system: Turturbile BSR XAE. Ampli Hotel
System: Turbulence system 50 12 86" x 172"
or offer b42 86" x 172"
HELP WANTED
Fill your place with inexpensive used furniture. Fill your place with 42-132.710 Help clean (JOB LOSING wanted).
FOUND
35mm camera, Wednesday, z100 Smith, Call 272-112
6162 between 7 p.m. p.m.
A student assistant for female quadriplegic students works with 50 students Monday and Wednesday morning classes. Job includes typing papers to school students to school class notes, printing resumes, calling CALL 842-4423 or CALL 842-1011; interpreting and communicating with students.
Clerk opening at Overland Photo's downtown
district. Visits campus, knowledge of camera & darkroom materials. Applies to overland photo's division in Hollywood. Overland Photo's driveway is in Holiday Park. Travels with every other Saturday 8:30am-11am. In person at 1741 Mansfield St.
G P Loyd's now p hire cocktail waitress
to assist you. Apply to 601-824-123
apply@masters.edu 702-895-123
Counselors wanted. Western Colorado boy's camp emphasizing outpatient and river program. Ten children required. Included: self-addressed children received. Includes: ANDERSON CAMPS, GVYSUM, COLUMBIA CAMPS.
Part time job: Excellent job with work when your student has completed college. We look for a relatable, self-motivated and start learning job.
TRY US! YOU'LL ENJOY MASTICATING.
Topple dancers with dinner.
4:30-10:00. Only at
501 N. BMN
N. Lawrence
MEN WOMEN JOBBS*** CRUNSE SHIPS *
PREFIGHTERS. No experience. High pay! See Europe, Hawaii, Australia, So America, Winter.
Call 610328; Facebook.com/boston-shifts 4-17
610328, Boxes. Ca. Cambridge 9866
Cashier-Homes. Fine area restaurant, must be 21' or older. Offer over 21, part-time, evening.
Clark wanted to work eveningues 12-20 her
weekends. She also wanted to work sundays.
Call Schalbe Retail Liquor Store 943-212-1281
I'i's Big Boy now taking applications for full
& part time employee-Acpl in person at
lcmh.edu
Afterternoon clerk position at Quick-Stop Photo Store, 497 feet away in the Hinder shopping area on South Side. Position requires up to 4 am to 4 pm every other Saturday starting at 12:30 PM. Position is 1414 Mass. 1414 Mass.
Delivery Drivers needed. Apply in person at
Gibbary 2449 Iowa. No calls. 1-19
The RU Library System Currently has a large number of positions available in Watson and the Branch Liaison Services. Positions open in Watson and the Branch Liaison Services. Study Program who are interested in employment should pick up application forms in room 41220. Position names are posted on an individual based location listed in Room 41220. The Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer APPLICATIONS INITIATED IN THE EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER
The KU Library, Stedton currently has a large collection of books in Western Wardens and the Branch Liaison positions open in Wardens and the Branch Liaison positions open in Librarians. Study Programs who are interested in employment with Watson Library Job Notes for vacant positions at Watson Library Job Notes for vacant positions at the train entrance of Watson Library and at the EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AFFECTIVE ACTION CENTER. OUT REQUEST TO RACE RELIGION OUT REGARD TO RACE RELIGION OUT REGARD TO NATIONAL ORIENTAL STATUS NATIONAL ORIENTAL STATUS
The Lawrence Open School has a limited number of positions available. Tuition from $60.00 in $120.00 per semester. Applications may be pre-available. Simulation open research position requires a Bachelor's degree, individual instruction. Do not apply if you have a foreign background.
Immediate openings for person to work with,
quadtripleprince nursing in nursing home for
adults ages 36-54. Resumes to the job
& evenings & week nights. Open own trans-
portation. 620-519 before 4:30 p.m.
Ages 18+ ATS 123
Bursa of Child Research has opened its full-time research center in Alameda with expertise in computer data analysis and experience in computer data analysis and packages background in the social sciences, health sciences, and business procedures. Must be able to work with students on assignments. January 25, 1979 Starting assignment in September 20, 1979 Started assignment in April 20, 1980 Midtown Jade, 11 Harvard, Cambridge, another suburb of Boston. Purposes: Bursa of Child Research is an independent research center.
NOTICE
Footwear
INTRAMURAL
BASKETBALL
FREE THROW
CONTEST
(preliminaries)
8 a.m.-12 noon
SAT. JAN. 20.
Robinson North Gym
No entry fee
No pre-registration
Just show up
LOST
Gay Services of Kauai—general meeting, Jan.
22 7:30 Kauai Union Jyahawk room: 1:28
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER wishes to welcome all new and returning students for the spring semester. Meet us on Tuesday through Saturday, 7 p.m. to 1 p.m.
Sunday, Claredown Mondays. Come down and browse in the library or at our bookstore in towns–both hard cover and lily price paper books. We buy books every 23–1401 Mans 811-4644
Black slive. III W/L/other palm, 1/16 in.
Zoan. Please leave to F.O.E. Electric toy. 1-25
Large reward for indies' that applaure
no question. 844-565 Lost before Christ-
mas
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISN BINSING COPYING - The House of
Thesisn Building and copying at Lawyers. Get to
know what is happening here.
PERSONAL
Celebrity Photography, Hibiscus, Print, You name it. Highest quality, good prices, fast delivery. #82-33
Margaret Brass and George Gomez are running for student body president and vice president. They are interested in your ideas. Margaret -843-2154-4545, Paid for by the 1-23 Step Costion.
7th annual 10m Art Competition Art Escapepad, Pelican
Park, Burlington, Vermont
Boulder Band, Sun Jan 26th 9:30-12pm
Buddie's Band, Sun Jan 26th 8:30-12pm (East)
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Deliveries up to
17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control.
Consulting Total Ligation for appointment call.
We offer a 30-day period plan (360-490) 1-Way
Patient Parks. Ks. 1-232
EAT, DRINK, AND JUMP FOR JOY!
Topless dancers with lunch
Moon 2:00, June 41
501 N. 8th
Flammerhaye
N. Lawrence
Gay/Lewis Switchboard, counseling and general
information 841.8472 1F
Watch this space for details on KU's Winter SBA
Backgammon Tournament.
SA 1-18
DARKROOM - SUA provides a complete photographic darkroom (less chemicals and paper) for detailed archival work.
Stop by Burks daily for Pepsi Hour. 3-4 P.M.
Medium-Size: Medium -35c Large -35c
HARRINGTON SPECIALS! 6:00 Mon, Tues, and 2:00 Wed,
MAIRD'S HARRINGTON NIGHT! 7:00 Mon, Tues, and 3:00 Wed,
MAIRD'S HARRINGTON NIGHT! 7:00 Mon, Tues, and 3:00 Wed.
Toni. Let's do the love dance tonight! Meet me at 1-19
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three years professional training experience. 8324-114. iff
Dearest of Leilies—Give me time to come up with something. In the meanwhile, let's get started.
S1 PITCLIENTS every Friday afternoon from 2-6 at the Harbour
tf
Relax. Use my type your term papers, terms
note. Fast Service. Mrs. Nixon, 842-1501
business cases-provide quality services by factory
offering. Contact us at 612-784-5900.
For immediate appointment call 612-784-
5900.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ubiqui/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m., 9 to 1 p.m. on Monday at 832 Mass.
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who b-hip you with you math or CS problem. Call (800) 254-3176.
EXPORT TUTORIS MATH 0091 1521 call 864-3572
EXPORT TUTORIS MATH 0091 1521 call 864-3572
EXPORT TUTORIS COMPUTER SCIENCE 100 292 call 864-3572
EXPORT TUTORIS COMPUTER SCIENCE 100 292 call 864-3572
EXPORT TUTORIS QUALIFICATIONS : R.S.
EXPORT TUTORIS QUALIFICATIONS : R.S.
EXPORT TUTORIS e-learning programing For general problems
TYPING
I do damned good tyjing. Peggy, 842-4476.
Typical/Editor / IBM PIM/Exite Quality work
call: 842-931-8272 / description: installation
work
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980 tf
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
help customers. Law papers, term papers. Mr.
Lynn.
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10
Fridav. January 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Fuel...
From page one
said he and Chancellor Archi R. Dykes were monitoring the situation closely.
Even though the fuel oil supply situation was stable, Orok said he was not optimistic that the Kansas Public Service Gas Company would resume service to KU soon.
William Salome, vice president of the gas company, also said he did not know when the leak would occur.
"IF THE WEATHER moderates and temperature rises to the upper 30s, service should be resumed," Salome said. "Right now there's nothing we can do about this system was lowered, and under federal regulations service cannot be resumed."
Salome said the University's rating had been changed after hearings between the two sides, and she refused to comment.
concerning the volumes of gas consumed by customers. KU's rating was lowered because it had fuel oil as an alternate source and also because it used a large volume of gas
"Regulations were made to insure that residential and small commercial users have access to a natural gas lines coming into Lawrence are the same size as 20 years ago, yet the volume of demand is much higher. Because these lines are bigger users like KU, must be cut off sooner."
OROKE SAID that because there was little chance of the current energy being used, it would be better to
Salome said the natural gas supply to KU could not be increased in the future and its rating level would remain approximately the same.
Ask...
From page one
"It's going nowhere because we found no sponsors. Bennett mettit it last year and I thought it was the best."
Zacharias said ASK had no position on a proposal now in House committee concerning the removal of the 3.5 percent sales tax on food items.
"THE SALES tax is the most regressive of all taxes and it especially hurds older people and students. I would not favor a plan to remove it from the budget," he said, "that scores me."
Another proposal is designed to eliminate the tax over a period of three years. There is, however, at least one representative who opposes that plan.
State Rep. Edward C. Rolfs, R-Junction
City and former KU student body president, he thought the bill would pass
"I would probably support the repeal of the sales tax on food within a year. The state has a $125 million surplus now and the state shouldn't be a savings account." Roffs
Because of the surplus, Rofs said, the $46 million lost in revenues as a result of the sales tax removal on food items would not affect higher education.
However, Mike Harper, KU student body president, said the sudden decrease in revenue could result in cuts in funding for higher education.
"I support the idea of a tax cut, but even with that surplus," Harper said, "we need more money."
ART ESCAPADES
PELICAN CALYPSO
lusic bv
Masquerade Dance
Sat. Jan. 20th,
8:30-12:00
Union Bathroom
Admission $2.50
begin planning for energy shortages in the future.
PILAR
BURRIDOR
BAND
--in case of bad weather, call the KU Information Center (864-3086) the day of the event to determine if the event is post-confirmed.
sua films
The site, you have to enter all
the times, the dates and the
places.
RALPH BAKSHI FILM
WIZARDS
William W. Shakespeare in RALPH BAKSHI
This is a compound and unfamiliar
thing for a film.
A RALPH BAKSHI FILM
WIZARDS
Woodruff Auditorium
Friday 19 & Saturday 20
9:30 & 12:00
Admission
$1.50
sua films
DAZZLING
ADVENTURE...
from the depths of Devil's Bayou
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS'
THE RESCUERS
A new animated comedy-thriller
Technicolor®
©1977 WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS
Facilities Operations has requested additional oil storage facilities. That request is now on the list of capital improvements in the District to be sent to the Board of Regents in a few weeks.
sua films
However, Orok said, "The expense of repairing the tanks and the uncertainty of the repair would make the building of a new storage structure more economical."
One option would be to repair two storage tanks that have not been used this year because of leaks. The tanks have the capacity to hold 300,000 gallons of fuel and 100,000 gallon of tank in an underground system south of the Facilities Operations building.
Woodruff Auditorium
Friday 19 & Saturday 20
3:30 & 7:00
Admission $1.50
"We paid 27 cents a gallon for oil earlier this year and we're paying 33 cents a gallon now," he said. "It's the difference between buying oil in the off season and then being able to store fuel, compared to buying fuel now in the season when demand is high."
The University has no contract for a constant supply of fuel oil. KU must send purchase orders to Topeka and the state companies 10 days to bid on the contracts.
OROKE SAID the extra storage space would ease concern over the need to resupply equipment.
"There're not too many days to play with in this situation." Oroke said. "If Lawrence gets bitter cold weather there will be less than a 15 day supply on hand because more is consumed in the heating process. It's a guessing game and we're at the point of screening at the supplier to get the deliveries here."
KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: THE PHARMACOLOGY CLUB will meet at noon in Alcove G of the Kansas Union. THE ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING Unit will meet at 1:30 p.m. in Alcove G of the Union.
SUNDAY: A CROSS-COUNTRY SKI
RACE, sponsored by SUA and Sunflower
Surpius, will take place at 1 p.m. on West
Campus. Joe Uttachter will be a JAZZ
PIANO CONCERT at 2 p.m. in the Court of
the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of
Music at 3 p.m. in CARLILON RECITAL at 3 p.m. Jamie
Zink, pianist, will give a STUDENT
RECITAL at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital
Hall in Murphy Hall.
TONIGHT: KUF KOLF DRONSON CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Robinson, Susan Dickerson, organist, will give a MASTER'S dance in Swarthout Reed Hall in Murray Hall.
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842-6121
NINTH ST.
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CENTER
DOWE ST.
YALE ST.
IMAGINACTION
PRESENTS
AN OPEN MEETING ON THE STRUCTURES & FUNCTIONS OF UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE.
AN OFFICE.
THIS MEETING IS OPEN TO
ANY INTERESTED STUDENT OR
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PAID FOR BY IMAGINACTION
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SKIERS OF ALL ABILITIES ARE ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
NO ENTRY FEE
TIME—SUNDAY, JANUARY 21
PLACE—NICOHI KISHII WEST CAMPUS KIJ LAWRENCE Ks
1:00 p.m. (beginner instruction at 12:30 p.m.)
PLACE-NEWORSH MAKE WEST CAPSTONE NO. LAWRENCE WA.
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Parents, children learn to accept cancer
Stoff-Ranoter
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
Every Wednesday a group of parents gather to discuss their children, but they do not talk about bicycles, tricycles and report cards. They discuss the problems of having children with cancer.
They are participating in a University of Kansas Medical Center program designed to help parents and their children cope with the disease and death. The program, called psychosocial rehabilitation, is staffed by a child psychologist, a child psychiatrist, a child nurse, or two women who have lost children to cancer.
The parents compare the treatments their children are receiving and discuss ways the children can cope with them.
AT A RECENT group session one parent told the group that she and her husband had found that putting a bitter pill into a gelatin capsule had helped their son swallow the pill more easily.
"That's great!" another mother said. "I tasted that
pill once and it was the most horrible thing I'd ever tasted."
Nancy Cairns, the program's child psychologist, said the staff was involved with each case from the beginning.
"Ours is the only program we know of in which the psychosocial side of the team operates so closely with the medical side," she said. "As soon as we hear that a new patient has been diagnosed, we go talk to the child and his family. We let them know that we are there to talk to."
She said that parent participation was voluntary, but that most parents came to the sessions. Usually another parent would persuade them that the program was worthwhile.
"THE CHILD is in the hospital for at least a month," Cairns said, "and the parents get to know each other. The other parents provide safety and security, because they have been there."
In the same session, the parents discussed how their children lost their hair, an effect chemotherapy
"All of a sudden we looked in the back seat and there was his hair flying all over and the winnie looked like a wimp."
sometimes produces. One couple told of a time they took their child on a trip with the car windows open.
Everyone laughed, as if the story brought back memories.
All the parents at this particular session were from outside the Kansas City area. One woman, from a neighboring community, came.
"It's rough being away from the rest of my family, especially during Christmas," she said. "All I've seen is the hospital and the Safeway across the street."
CAIRNS SAID the children usually accepted their disease more easily than their parents did because they were less likely to show symptoms.
"We can tell a child that his treatment might last six months," she said, "and be accepted that because it works."
"The parents can't put the disease out of their
minds, but a child can. A lot of our kids try to protect their parents, or vice versa. The kids worry about being in danger.
Brothers and sisters of the child are the hardest to deal with, Cairns said. They often feel guilty and think they caused their brother's or sister's disease. She said they would become angry about the situation, or afraid that they might develop the disease.
She said that the brothers and sisters became jealous because of the extra attention the patients received, but that the jealousy usually disappeared after they witnessed the painful treatments.
THE PSYCHOSOCIAL team often lets children see their sick brother or sister, she said, because children can develop horrific fantasies about the cancer treatment. Seeing the patient recessuses them that a
The team also goes to the child's school and discusses his problem with the teachers and principal, Cairns said, because a lack of acceptance by a cancer patient's peers can be traumatic.
"They think the child will either be at death's door or perfectly all right," she said. "We want them to know what the dangers are and how to cope with the situation."
The child's change of appearance, most commonly hair loss or an excessive weight gain, can be hard for them.
Cairns said that if the patient made it through the first week of school, he would be fine. It helped if the teacher had a smile.
The child usually knows more about his disease than doctors who are not cancer specialists, do she, said. That is true of the parents, also. During a group session, medical terminology is tossed around as if it
'THE TEEN-AGERS have the most difficulty in adjustment. But if the child or the teen-agent can reach out to his friends once and explain his disease to them he will be OK.'
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
See CANCER back page
COLD
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Canada trip set to view eclipse
Vol.89, No.77
Monday, January 22, 1979
See story page seven
HKSCC
Lunchtime rally
About 200 people gathered for a free speech rally outside Strong Hall at noon Friday. Ron Willis,
professor of speech and drama, and four others spoke concerning the literature distribution policy although it was recently suspended by the University Event Committee.
KU observes Iowa's pre-enrollment
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Renorter
A computerized pre-enrollment system being considered for use at the University of Kansas is working well at the University of Florida.
The official, John E. Moore, director of admissions at Iowa, said more than 18,000 of the school's 22,000 students had enrolled before the spring semester began.
A RCU committee recently submitted a report on computer pre-enrollment to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. The report said that if the administration decided to change to pre-enrollment, the Iowa system should be used.
Under that system, students enroll for the next semester a month before final examinations of the previous semester begin. Students enroll, according to a letter schedule, at a central enrollment office that has a computer equipped with 24 video display terminals.
EACH STUDENT gives a computer programmer a course schedule with three or four alternatives for each class period. The computer then provides the student's schedule for the next semester.
The process takes five to 10 minutes for each student, according to low officials, and 20,000 students can be enrolled in two weeks.
'One of our biggest problems was that a department or in-
The officials said there were few problems in the first preenrolment session.
structurer would put a limit on the number of students in their classes so we did run into a lot of filled classes," Moore said.
"They were mostly in freshman and sophomore core classes, so we went back and lifted the size limit on those courses to allow the
Moore said the only breakdown occurred when the computer quit working for an hour.
However, Moore said the system meant more work for the school's faculty. Each teacher advises several students. To enroll, a student must pick up a permit card from his adviser and have a tentative schedule approved by the adviser.
"The University of Iowa student newspaper surveyed a number of students during enrollment," Moore said. "Almost all were very confident."
MOORE SAID most Iowa students appeared to like the new enrollment system.
enrollment office and could go through enrollment without seeing an adviser.
"The new system forces the student to go to his adviser," Moore said. "And it它s the advisers to do their job."
Under the system proposed for KU, a student would pick up his permit and enrollment card from his school's academic dean's office. The student would select courses and have his schedule approved by his adviser before pre-enrolling.
THE STUDENT'S schedule would then be entered into a com-
pater. If there were no conflicts, the student would receive a complete class schedule.
If only a partial schedule could be made because of conflicts, the student would keep his permit and enrollment card and receive a
Students with partial schedules would return during the last week of pre-enrollment to add the classes they were missing. If it would not be possible to complete the schedule then, the student would have to wait until school started to add the classes he needed.
During the regular enrollment period before classes start, students would pick up their fee cards, schedule cards and registration forms.
THE PRE-ENROLMLE proposal is scheduled to be presented to the University Senate Executive Committee Feb. 1, when SenExR will vote on the proposal.
If approved by SenEx and the administration, it will still take more than a year and between $0.00 and $110.00 to start the
Iowa, which leases much of the equipment, calculated that the cost of installing the computer pre-enrollment system was close to $60,000.
"We leased 24 video display terminals and four printers to the schedules." Hall Dirksen, associate registrar at Iowa, said. "We think we can get by next time with only 18 terminals and three printers."
Speech group waiting on KU
By JOHN LOGAN
Staff Reporter
Organizers of a free-speech rally held Friday on the steps of Strong Hall say they are going to wait for the administration to make the next move in the controversy surrounding the KU literature distribution policy.
The literature distribution policy, which outlined where and how literature could be distributed on campus and banned handing out literature in campus buildings, was suspended last week by Deil Shankel, executive vice chancellor, pending review by the Events Department.
THE POLICY was an effort by the Events Committee to condense existing literature distribution guidelines into one list. The list was
Since then, members of the coalition have protested several times handing out literature in campus buildings.
During the past week the group handed out leaflets in Strong Hall and in the Kannus Union lobby, calling for the elimination of the
At the rally, a lunch-bear crowd of about 40 watched as members of the coalition and other speakers took blasts blasting the policy and
Miller spake first and accused the administration of sacrificing student rights in order to make the University look tranquil for years.
"There is stonewelling from Strong Hall." Miller told the crowd. "I don't think the promoters of the policy are brown-shirts--They just want a neat, orderly campus when the Board of Regents come through."
Kon Kuby, Lawrence senior and a member of the coalition accused the administration of censorship under the gueuse of campus
"The role the University plays is odious," Kuly said. "We're serving notice to the administration that we will not tolerate crenure."
Kyle Smith, Liberty, Mo., law student, said the real problem was not the policy, but the attitude of the administration.
"It's that attitude we have to fight, not any one thing."
*Archie's worm farm has an attitude problem,* Smith said. "They (administrators) are very image conscious. They want to let us
The messages of the protestors were greeted with enthusiasm by most of the crowd, which clapped and cheered for each speaker.
"I think the rally is great," Michael Bradford, Boston senior, said. "I've been here four years and I've only seen a handful of rallies. I don't know how to deal with it."
Kuby and Miller said they also were pleased with the demonstration.
"I think we made our point." Kuby said.
Miller agreed and added that he was pleasantly surprised by the turnout.
Several KU administrators watched part of the rally from the second floor windows in Stream but declined to comment.
Members of the Events Committee would not comment on the demonstration but said they expected the policy to be changed.
Ron Willa, professor of speech and drama and a member of the Events Committee, said the intention of the committee had not been
"The thought behind it was to maintain classes in a normal manner. The discussion centered on keeping classes real." he said.
"We didn't really consider the possibility of literature distribution in the rotunda of Strong or the Union lobby."
"As I look around the committee, I can see no dissenting voters against changing the policy," he said. "They're all champions of free
List fee too high, bookstore boss savs
Rv ANNE IVEY
Staff Renorter
Bill Muggy, manager of the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Rd., said Friday that a $500 charge he had paid each semester since last spring to the Kansas Union Bookstore for the KU instructors' book list was "excessive" compared with what most schools
Muggy said most regional schools either provided the instructors' list at the cost of duplicating it or shared the cost of making multicopy forms to compile the list. He said the service usually cost $10 to $15 a semester.
However, Bette Brock, manager of the Union Bookstore, said the charge was to cover not only copying the list but also labor costs.
An instructors' list includes all the books KU teachers will use in their classes. The teachers fill out requisition forms provided by the Union Bookstore before each semester so the bookstore can purchase these books from its distributors.
BECAUSE OF THE time factor and cost, Muggy said, he cannot hire someone to gather the information for the instructors' list.
"I was given a take-it-or-leave-it contract," Muggy said. "It was a whimsical amount that their lawyers came up with."
But Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said Muggad had not been forced to accept the contract.
Muggy said he also objected to the way contract negotiations, which had set the amount for the lists, had been conducted. He said he and his lawyer had been excluded from the first session of contract negotiations.
Ferguson said the $600 was "stated in the contract as an arbitrary amount," and that the contracts would be based on the amount of providing each request.
CURRENTLY, THE Union Bookstore sends requisition forms to all instructors. The instructors list the titles of all classes they are teaching, the books their students will need for these classes, the publishers of the books and other information.
This textbook information is passed on to the Jayhawk Bookstore.
Both Ferguson and Brock said that when negotiations had begun on the first contract, it had been too late to change the system of contracts.
Muggy also said he was not sure he had received all the information and if the information he did receive was correct.
She said, "It would take too much of our time and energy to decide what to withhold. Besides, it just isn't ethical."
condition and the in-the-hat team, we probably received 90 to 95 percent of the information after the Union had processed it and gone through
"It's our obligation to carry everything asked for. We're pleased to," Brock said. "But we don't have an option. Why should we give you a package?"
BROCK SAID THAT MUGY had received all the written information the Union found and that there was a folder with this information.
Spring enrollment increases slightly
KU's tentative spring enrollment took another jump when compared with last spring's figures, but only a small one, of 105 students.
The figures showed that 22,355 students have enrolled this spring, compared with 22,349 last spring.
The Lawrence campus has an enrollment of 20,550, compared with 20,539 last spring. There are 1,805 students enrolled at the University of Kansas Medical Center; 1,801 enrolled there last spring.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday that official gurres would be made on Feb. 13, the 20th day of class. Late
Last fall's enrollment set a record when 23,564 students enrolled at the Lawrence campus and 1,918 at the Med Center.
2
Monday, January 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Capsules From staff and wire reports
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Unions plan strike in Britain
LONDON- Public employees in Great Britain are to stage a nationwide 24-hour strike today protesting the Labor government's anti-inflation wage
Four unions representing more than 1.5 million public service workers are protesting a 5 percent wage hike. The economy already is hobbled by a truck
Most state schools will be closed and hospitals will be without nurses, porters and cooks. Small municipal airports will be closed because many of their facilities are under repair.
Mistrial likely in Davis case
HOUSTON—A district judge said yesterday that he would declare a mirabil today in the murder conspiracy case against Fort Worth millionaire T. Cullen Grosso, who was charged with killing his sister.
The 12-member panel, which has deliberated the case for more than 36 hours, has been unable to break an A-8 split in the voting since last Wednesday.
Judge Wallace Moore said the mistrial was likely if jurors remained split and if each told him they doubted further deliberations could dissolve the deadlock.
Moore said he was prepared to release Davis, accused of plotting to murder his divorce-court judge last August, on $30,000 bond immediately after a
Conaress aets budget request
WASHINGTON — Congress will receive President Carter's spending blueprint for fiscal 1980 today, the first step in what shapes up a year-long battle over
Carter will deliver a nationally televised State of the Union address to a joint session of the House and Senate tomorrow night.
With many lawmakers calling for restraint in spending, the president is expected to call for a budget of about $32 billion and a deficit of roughly $89 billion.
Graduate job market improves
BETTLEHEM, Pa.—The job market for most college graduates this academic year is continuing to improve, according to the College Placement
According to a national study of 707 employers, a 17 percent gain at midwinter is expected, following a 16 percent gain projected at the same point one
In the private sector, an 18 percent increase is expected. A 12 percent decline was forecast in local and state government openings and a 10 percent decrease in corporate openings.
EPA pushed on smog rules
WASHINGTON - Pressured by inflation fighters and big industry, the Environmental Protection Agency was reported yesterday to be ready to cut its
But Marlin Fitzwater, EPA press spokesman, said the decision on the smog standard had not yet been made.
Fitzwater said a proposal made last July to change the standard from .08 to 10 microm grams per cubic meter of air would be released this week
Anti-abortion protesters picket
TOPEKA--About 30 anti-abortion protesters picked yesterday in front of Stormpit Vall Hospital in Topeka to mark today's sixth anniversary of the U.S. abortion ban.
Authorities said the march, organized by a group of University of Kansas students, was peaceful.
The group said it planned to send nine representatives to a "National March for Life" today in Washington.
Cambodian troops still fighting
BANGKOK Thailand—Loyali Cambodian troops had regrouped and were battling Vietnam forces yesterday around the city of Bangkam, which the government has said is one of its largest bases.
Western and Thai sources also said a helicopter, apparently manned by loyalists, was seen trying to ferry in supplies to besieged troops in an ancient city on the island.
Late last week, soldiers of Premier Pol Pot's fallen government had been reported massing near Battambang, a western provincial capital and Cambodia's second-largest city. The Vietnamese also begged their forces in Battambang and brought in artillery pieces for the showdown, the sources said.
Battambang, 185 miles northwest of the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, was captured by the Vietnamese toward the end of their lightning invasion,
Viet refuaces allowed to land
HONG KONG—More than 1,100 Vietnamese refugees came ashore yesterday from old burgess freights which have been anchored off Hong Kong for more than a decade.
The Vietnamese from the freighter Huey Fong were helped aboard buses headed for a transit camp. They were the second group to be taken from the camp.
The first group of 372 left the ship Saturday. About 2,000 remain on board.
Off Malaysia, a group of 58 Vietnamese from the freighter Hai Kong left
Off Malaysia, a group of 58 Vietnamese from the freighter Hai Kong left Sunday on commercial flights for resettlement in the United States.
A second group of 117 will leave for the United States today. About 680 refugees remain aboard the Hai Hong, which anchored off Port Klang, Nov. 9.
China eases emigration rules
WASHINGTON-Leonard Woodcock, ambassador-designate to the People's Republic of China, said yesterday that he hoped Chinese life would become liberal enough to make China eligible for most-favored-trade nation trade status with the United States.
Most-favored-nation status means that a country has the lowest tariff rates when it trades with the United States.
Woodcock said China had relaxed its policies against emigration for family reunification, a key factor in future trade relations.
The emigration status is critical because of the Jackson-Vanik amendment, passed by Contress in 1974, which says that no state-controlled economy can have most-favored-nation status without a presidential waiver stipulating that it allows free emigration.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd said he understood that the administration would not immediately push for most-favored-nation status
19th tenement fire victim found
HOPOKEN, N.J. — After recovering the body of the 19th victim yesterday of a tenement fire, investigators searched for the rubble for the bodies of two per-
Officials said 20 residents were injured, including seven who remained hospitalized yesterday.
The cause of the Saturday fire in a 75-year-old, five-story building was believed to be arson.
All 21 persons dead or missing were thought to be members of three families, two of which moved here last May from Guyana.
Authorities said arson was suspected because of the intensity and speed of the early-morning blaze, but they had uncovered no firm evidence and had no
Weather ...
Skiers will be partly cloudy today and tomorrow. Temperatures will reach the 30s today, then dip to 10 to 15 degrees tonight. Winds will be in the 20 to mph.
WHAT'S AN NSACAREER? It's different things to different people.
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Bakhtiar says he'll stay
3
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) –Prime Minister Haipour Bakhtiar vowed yesterday he would not be driven from office by the return Friday of Ayatullah Khomeini from exile. He met with top security aides to arrive at the arrival of the charismatic Moslem leader.
"All the nonsense and rumors the newspapers are writing about my resignation is untrue." he told the Iranian people in a broadcast address. "I am going to remain in the stronghold of the constitution."
FROM HIS headquarters-in-xile in France, Khomemi charged that Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was planning a military coup to return to power.
The Shah was expected to head for the United States, with a possible stopover in the Moroccan capital Rabat. The time of arrival were not mentioned in the announcement.
Khomeini, 78, said he wants to abolish the monarchy and set up an Islamic republic to replace Bakhtiar's government. He also said he was a tool of the shah and of foreign interests.
FACTIONAL STRIFE continued yesterday as Pro-Khomein demonstrators marched in Tehran, pro-shah gangs reportedly harassed motorists in the capital, and a Marxist guerrilla group warned Khomein against "suffocating freedoms" if he takes command of the nation.
A government source said Bakhtiar called in the members of his National Security Council—the interior minister, armed forces chiefs and the head of the paramilitary state police—to discuss plans for Khormeni's scheduled arrival in Iran.
The Moslem elder, in exile for 14 years,
is expected to be welcomed by hundreds of
KHOMEINI 15 to arrive aboard a chartered Air Air jetliner piloted by volunteers from the strike-bound Iranian airline. His first stop will be a Tehran cemetery where many "martyrs" from the violence of the past year are buried.
thousands of jubilant Iranians as the man who will abolish the monarchy.
In an apparent reference to communists, he said some troublemaker in the country was a Russian spy.
In his address, Bakhtiar called for national "calm and order" and said recent strikes, many of them directed at his ally, the Taliban, more than bouncy the official corruption of the past.
The 430,000-man Iranian military to hold the key to Iran's future. Khomiine must reach an accommodation with the US, which considers considerable loyalty to the shah, to succeed.
Israel, Palestinians continue fight
TEL. AVIV, Israel (AP)—Iralsa artillemery and Palestinian gunmen dueled across the Lebanon border Sunday as U.S. envoy Alfred Atherston crossed his Mideast peace movement efforts in Jerusalem.
Israeli officials reported some progress toward reviving the stalled Euviatian-Israel talks.
No Israeli casualties were reported in the fierce cross-border exchanges, but Lebanon provincial authorities reported one casualty.
Lebanese authorities said the towns of Nabatiyeh and Aiyihyah, about 10 miles from the Inland border, came under "fierce attack" by ISIS.
Pakistanian rockets fell on the Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona and nearby farm settlements in northern Galilee, Israeli officials said.
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said Israel would
“continue to hit the terrorists in order to prevent their attacks on Israel's civilian population.”
In Lebanon, guerrillas claimed to have driven off an Israeli gunboat attack on a Palestinian refugee camp 50 miles north of Beirut late Saturday and to have destroyed an Israeli tank attacking a guerrilla position several miles inside Lebanon.
The Israelis denied mounting a naval attack.
Israel sent ground troops on a raid against Palestinian camps in southern Jericho early. Friday but the government has not issued a statement.
Meanwhile, the leader of Israel's team of experts on peace-treaty language said Alderton's suggestions for solving treaty-language issues were 'proven.'
"There are difficulties, but there has been progress," said Elihu Ben-Elassar.
STUDENT SENATE SPRING ELECTIONS
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BATON ROUGE, la. (UPI) - A Lahyan official warned the United States Saturday that continued support for Israel could prompt another Arab oil bovett.
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"It is not the first time the Arab world has been subjected to barbaric invasion, but we have always been able to free ourselves," he said.
"It has always been said my country is one of terrorism, when we oppose terrorism"
Shahiha said the American public misunderstands the Arab beole.
"The Israelis depend on American support and this is a dreadful matter."
Arabs have lived without American support in the past, but they are now being supported by us. But we feel we are a part of humanity and must cooperate with others for human accomplishments," he said.
Arab oil sales, however, cannot continue indefinitely while the Palestinian issue remains a major challenge.
Yerma de García Lorca
Los estudiantes de habla hispana interesados in participar en el montaje teatral de
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanassian editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of other editors.
JANUARY 22.1979
City's wisdom visible
The Lawrence City Commission struck a blow against eye pollution last week when it voted to enforce a city ordinance ordering the removal of all billboards within the city by Oct. 22, 1979.
Martin Outdoor, a California-based firm that stands to lose 38 billboards in Lawrence because of the ordinance, has announced plans to file a lawsuit against the city.
Unfortunately, the commission may have to pay a price for sticking to its rule.
The company plans to base its lawsuit on First Amendment and due process rights. The president of the company had offered several compromises to the commission, including the removal of all five downtown billboards and the construction of three new ones on sites chosen by the commission.
YET THE COMMISSION refused to budge from its anti-billboard position, a tactic that becomes almost startling when viewed against the background of present day politics. In a field where the byword is compromise and the primal urge is to make a deal, the commission showed a refreshing amount of integrity with its stance.
Put simply, the commission thought
that it was right, and who needs to change when you're right?
The fallout from the commission's decision began almost immediately. Several area businessmen who had fought the ordinance expressed their displeasure, citing the fear that the loss of advertising might cut into their business.
AND, DESPITE the fact that the federal government will make 75 percent of the city's payments to Martin for the loss of the billboards, the monetary loss to the city will still be a respectable sum, even if the city wins the lawsuit.
Nevertheless, the commission reported that the sentiment of the residents of Lawrence seemed to rest against the billboards, and they responded by supporting those sentiments.
As special interest groups continue to gain prominence in the political field, the commission has managed to at least buck the trend slightly.
Advertising billboards are an eyesore that will not be missed in Lawrence. The commission, ignoring the usual political pressures, has chosen to act instead in the best interests of the residents of Lawrence.
It is an encouraging sign.
Law students prisoners in faulty war compound
The idea seems outrageous, yet it is true.
The idea seems outrageous to me, but the bill to new Green Hall to see the barricades that hold KU's law students captive. It's not hard to imagine. And they did not even participate in the debate.
Prisoners held at the University of Kansas?
Last summer the war, also known as the kashmiri Baxi Ram, resulted in 12 deaths, or more than a quarter of all casualties to a higher number of casualties than ever recorded for KU law students in the biannual period.
The administration was rightfully upset, but said it was not overly concerned. The problem would be examined and new policies would be necessary, they said. It sounded like bad news.
BUT OUTRIGHT imprisonment of all law students? The first-year class was just beginning law and had not even been trained to practice it, and none responsible for the outcome of the last war.
Still this year's law students are being forced into backhackre backward 24 hours a day, receiving stepped up instruction in preparation for their own wars. We will conquer the enemy next time, the administrators muttered cryptically.
So, with the addition of the fences and barricades, law student life, which is dreary and exhausting enough, takes on a new light. That of a POW.
AND TO HEAP injury upon insult, the students are trapped in a faulty building.
the prisoners are living on chemically preserved, plastic packaged products of modern man's food industry: the vending machine. They have no sleeping quarters, and only a limited number of institutionally cushioned chairs.
Last semester a light fixture fell from the ceiling and crushed to the ground 25 feet below, fortunately students milling in the forum area.
Then there are the 18 faulty panels scattered around the outside of the building that a consulting firm has determined to be unsound and potentially hazardous.
So far none of the prisoners have sustained injuries from slipping cement or falling lights. But how long can good fortune last?
Surely, if the administration wants to hold prisoners of war campus it should
Jake
Thompson
PETER B. MAYER
provide a safe compound in which to hold them. What if a POW were injured by the building? It might lead to a breakdown of institutions and a loss of trade for the University.
THE ADMINISTRATION is taking steps to provide a safe prison for its captives. At present, repair is delayed while the administration awaits written response from the chief contractor, Casson Construction Co., Topeka.
John Casson, an officer in the company, said recently he had not reviewed the plan in detail, but repair would begin soon, after his rebel letter was sent to the administration.
Then, a meeting between the construction firm and KU officials will determine a deadline for repair and finally work will begin.
Meanwhile, the POWs in new Green Hall live in fear of a prison that may crumble around them, held for a crime they did not commit.
Repair of the panels and a safety inspection of the entire structure are needed in the very near future. The administration of these tasks to the POWs and to itself.
THE FAULTY CONSTRUCTION of the panels was discovered more than a year ago, but no reason has been taken to investigate. Fortunately completed or investigated, now that the investigation is complete, repair should immediately begin. The repair should work slowly, slow the bureaucracy to a turtle's pace.
One would hope the POWs lives are endangered much longer and the whole process is hurried along to make the safe for all who pass through its doors.
Perhaps if the panels are repaired soon, the administration will be more amiable and take down the fences, thus freeing the POWs.
After all, it was not their fault the university suffered such heavy casualties in the war.
KANSAN
(USFS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and June. Subscription price $25 for six months or $35 for six years. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60945. Subscriptions pay $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglass County and $18 for six months or $3 a year in county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity door.
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The Carter administration has been unable to understand the women's movement since Carter took office, and his campaign promises to promote women's rights has been more than a superficial effort for (or against) him, and his staff are not prepared to deal with.
But after a decision by the Democratic National Committee in Memphis that guaranteed women half the delegate seats at the 1980 Democratic presidential convention, Abzug did not need to speculate too much.
Gloria Steinem, a former member of the committee and the editor of Ms. magazine, praised the committee members who resigned for "not succumbing to terminal subservience and not becoming a claique by failing to act as president, which he seemed to have in mind."
Indeed, the action by Carter last week may have put a large dent into his hopes for support by women's groups in 1980.
ABZUG, WHO joined the other resigned committee co-chairman Carmen Delgado Votat at the Democratic Midterm Conference in Memphis this December, said she would not speculate on how the rage the members would affect Carter's reelection hopes.
The recent forced resignation of the co-chairman of the National Advisory Committee on Environmental Resilience and subsequent resignation of the other co-chairman and 20 members of the 40-member committee is an excellent example of how Carter has dealt with the women's work.
ABZUG AND the committee, who have not on the best of terms with the administration from the beginning, have faced worse problems, however. Those problems indicate a serious departure for Carter from his previous committed support for the women's movement.
UNFORTUNATELY, Carter assumed that the committee's concerns ended there. He had hoped that the committee could be a tool in his commitment to the women's movement.
The chances seem good that a large proportion of the seats reserved for women will be filled with women outraged by Carter's recent actions.
With one irrational action, Carter has not only rendered useless an advisory course and needed purpose, but he has also alienated some of the most powerful women in America—women who worked hard to keep the war under control may be not willing to do the same来 1980.
Carter formed the advisory committee last spring to continue the work—and support the goals—of the National Women's Conference held in Houston in November
Because the committee has a yearly operating budget of only $300,000. Abzug and other members had worked without pay in borrowed office space and with the help of only a small staff borrowed from other federal agencies.
Still, Carter probably genuinely supports the Equal Rights Amendment and a few other highly visible issues of the women's movement.
But what happened was that the goals he saw expressed at the conference in Houston
Does Carter allow only 15 minutes for any of his other advisory council? Probably not. Not, when added to no pay, back room where a borrowed staff, the action seems believable.
The committee met with Carter Jan. 12, for one hour instead of the scheduled 30 minutes. During the meeting Carter was invited to the meeting and satisfied with the administration's
Carter's promise to women empty
He does not genuinely support the notion that a group of highly-educated women who were brought together to advise him may be able to take part in the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.
were different from the goals sought by the advisory committee.
But his understanding ends there.
In November 1978, Carter apparently was angry with the advisory committee for canceling a 15-minute meeting with him and was asking that a 15-minute meeting would be too short.
BUT CARTER, and many members of his staff, have not been committed to the women's movement in the way they first appeared to be—precisely because they do not understand the goals that they supposedly support.
relationship with the group and said the two should find better ways to work together.
Carter apparently had become angry about a press release prepared Jan. 11 to be handed out after the meeting the next day. The release included blasts at Carter's antifailion program, his proposed backups in welfare programs and his proposed inundation budget, along with criticism of other aspects of the administration's policy.
Mary Ernst
He apparently did not tell committee members—or even imply—that he was about to fire Abzug. A few minutes after a post-meeting press conference, in which she followed committee members suggestions and praised Carter's policies. Abzug was fired the next day, but a special assistant, and White House Counsel Robert林立忠 to resign or be fired.
If Carter were truly as committed to women's rights and the women's movement as his campaign rhetoric and political double talk seemed to imply, he would not
have treated the advisory committee, which contains the most outspoken and articulate leaders of groups that represent millions of American women, in the manner that he did.
CAMBODIAN REBEL
CAMBODIAN REBEL
ARMY OF VIETNAM
1234567890
Tighter controls will ease inflation
By JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
N. Y. Times Feature
TIGHTER MONETARY and budget policy are to reduce the pressure of demand, especially where—as for food, services and housing—services generally—the market is still operative.
The guidelines for prices and incomes accept that corporations and organized companies produce, and produce inflation, an acceptance of the obvious that has been unduly delayed by the theological commitment of economists to the impersonally competitive market of the
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Inflation is caused by the increasing ability of strong sellers—the great corporations, the trade unions, farmers in conjunction with the Agriculture corporation is set by boards of directors they themselves select, the numerous legislatively-aided groups—to raise their own prices and incomes. And it is caused by an aggregate of public and private demand suppliers apply at current prices. So prices are bid up.
Both causes are now operative, and president Carter has in place the elements of a national security strategy.
The guidelines remain a poor and unduly relaxed alternative to the cleaner and more effective solution of forthright controls, and the effort of administration economists to establish a system of forced by government procurement, possible consumer boycotts, threats of antitrust enforcement and promises of social excommunication is professionally unworthy and also fatuous. So is the government operated statement that controls do not work.
Now as to reservations:
ONCE FULLY in effect, controls held prices nearly stable through the vast convulsion of World War II; they decisively broke the inflationary spiral in the Korean War and pushed American forces out 1972 they brought both unemployment and inflation below the 5 percent level. They
were removed, irresponsibly, once the election was won.
Anyhow, if firm controls do not work,
what can be expected of weak ones?
Controls are only needed for prices or incomes that are set privately by—or under the government or through collective-bargaining contracts. It was learned in World War II and often then remarked that the government had to fix prices that were already fixed.
As to the upward pull of demand, there are three ways, and only three, of regulating
ONE IS by restricting expenditure and reexpenditure from borrowed funds—
The second is by restricting public spending.
The third is by restricting private consumer spending.
The administration is proposing to act only on the first two sources of demand. This
Monetary policy—the restriction of bank lending through high interest rates and higher reserve requirements—reduces producer investment more than consumer investment. The large industries as housing and other construction that do business on borrowed money.
It effectively exempts the large corporation that can invest from its own earnings, is first in line at the banks and that, in any case, can pass along the higher interest costs to the public. And the higher return on long-signed singles out the banks for special loan awards.
FINALLY, THERE is a grave uncertainty as to the relationship between any given monetary action and result. That is why it provokes such a relentlessly banal discussion as to whether it does or does not portend a recession.
Action on public expenditure—the debatably sacrosanct case of defense expenditures apart—has its primary impact on the poor.
The well-to-do can afford their own
houses, doctors, hospitals, recreation schools and colleges; they have secure jobs and incomes; and their children do not need Comprehensive Employment Training Act
Public health care, public housing, public education, youth employment and the numerous services of the modern city are important, important to the least affluent of our people.
It is easy above a certain income level to be against public spending.
THE ONLY remaining way to limit demand is by restraint on private expenditures, and this, plausibly, should be on those of the affluent.
A very modest increase in taxes on incomes above $30,000 would avoid both the dangerous and discriminating uncertainties that arise from the effects of the budget cuts on the poor.
greater. A modest restraint on upper-income expenditure and the resulting outcry should make it easier to ask blue-collar workers to accept limits on their wage incomes.
GIVEN THE sympathy now being accorded the rich, the suggestion of such sacrifice, however mild, will provoke much indignation.
It would affect fewer than 5 million tax payers (4.8 million in 1976) while bringing a measure of restraint to bear on recipients of between one quarter and one fifth of all taxable income. The effect would be to moderate expenditure on more expensive automobiles, more costly real estate, fancier drives, more expensive affordable social observances and other outlays of less than life-supporting urgency.
The incentive effect of upper-income taxation is not adverse. In times past when the taxes on higher incomes were far higher than now, economic growth was much
But it could be beneficial even for those making it. Better police and sanitation services will reduce the menace of crime in the vicinity, a venture out again at night without disguise.
The revolt of the affluent, which now has politicians so frightened, is not a violent thing. The response in the ghettoes if life gets furthered more to deteriorate might be different.
TESTIFYING BEFORE THE Joint Economic Committee a few weeks ago, Charles L. Schultze, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, warned congressional leaders in Social Security taxes—taxes that fall heavily on those of middle income and below. They are needed to limit demand. He could not, it follows, oppose a similar increase for the same purpose on top of his own second thought, would surely welcome it.
His tight-money policy is discriminatory, and, except for being uncertain as to effect, also dangerous. His expenditure cuts single out for sacrifice his strongest supporters—a politically innovative but distinctly quixotic action.
With genuine controls and restraint on spending, you will least be felt, he will spend the best of his time.
John Kenneth Galbraith, professor emeritus of economics at Harvard, is author, most recently, of "Almost Everyone's Guide to Economics."
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 a affiliate of the university, 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.
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at
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Monday, January 22, 1979
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
ersceduldandafterandon. dit
Compiled by Henry Lockard
A drafting table and the top of another table were reported taken in a burglar Wednesday night at Marvin Hall. According to the KU Police Department, during the time the police was involved, Police said a truss was used in the items, which were valued at $850.
KU police arrested a person early Friday morning in the 1500 block of Jayhawk Boulevard for driving while intoxicated.
Matthew Mahaffy, Wichita senior, reported to Lawrence police Saturday that camera equipment worth $1,100 has been taken from his room at Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, 1540 Louisiana, between Dec. 22 and Jan. 11.
Dave A. Dunn Jr., an employee at Dairy Tape, 182 W.38rd St, reported to that someone drove away with that money for $5 in gas Saturday afternoon.
Dan Vitale, an employee at Clark Oil
Co., 51 W. Ninth St., reported to Lawrence police that $2.25 in gas had been taken from that business Friday night.
A dog valued at $110 was reported taken from the back yard of Brian MacLamrocre, Topeka junior, Friday evening. A gate to the back yard of his at 637 Missouri had been opened, according to Lawrence police.
And Kent A. House, an attendant at Derby Gas Co., 3230 Iawe St., reported that someone drove off without paying for the worth of gas early Saturday morning.
Steven R. Macheers, Wichita sophomore, reported to Lawrence police that his car, valued at 4000 was taken from the library on Friday, 10:20 a.m. 18030 Naismith Drive, between 5 p.m. Friday and 2:30 a.m. Saturday. The car was stolen from 19020 Rail Court, St. Court, said the car had been locked.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: MARINE CORP OFFICER SELECTION OFFICER will be in Booth 1 of the Kansas Union from 9 to 14 to interview persons interested in the Marine Corps BASKETBALL CLUB with Ted Owens will meet at noon in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The AFFIRMATIVE ACTION ADVISOR'S ROOM will meet at 12 noon in the Council Room. THE LEGAL SERVICES BOARD will meet at 2 in the Governors Room of the Union.
TONIGHT! FACULTY RECITAL by
Katherine Hall in Swarthout or
Katherine Hall in Murphy Hall
Events
Colorado man is bound over in murder case
TOMORROW: MARINE CORPS OF-
FICER SELECTION OICHER will be
A Denver man was bound over for trial in Douglas County District Court Thursday after he was found competent to stand trial by Associate District Judge Mike Elwell.
Lee E. Harris, 28, who has changed his name to Kentar Gahjli, is charged with felony murder, kidnaping him with the death in November 1977 of Sam Norwood, manager of F.W. Woodworth Co., 911 Massachusetts to undergo mental tests earlier this month.
She said Gahji and Moore had overpowered Norwood outside the downtown store and had forced him to move. The Moore and Moore forced Norwood out of the car. Avery said she then heard four or five gunshots and only Gahji and Moore had returned to
In preliminary hearings Thursday, Terry Avery, of Denver, testified that she, Gahij and another Denver man, Dennis Moore, 23, died suddenly on Friday morning, day before and the day of Norworth's death.
Booth 1 of the Union from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE
at 7 p.m. in Room 3 of the ECOGEO CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. A WORKSHOP ON PERSONAL POWER begins at 7 p.m. in the Library. A WORKSHOP ON CHRISTIAN ATLHETS will meet at 8 p.m. in the Fireside Room at Lewis Hall.
Think
Valley West
for
Fine Arts
& Furnishings
in HolidayPlaza841-1870
Mon-Sat 10:5:30
Moore has been jailed in Colorado after conviction last month on an unrelated drug charge.
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University Daily Kansan
Whitenight's ANNUAL
town shop WINTER SALE
FURTHER REDUCTIONS FOR CLEARANCE
Most men's wear items are on sale. We will soon be remodeling to enlarge our men's wear operation. Be thrifty and save.
SUITS
• Vested • Woodens
Were NOW
$175 $117.95
205 163.95
DRESS SHIRTS
• Most Sizes
• Values to $22.50
NOW
$9.99
SPORTCOATS
* Harris Tweeds * Sheltlands
Were NOW
$110.00 $72.95
125.00 82.95
SPORT SHIRTS
• Viyella Wools • Flannels
Were NOW
$18.00 $13.50
$42.50 27.95
SWEATERS
• Entire Stock
Were $10.00-850.00
Reduced
40% & 20%
WINTER COATS
• Wool • Weather Proof
Were NOW
$ 85.00 $ 63.95
150.00 119.95
DOWN JACKETS
• Woolrich
• Prime Down Fill
Were $90.00
NOW $63.95
MOUNTAIN PARKAS
• Backpack by Woolrich
• Anorak Outer Shell
Were $47.50 to $70.00
25% OFF
JEANS-CORDS Entire Stock 1/3 OFF
Special Groups at Bargain Prices
SUITS $1/2 PRICE LINED $1/2 PRICE K.U. CAPS $2.49 JACKETS K.U. TIES $3.49
- NOT ENTIRE STOCK •NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS
•USE VISA OR MASTERCHARGE
the town shop
839 Massachusetts St.
FALLEY'S
@
LEAN-MEATY
SPARE RIBS lb. $1 09
WILSON CORN KING
BACON 12 oz. pkg. 89¢
WASHINGTON FANCY RED DELICIOUS
APPLES 10 for 79¢
SIX PACK-12 oz. cans
COCA-COLA $1 39
COORS BEER 6 pack 12 oz. cans $1 57
SUPER POP
POP CORN two pound bag 2 for 89¢
VAN CAMP
PORK and BEANS 16 oz. can 4 for $1
FOLGERS
COFFEE three pound can $6 39
FALLEY'S HOMOGENIZED
MILK full gallon $1 49
FALLEY'S WHITE
BREAD 16 oz. loaf 4 for $1
ALL BRANDS & SIZES
CIGARETTES carton $4 39
PARKAY
MARGARINE 16 oz. sticks 49¢
NABISCO SALTINE
CRACKERS 16 oz. box 57¢
2525 IOWA (Next Door to Gibson's) Open 7 a.m.-Midnight Seven Days Prices effective Mon-Tue-Wed Jan. 22-23-24 We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
$1 09
89c
49c
57°
6
Monday, January 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Snow stops Med Center projects
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
Staff Reporter
Weather problems have forced additional delays in two construction projects at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Snow has halted construction of the new Bell Memorial Hospital. And the construction deadline for the new Radiation Therapy Center has been changed for the third time, according to the radiation center's director, Carl Mansfield.
Mansfield said last week that the deadline was moved from April to May because the heavy snowfall in Kansas City stopped work on the center's roof.
The original completion date for the center was in February, but it was moved twice because of delays caused by a cement shortage.
THE ROOFING SETBACK has halted progress on the center, a five-story underground building that can facilitate treatment rooms were covered by the time the
snowstorm hit, some partitions could not be completed without a roof.
The four radiation therapy machines cannot be moved into the center until the roof is on the building. The largest machine, the $1.5 million machine arrived from Paris in late December and is being stored in downtown Kansas City, Mo., until its room is prepared. The $1.3 million machine is the fifth of its kind in the United States, made for patients with the most deep-seated tumors.
Two men from France were scheduled to arrive early this month to install the machine, but their arrival has been postponed until March, Mansfield said.
THE INSTALLATION OF a 20-million electron volt accelerator, which is used to treat patients with deep tumors who do not need the penetration capabilities of the 40-million volt machine, has been delayed because of bidding problems. Mansfield
In the original bidding a Canadian
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company, Atomic Energy of Canada, Ltd., gave the low bid for $550,000. However, Mansfield said, because there would be a better chance for federal funding for the machine if the University bought it from an independent company, the machine was out for bids again.
The Med Center owns two smaller machines, a 6-million volt accelerator and a Cobalt 60, but they will not be moved into the radiation therapy center until April.
"If we had just started roofing a few days earlier," Mansfield said, "we would have finished before the snow came, and we would still be rolling."
THE SNOW HAS also stopped all construction on Bell Memorial Hospital, which is scheduled to open in June or July, according to Vincent Cool, acting state attorney.
He said the panels that made up the outer surface of Bell Memorial were ready for inspection. In May, an investigating team found 140 cracked and chippped panels. The investigative Committee inspected the panels in October and found visible cracks still in them.
BAD WEATHER prevented most of the committee from inspecting the panels last Monday. The committee will meet today to inspect the panels and discuss the next step.
"Mr. DiCarlo can conform at his own free will because there is no time limit," he said.
Cool said that if the委员会 found the panels unsatisfactory, there was little the committee could do to get Dilcario General Contractors, Inc. of Kansas City, Mo., to comply with its demands.
Reed said the Med Center had to take special precautions because officials knew its tanks for fuel storage were not adequate. The Med Center can store 57,000 gallons on the campus, which is a five-to-seven day supply.
The Lawrence campus has 220,000 gallons of usable fuel storage capacity, which gives it a 144- to day supply.
stantly," Reed said. "We have been low on fue! oil but never to the point where it was critical."
Med Center survives fuel test
To be assured of adequate supplies, the Med Center leased two 100,000 gallon fuel oil storage tanks at the Johnson County Airport in Olathe. Reed said there were 120,000 gallons of oil on reserve there.
Footwear
Although natural gas for the University of Kansas Medical Center was cut off at a higher outdoors temperature than in previous years, the Med Center was ready with extra fuel oil and diesel to replace the vector of Facilities Operations at the Med Center, said Friday.
Staff Reporter
The Med Center and the Lawrence campus have intermittent contracts with the Kansas Public Service Gas Company that deal on gas distribution from the Lawrence Center and the Lawrence campus have been cut off since Jan. 1. Reed said the Med Center had known for almost a year that the Lawrence campus would be shut down.
By DAVID SIMPSON
BASKETBALL
OFFICIALS
MEETING
Thurs. Jan. 25
5:00 pm
ROBINSON NORTH GYM
"THE MED CENTER has tank trucks that haul oil from Olathe to the campus when supplies are low." Reed said. "These oil reserves give us additional supplies and have also enable us to buy oil when prices were lower and store oil in these tanks."
The Med Center usage rating had been changed after hearings on gas usage between the Federal Power Commission and the gas company. Many high-volume users were told that they could be to cut off from natural gas sooner to insure that residential and small commercial buildings had adequate supplies of gas for heat. Usage increases as temperatures drop.
An Evening With Brewer & Shipley with Special Guest Danny Cox
*WE KNEW we could be forced to use our fuel oil reserve more this winter so we kept purchase orders up fairly con-
SUNSHINE
FIELD
CIRCLE
SUNSHINE
Reed said that because fuel oil reserves at the Med Center were inadequate, officials had requested and had given funds to build 200,000 gallons of storage capacity on the Med Center campus next year.
The University of Kansas has a three-stage contingency plan calling for the gradual shutdown of the University if the lack of fuel supplies becomes critical.
the plan, developed several years ago, would go into effect if, during a prolonged period of cold weather, KU's gas supply would not be replenished nor will it reserve fuel oil supply.
KU could close during fuel pinch
An Evening With
Brewer & Shipley
with Special Guest Danny Cox
Take one toke over the line...
January 25th...8:00pm...in The Ballroom
Admission $3.50...Beer will be served
Tickets available: SUA, Kief's & Caper's in K.C.
SUA
A WATER POLO instructional league is now forming. This league will play each Sunday from 6-7 pm. All interested persons are advised to contact TOM WILKERSON
TOM WILKERSON
RECREATION SERVICES
864-3456
STAGE TWO calls for closing additional
Stage One calls for full operation of the University on fuel oil supplies. Thermostats in most buildings would be lowered to 60 degrees. Buildings closed under Stage One would be: Danforth Chapel; Oread Hall, 11th and Main streets; the Military Science Anexe; the KU hangar at the airport; and the No. 8 school, 23rd and Iowa Streets.
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Lawrence 2340 Iowa
buildings but keeping residence halls and classes open. Buildings closed under Stage Two would be Allen Field House and Anxen; the Continuing Education Annexes, 646 New Hampshire St. and 1246 Mississippi St.; Bank Building, 746 Massachusetts St.; Chamney Dairy, 2441 West 15th St.; the Child Research Building, 1041 Indiana St.; Robinson Gymnasium except classrooms and offices; Stone Cottage, 1144 West 11th St.; the Printing Service, 1318 Louisiana St.; Spooner Art Museum and Twente Anne.
Under the third stage, all classes would be cancelled, residence halls would close and students would be sent home. Only essential services, such as the KU Police Department and the switchboard would remain in operation.
Once fuel supplies were restored, a two-to three-week period would be necessary to raise the heat in the buildings before classes could resume.
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SEMESTER RATE
PLUS TAX
Please send payment to:
THE KANSAS CITY Student Discount STAR AND TIMES
$13.39
- MORNING - EVENING - SUNDAY
KC Star Times
17th & Grand Ave.
KC, Mo. 64108
or call 843-8481
DATE:
I agree to subscribe to the Kansas City Star and Times for the full semester at the amount upon billing by the carrier or agent. This price includes consider-able meals, other supplies suspended for holidays, toll or winter breaks and other periods when service becomes effective the date of registration and expire the last day of finals.
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22 years of
PERSONALIZED
DISCOUNT
SERVICE
EVERYTHING IN STEREC
EVERYTHING IN STEREO
STEREO CLEARANCE 40% to 70% OFF
Selected Receivers, Speakers, Turntables, Compact Stereos, TV's, Portable Tape Players.
Most are in perfect condition,some will be sold as is.
Complete listing is available in store.
★Cash only
No credit cards for this sale
AUDIOTRONICS
928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN
Monday, January 22, 1979
7
A
By RON BAIN
Canadian trip set to observe eclipse
Staff Renarter
Staff Illustration by STEVE GEIST
The last solar eclipse to be visible in the United States this century will not darken the skies of Lawrence, but will be partially visible to those who look at the right time, according to John Davidson, chairman of physics and astronomy.
At about 10.30 a.m. on Feb. 26, the moon will block about half of the sun's light over Lawrence. In Oregon and Canada, the sun will be completely blackout by the moon for about two minutes.
THE NEXT SOLAR expipe that will be visible in the United States will occur in 2017. The last eclipse seen in the United States occurred in 1970.
A trip to Manitoba, Canada, where the February eclipse will be 100 percent visible, is being planned by the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, a KU astronomy club, Davidson announced last week.
A member of the astronomy club, Don Bord, professor of astronomy, said at least 44 persons would take a bus to Brandon, Manitoba, on Feb. 23 to observe and photograph the full solar exisse.
All reservations for that bus have been all, he said, but another bus might be chartered through Mauniput Travel Agency, 900 Massachusetts St., if 25 more
persons make reservations for the Canada trip.
University Daily Kansan
ABOUT 10 KU students and three faculty members have signed up for the trip so far, Bord said.
Gerry Goetsch from Maupoutin said anyone who bought a reservation could make the trip to Canada. A round-trip ticket from Lawrence costs $129 and includes two nights lodging in Manitoba, he said.
Dave Baysinger, a Denver astronomer, said people who are interested in the moon would be able to afford a trip to Canada would see the eclipse in Colorado. He said the eclipse might darken the skies in Denver because automatic street lights come on.
People should avoid looking directly at the eclipse to prevent possible eye damage. Davidson said special telescopes, which will project an image enlace onto a white screen, will be set up on the KU campus for safe viewing.
At least three telescopes will be set up at Lindley and Wescohalls and the Daisy Hill residence halls.
The telescopes are tentatively scheduled to be available for public use between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., Feb. 26, Davidson said.
RECREATION NEWS
Intramural Basketball Info is available in the Recreation Services Office. Room 208, Robinson Center
BASKETBALL MANAGERS MEETINGS WILL BE HELD AS FOLLOW
FACULTY/STAFF BASKETBALL LEAGUE MEETING
Monday January 22 at 5 pm — Room 124 Robinson
RECREATION LEAGUE "C"
Tues., Jan. 23, 5:15 pm — Room 205 Robinson
TROPHY LEAGUE "A"
Tues., Jan. 23, 6:00 pm — Room 205 Robinson
RECREATION LEAGUE "B"
Tues., Jan. 24, 5:15 pm
DON'T MISS THESE MEETINGS
PLANT ENGINEERING
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TALENT AUDITIONS
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singers • dancers • comics • actors • jugglers • magicians • variety acts of all kindd
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H I L O S S T A R I K N
Topeka General Auditions
January 27, 1979 9:30 a.m to 3:30 p.m
Topeka Room. Holiday Inn South
Topeka General Auditions
University of Kansas
When you audition you have 3-4 minutes to speak and give a short side-by-side video to your accompaniment. However, a band will often want the singer to bring sheet music in your耳. A record player can record sheet music (and cases) that will be available
Sorry, no jobs are available for instrumentaliers!
January 30, 1979 1:30 p.m to 7:00 p.m
Big Borg. Kansas Union (Second Floor)
Registration will begin 30 minutes prior to each audition for further information and a schedule. Contact the Show Productions Department, 445 Words Way, Moulin-Marcel, MO 64181 (819) 725-5455. Ea. 216.
CASH'M CARRY
DORM-WARMERS"
AT
BUD LEYMINGS & SAMS CARPETS
WINTER
Rug Riot!
Bud Jennings & Sons Carpets has just received a huge shipment of first quality carpet remnants from one of America's leading carpet mills. And they're all on sale!!! Up to 65% off! A few minutes surveying the hundreds of color and styles will convince you that you have surely hit the jackpot! High fashion and luxury at closeout prices! Hurry in for best selection. All items are one-of-a-kind and subject to prior sale.
"A lot of flash for a little cash."
Size
6'10" x'1",
6'10" x'10",
6'6" x'10",
8'3" x'12",
5'11" x'9",
5'4" x'11",
6'10",
8'2" x'12",
5'8" x'11",
6'7" x'10",
4'1" x'6",
8'7" x'12",
6'9",
6'11" x'12,
5'x7'1,
5'4" x'12,
8'1" x'9",
6'10" x'10,
7'5" x'12,
6'10" x'6,
5'x9'1,
5'3" x'9",
6'1" x'12,
6'3" x'12,
7'x8'5,
5'5" x10,
5'1" x'11",
5'10" x'9,
5'6" x'8",
6'8'2,
8'11"9,
5'x8'2
Description Reg. Sale
brick shag $84 $40
Wedgewood blue plush $72 $32
brown mist hi-hi log $92 $45
brown sugar plush $165 $70
senic green hi-lo shag $93 $60
fern green hi-lo shag $105 $39
red plush $60 $35
spice beige hi-lo shag $120 $85
summer green hi-lo shag $65 $30
Kelly green plush $65 $32
bronze olive shag $37 $25
brown/rust geometric $182 $75
racing green shag $75 $45
Indian copper hi-lo shag $100 $85
pecan shag $39 $21
brazee sculpture $78 $21
autumn harvest shag $87 $40
chocolate plush $95 $62
red foam-backed shag $100 $70
gold dust shag $70 $41
buck shag $60 $30
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Extra funds to pay for union basement
A budget surplus of $484,130 will be used to finish the basement of the satellite union, Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration called for the basement to remain unfinished.
Lawton said KU had the surplus because bids for the project were lower than the initial allocation of $2.5 million for the structure, scheduled to be completed this spring, was insufficient.
The building is being financed by funds from the student activity fee, by transferred Kansas Union bonds and by state-budgeted funds.
Lawton said the same architectural firm that had drawn the original plans for the satellite union was making another set of plans. He said those plans should be completed in February.
BIDS FOR the project will be taken within 90 days, he said.
Lawton said that if the bids were larger than the surplus, KU would take alternate bids.
"It's unlikely we'll get more funding," he said. "The alternate bids will make it possible to award as much of the work as possible."
"We delighted that, hopefully, we're going to be able to finish this thing up," he said.
Frank Burke, director of the Kansas union, and the basement probably would have had a lot of room used for meetings and social gatherings; an activities area, into which student legal services and the wilderness discovery storage space are located; and a storage space for books, food and beverages.
He said that priorities for the 17,000-square foot basement had been set by an advisory committee of students, staff and administration officials.
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Monday Jan. 22 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
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Wednesday Jan. 24 All Campus 8:30 pm
Thursday Jan.25 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Friday Jan. 26 TGIF 4:00 pm
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8
Monday, January 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
ENGINEERING SENIORS
McDonnell Douglas Corporation is one of the Nation's leading engineering firms. Our goal is to continue to excell by developing state-of-the-art methods and equipment.
Together with other engineers, you can contribute to the development of Advanced Electronic Systems and Mechanical Systems by using the most advanced techniques.
You have spent several years to attain your degree-spend 30 minutes with a McDonnell Douglas representative and let us show you how to turn that degree into a career.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, January 22, 1979
9
145
Rare moment
wean mastich, K-State guard, is in the middle of a Darnell Valentine (14) and Tony Guy sandwich during Saturday's KU-KState game. It was one of the few times Marshmali or Guy were in action.
Snorts Writer
Bv MIKE EARLE
The KU men's swimming team climbs above the 500 mark in dual meet competition by defeating the Oklahoma State Cowboys 82-29 Friday night in Robinson Natatorium. The victory moved KU's dual score to 3-2.
"A lot of gays are working hard to make the team," Spain said. "I last year, we took Oklahoma State too lightly and they almost beat us."
Dave Killen, a freshman from Lincoln, Neb, set the new school record in the 1,000-yard freestyle despite placing second with a time of 9:44.40
Head coach Bill Spain's team won nine events, set a school record in the 1,000-yard freestyle, dominated the sprints and won many delays of the season in dual competition.
KU capped the top three places in the 200-
yard individual steve. Steve Graves led
KU also took the top three places in two other events.
Rick Jenkins won the 50-yard freestyle and Brian Collins edged two teammates to win the 100-yard freestyle. The Jayhawks also won the 400-yard medley relay in a pool record time of 32.82 and won the 400-yard relay in another pair of victories in dual relay events this season.
the way with a time of 1.57.16. Graves also won the 20xvard butterfly in 1967, settling on a 20xvard record.
Peter Bakker-Arkema, who had never swum the 200-yard backstroke for the Jayhawks in dual competition, won the 200-yard breaststroke and the 202-yard breaststroke with a time of 2:14.77.
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The Cowboys had no entrants in the diving events so KU's Kurt Anselmi and Tom Anagnos finished first and second in the one-meter and three-meter diving.
Red-hot Wildcats burn Kansas
By JOHN P. THARP Associate Sports Editor
MANHATTAN—The way Kansas State played Saturday night, the Kansas City Kings would have lost had they, instead of Kansas, faaced the hometown hot shots.
Young K-State, previously plagued by low-scoring games and hesitancy, grew up and blew up the Jayhawks, hitting an astounding 70 percent from the field and racking up a final 86-68 score. The team scored by a winner in the K-STate series.
Steve Solder, who went into the game averaging just more than 11 points and not noted to be a star, shone against KU as he took on the defense on drives and short jumpers in front of helpless Paul Mokesi. Solder scored a career-high and game-high 28 points, which, combined with Roland Blackman's career-high accounted for 35 of the Wildcats' finals.
THE MANHATTAN sharpshoters surprised the 11,200 fans present, as they improved their first half field-goal percentage from 66.7 percent (18 of 27) to 72.7 percent.
Sports
(24 of 32), for the final 70 percent, a K-State record.
S
-KANSAN-
"We were trying most everything to stop them," said KU coach Owens. "We did a very bad job inside, whereas they executed very well.
"We didn't execute very well on defense." Darnell Valentine, noted for his ball-handling ability and defensive skills, watched Wildcat guard Glenn Marshall repeatedly penetrate KU's defense and deal, outlaying a game-high eight assists.
"They were just taking the ball in on us at will," said a somber Valentine.
K-STATE, NOW tied for second in the league with a 2-2 record, played almost flawless basketball, looking like previous Wildcat championships. The Wildcats never lost control of the game, and worked with precision, speed and shooting accuracy
we repeat everything Kansas could throw at them.
Kansas threw all it had, and didn't look too bad in doing so. The big offset to that effort was K-State's excellence. KU, now tied for last in the league with a 1-3 record, to its worst league start since 1982-63, impress its goal field percentage at 46.8 percent.
"The Hawks passed the ball and worked for the best shots, something they had been urged to do by Owens, but committed 19 turnovers, a dozen on steals by the pesky Wildcats. KU could only manage eight swipes, two by usually grabby Valentine.
Owens said, "We had gone to a man-to-man pressure defense and made that court
"DEFENSIELY WE took some things away from KU." K-State coach Jack Hartman said, "which was certainly to our advantage. We took away things we thought were key differences, we didn't want certain ones doing certain things."
Hartman was obviously alluding to Valentine, KU's big-play man, who opened the second half with 10 points in just more than eight games. KU within eight, sigh. 52-44, its final challenge.
"I thought maybe we had turned the game around, but Kansas State gave a spirit of its own," he said.
Kansas State (96)
| Rating | Average |
| :--- | :--- |
| | PG | FT | REB | PF | TP |
| Guy | 7.0 | 10 | 4 | 2 | 15 |
| Crawford | 4.8 | 6 | 8 | 3 | 15 |
| Mokken | 9.1 | 18 | 10 | 1 | 9 |
| McKenzie | 9.1 | 18 | 10 | 1 | 9 |
| Valentine | 4.1 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 10 |
| Valentine | 9.0 | 15 | 1 | 3 | 10 |
| Magley | 0.5 | 1.2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Magley | 0.5 | 1.2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carroll | 0.4 | 0.4 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Carroll | 0.4 | 0.4 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Kansas ... 31 28 ... 69
K. North ... 43 57 ... 96
Blackman FL 15 FT REB PF TP TK
Marthy 10.3 14 27 19 7 2
Marylin 3.4 14 14 14 1 6
Marshall 5.9 0 0 1 1 6
Wills 4.5 0 0 1 1 6
Willis 4.5 0 0 1 1 6
Lewis 4.0 0 0 1 3 6
Nelly 3.4 0 0 1 3 6
Totals 34.4 10.3 32 19 6
Officials: Meen, Spitzer; Attendance 11,200
Technical foul: Soldier
KU whips MU for tourney title
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
Kansas was not to be denied by Missouri again.
The Jayhawks, who now have one eight games in a row, played an evenly matched game against the Tigers Saturday night in Lincoln, Neb., to win the Big Eight Sports Basketball Tournament in a game much larger than the two teams met for the year a title ago.
Last year, the Tigers held on to win 84-81.
But the Jaywawks this turned up 31-6.
***
The victory was the third of the tournament for KU, which beat Colorado 89-64 in the opening round Thursday and earned a victory, earning the chance to dethrone Missouri.
Senior Adrian Mitchell came close to repeating her performance of a year ago by leading all scorers with 20 points. She had 24 last year.
COACH MARIAN Washington said foul trouble had hampered the Jayhawks, especially sophomore Lynette Woodard, who scored in the game with a 33-point scoring average.
Woodard picked up her fourth foul with
9:41 remaining in the game. She ended the
"Ilyanne sat out a lot in the first half," Washington said, "and when she got her fourth four in the second half. What was so special about that game had to sit out. Adrian was effective for us."
game with 17 points, her lowest scoring performance of the season.
It was Mitchell who sparked KU, which led at午晖, 29-28. Her 12 points in the second half before fouling out with :55 left kept KU in the game.
Despite the fact only seven athletes played against Missouri, Washington said team depth had made a big difference in KU's tournament play.
"WHEN YOU CAN begin to get more ballplayers in, the less easy it is to key on one person," she said. "What's happening when you play at a defense of play — running and pressure defense."
Missouri scored first in the game and until a lay-up by Shyra Holden pulled KU
ahead 25-24 with 2:13 left in the first half. KU kept the one-point advantage when Pat. Mason hit a jumper with :03 left to make it 29-28.
The greatest point difference in the second half came with 8:56 to play, when
KU scored six unanswered points four minutes later to set up the close finish. The score was 61-41 with 2:22 left until Woodard left KU with 3:08 left. That basket left KU with the 63-61 victory.
WOODARD, WHO averaged about 29 points for the tournament, was chosen the most valuable player. Mitchell, who scored 31 points in all four games, joined Woodard on the all-tournament team.
Bradshaw passes Pittsburgh past Dallas
MIAMI (AP) - Terry Bradshaw fired four touchdown passes and shattered two Super Bowl passning records yesterday, leading the Pittsburgh Steelers to their third National Football League championship in a 35-31 victory over the Dallas Cowboys.
Bradshaw hit wide receiver John Stallwood on touchdown pass plays of 28 and 75 yards, found Rocky Bleier with a 7-yard pitch and connected with Lynn Swann on an 18-yarder. Franco Harris added a 22-yard touchdown run as the Steelers came from behind, then had to fly off a late Dallas scoring spree for the victory.
BADHSAW, THE NFL's most valuable player this season, passed away at a career-high 76.
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record of 520 yards, set 13 years ago in the first game of this series by Green Ray's
BUT THE Cowbies refused to let the Steelers run away with the title game even after Pittsburgh moved out to a 35-17 lead with 6:51 to play.
The Steeleers and Cowbys dazzled the near-capacity crowd of 78,656 with a pulsating first half that ended with Pittsburgh leading 21-14 and Bradshaw already in the Super Bowl record book with 233 yards in the air.
first on a third-and-9 play from the 22. When Dallas dazzled the ensuing kickoff, Dennis Winston recovered for Pittsburgh and Bradshaw struck on the first play from scrimmage, hitting Swann in the back of the end zone.
IT WAS A brilliant personal accomplishment for Bradshaw, who survived years of booing and ridicule to emerge as the most valuable player of the Steelers' defense. But with a defense but left the computerized Cowbys folded, spindled and mutilated under an
Then, after the defenses tightened in the third quarter, Pittsburgh broke open the game in the fourth quarter with two touchdowns in 19 seconds. Harris tallied the
The Cowbys scored one touchdown on Roger Staubach's 8-yard pass to Billy Joe DuPree with 2:21 left after an 89-yard drive. Then they recovered an onside kick, and for their last touchdown, passing 4 yards to Butch Johnson with 22 seconds left.
endless barrage that spread his passes all over the field.
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10
Monday, January 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
An Equal Opportunity Employer
MCAUTO PROGRAMMING CHALLENGES
The Programming Sciences area of McDonnell Douglas Automation Company has opportunities for college graduates with Bachelor or Master degrees in Computer Science, Mathematics Physics and Engineering.
INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
Opportunities to design, implement and maintain state-of-the-art graphics applications for Business and Engineering on HP-3000 Mini-Computers, IBM 370 MVS/TSO, and CDC Cyber 175 Computer Systems.
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Develop and maintain Civil, Structural, and Mechanical Engineering software.
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Work with prospective users of the System 2000 Data-Base Management System in the areas of application development, user training, documentation, and systems implementation.
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Opportunities in Robotics to develop a control language, vision techniques and control systems.
ine McDonnell Douglas Representative will be at your campus on:
Friday
January 26,1979
Make an appointment through your Placement Office to talk to us about your future or send your resume to: T. P. Stiffler - College Relations Manager McDonnell Douglas Corp. P.O.Box 516 Department 062 St. Louis, Missouri 63166
MCAUTO
' ]
Monday, January 22,197
'Hawks win indoor track opener
11
Bv GENEMYERS
Snorts Writer
KU's men's track team started its season Saturday night in Allen Field House in what could have been called a comeback meet for five Jahawks.
Kansas scored 83 points, to easily outdistance Southern Illinois and Wyoming, which scored 57 and 23 points respectively. Dauer Bauer, Lester Mickens, Kevin Newell, Jay Reardon and Steve Rainbelt all made comebacks to lead KU.
Newell, NCAA Outdoor All-American last season, and Mickens, Indoor All-American showed that injuries suffered last season caused them down. Both scored double victories.
Newell ran away from his competition in both the 60- and 440-diameter dashes. His 6.26 performance in the 60 led a KU sweep. Teammates Billy Washington and Bob Loziot completed the sweep in the 60. Newell ran the 440 in 47.84 seconds.
KSU nudges women
MICKENS CAPTURED his victories in
By GENE MYERS
The emphasis of KU's opening women's track meet was supposed to have been on individual performance. To relieve team pressure and encourage individual achievement,队 standings originally weren't even scheduled to be recorded.
But by the conclusion of Saturday's quadrametric meet in Allen Field House, that emphasis on individual efforts had taken hold, the team kept team points and Kansas State University won the final two events to edge KU 70-69. Fort Hays State University and Barton County Community College also four teams called seven and four points respectively.
Despite a few second thoughts, KU head coach Teri Anderson was pleased with her team's win.
"We shouldn't have even counted team scores," she said. "Overall, some of our individual performances were great, but K-State had an advantage because they began practicing a few weeks before us. We just weren't sharp enough."
SHOT PUTTER Linda Newell said she wasn't sharp Saturday night but that didn't stop her from breaking the KU and Allen Field House record with a winning loss of 45
tories in the 60- and 300-yard dashes, with times of 7.14 and 35.83 seconds, respectively.
THE BEST FORT Hays State could do was two second-place finishes, one in the shot put and the other in the 440. Barton County's best was a third in the long jump
Joining Green and Newell as first place finishes were Michelle Brown, in the 1,000 yard run (2:46.5); Lori Lowrey in the 60-yard hurdles (8.1), Shawn Corwin in the high jump (5-7), and Wendi Warner in the mile (5:23.5).
the 600- and 840-yard dashes with 1:12.29 and
1:15.07 times, respectively. He was pleased
with his performances, though in the 800 he
was戴ed and boxed on the inside with one
door.
"Considering it the first meet this year,
I'm happy," Mickens said, "I didn't know what to expect, and I hadn't even run a half (80) in a year.
Warner's victory topped a 1-2-3 sweep in the mile. Teamsmatter Louise Murphy and Karen Fitz finished fewer than two seconds behind Warner.
AFTER CORWIN outdued K-State's Beets Kolark in the high jump, the Wildkittens had to win the final two events to win the meet.
Janell Lavalley outkicked Hertzog and Warn to capture the 880-yard dash with a 2:19.8 time and the K-State mile relay team by downing KKU by almost three times.
In the mile, Bauer had one of the meet's most surprising performances. Not even expected to run because of a nausea operation over Christmas break, he kicked his way from the back of the pack in the final 300 wins to win going away in *i*: 16.33.
The Jayhawks will see action Saturday in Allen Field House, facing Dodge City Community College, North Texas State and Wichita State.
Reardon missed all but the first outdoor meet last year because of knee surgery. In the opening triangular meet, he was back, but he wasn't ready for long and high jumps. While his distances and heights weren't among his bests, Reardon still managed a first-place finish in the triple jump, with a 46 feet-7% effort, on the long jump, and fifth in the high jump.
LAST YEAR, Rainbolt redshirted himself
to train for the decathlon, Rainbow, the 1977 Big Eight Indoor high jump champion, tided his best jump of the young season with a second-place leap of 6-10.
Despite being pleased with his team's efforts Saturday, KU head coach Bob Timmons still is worried about injuries, especially those to freshman spinner Deon Hogan and freshman triple jumper Sanya Owolabi.
SENIOR ALL-AMERICA Anthony Coleman also recorded a double victory for the Jayhawks in the 60-yard high and 60-yard low hurdles.
KU's final two firsts were earned by freshman pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham and the mile relay team. Buckingham had little difficulty, outvaulting second-placed finisher Tiffany Jones but not losing to a foot. Buckingham cleared 16-9 and just missed 17-04, tying his career mark.
Tom Jantch, Tim Jantsch, Greg Carpenter and Stan Whitaker combined to nip Southern Illinois by a half-second in the mile relay.
University Daily Kansan
THE EMINY TAYLOR
THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE AND CAREER CENTER
OPEN HOUSE
Tuesday, Jan. 23,1979
3:30-5:00
Come by, see the center, and share plans for next semester
218 Strong
Nationalally ranked competition proved to be too much for the men's and women's gymnastics teams during the 2013 Olympics as both were defeated in dual meets.
Gymnastics teams fall
The men's team hosted fourth-ranked Iowa State Saturday and despite turning in its best performance of the season, KU lost 217-95-199.3.
Marshall Kelley's win in the high bar competition was the only victory for KU. The only other performer to place high on the podium who took second in the pommel horse.
THE WOMEN'S TEAM did not fare any better against Southwest Missouri State Friday in Springfield. KU lost 129-75-118.5.
Jackie Dipinto came up with KU's best performance, taking three place in the side-horse vaulting, balance beam, uneven parallel bars and all-round competition. Southwest Missouri is among the top 10 teams in the nation.
Meet results for KU men. High bar-1,
Kelley; Pommel horse-2; Boor-1;
Still rings-5, Rort Orman, 8.8; Vaulting-
Chris Phillips 9.3; Parallel Bars-5
Mark Folger, 8.75; All-round-4, Kelley.
49.1.
KU women's results: Side-horse vaulting — D. DiPinto, 8.35; Unewen parallel bars—D. DiPinto, 7.25; Balance beam — D. DiPinto, 7.95; Floor Exercise — D. DiPinto, 8.1; Al-round — D. DiPinto, 31.85.
Fly the jet set.
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A WINFIELD FESTIVAL IN JAN 7, No. 2 but how many games did the following perform at Birlington, Don Cony, and John Hackenbush Jan 22, 1945, Feb 13, 1946, Mar 18, 1947, Apr 30, 1948, May 10, 1949, June 1, 1950, July 1, 1951, August 1, 1952, September 1, 1953, October 1, 1954, November 1, 1955, December 1, 1956, January 1, 1957, February 1, 1958, March 1, 1959, April 1, 1960, May 1, 1961, June 1, 1962, July 1, 1963, August 1, 1964, September 1, 1965, October 1, 1966, November 1, 1967, January 1, 1968, February 1, 1969, March 1, 1970, April 1, 1971, May 1, 1972, June 1, 1973, July 1, 1974
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4. utilities
Roommate, own bedroom in 3 br. house, 19th & 18th,
$100.00 per month a 1.7% utilities. Call 615-242-3700.
Nixed a roommate $33.00/month 841-5145
1,296
examiner Mutable Bass Guitar with straps, cords,
guitars, card, and covers. Very good condition.
cards, cords, and covers.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make smiles out of Western Civilization again so some to see. For each note, for a demonstration. For rumination 31. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* and *New Analysis of Western Civilization* are published by Oread Bookshelf, tlp: 978-0-435-62151-6
SunSpeed - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
reflective. Excellent for all ages.reasonable.
1023 841-8570. 841-8570
Nakamichi 500 Cassette (row $460 for $280, for
$130 each) Minitool Microphone and Stax earphones
Mikihi microphone and Stax earphones
Apt. 2B and efficiency. Close to campus. Unit-
p3578. Clean, quiet, and comfortable Btu.
30297
Alternator, starter and generator Specialties
106-5892-3700 106-5892-3701 MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-869-3000 3000 wth. 17 hrs.
106-5892-3701 MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-869-3000 3000 wth. 17 hrs.
BONG'S at WHITE LIGHT are 19% off with this
704. Max 835. *128-138*. 1-24
1968 Camaro. Snow Tires. Kansas Inspection
$2,500. $900.00 Mileage 842-707-3001 1-25
72 VW Super Bug. Nice, clean air. Also needed
to have a spare battery. Call 841-2576. B7
TV. Call 224-841-2576. TV. Call 841-2576.
WATERED MATTHESSS $59.88, 3 yr. guarantee
AL WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 163-128, 1-24
MASTERSHIP
1970 Fender Telescopic. New lacquer finish, magnets.
Telescope $250.00, 82-519-3001 after 9 p.m. 1-24
Hockey goalie equipment. Excellent condition.
Goalie jacket. Best offer. 82-434-304
Goalie suit separately. Best offer. 82-434-304
Michigan Music, 647 Michigan, sales and
instrumental Street Music, 647 Michigan, sales and
instrumental Instrumental. Complete of string and voice
choreography.
Mavlng zaz dryer 6 months old—almost new:
Call Marilyn, 811-452-1452. Must Surrender!
Stereo system: Turntable BSNX ASE. Ampli Base 150 A. Speakers Ultrasonic 120 A. Ampli Base 49 A-1-25
Fill your place with inexpensive used furniture
242-713-2900. Help to repair
hailing wanted!) 1-23
New JCP 5.5 C邑 Cf: refrigerator/freezer Call 1-428
N4708, Mark or Dave
Single bed and dresser w/mirror for bed 842:
1812 1:26
well Mosman guitarists. I have a few very nice Mosman flat-top acoustic guitars starting in the early 1980s, which I own - Caradine, Merle Travis, Cat Stevens, & many others. They are in limited supply. Call Stuart Hammond at 718-245-7600.
74 Vegas, AC, AM-FM-2, 2 newmatts, 4 good ratings,
3 good restaurants. Home $890 after 50, business $150
after 100.
HELP WANTED
615 min. camera, Wednesday, #200 Smith, Call 272-
8165 between 7- p.m.
Found One set of keys in front of Sponsor Hall.
Night of SUM M篮球 Game. 1-24
FOUND
A student assistant for female quadriplegic student for second semester. Needed for Mon student to assist with typing papers, taking学考 to school from home, and calling the bus. Call 8432-6428 or 8431-1021 after admission.
Woman's watch found in front of Hoch. Call 841-6288.
4268. Chan
Clark opening at Overland Photo's downtown
knowledge center on Tuesday. The museum,
knowledge of camera & darkroom materials, AP-
Overland Photo's drive-up store in Holiday
Square plus all day plan for every other Saturday.
Plan all day plan for every Saturday.
Counselors wanted. Western Colorado boy's camp emphasizing outcasts and river program. The camp provides meals for children (required). Include self-addressed, banked letters to ANDERSON CAMPUS. GYMPIUM. CALDORADO.
Clerk wanted to work eveints 12-23 hrs per week. Prefer a first or second year law student. Email: clerk@varsity.edu. MEN WOMEN JOBS* CRUSE SHIPS * FREIGHTERS. No experience high pay! See Europe, Hawaii, Australia, So America Winter. Mail resume to: Clerk@varsity.edu. Box 5043, Calsus CA, 92860. 4-17
G. P. Loyle's is now hiring cocktail waitresses and dancers, and D.J. & X. Experience prefers 200hrs or more of experience in the job offered.
Part-time job: Excellent pay work what is required of a full-time job. Obtain experience in turning next week. Please send resumes to the following address.
Cabaret-Hotels, fine area restaurant; must be 25 years old or older. Offer over 21, part-time, evening meals. $79-$109 per night.
J.B's Big Bay now taking applications for full
& part time employees - Angela in person
Afternoon clerk position at Quick-Ship Photo-Shop, 937 out West in the Hillcrest shopping area. Heat 280° C on Monday-Friday and 175° F on Saturday. Startup费 $2.70. Apply in person 1741; Mass. 1-23
The Lawrence Open School has a limited number of scholarships and a private tuition. Tuition from $0.50 to $120.00 per semester. Scholarships are available. Stimulating open concept education is the core focus of the school's basic skills, individualized instruction, and experiential learning.
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Access from labcad
Batteries .301
Hitway 40 N. Lawrence Across from cabot's
Immediate openings for person to work with a quadripartite female in nursing home, be ready to assist residents with care & evenings & week nights. Provide own transportation. 943-6511 before 4:30 p.m. A1-23
Bureau of Child Research has opening for full-time research assistant in the Department of Computer Data analysis, experience with computer data analysis, experience in background in the social sciences, experience in cognitive processes. Must be able to work well with other students. Must be capable of starting data approximately February 29, 1972. Starting date approximately February 18, 1973. To apply, contact Mildred July 11, Haworth, telephone number 607-524-2600. Bureau of Child Research is an independent organization. Bureau of Child Research is an independent organization.
New taking applications for Fountain & Grill
Office. Apply online at www.fountainandgrill.com.
Apply in person at Virtus Restaurant 1287
WANTED: Students for part-time jobs in Life
Science. You must be able to read, write,
while you learn how to use our Internship pro-
gram, and attend the 2012 Summerdefend or
2013 Summerdefend, or call Robert L. Shields,
Bank Building or 229 Bremen Building, Otwyn-
nigh
Graduate Assistant to the Executive Vice-Chairman. Numerical aptitude, good writing ability and experience. F Y 20 appointment午班 $460/month monthly salary. June 14, 24, 1979. Contact Marcia Wolf. 201. Strong communication skills. Employer. Qualified man and woman of all races and persons with disabilities are encouraged. F Y -23
LOST
Large reward for ladies' surpiration
Ring. No question: 864-5855. Lost before:
Chrysta 24.
Zone. gloves. RH W/Learther palm, 1/16 in
Zine. plaque. wear at E.O. Electric shop. 1-25
MISCELLANEOUS
TIBESI BINDING COPYING - The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for desks binding and copying in Lawrences to help at 838 Maa. or phone 416-350. Thank you.
NOTICE
PERSONAL
Gay Services of Kansas—general meeting, Jan
23, 7:36. Kansas Union Jawshawk room, 1-23
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER wishes to welcome all new and returning students for the spring semester. Meet us on Monday, Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Closed Monday. Come down and browse our books. Join us in town—both hard cover and 1-piece price books. Remember, they, we buy books every day!
Color Photography, Shirts, Prints. You name it. Highest quality, good prices, fast delivery. 1-25
Margaret Berlin and George González are running for student body president and vice president. They are interested in your ideas. Margaret González 434-845-6001. Paid for by the Step Coalition. 1-23
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to
17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Child,
Counselors Total Ligation. For appointment
in March 2008, at 346-349, 406-411,
50. Overland Park, Ks. W 1-23
DARKROOM - SUA provides a complete photographic darkroom (the chemicals and paper) for the study of light in various environments.
Back by Bucky daily for Peep Hour 3-4 P.M.
Small-Shop; Medium-Space; Large-Space; 9th
& 11th Street, 20th Avenue, 67th
& 85th St., New York City.
BARGARIN SPECIALS 6-10 Mon. Time and
Dinner at BARGARIN SPECIALS
MARGARINE DELIVERY Wed. 8:30 to 11:30
elfewers
$1 PITCCHERS every Friday afternoon from 2.6 at the Harbour
TIG O BITTEN AND DINNER.
Desselecione!
4:30 - 10:00
Only at
Flamantine
50th N. 9th
Sd. N. Lawrence
N. Lawrence
Operation Friendship's planning meeting will be held at the New York Museum of Art, where attendees and anyone interested in cross-cultural attendance and any interest in cross-cultural information. Come with creative ideas and a real experience. At the center 1629 West Ninth Avenue, New York, NY 10024. Experience experiences. At the center 1629 West Ninth Avenue, New York, NY 10024. Experience experiences. At the center 1629 West Ninth Avenue, New York, NY 10024. Experience experiences. At the center 1629 West Ninth Avenue, New York, NY 10024. Experience experiences.
TAN MAN—Where are you?—Dad. 1-22
SERVICES.OFFERED
Relax. Let me type your term papers, dissertation
minit. fare Fast Service. Mr. 842-1561
910-763-9101
Import care-provided service by factory
careers for immediate appointment at 843-750-
2960 or by phone at 843-750-2961.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uribe/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
EXPERT TUTORIALS: MATH 102-112, cell 844-5722;
EXPERT TUTORIALS: COMPUTER SCIENCE 102-112,
cell 843-6098;
EXPERT TUTORIALS: COMPUTER SCIENCE 102-112,
cell 843-6098;
EXPERT TUTORIALS: PHYS 102-112, cell 843-
6098;
PHYS 102-112, cell 843-
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can
help you with your math or CB problem. Please
Browse Bice 841-1479.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. ff
Typist/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Excellent work, reasonable rates. Thank you. Discretion welcome. wfz@ibm.com
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Master's degree. Law papers, term papers, MPA
widely. 842-763-9111.
Experienced Typist - term paper, beats, mills,
spelling, lettering, spelling, spellings, spelling
corrected 814-5254, Mrs. Wright
Experienced typist with scientific background
IBM递交 Selectrix II Calm Jas 843-812-312
http://www.ibm.com/selectrix
Will do typing on electric wire typewriter.
Provide service.professing.Call Me Hoyes-
247-850-1941
REWITING EDITING.-Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an even more effective form. You are encouraged to think with precision and smoothness. Outlining of texts and articles also available. E-mail us at rewritings@ucr.edu.
HOME TYPING SERVICE - Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced secretary in her home. For information call 843-2180, after 5:30 a.m. weekend weekend. 843-2180, after 5:30 a.m. weekend weekend. 1-26
WANTED
Female remount for Jayahawk Towers $95 all-
uplies paid $433-3025. 1-23
Gay Male to share large 3 BR apartment with 2 gay students. $700 plus 1/3 utilities. Must be non-smoking and agreeable. Write Aorta, Phone # 1-877-417-1122. Include name and phone number. 1-23
Roommate wanted to share house, furnished.
Contact Jim Meyer at 842-219-1.
1-23
Roommate: Share 2 bedrooms. Agt. $50 per month.
u. 2311 Alabama. Cik. Call after 6am.
b. 717-490-8133. Call to roommate.
Female: roommate needed: 3 Bri Dep. $90 • 1/2-3/
utilities. Call 841-2427 morning calls.
Female Roommate need'd quick! Call Julie:
841-2130
1-23
HEAD START NEEDS YOU... volunteer to help a child in need; aid 2 hrs for each day clinic. Located at 901 S. 74th St., Chicago, IL 60611.
Want to each customer create! If so, Registration is complete and you will be able to receive a welcome card. The Restoration Services, www.rst restoration.com, and call 518-604-2390 for more information.
THE MOFFET-BEERS BAND is now building
the moffet-bers band. Call 824-5068, 824-9234
keyboard for more information. Call
824-5068, 824-9234
Student wanted to share 2 benches, but with max
quantity of 10. Available Feb 12 $10.00* = *utilities*
on site.
Female Romanee wanted. Wanted $83 a month.
1/13 utilities, 852-2641.
1-26
Wanted. A roommate for furnished 2 BR apt.
$125.00, $415, utilities, 888.88.
Formalmente konnte to share two bedrooms apart-
ment, a bathroom, a kitchen, a smoker,
clean and dry. Call Michelle at 802-345-7611.
Wanted. Two rooms for apartment at Jay-
hawer Tower. $50 a month all utilities paid.
$1,300 a month of rent.
One or two rooms needed for attractive
Trilattice Townhouse. Negotiable. 814-0323
12
Monday, January 22, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Cancer .
From page one
were household talk, which it is to the parents of a cancer patient.
The parents also must face tremendous financial problems.
Pearson begins teaching class as visiting prof
Former U.S. Senator James Pearson will begin his stem cell research at the lecturer at the University of Kansas.
Pearson will lecture to the 11:30 a.m. "Legislatures in the United States" class taught by James Drury, professor of political science.
Pearson, who turned down an offer to teach the class jointly with Drury, will be lecturing to the class at least 10 times this semester.
Pearson also will be lecturing to several other political science classes this semester. He has not established a definite schedule because of commitments in Washington, D.C., that will keep him commuting between the south of Baltimore and the nation's capital.
In addition to his class lecture, Pearson will speak about the Strategic Arts Limitation Talks at noon Wednesday at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center,
The talk will open KU's Wednesday Forum lecture series for the spring semester. The talk is free and open to the public. Lunch will be brown-bag style.
Late returnees increasing KU housing hassles
Approximately 40 students are living in temporary housing even though some KU residence halls are not full, Fred was one of the residents of residential programs, said Friday.
The 40 students cannot move into permanent housing until the office of residential programs knows whether all of them will with housing contracts are returning.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said, "As soon as we have the shakedown of who is coming back and who isn't, we will have a permanent space for everyone on tem-
GEORGE EDWARDS, assistant director of residential programs, said his office had hoped to confine all temporary housing to McCollum Hall. But because of the number of people needing housing, he said, it was easier to use Oliver and Hashinger balls, also.
Dave Romano, resident director at McColum Hall, said housing was tight there. He said he did not know how many residents were staying temporarily.
"We have people in end rooms, which aren't usually used for residents. The rooms are used as guests rooms or study rooms most of the time." Romano said.
Wilson said the persons living in the end rooms at McColm Hall were there for them.
"THERE ARE some people who need what we叫 "landing room" housing. This is a place to live while they are looking around campus. This is probably what the end rooms at McColllum are being used for." Wilson said.
Romano said landing room housing was used more often during semester break.
"Most people want out of the end rooms as soon as possible," he said.
. .
First, Cairns said, there are the medical costs. She said a clinic visit could cost as much as $200 and sometimes there were two visits a week.
THEN THERE are the non-medical costs, which cannot be paid in installments or by insurance companies, as medical costs can be, she said.
These are what Cairns called the "little things," such as money for travel to the Med Center and the long-distance phone calls to the family at home. Children who lose their hair need wigs, and those who gain weight need two or more wardrobes.
Cairns said she surveyed 70 families of children with cancer last year and found that as much as 25 percent of the weekly family income was spent on non-medical but
The parents appeared to accept their financial burden with the same passivity with which they accepted their children's disease. They all said the group sessions
The children attend group sessions, or "play therapy" sessions, to help them understand and accept their disease. They are not required to receive cancer, including the possibility of death.
THE CHILDREN also must accept the deaths of the other patients, who often have become their friends. Cairns said they are still devastated by their death calmly but with some curiosity.
"It's very frightening to them; it also sad," she said. "It's especially hard for the parents because they want to protect their kids.
"Mostly the kids want to know. The younger ones let it drop, then they come back to it. They have to take the information in whatever quantity they can manage."
The children, like other children, like to ask questions.
"Our daughter asked us when she could take off her wig," one father said. "She was so proud of the little bit of fuzz that was growing back, so we told her she didn't have to wear it. Her excitement was really a thrill for us."
Cairns said she had noticed that children
cried in a different manner than they had in
one.
"Children used to die panicked, screaming because they were afraid to die," she said. "Now they've had a chance to see the death of death. They know what to expect."
Wage, price director offered KU position
A Regents Distinguished Professorship at KU will be offered to Robert Russell, deputy director of the federal office of Wage and Pay. Mr. Russell is a regents decided Friday at its monthly meeting.
If Russell accepts the position, he will teach economics and possibly some business courses during the 1979-80 school year.
Russell, 40, is a professor of economics at the University of California at San Diego. He was on the professional staff of the Council of Economic Advisers in 1983 and 1986.
In other business, the board decided it would hear a report next month from its building committee on possible sites for a permanent home for the Wichita branch of the U.S. Air Force. The committee plans to inspect the sites listed in a report by KU officials.
The board will not recommend a site next month to the Kansas Legislature, Frank Lowman, chairman of the board, said. He said the board would have to estimate the cost of locating the branch at each of the sites before making a recom-
The Wichita branch is housed in the E.B. Allen Memorial Hospital. The state rents space in E.B. Allen from Sedgwick County, which owns the hospital.
The board also approved a request by KU to renovate six laboratory rooms in Snow Hall. The renovation will cost about $11,000, and the building will be funded from the National Science Foundation.
The board also voted to request up to $25,000 from the Legislature to pay for a study of a voluntary early retirement plan for faculty.
The board will hold its next meeting Feb. 16 in Wichita.
Operation Friendship
Building Bridges Between Cultures Planning Meeting Tonight 7:00 p.m.
at the Center, 1629 W. 19th
All regular members are asked to attend, and anyone interested in cross-cultural learning is invited to come for more information.
Partially funded by Student Senate
POSITION OPENINGS
1979-1980
K. U. Residence Halls and Scholarship Halls
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS must be sophomore, junior, senior, or graduate student for 1979-80 academic year
ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTORS must be graduate or fifth-year student for 1979-80 academic year
SCHOLARSHIP HALL RESIDENT DIRECTORS
must be graduate or fifth-year student
for 1979-80 academic year
All applicants should evidence above-average academic achievement, residential group-living experience, and availability for the entire 1979-80 academic year (August-May). Applications and job descriptions available now in the Office of Residential Programs, 123 Strong Hall.
FEBRUARY 15, 1979, for Residence Hall positions
FEBRUARY 28, 1979, for Scholarship Hall directors
APPLICATION DEADLINES:
BISSING, WHO USES a wheelchair, said he missed 11 of 13 classes one week last month.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER. APPLICATIONS ARE SOUGHT FROM QUALIFIED PEOPLE REGARDLESS OF RACE, RELIGION, COLOR, SEX, DISABILITY, VETERAN STATUS, NATIONAL ORIGIN, AGE, OR ORCINESTRY.
New van serves handicapped
A custom-made van is providing door-to-door service for nine KU handicapped students, according to Bob Turvey, the director of the Student Assistance Center.
The new transportation program for the handicapped began last Wednesday and will continue until the end of March. The program will be reviewed then by the Student Senate.
By CAROL BEIER Staff Reporter
Tom Bissling, president of KU Students Concerned with Disability, said he would not be surprised if KU's handicapped number increased because of the service.
The Senate allocated $2,500 last semester to operate the program. The state had purchased the van for $19,000.
Bissing and Harper said they would support expanding the program to include more students and a longer period of operation.
"WE ARE SCHEDULING around the specific needs of the students using the service, and it is much more personalized than the regular bus service." Tervue said.
The van, which is specially equipped with an electric lift for wheelchairs, carries the students from their homes to class.
that the handicapped busing service had a more urgent need for the transporation.
The van was bought from Collins Industries in Hutchinson, to use for field trips, according to Mike Harper, student body president.
"The van was virtually idle," Harper said, "so we convinced the administration
films sua
Tuesday, January 23 LITTLE CEASER
Dir. Mervyn LeRoy, with Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Fairbanks, Glinda Farrell. The Gangster film that wrote the vocabulary for the genre.
Wednesday, January 2
Truffaut:
THE WILD CHILD
Dir. François Trulauf; with Francois Truffaut, Jean-Pierre Carpentier. Photography by Nestor Almendros ("Days of Heaven"). Francesubtiles.
Friday & Saturday January 26 & 27
GONE WITH THE WIND
Di. Victor Fleming with Clark Gable, Vienna Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland. "3:30 & 7:45, Friday matinee will be held in the Forum
Midnight Movie:
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
(1968)
(1950)
Dir. George Romero; with Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea. The Complete Uncut Version. 12:10 a.m.
Monday, January 29 BETWEEN THE LINES
(1977)
Dir. Dron Micklin Silver ("Hester Street"); with John Hearn, Gwen Lindsay; Lindsey Court; Jeff Goldman; Jim Dougherty and the Asbury Jules 7:"30 and 9:30.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7.30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING
Introductory session Jan. 28, 1979 Sunday afternoon, 1:30-5 Kansas Union—
Jayhawk Room
Open to all KU students call 864-3552 for more information
KU HANG GLIDING MEETING
Wed. 7:30 p.m.
2002
Learned Hall
Everyone Welcome
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
MAKING A BREAK
MaupIntour
Travel Service
can make your travel or
rangements quickly, efficiently,
and at NO CHARGE to you.
843-1211
K.U. UNION/DOWNTOWN
THE MALLS
Maupintour travel service
MEN and
WOMEN'S
Precision
Hair
Cuts
only
$7.00
shampoo and
drugging extra
shampoo and blow drying extra
1987
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
PE
Call 843-3034/9th St. Center/9th & Illinois
Film & Paper Special
ZERCHER
PHOTO
"We Handle Everything Photographic"
$3
Towel or
Good Dove
$3
Authorized By
Zercher Photo No. 4
$3
This Coupon Good For
$3.00
Toward the purchase of 100' roll of film
or 100 sheet box of Kodak paper
$3
Good at both Lawrence Zercher Photo Stores
Downtown 1107 Massachusetts and
Hillcrest Center 919 Iowa
$3
Authorized By
Zercher Photo No. 4
Expiration 2-9-79
Two Locations Near Campus
Downtown 1107 Massachusetts
Mon-Sat
9:30-5:30
Hillcrest Center
919 Iowa
.
SAT 10-6
.
Tavern's license under scrutiny
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
Staff Reporter
From the outside it looks empty. There are no cars in front and only one is parked along the side. There isn't much room for cars, but it doesn't matter because most of Uncle Mily's customers walk to the tavern at 2448 Barker St. anway.
That is one reason why Haskell Indian Junior College officials across the street would like to see Uncle Milty's license to sell beer revoked. They say students crossing 23rd Street could get injured or killed.
"It's just a place to go," said Julie
Some of the neighboring residents agree with the officials. But many of its patrons don't really care whether Uncle Tom was killed, they would just go somewhere else.
It's just a place to go, said Jane.
And Marlon he didn't go to Uncle Milty's for the beer anyway.
"I come here for the girls," he said.
Others say students need a place like Uncle Milly's to socialize.
FRANK L. QURING, dean of students at the junior college, said, "It creates a problem if students are congregated in too big a number there. They loiter outside and residents of Oceansa-Keokuk feel comfortable coming home at night."
Uncle Milly's is directly around 23rd Street from Osceola-Keokuh Hall. Many customers go there because it is close to the airport. They fully aware of the threat to its license.
At last week's city commission meeting, Haskell officials told commissioners a city ordinance that tars the sale of beer or liquor within 400 feet of a school. But they said their main concern was the location caused problems at O.K. Hall.
He owns several other taverns and said, "I have less trouble there than anywhere in town.
"It's just a place to hang around. To meet people," they say.
That is part of the problem, Haskell officials say.
"OTHER INDIAN bars have lots of trouble," he said. "One of the reasons I get a license to sell beer was because much trouble in the other Indian bars."
Millon Collins, owner of Uncle Mily's,
said, "There's nothing wrong with drinking
3.2 beer. Because I sell beer is no sign
there will be trouble."
Only a few students view possible revoilment of Collins' license as an infringe-ment, and many are not Indian, said that if he lost his license, "They're saying the Indian is not Indian."
He said the officials at Haskell were treating the students like children.
"They're all 18 or older."
Collins said he did not serve drunks, permitting fight or allow marijuana in Umi Lilly's. Although he does not stay in jail, he is always out and out. I'm always there at closing time.
And although Collins said he sold food as well as beer, it is the "Bar" in the yellow "Uncle Mily's Bar and Grill" sign that draws customers.
Students with pitchers and cups of beer crowd into the small room, clustering around a table for banners, standing against the walls and leaning on a pinball machine. In one corner, football players look for other sports teams; every one talks over the resounding jubilation.
UNCLE MILTY'S has been in business since 1972 and it began selling beer in April 1976.
"They come over here for a sandwich and to play pinball or foosball," Collins said.
But a student resident assistant at O.K. Hall said he seldom saw anyone eating at Uncle Mily's.
"They go to drink." he said.
He was one of several students at O.K. Hall who said they would prefer that Uncle Milty's not serve beer.
"But," he said, "I do enjoy going there."
Several O.K. Hall residents go to Uncle Milly's, but it is students from other halls who cause the problems in O.K. Hall. Milly, with a student resident assistant in the hall.
Steel Photo by ALAN ZLOTKI
Residents of the residence hall for men and women said other Haskell students often passed into O.K. Hall on their way back to their own residence hall.
But some students said they were not sure that eliminating Uncle Milty's would help.
Sometimes they pick fights with O.K. Hall residents. Galbreth said.
Students have been hurt badly enough by past fights to require a trip to the hospital they said.
"MOVING IT wouldn't solve the problem," said Galbreath. "The problem is with the few students who do not use good judgment.
Mike Gomez, the only sophomore live at O.K. Hail and a member of the student body, was not served at Uncle Milly's, students would go to Insight, a disc at 2025
Several students said part of the problem was that there were no activities on the Haskell campus.
"For some of them," he said, "this is the first time they have been out on their own."
See MILTY back page
MILTY'S
BAR + GRILL
Milton Collins, who has owned "Uncle Mily's Bar & Grill" since 1972, awaits a decision by the Lawrence City Commission that will tell him if it permissible to sell alcoholic beverages within 40 feet of an educational institution. "Uncle Mily's' s" is located across the street from Haskell Indian Junior College.
Troubled tavern
The Representative Goes to Washington 10 ft Tape Adjusting to Congress (Internal View)
Changes in U.S. Congres
Seniority Rule
Demo Caucus
Congress Watergate
M
Washington wisdom
KU campus yesterday, lecturing to a political science class in Blake Hall. See story page six.
Former U.S. Senator James B. Pearson made his first appearance as a teacher on the KU campus yesterday, lecturing to a political science class in Blake Hait. See story page six.
Staff photo by BILL FRAKES
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 78
KANSAN
Tuesday, January 23, 1979
Severe winter taxes fuel budget
By DAVIDS SIMPSON
Staff Renorter
The severe winter has forced the University of Kansas to overpass its fuel all budget by $17,000. Martin Jones, director of business affairs, said yesterday.
"The University has spent about $300,000 for fuel oil this winter," Jones said. "There was no way the fuel oil budget could be covered by usage depends entirely on the weather."
The University has been using fuel oil reserves to heat the campus since Jan. 1. Fuel oils cost the University about $85 at least twice as much as natural gas costs.
The University has an intermittent contract with the local gas company that allows service to be cut when demand is low. If the demand drops, the contract when it will be put back on natural gas. Yesterday, the University had about a five day supply of fuel oil left in its storage
JONES SAID he was confident money would be allocated by the Legislature to fund the school.
"After the energy shortages a few years ago, the utilities budget was separated from the budgets of other University operations." Jones said. "In this new budget, if the University had money from its utility budget left over, it would return it to the
state. If it used more than was budgeted, the state was supposed to help cover the costs."
Jones said the University had anticipated the additional cost of fuel oil and send in a supplemental request last summer to increase the utilities budget by $61,000. However, the legislative budget meeting meeting with the utilities budget be reduced by $711,000.
Gov. John Carlin will be making his budget presentation today in Topeka and Jones anticipated that Carlin would support the University's requests.
"The chances are good that the University will get the supplemental funds we requested," Jones said. "We met with Gov. John Carlin and the budget director last
December and told them the problems we found in regard to heating the University.
December and told them the problems we found in regard to heating the University." Jones said it was very important that the utilities budget not be reduced.
"The budget director made his recommendations before KU was placed on fuel oil Jan. 1," he said. "The idea of the new budget was that the Legislature would pay for our utilities so that we wouldn't have to touch other programs."
Jones said the Legislature would not decide whether funds would be appropriated until March. If funds are not appropriated, it would depend on the official administrative officials will meet and determine what reductions will need to be made to compensate for additional open budgets.
Administrators fear cutbacks in KU budget
By BILL RIGGINS
Staff Renorter
Administrators at the University of Kansas, worried that the proposed KU budget may suffer at the hands of Gov. John Carlin and the Kansas Legislature, are considering where the ax might fail.
Some administrators fear that the formula funding proposal, by which KU justified its budget request, will be rejected. This could result in substantial cutbacks in the KU budget.
They may get some idea of proposed cuts when Carlin makes his budget recommendation to the Legislature at 11 p.m. on Friday.
Formula funding is a new method for figuring the budgets of Kansas Board of Regents schools. The system compares the financial status of a university in seven program areas to other "beer schools" of similar size.
KU's budget proposal indicated that compared with similar universities, KU was underfunded by about $4 million. KU has requested about $225 million for fiscal 1980 for the Lawrence campus and the Med Center.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS have indicated in the past
Advocates of the proposal have said it would allow funds to be used more efficiently. Opponents say it too expensive.
that they did not think Carlin would be in favor of the formula funding proposal.
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor, said he hoped that the Leissature would not reject the concent.
"If the whole concept is rejected by the Legislature, it will be extremely difficult for the University," Shankel
"Our whole budget request for next year was built on the formula funding concept after we had been authorized by
Caligar, vice chancellor for academic affairs; reinjection of the concept would be a 'never network to the world' (Pearson 2015).
"Everybody will get hurt. Everybody will be worse off," he said.
Calgard said a substantial cutback in the CU budget would force him to reduce the amount of money he had for the food bank.
"OUR EQUIPMENT budget is simply not adequate," he said.
Another area that would suffer, Calgair said, would be support services, such as salaries for clerical help and medical assistance.
He said a budget cut also would hinder funding to be used to improve Watson Library.
tribute woulid be missed.
Davie Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said
plans to expand placement services, career development programs, student orientation programs and the information center probably would have to be revised if the proposed budget were substantially cut.
Ambler said a list of priorities would have to be made to decide which programs were most necessary.
"Those would be very difficult decisions," Amler said.
"Admissions and records and financial aid are essential services, but almost all programs have a degree of necessity in helping students."
Although administrators seem pessimistic about the future of formula funding and the budget, they say they don't know that Carlin would recommend in his budget address to the Legislature.
RICHARD VON ENDE, executive secretary of the University, said he thought it would take time for legislators to realize the worth of the formula funding system.
"I don't know what to expect," said Von Ende. "I have a feeling that formula funding is not going to be accepted."
Dick Wintermorte, director of the KU Alumni Association and official lobbyist for KU, and he thought formula fun
"It does cost quite a bit of money to bring the University of Kansas up to standard with other universities," he said.
From Staff and Wire Renorts
Funds to complete the Clinton Lake project, west of Lawrence, are in President Carter's 1980 budget proposal. The proposal would allocate $2.25 million to Clinton from more than $25 million designated for Army Corps of Engineer projects in Kansas.
Clinton Lake, a $75-million project, is about 90 percent finished, according to Wayne Cook of program development in the Kansas City district office.
Victor Counts, the project director, said yesterday that he did not force any
The money would be used to complete the public recreation areas already under contract. Counts said the lake would be completed by the spring of 1980.
"Once a project has gotten under way,
Congress usually combines allocating funds
into separate bills."
"We are on a schedule and as long as we are funded we'll keep right on working. Right now we are on the tail end of the project."
BEVERLY BRADLEY, chairman of the Douglas County Commission, said, "I am elated that we got the funds. We thought that they would come through."
The 880-million project is nearly 60 per-
The El Dorado Lake project, the largest of the Kansas projects, also has been allocated funds under the president's proposal. It would receive $10.8 million for continued construction if Congress approves the proposed budget.
complete and is expected to be finished by 1981.
Harold Chitwood, engineer at the EI Dorado Lake project in south-central Kansas, said the dam on the Walnut River has a 400,000 acre lake for swimming and boating.
However, delays have set back the completion date. In 1973, the corps delayed
The idea for Clinton Lake was first mentioned in an 1855 newspaper article. The Army Corps of Engineers included plans for the lake in the State Plans Act in 1965 to provide food control, water supply, recreation and a fish and wildlife refuge.
WORK ON the project began in 1971. The project was originally scheduled to be completed by the end of 1982.
work on the project for one year to take a public opinion poll about recreational use of the lake. In 1974, impoundment of water to begin in 1976, was postponed until 1977.
When the project is complete, the lake will cover 7,000 acres and provide recreation for many visitors.
A four-lane access road that essentially could be an extension of Iowa and 23rd Street at the end of the street, said the project for the access road, Clinton Parkway, was unique because it involved a multi-lane freeway.
She said it was too early to comment on how the allocations of funds from the president's budget proposal would affect the date for starting construction.
2
Tuesday, January 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and ware reports
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
N.J. tenement fire kills seven
JERSEY CITY, N.J.-Northern New Jersey's second tenement fire in three days killed five children and two adults yesterday.
Suspected killer rive enquirerman two adults you suspect Police launched a manhunt for an arsonist who may have touched the building
Some of the victims were seen pounding on a window shortly before firefighters arrived, but apparently were overcome by smoke when they tried to open the windows.
in fortune New Jersey City Police Detective Howard Shea said authorities knew of no motive
the police had not suspected it was the work of an arsonist.
The fire brought the death toll to 40 persons killed in fires attributed to arson in northern New Jersey during the past six weeks.
reach a fire escape, accrumbing to Debby's car underwater.
While the pre-dawn blaze swept through the tentement, a demolition crew in Hoboken, New Jersey, searched for two bodies missing after another fire that claimed at least 19 lives.
Romb blast in Beirut kills 8
BEIRUT, IBRAH - A bomb blasted rip apart an automobile in Beirut's Moslem sector yesterday, killing eight persons, including Yasser Atsar's top ally, Hamza al-Bashir.
security officer, on Hassan's station. Organization Organization a parked car exploded as Hassan's station wagon passed it after leaving his home. The PLO reported that the explosion occurred at the station.
Hassan, the reputed mastermind of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre, died shortly after being rushed to a Beirut hospital.
street and pushed to the side of the building,
others killed by the explosion included four Palestinian bodyguards and three bastanders.
State staus out of investigation
WICHITA—Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan recommended yesterday that federal authorities investigate allegations of police brutality against three black youths in Wichita last month.
After meeting with black community leaders and law enforcement authorities, Stephan concluded that the state should not enter the case.
fourteen law enforcement Task Force, a black community group, asked for an investigation of what it alleges were acts of police brutality and racism during the attack.
The group also charges Police Chief Richard La Munyon and Sedgwick County District Attorney Vern Miller with obstruction of justice by covering up or disregarding evidence concerning the arrests.
Germans televise 'Holocaust'
BONN, West Germany—West German police guarded TV transmitters against possible sabotage of the first telecast last night of "Holocaust," which was on May 15.
Chief Federal Prosecutor Kurt Rebmann said police suspected that neo-Nazis were responsible for last Thursday's bombing of a transmitter that canceled transmission of a documentary on World War II death camps.
High court to rule on Laetrile
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court, stepping into a medical and legal storm of controversy, said yesterday that it would decide whether the federal government may ban Laetrile, a substance that is derived from a chemical found naturally in apricot and peach pits.
The justices voted to study lower court rulings that have permitted the substance's use by terminally ill cancer victims.
The justices' eventual decision may hinge on the privacy rights of cancer victims and whether the government may be available to provide such information, there is no known cure.
KC still in race for GOP site
WASHINGTON- Although reports from Republican party sources indicated yesterday that Detroit and Dallas were the leading sites for the 1980 Republican national convention, problems in both cities have brought Kansas City back into consideration.
Along with Kansas City, New Orleans is in contention for the site. New York, Miami Beach and Minneapolis-St. Paul have been virtually ruled out.
The GOP site selection committee made a final review of all the convention bids last night and will vote its recommendation today.
Rains cause Conn. emergency
HARTFORD, Conn.—Gov. Ella Grasso declared a state of emergency yesterday in Connecticut, where more than four inches of rain fell in an 12-hour
Swollen rivers receded Sunday as the Northeast struggled to deal with flooding caused by the heavy weekend downpour. Families in three New England states were forced to flee their homes, while air, auto and rail traffic were tangled by the storm.
At least 19 persons were killed in the storm.
Derailment releases chemicals
TIE SIDING, Wyo.—Three railroad tank cars filled with solid phosphorus derailed and burned yesterday, sending a billowing chemical cloud into the air and forcing the evacuation of about 38 persons.
Firefighters and Union Pacific chemical engineers decided to let the fire burn itself out. The cloud, which could cause eye irritation, later was dispersed by
Five persons were hospitalized for minor injuries.
Five people were hospitalized because of the phosphorus was toxic, Laramie, Wyo., civil defense spokesman Bob Middleton said the clouds were not
Officials said between 25 and 30 cars of the 116-car train left the tracks. The cause of the derailment was not immediately known.
KSU student held in shooting
MANHATTAN—Marvin Farris, 23, a senior at Kansas State University, was ordered bound over for trial yesterday on a charge of second-degree murder in a case involving an unidentified man.
set the date. District Judge Harlan Garian was said despite discrepancies in the alleged time the killed took place a crime was committed and there was no charge.
Arraignment for Farris, who remained in custody in lieu of $100,000 bond, was set for Feb. 5.
probable cause to show the suspect over the bridge. McSpadden's body was found in the trunk of his car Nov. 8 at Emporia. Farris was accused of killing McSpadden Oct. 28 at Manhattan and taking the body to Emporia.
Atchison escapees still at large
ATCHISON - Atchison County Sheriff's officials have asked the Kansas Bureau of Investigation to help locate two inmates who escaped from the county jail.
Underserhier A.1. Hieldrich said authorities had no clues to the whereabouts of Paul Dale Zika and Arnold Griffin. Heldrich and the pair may have headed south after the outbreak.
Although Zaski was being held pending a preliminary hearing on a second-degree murder charge, Heidrich said he didn't think that either man was armed
`\unlink` inspects a network object that appears used a metal drain plate to pry open a security screen over their cell window. They slipped through the screen and went down fire escape stairs.
Weather...
The weather service in Topeka issued a traveler's advisory for this morning predicting hazardous driving conditions caused by blowing and drifting snow. The forecast calls for a possible accumulation of from one to three inches. It will be cloudy and colder today with a high in the low 20's and snow ending this afternoon. It will be clear to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with a low tonight around 5 above and a high tomorrow in the mid 20's.
the mistrial after jurors, who had heard 11 weeks of testimony, insisted they were deadlocked and further deliberations would not resolve the impasse.
HOUSTON (UPF)—A district judge yesterday declared a mistrial in the murder-for-hire case of Fort Worth millionaire T. Cullen Davis.
Mistrial ordered in Davis case
Moore indicated he would set bond for
Judge Wallace Moore reluctantly ordered
Carter plans 'lean' budget
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Carter urged Congress yesterday to let him spend more for defense but cut some job programs that have been criticized in controversy within the Democratic ranks.
Describing his budget as "lean and austere," Carter said he plans to reduce this year's $37.4 billion budget deficit to $29 billion in 1890.
The deficit would fall to $1 billion in 1981.
Liberals within the Democratic party, particularly Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., have criticized proposed cuts in school lunch, jobs and other programs.
Carter says his cuts will fall hardest on people who are not in desperate need.
Carter and his chief political lieutenant, Hamilton Jordan, say the anti-inflation effort will help poor people more than they will be harmed by the cuts in social spending.
He said his budget includes $4.5 billion more for the poor, with increases in
programs such as food stamps, Medicaid,
subsidized housing, education, urban
grants, and helping to provide food for
undprivileged women and children.
The budget includes $6.9 billion for revenue sharing, for state and local governments, but officials said no decision was made about continuing the program after 1980.
Also, perhaps more importantly, inflation accounts for all but seven-tenths of one percent of the $4.5 billion increase. Reductions in just one other program not only cut the cost of public service jobs for the unemployed, more than offsets even that 0.7 boost.
However, Carter is scaling back the urban policy initiatives he proposed last March. While spending for existing housing subsidies would rise because of previous commitments, the administration seeks to cut fewer new subsidized units than in 1978.
Military backs Bakhtiar
TEHRAN, Iran (AP)—Iran's top military gave full support yesterday to new Saudi-backed fighters.
"The entire armed forces stand fully behind the legal and constitutional government of Bakhtiar. Gen. Abbas a group of Iranian journalists."
Street battles raged between pro- and anti-shah Iranians in a western city, and at one point, a British soldier
Ayatullah Khomeini, the exiled Moslem leader who has directed the anti-shah movement, plans to return to Tehran Friday to help the government republic to replace the Bakhit government.
In a speech at his home outside Paris Sunday, Kohmene charged that the Shah was planning a military coup to restore his power. But Gharabaghi told reporters today the armed forces "have no plans to pull a comp."
Nevertheless, Assadullah Mobashari, a member of the executive committee of the
Tuesday, January 23 LITTLE CEASER
sua films
(1931)
Dir. Meryn LeRoy with Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Glenda Farrell. The Gangster film that wrote the vocabulary for the genre.
wednesday, January 24
Truffaut:
THE WILD CHILD
Dir. Frances Troutauf; with Francois Troutauf, Jean-Pierre Carregol. Photography by Nexster Almendros ("Days of Heaven"). Subtitles.fr.
Dr. Victor Leigh, with Clark Cable,
Vien Leigh, Leilah Howard, Olivia de
havilland, '330 & 745, Friday
matelles will be presented in the Forum
Friday & Saturday, January 26 & 27
GONE WITH THE WIND
(1939)
Midnight Movie:
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
National Front political opposition, told a Tehran newspaper he thought it would be "dangerous for Khomeini to come to Tehran at this time."
Mobashari has been in Paris for several days to negotiate with Khomeini on behalf of the National Front and he spoke with the newspaper Ettelal by telephone.
Dir. Joan Micklin Silver ("Hester Street"); with John Heard, Gwen Lindsay, Lindsey House, Jeff Galloway, Dennis Sullivan, and Asbury Jules; *7:30 8:30*
Monday, January 29 BETWEEN THE LINES
(1977)
The National Front was the major non-religious force in the anti-shah opposition.
In a radio-telenceva speech Sunday night, Battari said he would remain in office after the election.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
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Davis, who was charged with soliciting the murder of his divorce judge, Joe H. Eidson of Fort Worth, by paying an FBI informant $25,000 to arrange the slaving.
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Shortly after receiving that message, Moore called the jurors into the courtroom and polled them individually. He asked them to provide their names and to reach a decision and declared a mistrial.
The last message the jury sent to Moore said, "It would serve no purpose to continue it."
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THE JURORS received the case last Tuesday night and the first vote resulted in 8-4 deadlock, a split that never changed as all cases taken in the 43 hours of deliberation.
Testimony卸通知 Nov. 6 and jurors listened to almost 100 witnesses, including Davis, and eight hours of closing arguments last Tuesday before receiving the case.
Moore permitted prosecutors to offer conspiracy and solicitation counts to jurers for consideration, but instructed the panel members that they could convict on only one
CHIEF PROSECUTOR Tolly Wilson
accused the Davis defense team, headed by attorney Richard Haynes, of trying to frustrate justice by dragging out the procedures.
"I think it was a deliberate attempt to stretch it out and see if something wouldn't happen, possibly a juror would get sick or could not continue in this case." Wilson said.
Davis was arrested after leaving a restaurant parking lot where he handed out pills.
"We weren't really talking about killing people." Davis testified.
The defendant, jailed without bond since Aug. 20, told the jury that the entire episode leading to his arrest had been a misunderstanding in which he was framed by David McCrory, an employee and long-time acquaintance.
Jurors were asked to choose between McCrystal's claim that his boss pressured him to arrange the slayings of 15 enemies in a scheme of paranoia and revenge, or the explanation he was just "playing along" with the FBI in the sapd conversations.
Yerma de Garcia Lorca
Los estudiantes de habla hispana interesados in participar en el montaje teatral de Yerma invitada a tomar parte en las audiciones que se llevaron a cabo.
FECHA: Enero 22 y 23/79
LUGAR: Wescoe 4020
HORA: 7:00 p.m.
Rettena la dimensión de FECHA y Drama.
Patrocina los departamentos de Espanol y Drama
March 9-18
Padre island Spring break $149 ch 9-18
Trip includes: 7 nights lodging, round trip bus transportation, a day trip to Mexico, T-shirt, and beverages on bus. Sign up by February 5 in the SUA office.
Seniors (CLASS OF 1979)
Seniors
115 DAYS TILL GRADUATION PARTY!
Countdown time begins this Friday, January 26 at the BREWERY. 714 Massachusetts.Free beer and soft drinks from 3:00-7:00 p.m.
paid for by the class of 1979, University of Kansas
---
Tuesday, January 23, 1979
3
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Bottle bill enters House, Senate
University Daily Kansan
State lawmakers chose their weapons last week for a legislative duel that could determine Kansas strategy in a battle against litter.
A bottle bill, introduced simultaneously in the Kansas House and Senate by State Rep. Bob Miller, R-Wellington, and State Sen Paul Hess, R-Wichita, would require a five-cent refundable deposit on all beer and soft drink containers.
State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Toptea, countered by sponsoring a litter control bill, which would tax all retailers, manufacturers and restaurants that products that are likely to end up as litter.
BOTTLE BILL supporters, which include the League of Women Voters, Associated Students of Kansas and the lobbying committee of the KU Ecology Club, say the bottle bill will encourage recycling. Members of these groups claim that similar laws in other states have decreased litter dramatically by promoting the use of refillable bottles and recyclable cans; have saved resources and energy.
"The thrust of the bottle bill is that it's a way of helping people—through their pocketbooks—change their lifestyles to recycling," Hess said.
ASK endorsed the bottle bill last year and Hannes Zacharias, executive director of ASK, said that although the bottle bill would be supported by the legislature, it would be supported again this year.
ZACHARIAS SAID, however, that he thought the bill needed more research.
"The bill would become effective Jan. 1.
1980. By the time the legislation is passed and put on the statute books, it might be July, which would give people only six weeks to vote. That's that's one problem with the bill," he said.
Opponents of the bill, especially those in the beverage industry, say timing is not the only problem. They contend that the bottle penalizes them, but ignores other industries that contribute to the litter problem.
THE LITTLE tax proposed by Hein would raise $1.6 million annually by taxing retailers a maximum of $80 a year and requiring each retailer to purchase a year. Taxable items would include bottles and cans, newspapers, food containers, crates, tires, muffers, and other litter-tolerant goods.
"I used to be a strong supporter of the bottle bill, but I'm an opponent now, in respect to the other alternatives we have" said about sponsoring the litter control bill.
Both bills would prohibit the use of pull tabs on cans, an item that 15 other states already have prohibited. The pull tab provision of the litter control bill would become effective July 1, 1981. The rest of the bill tax would be into effect July 1, 1972.
The revenue from the tax would be used for cleaning up litter, for new litter receptacles, for anti-litter education and for recycling projects.
Most of the support for the litter tax comes from the Kansas Environmental Council, an organization of brewers, bottlers, beer distributors and grocers that was
"the bottle bill is repugnant to most business interests," Paul DeBauge, an Emporia beer distributor and member of the Kansas Environmental Council, said. She said the problem, but they don't want the answer to the problem to out them out of business."
formed a year ago to draft the litter tax proposal.
DEBUGAE SAID the Environmental Council feared that the bottle bill would result in a loss of jobs in the container industry. The agency said it would take more than once and inconvenience for consumers.
Another problem opponents of the bill predict is that of the migrating containers—those that are bought in one part of the state and redeemed in another. That would be a problem for dealers in border areas where travelers may stop at containers or leave without leaving the state.
David Sakuma, manager of the Seven-Eleven convenience store at 25th and Iowa streets, said of the bottle bill, "I imagine it might curtail business a bit, but not a lot. I think it's a good idea because musically an easy to carry myself, but I don't know how the company feels about it."
Reactions from local businessmen varied from cautious support of the bottle bill to a violent attack.
Sakumura said he thought storing the returned bottles would not be a big problem, because his store already handles many returnables.
JOIN LAWSON, vice president of personnel and administration of Laphea, Inc., a local Coors distributor, said he preferred the litter tax.
"The effect of the bottle bill would have to be estimated from states with similar legislation and, for them, it certainly hasn't been positive," he said.
The bottle bill would require a retailer to refund the deposit on any containers of funds it carries. The retailer could purchase and return the distributionist. However, Miller said, retailers could contract for a redemption center so they would not have to take back the con-
The bottle bill, which has appeared in some form in the Kansas Legislature every year since 1971, the same year Oregon passed a similar bill, has never gotten out of committee. This year, as HB3111, it has been assigned to the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee. Miller, who is chairing the scheduled hearings on the bill for tomorrow.
The Senate's bottle bill, SB 94, was assigned to the Federal and State Affairs Committee, the same committee that will vote on the litter control bill.
"The bills will be compared." Hess said. "The problem with the litter control bill is that it leaves a tax, and I don't think people in general are in the mood for tax increases. Ten percent of the tax will be used for additions to the bureau word there is bureaucracy."
Hess said that he had been polling voters in his Wichita district for several years and those favoring a bottle bill averaged between 70 and 80 percent.
"I must admit there is more organized opposition to the bill than organized support, and that it is not a bad idea."
Solbach prepares landlord-tenant repair bill
By GENE LINN
Staff Reporter
Tenants no longer would have to put up with problems such as leaky faucets and torn screens if a bill being prepared by State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, becomes
"If the tenant has, say, a broken window that the landlord won't fix, the tenant has no recourse at the present time," Solbach said yesterday.
However, he explained that under his proposal, a tenant could have the necessary repair work done and have the cost deducted from his rent.
The tenant would first pay for the repairs and then take the receipt to the treasurer of the building.
The treasurer would set up an escrow fund using one month's rent supplied by the bank.
The landlord would then have 14 days in which to protest if he felt that he should not work on the house.
If the landlord did not protest, the cost of the repairs would be deducted from the rent.
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IF THE LANDLORD protested, the case would be decided in small claims court.
Nominal fees would also be taken out to pay for county administration costs and to compensate the tenant for making the repairs himself.
"The most important part of the bill".
Sobach said, "that both parties are under pressure to resolve the problem. The tenant is responsible for the repairs and the landlord needs the rent."
Repairs made under the proposed bill could cost no more than $100, or one half of the original bill.
that aren't worth taking to court," Solbach said.
"That's where the abuse is—small things
Steve Young, KU's representative to the ASK board of directors, said that he and another KU student had talked to Sobach University about a plan for a document-lent legislation about two weeks ago.
He said he was first approached about the need for a landlord-tenant bill by some KU students. After that, he said, he and Kathy Landgren, legislative director of Associated Students of Kansas, drew up the proposed bill. ASK is a student lobbying group.
YOUNG SAID that he was not familiar with Solbach's bill, but that a landlord offered to take him.
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Tuesday, Jan. 23,1979
3:30-5:00
218 Strong
Come by. see the center, and share plans for next semester
"The revisions office should be finished with the proposal in the next couple of weeks."
Solbach said the legislative revisions office was working on the proposal. All bills go to the revisions office before they are introduced, he said.
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Recycled glass bottles benefit environment and ecology club
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Start Reporter
Glass recycling is not a big moneymaking business in Lawrence, but the KU Ecology Club is determined to its hudgingless recycling project alive.
"We're not doing this for the money, but to increase awareness of conservation. That glass can save energy, resources and land, if it's not just thrown in the landfill." Mike Swain, Prairie Conservation of the recycling project, said Sunday.
The glass is sold to Wallace McPherson, a Topeka scrap dealer who supplies the collection bin and transports it to and from Lawrence. McPherson sells the glass to an Oklahoma bottle manufacturer for recycling.
The bin, which holds 12,000 pounds of broken glass, was filled halfway the first two months of the project. The club earned between 440 and 680. Swartz said.
One weekend each month since November, the Ecology Club has organized a weekly meeting at the Daisy Hill parking lot west of Iowa Street. Club members, protected by goggles and heavy gloves, smash bottles and jars into a metal bin, separating the trash from the garbage.
An average of 50 contributed to the
recycling project on the first three collection weekends, far short of the thousand people that Swartz said he had expected.
Swartz said he was disappointed by the small number of students who had used the recycling center, and estimated that Lawrence residents' glass donations outnumbered students' donations four to one.
LAST WEEKEND's collection of glass was larger than the first two because four bars saved glass and Lapeka, Inc., the local Coors beer distributor, offered more bottles than the club could transport. Swartz said.
"The project can almost be successful with only the bars and Coors, but we want to get the community involved," he said.
Lapke has a surplus of bottles because the company buys them back from consumers for one cent each. Bell Kennedy, manager of Lapke, said this was done to help alleviate the litter problem. Lapke had dumped all the waste in the city landfill in north Lawrenze before the club began to collect them.
Although the buy-back policy costs Coors money, recycling the glass would be less profitable because there is no local recycling center, Kennedy said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
SenEx approval vital
That strange creaking sound emanating from Strong Hall last week may have been the first sounds of progress toward a computerized pre-enrollment system at KU.
But don't celebrate yet.
A committee formed to study the possibilities of pre-enrollment submitted its report last week to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. The committee outlined two possible methods of pre-enrollment and endorsed the second of the methods, which would allow students to pre-enroll in November and December for the following spring semester.
THAT PRE-ENROLLMENT would be augmented by a regular enrollment period in January in which students would pay fees and be allowed to complete any unfinished schedules.
Despite endorsing the pre-enrollment proposal, some committee members expressed reservations. In a note attached to the committee's report, Dick Mann, chairman of the committee, said, "The committee was divided on the question of whether or not the university requires a pre-enrollment system."
Of course, anyone who has weathered the monstrous lines and endured the numerous frustrations of the current enrollment procedure might find that statement a little difficult to swallow.
The pre-enrollment committee itself was formed in response to petitions circulated among students last fall that noted a "grave concern" about the current enrollment process, and supported computerized pre-enrollment.
Thus, the new proposal for pre-enrollment presents the University with the perfect opportunity to finally put the entire operation in motion. The proposal will be presented to the University Senate executive committee for its recommendation.
THE ADVANTAGES of a pre-enrolment system at KU should be obvious even to the most casual observer. Yet, studies of the possibility have been continuing at KU since 1974. The University ever went so far as saying in May 1976 that pre-enrollment would be used by spring 1978. But, of course, the project is still buried deep in study.
Students already have expressed their desire for a pre-enrollment system. At a university that prides itself on its modern image, the archaic methods now used for enrollment are unneeded. SenEx would be doing both the University and its students a major favor by recommending the new proposal to the administration.
Perhaps that will be enough to spur the administration into action. Let's hope so.
President Jimmy Carter is expected this week to deliver his proposed 1980 fiscal budget to Congress and the nation. But if early disclosures are correct, his budget proposal may very well turn out to be another invitation for blacks, poor and minority groups to become leaders of Democratic support, to begin looking elsewhere for help in 1980.
Carter budget breaks social promises
Hoping that austere politics in 1979 will make for astute politics in 1980, Carter is expected to propose a budget hovering around a record $323 billion, with a deficit below $30 billion. This is almost $40 billion more than this year's spending ceiling, but the president said what he needs to maintain all programs at current levels when inflation is figured in.
His budget is expected to include $179 billion for welfare and income security programs, an increase of $20 billion, and $122.8 billion for defense, an increase of nearly $11 billion. But with his emphasis on "austerity," and with cuts into some American jobs, America has been worked Americans are proposed, it is beginning to look as if Carter has set aside his old book of promises for a new one, and this is troubling to many Democratic liberals.
TWO YEARS ago, Jimmy Carter became president largely on his promise of jobs for minorities. The unemployment rate for black Americans was 12.5 percent, or 186 percent of the white rate of 6.7. Today the black unemployment rate is at a deplorable 40 percent. That means that the white rate of 5.2. Despite the high unemployment rates, Carter wants to reduce public service jobs from 625,000 to about 425,000, a cut which administration officials say would save $400 million. These are jobs in which blacks have found a much more affordable employment environment than could be found in private industry.
Cuts in other domestic social programs such as job training, health programs and community services.
Thus, on his pledge to increase defense outlays to our European allies, Carter agreed to cut the defense deficit below $30 billion, Carter delivers. But on his pledge to the people who were largely
LOS ANGELES—In the aftermath of the Jonestown tragedy in Guyana, many critics have demanded U.S. government intervention with such groups as the Unification Church, Synchron and Hare Krishna, claiming that they preach distrust of society, demand absolute obedience of their members, and use psychologically manipulative tactics in recruiting and influencing them.
N. Y. Times Feature
Tactics of religious cults justify U.S. intervention
Government spokesmen have replied that without evidence of specific criminal activity the state cannot act, for several reasons.
The First Amendment forbids all interference with religious liberty; persons who undergo cultist inductionation do so willingly and freely; regulating thought reform by cult groups would also permit Jesuit seminaries, military academies and used-car salesmen.
THESE ASSERTIONS invite analysis, if only because of the unsettling case to be drawn from them: If extremist groups may retire to a remote location, suspend their psychological integrity, and indoctrinate them in a world view in which the坠葬 and the establishment of a theocracy—justify the means-deceptive recruitment, fraudulent fundraising and the use of illegal weapons.
A substantial body of evidence that has appeared in hearings, reports and court cases involving religious cultists, and considerable clinical material suggests that the indoctrination activities of these groups are not de minimis.
By RICHARD DELGADO
They include physical injury resulting from inadequate diet and sleep, self-mortification, and in some cases drug usage, and psychiatric harm such as thought disorders, guilt, depression and suicidal behavior.
THE DEFERENCE尔然 afforded religiously motivated conduct is reduced with these groups by their lack of "sincerity," a requirement deriving from conscientious-objective cases, and the absence of any moralistic institute as essential, rather than merely optional point of practice.
Measured by the standard of the Amish parents, members of a religious community with a long tradition of rejecting modernization who refused to send their children to high school for fear that they would learn world ways, or the California Indians who practiced rival pyelotism as a central tenet of their mythical religion, would practice norms practices do not present a very limiting case for protection.
The balance would thus appear to tip toward intervention. It
BECAUSE OUR political and legaldiscourse discourage intervention based solely on the desire to protect individuals from themselves, a finding that the harms were voluntarily incurred would greatly weaken the case for intervention.
could be argued, however, that some of the harms by which intervention is justified are incurred freely by consenting adults to engage in risky behavior.
the process by which cults attract and indoctrinate new members is arranged so that when the capacity for voluntary choice is high, the capacity for voluntary choice is reduced. At the outset, the target person's decision-making ability is unimpaired. It also predictable that if he were informed that the group whose meeting he is asked to attend is a well-known cult, he would react
Later, he is given information about the identity of the group and the conditions of membership, but he is permitted to learn this information only as the cult perceived that he has become so weakened by fatigue, sensory bombardment, peer pressure and induced guilt and anxiety that he has lost the ability to assess it in his ordinary frames of reference.
THE CONVERT THUS never has full capacity and knowledge simultaneously; one or the other is limited in a manner
A final, practical objection is the purported difficulty of distinguishing—"of drawing the line"—between the thought-reform practices of culls and the "brainwashing" of Jesuits, military schools, salesmen and others who use some degree of persuasion, influence or moral exhortation in their dealings with others.
But while other institutions may use some of the techniques of classic thought reform, few apply them in such a variety or with such intensity as do cults. Jesuits may isolate the seminarian to nomenclature reflection and a deepening of his spiritual resources.
BUT THE ISOLATION is temporary, and the order does not seek to accelerate the process by physiological depletion or sensory overstimulation. Nor do mainstream denominations conceal the duties and obligations of the priesthood.
Thus few, if any, other social institutions use conditioning techniques as peratively, intensely or deceptively as do others.
Decisions to intervene in connection with these latter groups do not, therefore, require by their logic alone intervention in other cases.
responsible for his being elected, Carter throws a curve.
Richard Delgado is visiting professor of law at the University of California at Los Angeles.
RELIGIOUS CULTS
WHAT A RELIEF.
Vernon Smith
"These people would leave Carter tomorrow
if Kennedy gave the word."
Now, with the Carter administration bent on cutting inflation by holding down federal spending, it becomes more unlikely that any major attempts to aid the poor will be launched. Funding for the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act, which was passed last month of thick leaders and finally approved by the president, probably will be delayed.
Kennedy already has said that he will not seek election in 1980, which should make Carter rest a little easier at night. But his speech in Atlanta was clearly a message to the Southerner in the White House who somehow thinks he owns the black vote.
LAST WEEK, in the pulpit of Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church, Carter received much applause when he told his audience that he had been brought to the ideals of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
IT'S VERY easy to eliminate programs for low-income people because they're defenseless, voiceless and normally don't vote. They're an easy target.
But the applause he received did not compare with that given by the same audience to Sen. Edward Kennedy only 48 hours earlier.
Kennedy moved his audience in much the same way King did before leading his followers to protest. And without naming names, he was clearly critical of the present administration's laggard attitude in social and domestic reform.
After Kennedy's speech, one black Georgian said, with tears in his eyes.
In all, the nation's books have been in balance only eight times since World War II. It is very doubtful that Carter will accomplish this feat.
However, if Carter has any plans to seek re-election in 1980 then it would certainly be his advantage to begin taking serious note of Kennedy's position, because that voiceless minority is slowly becoming a political force with which to be reckoned.
The senator from Massachusetts realizes that the most important budgets to be balanced are in the households of the people. The senator from Massachusetts 1800, would be well advised to do the same.
CARTER MAINTAIN that a "lean and tight" spending program is needed in order to hold down prices and halt the dollar's decline. Close advisers to the president say that such a policy is good politics, particularly in light of the conservative tide that allegedly swept the country last summer under the title of Proposition 62, which imposes less, say Carter's advisers, so the president is in tune with the public sentiment.
The public may be willing to settle for less, as administration officials maintain, but for that segment of the populus that has an economic advantage Carter's auction率 will not sit well at all.
CARTER BUDGET
FORGET IT, ROSCOE...
THEY DON'T EVEN SELL
CHAMPAGNE...AND
THEY'VE NEVER HEARD
OF BELUGA CAVIAR!!
CAN YOU STAND IT?!!
LIBERALS
Voter needs sharp eye
Newly elected GOP members in the House want to expel Diggs from Congress if he refuses to comply with a proposed sanction barring him from casting votes on the House floor. Diggs, the ranking black in Congress, has appealed his conviction.
Of vital importance and concern in the corruption of these politicians, is their subsequent elections and re-elections to political office.
Some people might consider the words politician, corruption and money to be synonymous. Unfortunately, there are at least two methods glaring examples where such is the case.
*first, the is folly of Tennessee's former governor, Ray Blanton. Last Monday, six days before his term as governor, he sent a letter to Mr. Trump and 49 commutations to convicts, of whom 23 were serving long-term sentences for murder. Thirty of the convicts became eligible for immediate release—13 have been sent to jail and the other 24 had their sentences cut.*
Blanton's administration, throughout his term as governor, was accused of operating under the table. Did Tennesseans get what they voted for? Of course they did.
A THIRD politician corrupted by money is Rep. Charles Diggs, D-Mich., who has been convicted of taking kickbacks from his congressional employees. Diggs was using the money of congressional aides in order to buy expensive expenses, and was also engaged in mail fraud.
Blanton's alarming action has left newly-elected governor Lamar Alexander in a
There also is the case of Rep. Daniel J.
Flood, D-Pa. W flood was sworn into the 96th
Congress during a recess of his perjury-bribery trial.
Both Flood and Diggs were re-elected. Flood, from the affluent Wilkes-Barre and Hazelton, Pa., district, was elected to his 19th term. Diggs himself is no obscure
Blanton's action was not out of mercy. A federal grand jury is investigating his administration for an apparent clementry-for-sale racket.
Stephen Elko, a former administrative assistant to Flood, currently serving a three-year prison term for accepting bribes to influence Flood's decisions, has testified that Flood had received bribes from 1971 to 1975.
ONE MONTH ago, two members of Blanton's legal staff, who both have resigned, and a highway patrolman, a Blanton family friend who is now suspended, were arrested and charged with offenses related to sentences, and tardions for a price.
"I didn't want to miss that." Flood, known as "Dapper Dan" for his silk suits and fur coat, said of the scene.
A root is charged with nine counts of bribery, three counts of perjury and one conspiracy count—all in connection with trading of his political clout as chairman of a House appropriations subcommittee for $25,000 cars and favors.
THE AMERICAN voter, if he is going to
Philip Garcia
In the November elections, five members of Congress charged with wrongdoing wore masks.
point a finger at the corrupt politician, must elect a candidate to elect compulsory and ethical politicians.
Voting is one of our most basic rights —yet it seems as if we have not learned to fully investigate the candidates, a basic prerequisite before casting a vote.
Richmond, D-N.Y., who acknowledged soliciting two boys for sex.
The public cannot afford to sit back and allow politicians to pass on a polished image. More probing of political candidates, their platforms and history is needed.
Perhaps even worse is the apparent inability of voters to demand personal ethics as a major criteria for being elected to public office. If the politician has the power, enough people will fork over the dollars to see that their personal interests are met.
Last year alone, political action committees, not to mention private and corporate contributors, donated $40 million legally and illegally to politicians.
The voter must decide whether he wants ethics in politics or politicians who can control it.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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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 affirmed, he or she should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
sw not bake尼斯 to ho ams isn't ek beote bat na in ii. II.zes bees beole
Tuesday, January 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
an ers ceed buld and after and on. edit
A. R. WEST
Photo bv CHRIS TODD
'Wood'
Lynette Woodard, $4 siphomore All-American, has had to handle being KU's top player and also the letters and gifts sent to her by fans who often are total strangers.
Hot 'Hawks meet Wichita
The women's basketball team, riding an eight game winning streak, could have trouble getting excited about its first conference against Wichita State University at Wichita.
KU, 16-4, has not played the Shockers this season but the two teams have seen each other in action in the Shocker Classic, played earlier this month in Wichita. In that tournament, KU trounced West Texas State, 119-98, en route to winning the championship. The team won best Wichita State in a game for seven points in the eight-tteam tournament.
The Jayhawks are coming off their Big
Eight tournament title victory Saturday in Lincoln.
"I don't want to say it'll be hard to get up." KU head coach Marian Washington said Monday. "But there no question it's difficult when you find yourself overwhelming a team to find a challenge to overcome."
Woodard has to handle basketball, stardom
Washington said she hoped to be able to play several players in tonight's game. KU's wide margins of victory in recent weeks are encouraging her bench and get every player on the court.
By NANCY DRESSLER
Statistics alone would indicate that Lynette Woodard did not have a good night in a basketball game against Missouri. It would have been a Big Eight tournament in Lincoln, Neb.
Sports Editor
Woodard, sophomore all-American, only scored 17 points, her weakest offensive showing yet this season and far below her 33-point-oer-game scoring average.
But KU won the game for the tournament championship and to Woodward, that was all good.
everytime we play, whether I score 17 or
not, matter. "Woodard said
yesterday before publication," he
said.
"I want to play my each game. You can play the score and say, 'Wow, she's a winner.'"
Sports
"But that was my best and I'm proud of it."
WOODARD'S BEST this season has been enough to make her the team leader in every defensive and offensive category: assists, steals, blocked shots, scoring and she. She also has or shared the best individual performances by a KU player in each category.
In Lincoln, she was again awesome,
scoring 86 points and grabbing 32 rebounds to snare honors for most valuable player. She has earned that designation in two of the tournaments KU has played in this season.
But stardom has not shown itself in the soft-spoken 6-1 Wichita native, even when unknown admirers bombard her with mail and requests.
Woodard recalled one fan in particular, who wrote her last lesson after KU played at the Bowl.
"Someone said he was in love," she said,
"I didn't even know who it was."
Another exuberant fan sent flowers to Woodard's mother as a Mother Da gift from her father.
More recently, KU took second in the Queens Holiday Tournament in New York and a fan from Maryland apparently saw Woodard play.
"I got a letter asking for a schedule and a picture," Woodard said. "He must have called the school because he had my address."
The request is like many others. It comes from a total stranger.
But Woodward said she didn't mind the mail, despite its volume at times. It wasn't her favorite part.
KU should pay Moore full salary
"I never talked to them. I don't even know them," Woodard said of the fans. "Yea, you know."
Bud Moore is right when he says a contract is a contract.
Moore, fired in November from his job as KU's head football coach, wants to settle the financial loose ends that linger from the firing and tie him to the University.
KU wins Moore about $77,000 in salary for the two years that remained on his five-year salary.
Moore thinks he deserves every cent. He does.
But KU administrators, namely Bob Marcum, director of men's athletics, and Chancellor Ardy Diekhs, have not been willing to live up to their end of the contract.
They have made two offers to Moore, both reportedly for less than the contracted amount, an offer he termed "considerably less" than what was called for by the contract.
AS OF VESTERDAY, the former coach was still considering a second settlement
Nancy Dressler
A
--offer, made last week by Marcum and Dykes.
But unless it is for the full amount as depicted in the contract, Moore should rejoin.
A contract is a contract, a fact KU's administration has chosen to ignore.
If money is their concern, administrators should be worrying about what Moore could do if the full amount is not offered—take the matter to the courts.
Lawsuits are never easy or cheap and a suit between Moore and the University of Michigan is likely.
has mentioned taking legal action but has veto to hire a lawyer.
KU should be grateful, especially if legal efforts by other outcast Big Eight coaches to win the title are successful.
TWO OF MOORE'S fellow coaches in the conference also were fired this season with two years remaining on their contracts and both have successfully waged legal battles for salaries owed them by their respective schools.
Jim Stanley, former head coach at Oklahoma State University, lost his job in November amidst growing controversy about OSU's football program. When the university decided not to pay Stanley the full amount remaining on his contract, he arrested him and threatened to sue him. The university rented and agreed to pay him in full rather than fight it out in the courts.
When CU administrators showed signs of an unwillingness to pay up, Mallory threatened to take legal action. Colorado then agreed to fulfill its financial obligations.
KU should heed the actions of its fellow Big Eight schools. Those administrators apparently realized court action or even the threat of it would not be good for either their schools.
The other Big Eight coach to lose his job this past year was Colorado's Bill Mallory.
Moore has said he would prefer to avoid embarrassing the University by taking a different approach.
"I would like very much to avoid any public controversy at all," Moore said.
But the possibility of controversy doesn't seem to worry administrators, who have ignored the lead of their Colorado and Oklahoma State peers.
Their actions could bring KU more legal hassles than it has bargained for and if Moore does go to court and wins, the outcome won't be unexpected.
Big Eight basketball standings
Iowa State's Andrew Parker, the Big Eight player of the week, jumped on top of conference scorers this week, averaging 24.9 points in four games. Only 12th last week, Parker hit 27 points against Colorado and 32 against Oklahoma State to rocket him to the leading scorer's slot.
Big Eight Standings
KU's Darrell Valentine hung on to first place in steals, averaging three per game. For all games, Valentine has 49,13 points, John McCullough from Oklahoma.
High jumping Curtis Berry from Missouri kept his rebounding lead, increasing his average to 13.5.
Conference W L All Games
Oklahoma 3 1 11 6
Iowa State 3 1 11 7
Michigan 3 1 11 9
Kansas State 2 2 9 7
Nebraska 2 2 9 7
Colorado 1 3 11 5
Kansas 1 3 11 5
Oklahoma 1 3 11
Iowa State at Kansas; Kansas State at Oklahoma
State; Missouri at Colorado; Oklahoma at Nebraska.
Notre Dame still first, KU gone
The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press college basketball field, with first-place finishes.
The top 19 twenty teams in the Associated Press college basketball league had first place players in parentheses for season records.
1. Notre Dame (9) 19-11
2. Virginia State (7) 14-12
3. Michigan State (2) 16-13
4. Indiana State (1) 15-13
5. Louisville (8) 15-3
6. UCLA (7) 18-9
7. Duke (7) 18-9
8. Illinois (6) 16-2
9. Louisiana State (6) 15-4
10. Ohio State (6) 16-4
11. Georgetown, D.C. (6) 14-2
12. Syracuse (6) 14-2
13. Marquette (6) 13-2
14. Texas A&M (6) 13-2
15. Arkansas (6) 13-1
16. Temple (6) 13-1
17. Tennessee (6) 14-3
18. Alabama (6) 11-4
19. Vanderbilt (8) 12-9
20. Linden St. (1) 14-1
The Top Twenty teams in the United Press International basketball roll with first place, notes in correspondence.
1. Notre Dame (35)
2. North Carolina (4)
3. Indiana State (2)
4. Missouri State
5. Louisville
6. Duke
7. UCLA
8. Illinois
9. Ohio State (1)
10. Louisiana State
11. Marquette
12. George Washington, D.C.
13. Syracuse
14. Texas A&M
15. Temple
16. Texas
17. Vanderbilt
18. Arkansas
19. N. Carolina State
20. Alabama
KU HANG GLIDING
MEETING
Wed. 7:30 p.m.
2002
Learned Hall
Everyone Welcome
FREE Shampoo & Blow Dry with every haircut thru Jan. 31st Ask for Kathy
Prime Cut Hair Co.
13 E. 8th
Laurence's Most Unique Hair Salon
---
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PLUS TAX
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DO YOU WANT FLY?
Face it you've always wanted to fly! Many of us have had the feeling and for some it has never gone away.
If you have that feeling, then you're in luck. Air Force ROTC Flight Instruction Program (FIP) is available to you. It's designed to teach you the basics of flight through flying lessons in small aircraft at a civilian operated flying school.
The program is an EXTRA for cadets who can qualify to become Air Force pilots through 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 after graduation.
This is all reserved for the cadet who wants to get his life off the ground with Air Force silver pilot wings. Check it out today!
Superhonors and Juniors: Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. See if you qualify. Call Capt. John Mackenzie at 864-4679 or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108
AIR FORCE
ROTC
Gateway to a great way of life.
SUA
SUA
The SUA Bridge Club will hold a campus tournament on Jan. 25th in the Union. The top two eligible pairs will qualify to play in the College Regional to be held at Warrenssburg, Missouri February 1-3.
KU BRIDGE TOURNAMENT
2.
22 years of
PERSONALIZED
DISCOUNT
SERVICE
EVERYTHING IN STEREO
STEREO CLEARANCE 40% to 70% OFF
Selected Receivers, Speakers, Turntables, Compact Stereos, TV's, Portable Tape Players.
Most are in perfect condition, some will be sold as is.
Complete listing is available in store.
★ Cash only
No credit cards for this sale
AUDIOTRONICS
928 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN
6
Tuesday, January 23, 1979
Pearson lectures politics as KU 'drifting professor'
By PAT RICI Staff Reporte
Former Sen. James B. Pearson said yesterday that understanding the budgetary process was fundamental to knowing how government works.
Pearson was making his first appearance as a visiting lecturer in one of James Drury's political science classes yesterday morning in Blake Hall. Pearson termed his position as that of a "drifting professor," each month to lecture in different classes.
"If you learn to understand how money is being spent, you'll have the best picture of what you're spending."
the congressman of 16 years opened the class with a short lecture and followed with a lecture.
"Forces playing upon issues have great determining factors also." Pearson said, discussing the effect lobbyists have on government decisions. The lobbying is done within the government itself."
He explained how congressmen used to be "citizen politicians," who convened for only one year.
"Todav. the normal rush and volume of
business will not permit Congress to work less than year-round." Pearson said.
In discussing the political process itself, I discuss the political party organization holds the least power.
One student succeeded in getting Pearson to comment on the Republican presidential candidate.
Pearson said that in Kansas, the Independent party had more power and organization that the Republican or Democratic party.
"Ronald Reagan knows the nature of the party, the primaries and the convention. I feel he will be very strong. But, his chances are enhanced by very colorful conservatives."
Pearson said that George Buch and Tenen
said that Babcock Tennessee were both
possible candidates.
While discussing different issues with the class, Pearson said, "One of the interesting things about leaving Congress is your position doesn't make a difference anymore. You wake up one morning, read the news and say, 'What am I going to do about that.' Then, you realize you don't have to do anything."
THE KINSAS UNION
THE KINDS UNION
★
Bowling Leagues
★ SPRING 1979 ★
Spring Leagues Begin on the Following Days
Monday Jan. 22 Guys & Dollis 8:00 pm
Tuesday Jan. 23 Scratch 7:00 pm
Wednesday Jan. 24 Greek 6:30 pm
Wednesday Jan. 24 All Campus 8:30 pm
Thursday Jan.25 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Thursday Jan. 25 Gays & Dolls 8:00 pm
Friday Jan. 26 TGIF 4:00 pm
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TODAY: MARINE CORP OFFICER SELECTION will be in both 1 of the Kansas Union lobby from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 3:30 p.m. The GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:45 p.m. The Sunflower Room of the Union Recreational Services is holding INTRAMURAL BATKETALL MANAGERS MEETINGS for "C" league at 5:15 p.m. and "A" league at 6 p.m. in Robinson south yonk
TONIGHT: THE BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS will meet at 6:30 in the Governor's Room of the Union. The KU GOBY B CUB will meet at 7:30 in the Governor's Room of the Union. THE STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE will meet at 7 in the Regionalist Room of the Union. THE KU ADULT LIFE RESOURCE CENTER will hold a workshop on the use of iPad in the University Room of 7 in the Walnut Room of the Union. THE ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union. The SUA BOARD will meet at 7:30 in the Governor's Room of the Union. GAY SERVICES OF THE GOVERNOR'S ROOM will meet at 7:30 in the Jawahry Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: Senator James B. Pearson will speak on the SALT conferences in the opening of KU's WEDNESDAY FORUM SERIES for the spring semester. Forum Series 1 is open Tuesday through Oread, and is open to the public. The UNIVERSITY EVENTS COMMITTEE will meet in the Regionalist Room of the Union at 3:30 p.m. Recreational services will hold until 5:15 p.m. MANAGERS MEETING for "B" league at 5:15 p.m. in Robinson south gym.
TOPEKA—A bill that would force the University of Kansas and Kansas State University to play Wichita State University in men's basketball was introduced in the Kansas House of Representatives yesterday.
The bill was proposed by Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, who said he wanted to "equalize" the athletic status of the three schools.
By TAMMY TIERNEY
KU-WSU game proposed
Staff Reporter
Meacham, a graduate of WSU who also received a law degree from KU, said he realized it was not the Kansas Legislature's domain to schedule basketball games, but a bill was the only means of getting the three schools to play one another.
Currently, KU and K-State play one another in men's basketball. All three schools play each other in women's basketball.
submitted yearly for the last several years without success. A resolution introduced in the House last year did not receive a committee hearing. Meacham said.
Bills similar to Meacham's have been
ALTHOUGH THE bill has 42 sponsors, 17 of which are Sedgwick County representatives, it is generating little enthusiasm at KI!
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said that the KU administration was not involved in the scheduling of basketball at UNC, which traditionally done by the athletic director.
Because of the large number of sponsors, Meacham said he was optimistic about the bill's chances in the Legislature. He said he regretted having to resort to a law to bring the three schools together on the basketball court.
However, he said that past athletic directors,"had not been anxious to use one of their limited playing dates to play Wichita State."
Meacham said he sponsored the bill on three criteria: that each of the schools were under the jurisdiction of the Kansas Board of Regents; that each school belonged to NCAA division one and that all the schools were members of a major conference.
Meacham said the regents decided not to get involved and, despite attempts by WSU, the three schools would not get together on a voluntary basis.
"see this bill as correcting an injustice"
Maricom on the other hand, views the
bill as a remedy.
"In September, the athletic director at WSU sent identical letters to KU and KState outlawing several proposals, some of which were positive, and didn't even get a 'Hell no' in reply.
"But, if a 'hell no' would make them feel better, I'll send them one," he said.
He said that KU's playing schedule has been set when WSU made their offer and then the team's schedule.
Tax-removal bills pass committee
TOPEKA—Despite dissension among committee members, bills removing the state sales tax from food and utilities made headlines. In August, Kansas House of Representatives yesterday.
The two bills had several amendments incorporated into them before being passed, 11-9, by members of the House Taxes and Assessment Committee.
One of the objections voiced by some committee members was that the committee ate too quickly on major
recommendations and budgeted
bigger recommendations could be made.
Carlin is scheduled to present his budget message to a joint session of the House and Senate.
Workshop examines concepts of power
Power can be a positive force in a person's
scene, according to Bduhun Dangm, a KU
student.
"It is unforgivable to be asked to vote on this bill before the Governor submits his bill."
Because there are misconceptions about power, the center is holding a workshop titled "Personal Power" to develop skills and ground of power and its uses. Duncan said.
However, power is viewed by most people as a negative concept, used only to take advantage of another person, she said yesterday.
The workshop, one in a series of self-
The workshop instructor, Sloan Dugan, will focus on power as a means to personal growth. Duncan said. Dugan is an assistant professor of public administration at Ottawa University.
improvement workshops given by the center this year, will meet tonight and on Tuesday. Jan. 30. Both workshops will be held in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Unip.
"He is trying to counteract the negative feeling of the word power. It can be a powerful feeling."
TALENT AUDITIONS
for
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GET READY TO AUDITION!
singers • dancers • comics • actors • jugglers • magicians • variety acts of all kinds
Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, one of America's most exciting themed amusement parks, has started its annual search for the best in midwestern talent. Student-aged performers are invited to participate in a series of competitions.
You can earn over $3,800 this year working six days per week in the summer and weekends in the spring and fall.
If you haven't seen a Worlds of Fun production, ask a friend who has... you'll be surprised!
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THE COSSTATIKN
Topeka General Auditions
Topeka General Auditions
January 27, 1979 9:30 a.m to 3:30 p.m
Topeka Room. Holiday Inn South
University of Kansas
When you audit your team you have 3-4 minutes to side your own accompaniment. However, a third person can be your best friend. Be sure to bring sheet music in your key. A record of your rehearsal notes (real and casual) will be available.
January 30, 1979. 1:30 p.m to 7:00 p.m
Big Broom. Kansas Union (Second Floor)
Sorry, no jobs are available for instrumentallist!
Registration will begin 30 minutes prior to each audition. For further information and a schedule, visit Show Productions Department, 4454 Words of Fun Avenues, Kansas City M, 841641
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The two-day workshop will include lectures, small group discussions, a question and answer session and a writing exercise. The workshop program does not receive college credit for the class.
The center holds workshops primarily for non-traditional students.
"These are students who do not fit the 18-22 college are bracket." Duncan said.
The center is offering the "Personal
Students" students for $12.50,
balf of the regular public baths.
Non-traditional students, however, are not the only participants in the center's workshops. Many sessions are open to the public.
mature persons may register for the
boat at the Adult Life Resource Center,
1248 Mckinley Blvd.
BREWER & SHIPLEY
45
Rep. Homet Jarchow, D-Wichita, said he saw no need to rush approval of the bill.
decision after we hear his budget message.
We may be very embarrassed tomorrow.
Less than two hours later, Carlin told a group of newspaper editors and television news directors that he would not recommen- making the state tax sales off food and utilities.
The amendments to the two bills would remove the sales tax from residential telephones, remove a sales tax on all utilities used for agriculture and retain a sales tax exemption on all used farm equipment, parts and labor.
Wilkin said that the bill now benefited only one section of commerce.
Rep. Ruke Wilkin, D-Topeka, said she thought the amendment exempted the sales tax from utilities used for agriculture had "ruined a good bill by screwing it around."
Another amendment to both bills would add cities and counties to retain their local sales tax.
The amendment was opposed by Jarchow who said that the continued collection of the local sales tax would complicate checkout at retail stores' cash registers.
Serious crimes increase in '78
Sponsored by Rep. John Sites, R-Manhattan, the amendments would keep all governmentations from losing an estimated $482 million a year.
Olna said 3,501 serious offenses were reported to law enforcement in 1978, as well as a number of traffic violations.
The number of serious crimes in Lawrence was town 1.9 percent in 1978, if the other percent remained unchanged.
Serious crime was up 2.4 percent in Lawrence in 1978, Ron Olin, crime analyst for the Lawrence police department, said yesterday.
Olin said the figures were slightly misleading, because the department counts both aggravated and non-aggravated assaults as serious crimes. Those crimes are not considered serious crimes by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Aggravated assaults were up 15.3 percent in 1978 and non-aggravated assaults were up 85.4 percent.
Lawrence police consider murder,
manslaughter, rape, robbery, assault,
burglary, larceny and auto theft serious
crimes.
Olain said one reason for the increase in the number of assaults was that the Lawrence police department had started classifying domestic disturbances as assaults.
"If you improve your reporting procedure, crime will go up," he said.
Rape was up 27.7 percent in 1978. The number of rape cases cleared in 1978 was 34.7 percent, compared with 44.6 percent in 1977. There was no arrest or because of failure to press charges.
Olin said the clearance rate for rapes was not accurate because the figures did not include rape incidents.
Lawrence's crime rate is not bad, Olin
site and its size and location between Kansas City
and Baltimore.
"The crime rate could be considerably worse," he said.
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Tuesday, January 23, 1979
7
KU officials consider second 'heart' theory
"You're all heart" might be closer to the truth than doctors obviously had thought.
Soviet scientists announced last week the discovery of a second circulatory system in the Soviet newspaper Pravda, stated that the second "heart" was a lymph vessel, which contains a duct that expands and contracts pump lymph fluid through
Lymph is a body fluid similar to blood plasma, the whitish liquid contained in blood. Lymph helps combat infection and inflammation in the body.
Martin Wollmann, KU director of health services, said yesterday that scientists have long suspected that more than one pump kept the body's fluids moving.
Blood vessels in human legs contain ducts and valves that force blood upward to the heart. Wolmham said it was possible that the circulatory systems exist in the human body.
"They're probably talking about it in a euphymetic way," Dunn said.
However, Marvin Dunn, professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said the lymph node biopsy was not an organ that looked like the heart.
Dunn said he was aware that a major lymph vessel in the human body was capable of moving fluids actively, although it did not normally confirm reports of the Soviet discovery.
Panels fail 3rd inspection
Defective panels on the exterior of the new Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center were judged unacceptable yesterday for the third time within a year, according to a study conducted by planning for the Kansas Board of Regents.
Corman said many of the panels, which the contractor had said were repaired, were chipped and cracked. He said he was not responsible for them, but were defective, but that it was, "great a failure."
In Mav. the original panels were in-
districtry.
Corman said there were several legal cases where the state could take against Carlson, including a repeal of his contract, state presently is withholding some payments, until the work on the panels is complete.
Group protests abortion law at Med Center
About 25 members of an anti-abortion group picked the University of Kansas Medical Center for almost two hours Saturday.
Janet Wilmore, a volunteer for the Missouri Citizens for Life, said the anti-abortion group did not picket the Med Center yesterday, the sixth anniversary of the March 2015 decision to legalize abortions, because more people were available Saturday.
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The group also picteted the Planned Parenthood Clinic in Kansas City, Mo., and Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo. The group also performs the most abortions in the area.
David Waxman, vice chancellor of the David Center, said the demonstration was peaceful.
"It must have been," he said, "because I didn't know they were there."
He said the Med Center carried no specific policy concerning demonstrators, except the state policy which referred to destruction of state property.
University Daily Kansan
Although Kansas State Scholarship checks are expected to arrive within a week, if Cheryl Fabley, Colby junior, doesn't receive hers this semester, she won't have enough money to pay her bill at Sellards Scholarship Hall.
"My plans are to pay my housing fees with the scholarship money," she said. "I so really don't know what I will do if the money doesn't arrive."
Staff Reporter
Faibley is a designated state scholar and receives about $5000 for the State Board of Higher Education Program. Scholarships are awarded to students who need and grade point average. The University of Kansas received about $15,850 in state scholarships for 300 students
By LESLIE GUILD
Faiblely said even though her scholarship had not arrived, she had the money to pay her tuition.
"Some scholarships didn't arrive before enrollment last semester, so I made sure I'd get a scholarship in the first semester," Fafley said. "I took out a HELP (Higher Education Loan Program)
**THE LOAN WAS my insurance that I'd have money to pay enrolment fees with." You know, you're paying for the money, which I usually use to pay for tuition with. I'd have to use that money for my hall fee.
Scholars awaiting checks
"The HELP loan is a loan I have to start paying back 10 months after I graduate," Fabieb said. "But I felt I should take out the scholarship the money scholarship was delayed."
Kathleen Farrell, assistant director of the office of financial aid, said the state scholarship checks were expected to arrive at KU within a week.
"It seems like it should be easy enough to write out a group of checks," Farrell said. It takes more than one week, which sends funds to all state schools and some private schools in Kansas. So there's a lot of bureaucratic paper work to writing these checks," she said. "It's a very long process."
Farrell said the checks were sometimes delayed because of an aplicent error.
FARRELL SAID some state scholarships for the fall semester had just arrived at KU
"The state will not accept estimated tax or income figures on the application forms for financial aid," Farrell said. "So if the figures are estimated, the forms have to be sent back and redone. That can delay the scholarships from getting to us."
"Although about 300 students received their money on time last semester, we did receive another $7,500 in state funds last week." she said.
Farrell said the extra money was given to KU because other students who were to receive state scholarships did not collect their money.
"If some students who are to receive funds do not enroll, then that money is redistributed to others who are judged as state scholars," she said.
"At first I was really irritated that my money didn't come in because I had been
Lior Jarloba, Quinter junior, said she received her state scholarship check for the scholarship.
told I was a state scholar and would receive that money," she said. "But then funds ran short and I was forced to take out a HELP loan to get me through last semester."
Farrell said some state scholars were told would receive scholarships, but didn't begin to take action.
"THE PROGRAM took a drop in funding because of a legislative cut," Farrell said. "So some designated scholars didn't get funds."
But Jarbee said now that she had the money for last fall, she would use it to pay her rent.
"I'm not sure there'll be money next semester, so I will save what I can," she said. "And if I don't get the scholarship funds I need, I will save enough money, I try for another loan."
"I had enough from my loan to pay my tuition this semester," she said. "So the scholarship will pay my room and board this semester."
"Because the scholarships are awarded on the basis of financial need and grades and because those factors can change with time, we want to get the scholarships every year," she said.
Farrall said that students who were state scholars did not always get the scholarships
KANSAN WANT ADS
Farrell said, though, that although KU does not allow students to enroll on credit, the university has always had a positive record.
"It's easy for a student, especially one that's new to KU, to panic when it comes time to enroll and their check isn't here," she said. "But if we know the check is coming, we try to work things out so no one suffers."
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Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the TIME business office at 864-1534.
TOFU Fresh Organic tofu made in Lawrence now at Community Mercantile 700, Lane 1-26
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen practice daily. 6 P.M. Introductory lectures
Lawrence Lawrence Chug Zeen
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ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING
Attention all Graphic Artist! We've got a complete line of Graphic Art, Architecture, and Design materials. You can come in, and see us at Strong's Office System. 9:00 am - 12:00 pm 9:00 am - 12:00 pm 1-26 9:00 am - 12:00 pm
January 28, 1979
1:30-5:00
Jayhawk Room — Union
Open to all K. U. Students.
Call R64 3552 for more information
Charles VW SERVICE is back in town, now
specifically in Duxbury. Specialists in VW Duxbury, VW Daxbury & Volaris.
The KU Karate Club is holding its first meeting
Robinson College's additional information call Dong
Robinson (0754) 839-1264.
FOR RENT
Employment Opportunities
EXTRA NICE 2尼床 apt. Located in wooded area with wood deck picture window, vaulted ceiling, entirely carpeted, dahlgren washer & dryroom hookup. Bail 841-6987 or 1-782-3682 $21/15.
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW REHABILITED
in a beautiful 180' front yard,
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684-444 or call 214 at $24 Fronter Road. Next door
residential property.
Job search list for college graduates
Writing
Sargenty, 818 S. Pearlwa. Pella. Illinois. 6105.
www.sargenty.edu
Park 25 on bus has 1 bedroom apartment
20 on june have 3 bedrooms 1 bedroom apartment
20 on june - United $1800.00 Mo - Purchased $1800.00
40 on june - United $650.00 Mo - Purchased $650.00
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ENTERTAINMENT
Christian housing. Very close to campus. Call 842-7415.
phone. Keep trying.
p. Phone 842-4124.
p. Phone 842-4124.
kitchen, 15, Bath, Central Ai. Dr.,走进 kitchen, Singles, accepted No. Pets. 843-8094 - 1-23
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most utilities parks borders KU and near town. No parking.
Room for rent. Share kitchen and bathroom
Room for rent. Share Paint Close to客房 1-25
6600 or 824-6783
Nice. Single apartment, adjacent to campus,
paid bidt sublet thru May-May 15/2023-
Mai-14-813
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phone 843-7877
Brand new duplex units and 3 bedroom house.
Campus, campus, new Kitchen appliances,
1-248-8421-021
JAYHAWKER TOWERS has an apartment for
patients with disabilities facilities
for more information at 843-699-3111.
Need roommate for 2 bedroom apartment $124.00
Mo. includes water and east cart. Must Rent
Roommate!
Two bedroom unfurnished. $205/Mo. + electric
Call Bill. 843-7780. 1-24
S. W. Lawrences, Lucasurion 4 bedroom, W-W carriage,
8 bedroom, Hotel-Bc-Cau, S-Car Gaggle, Family of
children, Suit & Tuxedo.
Sleeping room-Marine kitchen, one block from the basement. Free on campus and no downward. Pet Day: 8AM - 10PM at our campus.
I need a roommate who is responsible and quiet
684-2540 after 4 p.m. $75 mo. includes utilities
Boommac wanted for plush mobile home. Wather-
room needed 2 plush to $120/room/home.
Boommac needs 4 bedrooms.
Sublet—B1 BH Appr (furn. or unfurt) at Frontier
and North Side. Fully furnished, full rent. no.
responsible. Call 841-5973. 1-26
Roommate, owed床位 in 3 br. house, 13th &
$100.00 a month + 1.7 util bills. Call
866-555-2424
Need a roommate $93.00/month. Call 841-5145
- 126
Noble Ave, Suite 101
FURNISHED ROOM FOR MALE. Walk to KU
14 & Kentucky. Wash hain basin. Save refrigerator, bath Clean, newly painted. warm $80/60
15 & Kentucky. Wash bedlinen. linens I/ 8/ 16
41-5318
Pormale roommate needed for two bedroom Apt 3 blocks from Fraser. $875.0 - utilities
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency Cleo to campus UU1-11
paid. Clean, quiet and comfortable 84-35
26
One bedroom for roommate. Share house
one girl & some girls $600 plus % 1% utility
Close $600
One or two roommates, male or female, to share apartment at 103 N. 57th St. with two guys (Female Call: 811-249-7600)
Sublease--nice 2 br. apt. on bus route. Available
noble. 842-7175. Keep trying.
2-1
Sub-bus Park 25 apartment 2 bdrm. unfur-
sub-bus Park 28 apartment 3 bdrm. unfur-
1-816-531-3543, bat 2.50; 8-161-531-3543,
bat 2.50
Two BR Duplex: Low rent; Newly Remodeled;
3002 keep trying (plus) Internet Call: 855-123-4567
2002 keep trying
Two bedroom furnished apartment close to gate.
Kentucky St. (upstairs) weekends between 8-10am.
French Quarter (downstairs).
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make senses out of Western Civilization makes sense to students in Western Civilization 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* is available now at Towson University Press.
Roommate wanted $116/mo. includes utilities.
Roommate wanted 17th and Alabama Call after
5 M WKM 1032.
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with straps, cord,
strap covers, picks, cords and covers. Very good condition.
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar. Very good condition.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
LMT MOVECTE, MOVECTE, 680-800, 900, W. 4
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Nakamichi 500 Cassette (new $480) for $280. Browne 1500 Cassette (new $390) for $360. McIntosh Mini电脑和 Slim耳机套包 $120. Sennheiser Headphones $70.
WATERED MATTERES $36.98, 9 yr. guaranty
at WHITE LIGHT, 70, Masses 1638-1346
- 18-24
1970 Fender Toleater. New lacquer finish, maple
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SunSpexs - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
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1021 Massa 841-5700
BONG'S at WHITE LIGHT are 10% off with this
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1-24
Hockey goalie equipment. Excellent condition.
Skates, cleats and gloves. Skate skates separately. Best offer, 843-485-125
Michigan Street Music. 647 Michigan, sales and
instruction. Complete line of strings and acoustic
instruments.
mattayg gas dryer. 6 months old—almost new.
Call Mariyah. 811-451-325. Must Sacrifice.
Stereo system: Turntable BBR AXE, Amp Rotel
Stereo system: Turntable BBR AXE, Amp Rotel
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JCP 125 5.5 Cubic ft. refrigerator/freezer Call
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Fill your place with inexpensive used furniture.
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Single bed and dresser w/mirror for sale. 842-
1812 1-26
Ielliss Mossman fatt-at top, I have a very nice mossman. Mossman flat-top account. Deleven, Davenport, Denver, Kahn & Carrishne, Merle Travis, Cat Stevens, & many others. Mossman at 314-261-8258. Winfox at Mossman at 314-261-8258. Winfox 2-16
**Sales! Sale! Sales! One Technics fully automatic burner system (IBM) and two Cannon ELS burners.** For information on the wait time for channel. For information call Mark H. O'Reilly at 1-800-329-7267. *don't miss* opportunity. Call anytime? *more*
SeaRs 10-speed $45. $28 610 turboable $20. Fair
price for a wheel $150. *Wagon* $150. *Vespa* $25.
*Triumph* $25.
12 x 60 Mobile with metal hat, carpent
China Independent living for students. 841-596-
3353 or 841-596-3351.
Sanamil amp. tuner, base case and rack. Techchip,
Rockford Instruments. $750. Retail $1200, w/ sale. $750. Cap 842-794-6200, after 5:00 p.m.
Pulser 801 with 50mm f4.1 lens, case, lens hood
and filter. Like New, kit 801-1
1-26
FOUND
Found Tom Cat, white body, brown head &
Found Tom Cat, white body, brown head &
Found Tom Cat, white body, brown head
35mm camera, Wednesday, #100 Smith, Call 272-1286 between 5-7 p.m.
Woman's w watch found in front of Noch. Call 841- 4288. Donn.
Found: One set of keys in front of Spooner Hall.
White female Kitten 3 mos. Call 842-3838. eaves.
By stadium.
Phoenix: Our set of keys in front of Spencer Hall.
Night of SMU basketball. Game 1-24
Set 5 of S keys with Phillips 66 tag along Misspelt
Set 10. 9:15 am. 6:15 pm. Clam at Amast
Camlabus
Found: Brown plaid winter scarf near Potter's
Call: Craig K435-8172. 1-25
HELP WANTED
A student assistant for female quadriplegic students will be required to attend a Wednesday and Wed morning classes. Job includes typing papers, taking school tests, teaching math, or serving as a senior. Call 843-4223 or 843-1011 afterternoon. Email: admin@eaglebrook.edu
Clerk opening at Overland Photo's downtown location in San Diego. Knowledge of camera & darkroom materials. Approval from Overland Photo's drive-up store in Hollywood, CA to open every other Saturday for 14 hours a day. Please call 310-755-9862 period 14H 310-755-9862
G. P. Lloyd's is now hiring cocktail waitresses,
and requires Experience, Experience preferred,
and ability to apply.
Part time jobs. Excellent pay work when you have hours you can do. College or college写工作. State College, Pa., and start earning next week. Please enclose 2c-16 handling 1-24
Counselors wanted. Western Colorado boy's camp emphasizing outliving alone, self-care and the importance of interest in working with children required. Include self-addressed, completed birth certificates. Possible to ANDERSON CAMPY: GAMPS.COL, 803-697-1250.
Clerk wanted to work weekends 12-20 fright. Who prefer a first or second year law student? No, it's too late for that job.
MEN WOMEN JOBS*** CRUISE SHIPS ***
FREIGHTERS. No experience. High pay! See Europe, Hawaii, $25 to $35. So America, Windy Beach, $35 to $40 in SEAWORLD box 61035, Caverra. CA 95800 4-17
Cashier-Hotels, this area restaurant must be on the third floor. Please prefer over 21 parttime, evening hours.
J's B.A. Bay Roy now taking applications for full
& part time employees-Appey in person at 723
Afterparty clerk position at Quick-Shop Photo-Shop, 937 Iowa in the Hillcress Shop district. Hours 2:30-6:00 Monday-Friday and all day 10:00-5:00 Saturday. Applies to a salary wage $2.70. Apply in person 1741 Mass. 1-23
Immidiate openings for person to work with,
quidiprismide in nursing home. Must be
eligible to live in a nursing home &
evenings & week nights. Provide own trans-
mission equipment before 4:30 p.m.
Adult Services
1-23
Bureau of Child Research has opening for full-time position in M.A. degree with experience to computer data analysis, experience with computer-based social sciences, experience with background in the social sciences, experience with communication. Must be able to work well with others. Prog ram program 25, 1978 Starting date approximately February 6, 1978 Midday July, 11th Hawthorne, phone number outlouds "Bureau of Child Research" is an office located in New York City.
Graduate Assistant to the Executive Vice-Chancellor for Teaching and Good writing ability FY 7 on campus, graduated from FY 7 on appointment, half time $469-$500 monthly; January 24, 2017. Contact Mark Woolf, 231 St. Hill, 864-864. Affirmative Action and women of all races and persons with disabilities are encouraged.
Now lainting applications for Fountain & Grill
Kitchenware. Apply online at pfn.us Restaurant 1278
Apply in person at Pfnus Restaurant 1278
Children's Learning Center has been providing for ages 3 to 12 since its opening. The Learning Center is an equal opportunity center in an open environment. The Learning Center is a
THE MOFFET-BEERS BAND is now holding
keyboard instruments, Call 842-566-8493, 842-566-8494.
Browse existing positions available. Assist in the recruitment of new applicants to the job offered by Applicant in job application A1A31 B3B37. Test
Part time help needed for wood working overnight. Must be able to work approximately 92 hours per week. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree in forestry, forest management, or a related field.
LOST
Large reward for return of Indias' star sapphire
ring. No questions: 846-565. Lost before Christmas.
A black wallet lost during enrolment in Hoch
saddlertium. If found, please return back.
The back of the wallet is torn.
Black glove, RW. H/lather, 1/4 in. 1/8
Zome. Please leave a F.O. ELECTRIC shop. 1-25
MISCELLANEOUS
NOTICE
THEIS BINDING COPYING - The House of
Law is a landmark law firm that has been
binding and copying in Lawsuits. Latu
was born in the city of Chicago, Illinois,
and graduated from Harvard University.
J. HOOD BOOKSeller wishes to welcome all new and returning students for the spring semester, which will be held on p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m to 6 p.m. Sunday, Closed Monday, Come down and browse the bookstore. Students may visit in towns—hall hard cover and 2 paper prices. Bookstore will buy books by 1-23 at 1401. Mass. 841-4644
Gay Services of Kannan - general meeting, Jan
23. 7:30. Kannan University Jyawkhayeh
1:23
1TRILLATING TOPS
Topless dancers with lunch
Noon - 2:00
Only at all times
Flamant
507 N. Johns
N. Lawrence
PERSONAL
Color Photography, Slides. Printing. You name it.
Highest quality, good prices, fast delivery.
$25-$35 per book.
Margaret Berlin and George Gomez are running for student body president and vice president. They are interested in your ideas. Margaret-843-712-4505 or Margaret-843-652-4505. Paid for by the Step Citation. 1-23
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control, Counseling. Total Ligation. For appointment call (800) 234-6500, St. Overland Park, Ks - 340. WwW.St.OverlandPark.340
1-23
Gay/Lewis, Switchboard, counseling and general
information. 841-8472. tt
DARKROOM-SUA provides a complete photograph darkroom (the chemicals and paper for this photo are shown in the next page).
Stop by Burkys daily for Petit Hour 2-4 P.M.
Small-16%, Medium-30%, Large-56%
Seat 1, Seat 2, Seat 3
HAROUD SPECIALS * 4-8 Mon. Tuesday, and
Friday from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
MADIS HEART NIGHT* Wed $16 gipfel tickets
WHEN THE INDUIN IS OUT,
GEORGE IS IN!
All Smokeers Supplies
Georges Shop
---
$1 PITCHERS every Friday afternoon from 2-6 at the Harbour
if
Register for the SUA Winter Baskhamgarten Golf Tournament at Ridgewood Country Club on Friday, January 13, 2015, at the Fairway. Winner receives for regionals' ranking.
GUITAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexpensive introduction to the instrument; begin with the basic steps of forming Groups began Wed. Feb. 7, for adults and children; Call Kansas Folkbore College 841-8842; TUE 9:30 AM through 11:30 AM
Tan Man--We finally get your cost back from the cleaners. Please come home-Dad. 1:23
SERVICES OFFERED
Rexas. Let me type my term paper, dissertation,
music. Fast Service. Mrs. Nixon. 842-1561.
Import cases—prompt quality writes by factory
imports. Calls 911 for urgent calls. Send immediate call 843-705-2260.
For more information, visit www.deliverydialer.com
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Udler Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 12 noon. Mass
EXPERT TUTORS. MATH 600-122. mail 647-8377.
EXPERT CATERS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. mail 647-8377.
EXPERT COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. mail 647-8377.
EXPERT COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. mail 647-8377.
EXPERT COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. mail 647-8377.
EXPERT COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. mail 647-8377.
EXPERT CATERS. QUALIFICATIONS. B.S. in Physics 890-900. QUALIFICATIONS. B.S. in Computer programming. For general problems call 890-900.
Need help in math or cs1? Give a tutor who can
help with your math or CS1 problems. CS8
Bailey 841-4795
BS8 Bailey 841-4795
MATH TUTOR MA. in mathe, patience, three years professional tutoring experience. 822-341-541
Long women, Party-Run dresses, Formals-Made
Elizabeth 1-893-296-1299, Lean 1-29
Eric 1-893-296-1299
TYPING
I do damned good typing, Peggy, 842-4476. 15
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980.
Experienced Typist—term paper, Briefs, mills,
letters, footreading, spelling correction
843-955-8025
Tysial/Editor, IBM Pica/Ellite. Quality work. Publish. Thesis, dissertation welcome. MS-82192
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Master's degree, Law papers, term papers, Mrs.
Weddle. 823-754-6120
Experienced typist with scientific background
IBM correcting Selective II Call Jian 845-312-91
(800) 764-7633
Do wi do typing on elite electric typewriter.
Provide service, postpressing. Call Ms Hayes.
Phone 914-356-0287.
REWRITING EDITING—Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective grammar, punctuation, and flow of thought with precision and smoothness. Out-of-print editions and articles also available. Editions: 842-1313
HOME TYPING SERVICE- Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced secretary in her home. For information at 413-658-1430, after 5:30 anytime weekends.
1-26
Female roommate for Jayhawk Towers. $95
1-23
utilities paid $43,367.35
WANTED
Gay Male to share large 3 BR apartment with 2 gay students (70$/m² plus 1.9JUILLES). Must be non-monastery loan, and responsible. Write Appr Wallet for loan. Include name and phone number. **1-23**
Roommate wanted to share house furnished.
Contact Jim Meyer at 822-129-1.
1-23
Roommates: Share 2 bedrooms Apt. 501 per month.
Alabama: Akron, Alabama 26; Cali: 1-129
812-412-124
Female roommate needed. 3 HR Duq. $90 +1/3
utilities. Call 841-2427 morning.
Female Roommate needed quick! Call Jill-
841-2130.
Jill-1-25
HEAD START NEEDS YOU • volunteer to help
the school with a 2-4 hour day each week. Leased
to teachers' and bursars' at the school.
Want to earn extra money? If so, Reeration Services needs basketball officials to officiate intramural basketball games. If you are interested in playing, call 314-275-8601 orRN or drow at room 208 Johnson. 1-855-322-7961
Student wanted to share 2 badem. apt with male
student. Student wanted to share 1 badem. apt with
Feb 15 $15 000* 'offices' Call 811-467-9199
Female Roommate wanted Rent $83 a month,
1/3 unities 842-3641 1-26
Wanted. A roommate for furnished 2 BR apt.
$112.50 + $9 utilities 841-885.
Formal marriage to share two bedroom apartment, smoker, and toy. Call Michael at 866-553-2910.
Wanted. To roommate for apartment at Jay-
awater Towers. $50 a month, all utilities paid.
$175 a month. To apply visit jayawater.com
One or two roommates need for attractive Trailridge Townhouse Negotiable 841-0232
Trailridge Townhouse Negotiable 841-0232
Responsible, quiet, roommate for spring semester.
73/Mc. are utilized 864-250. Call after
season.
Non-smoking female to share house with three females. 50% male, utilities paid. 641-842-26-6
Drammer-- Best beat-moll or band sound Live
at Steve 8214-7695, Kevin 8214-8055, Steve
@Steve 8214-7695, Kevin 8214-8055
Roommate needed. 2 Bdrm. Apt. next to campus
$100/month, 1' utilities. Call Riack 811-3586.
Female counsel wanted to serve 3 BR house,
house code Cally Ratha or Delken 843-5220;
house code Call Kathy or Delken 843-5220.
Female roommate to share 2 BR. Apt, close to
campu 841-5368 at 6:00, all day weekend.
Roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. at Meadow-
broom 843-1144.
1-29
Recommite to share house with two geyez exercise facilities, and a separate facility 72 of yufs. Call or stop by at TYMN 1640-936-4528.
8
Tuesday, January 23, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Senate to begin Regents debate
By PAT MANSON
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Two members of the Kansas Board of Regents, who were reappointed by former Gov. Robert F. Bennett before he left office, are expected to appear before a Kansas Senate committee sometime this week.
Bennett's appointees are being actively opposed by Gov. John Carlin, who has called for an end to the ban.
On Jan. 3, five days before he left office,
Bennett renominated Republicans Glee
Smith Jr., of Larned and Walter Hier-
er. Fairway to four-year terms on the
board.
Two weeks ago, Carlin named his choices, Republicans Margaret Glades of Yates Center and John MacDonald of Hutchinson. Carlin said that he had right to choose the new Regents and that he would fight Bennett's appointments.
The Senate Select Committee on Appointments is responsible for reviewing Regents appointments. Tom Rehorn, D-Kansas City, chairman of the committee, said yesterday that he would try to schedule a hearing for Bennett's nominee but that he did not know what the committee would make its recommendation.
"There's no way I can predict how long it will take or how many questions the nine members on the committee will ask," Rehman said.
AFTER THE committee has made its recommendation, the appointments will go to the Senate floor for debate.
The Senate, which must confirm appointments to state agencies by a simple majority, will then decide which of the four nonimmies will serve on the Board. The Senate could confirm the appointments of one nominee of Bennett and Carlin or reselect all of them.
The term of a third board member, M. Prudence Hudson of Newton, also has expired, but Carlin said he would not fill the vacancy until the Senate confirmed appointments to the two seats. Bennett made no nomination for Hudson's position.
Because the four nominees to the disputed seats are Republicans, Hutton's successor will most likely be a Democrat. The only other major difference between the two parties required by state law
Meanwhile, serve and Hierstheiner have continued to serve on the board since their terms expired Dec. 31. According to state law, Regents remain on the board until their successes are confirmed by the Senate.
Until the Senate takes action on Bennett's nominations, Carlin cannot submit his own. Carlin, however, has said he will not be subject to the Senate selects Bennett's nomines.
Carlin's aides have not denied that Bennett had the legal authority to nominate Smith and Hiersteiner. However, they have said that because Carlin must work with the new members, he should choose them.
BILL HOAG, a Carlin aide, said. "It is true that the vacancies occurred during the last 10 days of the Bennett administration. Obviously, as the vacancies
exist, a sitting governor may make the appointments.
"It was Gov. Carlin's position—Gov. Bennett being a gift-duck governor—that it would make more sense for the governor-elect to decide who would be on the board, and then rely on them on a continuing basis. It's logical to have people you can work with on the board.
"That was the motivation behind Gov. Carlin's actions."
Smith, however, said it had been a tradition for outgoing governors to fill the vacant office.
"The law has been for many decades, for vacancies that occur Dec. 31, that was not announced," said. "As a matter of fact, Docking appressed me four years ago, not Bob Ben-
However, when Bennett took office four years ago, the Senate confirmed his nominees to some state posts rather than Docking's nominees.
Smith and Hierister both said partisan politics had motivated Carlin's app
"I THINK it should be decided not on who makes the appointments, but who is appointed," Smith said. "He they judge us, he has been an at-terror to make it political."
Hierstner said, "I'm of the opinion that the integrity of the Board of Regents will be maintained with the appointments of Glee and myself, and that it will be damaged if we are not confirmed. I don't think this should be a partisan issue."
Rehorn, however, said he thought partitions politics were not play a large role in the country.
Also, the Senate has given no indication that it will vote in party blocs. The Senate Republicans, who outnumber the Democrats, would probably take a stand on the nominations as a party.
Gaar said then that he did not want to促Hierstenter to a state post because he had no money.
Majority leader Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, voted four years ago against confirming Hierstein, a Republican governor's nominee.
Garre recently said that he didn't know whether Hiersteiner would reflect Carlin's views on education and that he had not whether to vote for his confirmation.
Gaar, however, has said that Smith had a good chance of being confirmed because of his legislative connections. Smith was also charged with the murder he was appointed to the Board of Regents.
Rehorn said he could not predict how the Senate would vote on the nominees.
“It’s very close,” Rehorn said. “Long before this committee met there was a lot of lobbying going on. There’s been a lot of pressure. I don’t mean in an unreasonable amount. There’s just been a lot of phone calls for both sides.”
Rehorm said he did not think the Regents fight would cause bittersick on either side.
“There’s not going to be any malice or hard feelings,” Rehorn said. “Nobody’s going to be trying to crucify anybody else.”
600 students report flu cases to Watkins
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
About 600 University of Kansas students reported to Watkins Hospital yesterday with fln symptoms, according to Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital.
Usually, about 150 students a day are treated at Watkins.
However, Wollmann said, he did not consider the increase of patients to be a flu
"We can't really call this an epidemic because that requires large numbers," he said.
Wollmann said between 18 and 20 persons had been hospitalized with the flu in the past two days. He said flu reports began last Friday.
"Those with more severe symptoms or with other complications, such as infections, have been admitted to the hospital," he said.
Wollmann said symptoms included high fevers, headaches and body aches.
"For those symptoms, a person should stay in bed, take aspirin and drink fluids," he said. "They must just wait it out until the fever comes down."
From page one
Several students, including Rob crutchinger, Great Beat sophomore, and Robert Meyer, senior.
He said a number of students also had called the hospital asking advice.
"No prescriptions can be given over the phone," he said. "But some students who do not have a high fever or other severe pains have called in to talk to a nurse."
Collins said he would like to see 3.2 beer served at the student union at Haskell
Milty...
If it meant I had to go out of business, I'd gladly do it. Then Haskell students would be getting the same treatment as KU students."
Galbreath he did not know whether students would want beer at the student store, because it was a glass, rather than by six-packs, might eliminate beer in the residence hall, he said.
Colinls hasn't given up yet. He said he would fight for his license in court if questioned.
Haskell officials aren't ready to take that step yet. They are waiting to hear the city's interpretation told of the ordinance that they saw Uncle Milly's is violating.
Even then, Quiring said, "Before we would bring a recommendation to the city government," he added.
another basis, we would take another look at the situation."
Meanwhile, at Uncle Milly's the crowd is beginning to thin out. There are two cars parked nearby. But most of the patrons are heading near 23rd Street.
CHINA
JAPAN
KOREA
COMMAND BY A.S.A.
COMMAND BY NOWLAND
COMMAND BY DANIEL SCHMITZ
Dwarf nutrient
Large nutrient
Small nutrient
Small nutrient
All three are needed
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
Maupintour
Travel Service
can make your travel ar-
rangements, quickly, efficiently,
and at NO CHARGE to you.
843-1211
K.U. UNION DOWNTOWN
THE MALLS
Maupintour travel service
Kruppenkier, said he had been sick the entire weekend.
Wollmann said: the staff had not been increased to handle the excess work load. He also said the hospital had enough medical supplies to meet the demand.
MELANIE GROVER
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
Special Steak
"When I came in at 9 in the morning, the entire place was packed," he said. "And it took about two hours for me to get to a doctor. He gave a prescription and told me to watch what I ate for the next few days."
Includes regular beverage, choice of potato & sizzler toast.
PE
All for $2.29
Clip Coupon
One Coupon per person
Chef's
Good Jan. 23 thru 25th 1979 Good only at 1516 W.23rd St.
Call 843-3034/9th St. Center/9th & Illinois
MEN and WOMEN'S Precision Hair Cuts only $7.00 shampoo and blow drying extra
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Intramural Basketball Info is available in the Recreation Services Office, Room 208, Robinson Center
BASKETBALL MANAGERS MEETINGS WILL BE HELD AS FOLLOWS:
MEN and
WOMEN'S
Precision
Hair
Cuts
only
$7.00
shampoo and
blow drying extra
CAMPUS
BEAUTY
SHOPPE
RECREATION LEAGUE 'C''
Tues., Jan. 23, 1pm — Room 205 Robinson
RECREATION NEWS
TROPHY LEAGUE 'A'*
Tuens. Jan 23, 6:00 pm — Room 205 Robinson
RECREATION LEAGUE "B"
Wed., Jan. 24, 5 p.m. — Room 205 Robinson
RECREATION LEAGUE "B"
KU to give county portable hospital
By BRUCE THOMAS
DON'T MISS THESE MEETINGS
Staff Reporter
The Douglas County Commission voted yesterday to accept the field hospital from the University of Kansas. The proposal was submitted to the commission by Travis Brann, coordinator of the Douglas County office of emergency preparedness.
A 200-bed portable hospital, which has been lying boxed in the basement of Oliver Hall for more than five years, will be moved to the University Building, 111 and New Hampshire streets.
The package disaster hospital was brought to the University in August of 1974 as part of a civil defense program to prepare for an attack. He served a major disaster, Brann said yesterday.
The hospital, located in the basement of the food storage warehouse at Olive Hall, was the first facility to be opened.
University officials decided last month that the 600 square feet of space the hospital occupied was needed for the storage of other medical equipment. The emergency medical stockup to the county.
SATURDAY-January 27th at 1:00 p.m.at the Parlors
MARK DENKE, residence director of Oliver Hall, said he thought the space now occupied by the hospital would be used to store additional food. He said he learned of the hospital last month when a government inspector visited the hall.
Bram said, "Some of the equipment may be considered obsolete by the medical community, like the X-ray machine, but it could be put to use if the need came.
SUA WINTER BACKGAMMON TOURNAMENT
Double Elimination
Winner Advances to Intramural Regionals February 8-10
"This would probably never be used short of a national emergency (such as a nuclear
$1.00 Entry Fee...Register at SUA Office by 3:00 pm Friday, January 26th
NO LATE ENTRIES ACCEPTED
Sponsored by SUA Backgammon Club
---
When it comes to cutting
Guys & Gals hair, we're
No. 842-1144
REDKEN
war). In the case of a tornado we could move the patients to either Topeka or Kansas City faster than we could set up the hospital."
Beds, blankets, an X-ray unit, medical supplies, laboratory and lighting equipment and paper supplies to keep administrative records comprise the portable hospital. The only things that the hospital does not have, are Braun, are medicine, drugs and a shelter.
Last week, Brann received a letter from Hozan releasing the hospital to the county.
Blane's SALON ON THE MALL
Bramn and William Hogan, association executive vice chancellor, had been discussing the transfer of the hospital to the county's care since last month.
KU FREE
In the letter, Hogan said the hospital would be given to the county with the condition that the University could have access to the equipment in an emergency.
10
FOR MORE
BREWER & SHIPLEY
KARATE CLUB
DEMONSTRATION & OPENING MEETING
THURSDAY
JANUARY 25th
7:30 p.m.
173 ROBINSON
BEGINNING AND ADVANCED STUDENTS
INFORMATION CONTACT
DOUG BROWN 842-5225 or
ROB PITCAIRN 842-1376
PLANT ENGINEERING
As the aggressive world leader in the beef industry, Iowa Beef Processors is the site of exceptional career opportunity for ambitious individuals ready to take responsibility and grow with us. We have training opportunities available for upcoming or recent Engineering Graduates leading to total management responsibility for the maintenance/engineering function at one of our plants.
For more information about professional opportunities available, write or call COLLECT:
402/494-2061
Judv Mullens
ibp
IOWA BEEF PROCESSORS, INC.
P.O. Box 3350
Sioux City, Iowa 51101
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
COLD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
KU prof seeks Antarctic deposits See story page 5
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 79
Wednesday, January 24.1979
RESIDENCE OF THE REPUBLIC OF BRAZIL
Staff photo by TRISH LEWl
Budaet Address
Governor John Carlin presented his budget statement to a joint session of the Kansas Legislature yesterday. Carlin called for a conservative budget for his first year in office.
Budget draws mixed KU reaction
Staff Renorters
By TAMMY TIERNEY
KU administrators and local officials reacted yesterday with a mixture of satisfaction and gloom to Gov. John Carlin's budget message.
"We're very pleased with his recommendation for a 7 percent increase in faculty salaries and for the increase in the annual wage," Chancellor Archive D. Rykes said.
"However, with only a 6.4 percent increase for operating costs, we obviously cannot keep up with the pace of inflation. We will need to stretch our funds as far as they will allow."
In his message, Carlin recommended that student wages be raised from $2.65 an hour to $2.90 an hour to comply with federal guidelines.
Kyle's view was echoed by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and Richard Von Ende, executive secretary. Both said they were pleased with the salary increases for faculty and students, but dismayed at the budget cuts that have made a big bake from the University's budget.
SHANKEL SAID, "Clearly, with a 6 percent increase in operating expenditures, the company is making real progress."
some of the progress we've made. The recommendations Carin made won't allow us to make the library improvements we'd like in our major equipment requests also were denied.
Library improvements requested by the University included a security system and security monitors.
Several large requests for capital improvements also were cut from KU's budget. In 2014, the University and Lindley halls and improvements to increase the access of the handcapped to
Shankel said, "We'll just try to make the best case or they try to budget the budget."
Another disappointment for the administrators was Carlin's decision not to adopt formula funding. Instead, Carlin said that he would be more able to help feature budgets for Kansas schools.
VON ENDE SAID the 6 percent recommendation would result in a net loss in purchasing power for the University. The University will not be known until next year, he said.
Formula funding is a new method of figuring budgets for the Kansas Board of Regents schools. It is based on the comparison of Kansas schools with peer schools.
Dykes said he and other administrators had expected Carlin to reject the new funding method and said it probably would be adoated in phases.
"Most of us thought that Gov. Carlin would like to take more time to consider formula funding. I think it will be implemented when the Legislature and the Governor have had adequate time to study and consider it." he said.
SHANKEL SAID KU would keep pushing for formula funding at budget hearings so that at least part of the program would be adopted this year.
Dykes that because of the current penny-pinching mood of the legislature, he expected a lean year for Kansas universities.
"Formula funding is a pretty good indication of the quality of education," he said. "It is a rational and reasonable investment to make convincing and rational arguments."
"At across the country there is a much more conservative trend," he said. "There is pressure to reduce taxes and expenditures. There is pressure to provide for higher education in the Legislature."
However, local state representatives reacted favorably to Carlin's stand on aid to the troops.
"The University came out pretty well." Rep. Mike Glover, D-D Lawrence, said.
HE SAID he was satisfied with the increases for student employee and faculty pay, but worried about a possible lack of equipment or replacing equipment in KU's science labls.
State Rep. John Solubch, D-Lawrence,
said I think I agree in principle with
their views on a new law.
John Vogel, Lawrence, the sole Republican representative from Douglas County, said he was generally pleased by the state partly because of its conservative values.
"As a whole it was quite favorable to education," he said.
However, both Glover and Vogel said they thought some of the recommendations the committee made were true.
"The leading Republicans in the House want a spending bid, "Vogel said, "feel that the majority of Republicans in the House will encourage the make tax on utilities and food."
Glover said many Democrats supported spending lid legislation and the elimination of Obamacare.
*But Datumrecords are generally supplanted by*
*Citri Buermacchi are generally supported by*
*Glyph resulfate.*
Vitamin C as cold remedy argued
By RON BAIN Staff Reporte
Staff Reporter
The minimum daily requirement of vitamin C, as established by the Food and Drug Administration, is 45 milligrams, but according to a local pharmacist, that's not enough to store a cold.
Popping vitamin C tablets to avoid winter colds has become a national fast recy, but local authorities are advising people not to take them.
Vitamin C—ascorbic acid to a chemist—has long been known to be essential to human nutrition. Lack of the chemical causes a deficiency disease, scurvy, which occurs in long voyages until they started eating citrus fruits on trips.
Debbie Pearls, a pharmacist at the Round Corner Drug Store, 801 Massachusetts St., said yesterday that she thought large doses of vitamin C could prevent colds but could not cure them.
Taking vitamins, unlike taking drugs, causes no immediately measurable body response, according to Pleas. Also, different people have different daily requirements for vitamin C; so the effects of taking vitamin C pills vary from
*PEOPLE WITH colds come to us and ask about vitamin C, but any time we recommend vitamins, it's with the vitamin C. We don't offer it.*
According to a California biochemist, Linus Pauling, scientific studies have shown that the brain of mice actually alleviated the
symptoms of a cold, even after its onset. Pauling published a book in 1976 titled "Vitamin C: The Common Cold and the Flu," which recommended a daily intake of 2 to 5 grams of vitamin C for cold and flu prevention.
PAULING WAS one of the first scientists to publicize vitamin C' abilities to increase cold resistance. Pauling visited the University of Kansas last year to speak on the subject.
HOWEVER CONSUMING more than two of those tablets a day could be "counterproductive" for preventing colds, according to Peter Beyer, an assistant professor of diet and nutrition at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
A person with a daily intake of four 260-milligram A vitamin C tablets or a gram a day, would have to spend an average of $143.35 per day.
A well-balanced diet will provide about 100 milligrams a day of vitamin C, which is contained in foods ranging from orange juice and Kool-Aid to turnip greens and parsley. To avoid overloading on vitamins, the person would have to take vitamin C supplement tablets. A bottle containing 250 tablets, each with a 250-milligram dose of vitamin C, costs $6.06 in the Kansas Union Book-
Beyer said recent studies showed that doses of more than 500 milligrams of vitamin C *d* day reduced lymphocyte production in the human body. Lymphocytes, examples of white blood cells, are involved in the blood stream and are what ultimately cure colds.
Beyer said that consuming more than the FDA's
recommended allowance of 45 milligrams but less than 500 milligrams of vitamin C might make some people feel more comfortable, but that feeling could be psychosomatic. He said some people are reassured by taking a pill for colds.
A REGISTERED dietitian at Watkins Memorial Hospital, Marc Bates, said many people take large doses of vitamin C only during the winter cold season. That practice could lead to problems, she said.
Bates said consuming large doses of vitamin C increased the ability of hair to absorb the vitamin, so that symptoms similar to scurvy could develop if a person began taking large doses of vitamin C in the winter and then stopped in it.
Bates said people should stick to food for their nutrition needs, even if they were sick.
"I don't just recommend supplements off the hat," Bates said.
"You want to get at least the minimum, but I think it's better to learn how to meet nutrition needs their dishes," she said.
SUPPLEMENTES are big business these days, and many pharmacies and natural food stores sell vitamins.
Buddighy Straight, owner of Norwegian Woods, a natural food store at 1344 Indiana St., said it 15 to 20 percent of his family's income.
Gov. John Carlin presented recommendations yesterday to the Kansas Legislature for what he called a concession that cut the KU request by $8.2 million.
"We try to let people make their own choices," he said.
Straight said he used vitamin supplements, but did not try to rush the oilms on his customers.
By GENE LINN Staff Reporter
Carlin reduces budget request
The Kansas Board of Regents had asked for $225 million for the University of Kansas. Carlin suggested that the Legislature allocate $115,419,408 to KU.
State funding for KU and other Regents schools is now based on the number of full-time teachers.
Although Carl said he did not favor formula funding and cut about $32 million in formula funding requests, he did say he had used the concept as a "benchmark" in his research.
Formula funding compares the financial resources available to similar enrollment and fund needs. KU administrators had used formula funding to calculate KU's budget request for
"I DON'T think formula funding is the answer at this time," Carlin said.
However, he did recommend that funding for education be based on quality and not outcome.
"Because of declining enrollments, our policy towards funding higher education—based on full-time enrollment—mus chance," he said.
If the Kansas Legislature approves Carlin's recommendations, KU will receive little funding for new programs or capital improvements in fiscal 1980.
Carlin recommended one capital improvement project that had been requested by the company. A Marvin Hall project costing $1,277,100 was approved. However, a $1.9 million project for Lindley Hall and $800,000 in planning funds for a new power plant were not approved.
CARLIN ALSO cut 6 percent off the $19,187,537, a 13 percent budget increase, that the Regents had requested for the University of Kansas Medical Center. The Governor's recommendation was for $12,603,440.
However, Carlin proposed a KU faculty salary increase of 7 percent, 5 percent more than the Regents had requested. Carlin also recommended a 9.5 percent student employee wage increase and a 6 percent increase for other operating expenses.
Carlin's recommendations for KU were in keeping with his budget for the state as a whole.
The Governor recommended an overall budget increase of 7 percent to $24 billion.
1" contrast this to a comparable time four years ago when the increase was 12 per cent.
However, he said that 4 percent of the increase in his budget was because of new programs that he was proposing. He called them "very conservative, but compassionate."
CARLIN ALSO said his budget was
fecally balanced and no tax increases were
needed.
Apparently, one casualty of Carlin's conservative recommendations was a plan to eliminate the sales tax from utility and food bills.
Carlin, who had backed this measure during his campaign, said it had his hand on the ball.
"AS POLITICALLY visible as sales taxes are, the property tax is the most unfair and wasteful."
"The question is when?" he said. "At this time there are too many unanswered unanswered questions and other questions that you should do with the taxes on foot or utility bills."
Instead of cutting sales taxes, Carl said, he would provide $30.8 million in property taxes.
Carlin said he wanted to keep the sales tax because he planned to transfer $20 million from the state general fund to the state highway system.
Carlin also said the Legislature must protect homeowners and farmers before it draws up a program to reapraise property, as it is scheduled to do this year.
On another matter, Carlin stopped short of endorsing bills-lid legislation to limit
"The best spending lid we can give
Kansens is a thoughtful and deliberative
legislative process which is not stamped
into headline-grabbing programs." he said.
Carlin said that although his budget was conservative, it was responsive to the needs of his community.
He recommended a 5 percent increase of state assistance to the poor in minimum wages.
IN OTHER matters, Carlin made recommendations which would:
- create a consumer committee to advise the
Kansas Corporation Commission on utility costs
- contain health care costs, partly by reviewing the current Blue Cross & Blue Shield programs in Kansas to insure cost-effectiveness.
- give state employee a pay increase to 4.5 percent plus $18 month across
- provide an estimated balance at the end of fiscal year 1980 of $121,370,000, the lowest percentage of the state general fund since fiscal year 1971.
- tighten the lid on property taxes,
before a vote is needed necessary before the bill could be passed.
Nigeria students face more financial woes
By MARK L. OLSON
Staff Reporter
Most of the Nigerian students at the university are not financially difficult if the Nigerian government does not pay their scholarships, Apelcibir Willabo, Port Harcourt, Nigeria,
"I was able to fall back on the little songs I had," he said, "but now it is much tougher."
The lack of money coming from the Nigerian Consultate, which handles the money exchange between the Nigerian government and KU, has put a strain on the students who rely on government scholarships to pay for their tuition and on a payment to protect them and pay rent according to Wilabo and Jim Eklei, Port Harcourt, Nigeria, senior.
The failure of the Nigerian government to pay the tuitions of 16 students for the IUC administration to threaten to drop those students from the University if the tuition is not paid by Feb. 13, the 20th day of classes, according to David Ambler, vice president.
AMBLER SAID yesterday that the administration's decision to drop the students had not changed since the first day of classes, when there were 20 students whose tuitions had not been paid for the previous semesters.
Wilabo said the problem was worse for those students who have scholarships from
He said phone calls to the Nigerian Consulate in New York to find out about the attack.
"The problem," McCoy said, "you call and you can never get hold of anyone who
The 16 are among 45 Nigerian students studying at KU on scholarships granted by many of the 19 Nigerian states and by Graeme McCovy, comptroller
The Nigerian state of Rivers which stopped
their students in June 1978.
William is from Rivers.
"THIS THING IS the bureaucrats back home," Willabo said. "They are not doing a job."
He also said that the Consulate in New York had continued to send scholarship money to students after they had received their degrees, and that many of them had decided to use the money to get a masters. Wilabo said he thought that because of the money was not enough money to allot to those students who used their scholarships leisurely.
The delinquency of payment led Willabo to take on a job to help pay rent and buy food. He worked for a short time at a factory where he writes parking tickets for the University.
He said he must have the consent of the Immigration and Naturalization Service to work off campus, but to work for KU he must be a foreign officer. Coan, director of Forcing Student Services.
ACCORDING TO ROBERT H. Rumbaugh, district director of the Kansas City branch of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, a foreign student must prove that he needs job access because of economic in order to work or work a maximum of 20 hours off campus.
Xume said that short-term loans from KU, which must be repaid by the beginning of the following term, may not be enough to fund the back of funds from the Nigerian government.
ACCORDING TO AMBILER, the matter has come to the attention of the Nigerian business community.
But Wilabo said the Embassy had told him that it had no money, and that students were leaving.
"The funny thing is, even if my parents want to send money," Willabo said, "they technically cannot because I am on scholarship."
2
Wednesday, January 24,1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Viets sau uprising complete
HANGKOK, Thailand—Vietnam said yesterday that the "people's uprising" had completely and irreversibly toppled the Cambodian government.
However, Thai and Western intelligence officials said fighting was continuing some near Phnom Penh, the capital.
Vietnam's army newspaper said that the country, which supports the Pol Pot government, was trying to subplot the Cambodian revolution and that, "a major conflict would be fought."
Vietnam, which is backed by Russia, denies that Vietnamese soldiers defeated Pel Po's army and led the Cambodian rebels into Phnom Penh, which
But Western sources say that as many as 100,000 Vietnamese were involved in the invasion, which began Dec. 25, and that the Cambrian rebels did little, it was estimated.
Detroit gets GOP convention
WASHINGTON - A sharply divided Republican party committee yesterday, voted Detroit as the site for the 1980 GOP national convention.
After a floor fight that reflected the continuing struggle between GOP conservatives and moderates, the national committee voted 85-24 for Detroit over
The convention will be in Detroit's Cobo Hall and will begin July 14, 1980.
The convention will be in Detroit's Cabo Hall and will begin July 14, 1980. Dallas fell slightly short of the GOP requirements for seating in the Dallas Convention Center, but the fact that the convention center is booked until August 1980 was the primary problem, the seating said.
Dole backers form committee
**OYORKA**-David C. Owen, former Kansas lieutenant governor, announced yesterday that he would lead a committee dedicated to the re-election of Sen.
Dole. Republican vice president nominee in 1976, said recently that he was "inching neerer" to announcing his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.
Dole could try for the nomination and also file in June 1980 for re-election to the Senate. If he won the presidential nomination, he could withdraw from the Senate race. If he lost the presidential nomination, he still would be on the Kansas ballot for the Senate.
Strike slows lettuce harvest
The strike, in the Imperial Valley of southeastern California, is the largest called by the United Farm Workers of America, led by Caesar Chavez, since a farm labor law was enacted four years ago. The law ended years of strife in the fields by giving the UFW union bargaining rights.
SAN DIEGO--More than 2,000 union farm workers harvesting nearly one third of the nation's winter lettuce crop were off the job yesterday in a strike
Negotiators met in San Diego to discuss contract demands, as growers reportedly were trying to recruit help from Mexican towns across the border to
Lettuce, celery, broccoli and cabbage harvests throughout the Imperial Valley and at Salinas, Fresno and Oxnard, Calif., and E Mirage, Ariz. were grown there.
Derailment causes toxic leak
SEDALIA, Mo.—A tank car leaked 29,000 gallons of a toxic chemical yesterday morning, when a Missouri Pacific freight train dared near Sedalia
The tank car was filled with ferric chloride solution and was one of 23 cars on a Chicago-to-Pueblo, Colt, train.
Workers hope to finish cleaning up the chemical, which is harmful if touched or inhaled, today.
Until the operation is completed, rail traffic between Jefferson City and Kansas City is being rerouted over an auxiliary line.
Strikina teachers expect jail
oil teachers order oil order and set up prescapes the next induding.
Classes were closed last Thursday because of sporadic attendance.
ST. LOUIS—Leaders of striking students say they expect a judge to order them jailed for a strike that has closed public schools for 73,000 students. Circuit Judge Jvain Lee Holt Jr. issued a temporary restraining order against the teachers on May 15 and April 15. But the teachers defended the order and set up picket lines the next morning.
The Board of Education has said it would seek contempt-of-court citations at the hearing. The board also intends to ask Holt for a temporary injunction against the school district.
The strikers are asking for more pay and smaller classes.
Vote stops dam to save fish
WASHINGTON - A Cabinet-level committee yesterday barred me the Tennessee Valley Authority from completing the $119 million Tellico Dam in Tennessee, ruling that possible benefits from the project did not justify killing the snail darter, a three-inch fish.
At the same time, the Endangered Species Committee voted to permit completion of the $23 million Grayrocks Dam and Reservoir in Wyoming, provided that protective measures are taken to insure the project does not imperil whooping cranes.
Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee criticized the committee's action on Tellico and said he would try to exempt the dam from the flood control plan.
The Endangered Species Committee was created last year after the Supreme Court ruled that closing the tails on Tellio could doom the snail darter.
The committee decided to stop work on the dam even though it is 95 percent complete.
Elevator explosion kills one
LEXINGTON, Neb.-One man was killed and another critically injured yesterday when an explosion knocked them out the window of a 120-foot grain
Sen. Talmadae hospitalized
explosion. Trains on the Union Pacific main line, which runs beside the train tracks, would not topple it. The cause of the blast has not been determined.
Tom Titus, 28, died a few hours after the accident. Richard Hill, 20, was listed in critical but stable condition yesterday afternoon.
The incident caused the second death in less than a week at the elevator. According to the sheriff's office, the elevator's walls were bulging after the incident.
WASHINGTON—Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-GA., was admitted to Bethesda on Saturday for treatment of alcohol abuse and other complaints, according to one of Talmadge's aides.
Talmadge, 65, a 22-year veteran of the Senate, entered the hospital on the advice of his physician, news secretary Gordon Roberts said.
Roberts said Talmadge's condition was the result of prolonged stress and pressures.
The Senate Ethics Committee is investigating allegations that Talmadge ordered the diversion of $39,000 in campaign contributions and expense funds into a secret Washington bank account. The committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on the case next month.
Weather...
Skies will be clear today and tomorrow, according to the National Weather Service. Temperatures today will be cold, with a low of 5 degrees. Highs will be in the low to mid 20s. Winds will be from the northwest at 10 to 15 miles an hour. Highs tomorrow will be in the low 30s.
The extended forecast calls for a snow storm to move across Kansas Friday and to reach Lawrence Saturday. Weekend temperatures will be in the mid 30s.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter asked Congress last night to help him build "a new foundation" for prosperity at home and peace abroad.
Carter asks for 'new foundation'
In a State of the Union address that marked the midway point of his four-year term, Carter made no dramatic new changes to the enactment of those he already has outlined.
He said those proposals would be the basis for the new foundation that was both the first and largest in the country.
"The new foundation I have discussed tonight can help us build a nation and a world where every child is nurtured and can learn. We need resources now washed on war can be turned toward human needs—where all people have enough to eat, a decent home and a place of work."
"TONIGHT, I ask you to join me in building the new foundation—a better future."
The president urged support for his increased defense budget and said a new strategic arms limitation agreement with Russia had been signed unless it advances American safety.
"I will sign no agreement which cannot be
- A CELLING on hospital price increases,
congressional commitment to fight inflation.
verified . I will sign no agreement unless our deterrent force will remain over-
- *A* measure preparing for national health insurance to be plasmed in the during the 1980s.
Carter presented these legislative proposals:
- Limited public financing of congressional election campaigns.
- Deregulation of the trucking and rail industries.
- Reorganization programs in education,
economic development and the management of natural resources.
Carter said inflation could be conquered without triggering recession or throwing
"It is a myth that we must choose endlessly between inflation and recession," he
Iranian army blocks Tehran's airport
TEHRAN, Iran (From the Kansan wire services)- The Iranian military command closed Tehran airport to traffic today and three tanks blocked the main approach to it. The Iranian officer was taken to off to bring opposition leader Ayatollah Khomini home from exile.
Telran's military governor in a communique said Mehrabad Airport was closed because of "had weather" and plains by "a lot of opportunities" to cause unrest there.
A top Khoeniemi aide for the first time publicly announced Khoeniemi's plan to罢免 his term.
Westernday Khomeini said that his supporters would fight if the army tried to stop him from ousting Iran's current civilian government when he returned from exile.
Meanwhile, Iran's elite army unit, the "Immortals' brigade of the Imperial Guard," travels daily to journalists today at its base on the outskirts of Tehran. The military parade was designed to warn Iran's allied squabbling to the war that Iran is building, ported the shah more than any other leader.
The timing of the unusual show of strength also was significant. It came just four days before the scheduled return of Khomeini from Paris.
Khomeini's arrival and his announced intention of bringing down the country's
current civilian government of Prime Minister Shapur Bukhari was expected to spark further political and economic change in army's role would be vital to them.
BOTH HAVE assiduously courted the 500,000-strong armed force. Yesterday's demonstration underscored one ominous thing for Iran's immediate future: the country has never allowed a foreign officer could, "take the country if it wished," still remained loyal to only one master, the shah. Reports from Cairo said the shah, now in Morocco, probably would return to Egypt instead of allowing a foreign officer he was reported to be angry over Sakar, he was reported to be angry over Shaheb, his administration's policy on Iran.
SMOKE CLEARANCE
Sale at KING of Jeans 740 Mass.
The smoke odor has gone completely from the interior of our store—Thank Goodness! However, we are going to continue our great sale through Saturday, Jan. 27 (until 5:30) SAVE NOW. All clothes will be completely guaranteed as usual.
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WE ARE DISCOUNTING OUR ENTIRE STOCK 20%
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Wednesday, January 24, 1979
3
Israel, PLO trade border attacks
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Palestinian
nunners from the Israeli villages from bases
in Gaza.
Israel answered with an artillery barrage and a warning that Lebanon would suffer more than Israel if the shooting continued along the volatile border.
Many Israelis living along the 69-mile frontier送 the day in bomb shelters.
A school in Kiryat Shmona took a direct hit from a Katyusha rocket moments after 400 pupils and their teachers descended into shelters. The Israeli border town of Metulla, five miles from Kiryat Shmona, also was shelled, but no injuries were reported.
IN BEIRUT, the Lebanese government
The high command of Yasir Arafat the Palestine Liberation Organization claimed that Israel forces shellied the port of Tyre and occupied the city of Yehyash in a "major escalation of hostilities."
summoned the ambassadors of the five big powers of the U.N. Security Council and demanded that they put pressure on Israel to evacuate itsickets and artillery shells across the border.
In Jerusalem, Foreign Minister Moshe
Lamont said "we don't stay
helpless against the PLO."
warned that Lebanese civil population would suffice if the Palestinian attacks continued.
DEFENSE MINISTER Ezer Weizman was reported by Israel Radio to have
A reliable source confirmed that Weizman had issued the warning during a briefing of the Parliament's secret Foreign Affairs and Security Committee.
"He said the PLO should remember that the power of Israeli artillery is several times stronger than theirs," said the source, who asked not to be identified. "If the PLO attacks continue, it may not be only Israeli settlements that are hit."
IN THE guerrilla-controlled Lebanese port of tyre, 15 miles north of the Israeli city of Beirut.
Lady and Kansas Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, belittled Carlin's statement indicating he would carry out the sales tax cut later in his four-year term when state finances appear on more solid footing.
"I think as far as I'm concerned, all that talk about people's programs is a big bony deal," said Kansas State Speaker Wendell Lady. R-Overland Park.
TOPEKA-Republican legislative leaders yesterday criticized Gov. John Carlin's legislative budget recommendations, particularly blasting his failure to follow through on a campaign promise to eliminate the sales tax from utility bills.
"What assurance is there he'll do these things in four years?" Doyen asked at a press conference.
From the Kansan's Wire Services
State GOPs blast Carlin's budget
Lady said Carlin's failure to propose the sales tax cut was a prime example why politicians had little credibility with the public.
“In total expenditures, he calls for more than I think we ought to spend.” Hayden said. “His message was not as fiscally conservative as I thought it would be.”
House Minor Leader Fred Weaver, Daxter Springs, who helped Carlin's leadership team and implemented the budget, said he was pleased with most of the message, labeling Carlin's $224 billion expenditure.
"It holds spending to a bare bones amount and still allows the agencies to carry out their work."
REP. MIKE HAYDEN, R-Atwood,
chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee, said he thought Carlin was
spending too much.
He said Carl was justified in not recommending the sales tax cut on utilities. In addition to uncertainties in the economy, a recent federal aid, Weaver listed another problem.
HE SAID during the campaign, Carlin
"Instead of $8 million, it's going to cost in the neighborhood of $3 million to $30 million or more."
had been given the wrong estimate on the
sales tax of removal of the sales tax
on utilities.
Additionally, the Topeka-based utility said Carlin's proposals would halt construction of any new generating plants in Kansas for 10 years.
State legislators were not the only ones who were reacting to Carlin's budget proposal. The governor, Light Co. labeled Carlin's energy proposals "unfortunate efforts to redeem ill-thought-out campaign promises," and said the state could afford the cost of electricity in Kansas if enacted.
It said that until it sees the Legislature's reaction to the proposals, the company must consider suspension of further building on the Jeffreye Energy Center Unit No. 3.
Carlin had used criticism of rising utility rates in his successful gubernatorial campaign last year. Included was criticism specifically aimed at KPI. He accused the district to coerce its employees into voting for his opponent, Republican Robert F. Bennett.
University Daily Kansan
Israel's military command denied that Tyre was shelled but sources said Israel artillery bombed two Palestinian bases and Ras al-Ain, both in two lines of the Ras al-Ain, with two main lines.
Haidar said Israel pounded the town with an intense, random bombardment of heavy fire.
"People fled to orange and banana slices. Most kept a look refuge in basement shelters. Hanging
IN A RELATED matter, Israel maintained an official silence about PLO claims that Israeli agents were responsible for the assassination in Beirut Monday of Allied fighters and French officers, and he was repugned to be the mastermind of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre.
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One official said Israel would hold to its traditional policy of not commenting on Palestinian claims but added, "They like it as for everything that happens in Beirut."
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We're looking for the best graduates in the nation. That's why we're interviewing at the University of Kansas.
We've grown because we've made it a practice to employ the brightest, most capable people available. Which is exactly why we're coming here.
We're Haliburton Services, the largest oil field service company in the world. We provide a full range of highly technical, extremely complex services to the petroleum and other industries. This visit, we're interviewing for positions in the following areas of our business:
Field Engineering
Increasingly, our customers — both major and independent petroleum engineers on the skills of our engineers to engineer or gas and oil cementing, stimulation, combustion. As a field engineer, you'll be responsible for thoroughly analyzing the needs of your engineering the service or treatment design, presenting your project to your customer, marshalling the equipment necessary to perform the service, and ensuring that personnel on the job
Field engineering an individual with expertise in developing abilities and who is willing to accept remediations responsibility within the job of joining Halliburton.
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To maintain our exact quality standards Halliburton manufactures the vast majority of the equipment providing our services. To keep up with booming demands we operate several manufacturing facilities and abroad. We offer a unique challenge because our work involves both long and job show operations.
As an engineer in the department, your responsibility is to range from developing manufacturing procedures for a new product to implementing control procedures.
Individuals selected for manufacturing opportunities must have a high degree of technical ability, the personality to work effectively with others and have healthy dose of home sense.
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A major reason for Halliburton's leadership position is the constant need for new technologies, and procedures from our Research and Development department. The departments are widely recognized as both the most productive and the most important in the world. The departments function in four basic areas: Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical, and Environmental.
Several different professional disciplines are required. Finally you'll need a responsibility for an entire project. It is a position that requires an individual with a unique understanding of the science, research, theoretical concepts, able to communicate with field personnel, and who enjoys the challenge of expanding their knowledge in a technological base.
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One important reason for our leadership in oil field services is the rugged dependability of our service equipment. Our piece of service equipment we use is designed and built by Haliburton people. As an equipment engineer, you will be given training from a specific branch.
That responsibility will include all engineering, introducing your product to the public, personified, and troubled shooting in the field. You take charge of the complete project from inception to successful field operation.
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Sign up now at the placement office. On campus interviews January 31.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan
Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
JANUARY 24,1979
Spending lid has merit
Responding to the voice of the disgruntled taxpayer, the Kansas Legislature is alive with a tax relief hoopla that has begun to sound commonplace in these post-Proposition 13 days.
And neither Republican nor Democrat seem unaffected. Legislators from both sides are eager to join the bandwagon—introducing and sponsoring tax cuts, tax credits and tax lids. This new found enthusiasm for tax relief surely would bring a grin to Howard Jarvis.
YET AMIDST all these proposals, one stands out as most important a proposed 7-percent state spending lid.
Already 39 of the 40 state senators have sponsored a bill establishing such a spending lid and the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee now is working on its own version.
A spending lid, such as the one passed by the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee last week, would place a 7-percent ceiling on annual state spending increases.
At question in the house committee is whether the lid should include supplemental expenditures, those made after the regular session. The
Senate version does not exempt supplemental expenditures.
URGING HIS colleagues to adopt a loophole-free spending lid, House Speaker Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, park, "If you want to say you are in favor of the spending lid, then let's enact the spending lid and mean it. Let's not just use it for political rhetoric."
THERE IS nothing startling or new about the need for more efficient government. Legislators, quite simply, just have ignored it.
Although the spending-lid proposals must still face a long legislative battle, they are an encouraging sign. Perhaps legislators finally have seen that the long-term solution to taxpayer relief is not to be found only in tax cuts and tax labs, but that relief must be combined with reduced government spending.
Jarvis and his rowdy across the country have demanded nothing more, at the bottom line, than a trimmer government. In California that resulted in a crash diet.
For now there is no reason for Kansans to resort to similar extremes, and the Legislature can ensure this by voluntarily cutting back government expenditures. A spending lid would be an excellent starting point.
Gov. Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown recently used his second inaugural address as the kickoff for his 1980 presidential bid, once he became governor and then people exactly what they wanted to be.
Brown's budget stand is hypocritical
Brown, who was praised in 1974 as one of the most socially enlightened young politicians to come along for some time, has closed his eyes to problems he once saw as crucial. And he also has sought to close the gap between the two, calling the right strings—their purse strings.
In his address last week Brown criticized "the false prophets who have risen to advocate more and more government spending."
But during his bulldog for the 1974 governor's seat, Brown could have fit the description of what he now has chosen to call "false prophets." Indeed, Brown has been at a loss by several leading Democrats for what they see as hypocrisy on Brown's part.
SEN. GARY HART, D-Colo., blasted Brown recently for his move to enforce a federal balanced budget by a constitutional amendment at the same time that California is receiving $7 billion in federal aid each year.
Hart said the federal aid allotment to California had itself contributed heavily to the state's recovery.
In fact, Brown had not even supported California's Proposition 13 referendum last year, when it involved making it politically dangerous, not because of an obvious and overwhelming support for it. And he now sees it politically advantageous to be the first, and therefore should win, in his own right.
What is alarming is not that Brown seems to support the issue for purely political reasons.
But what is terribly alarming is that Brown, and many others, want to call a
U.S. must rethink OPEC policies
N. Y. Times Feature
NEW YORK-K The prognosis for the world's oil supply-and-demand balance in the late 1980s is disturbing, and that disquiet is bound to intensify if we examine the prospects for development of petroleum in the organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
We must expect that many producing countries will soon question seriously whether their programs will really contribute effectively to their future economic and social progress. This has already been demonstrated by the political upheaval in
Rv WAL TER. I. L E V Y
The challenge facing OPEC members is that during the relatively short period when they can count on a large flow of oil revenues, they have to develop economies that can provide sufficient government revenues, foreign-exchange income and employment for the period when the oil bonanza begins to peter out.
MANY DIFFICULTIES and dilemmas they face could not have been easily avoided. In addition, there were huge pressures to improve the economic well-being of their citizens due to the dramatic increase in the flow of oil revenues since early 1974.
Equally, with billions of dollars spent on creating new plants and their supporting facilities, OPEC governments must be prepared to provide for annual operating costs that may amount to one-quarter to one-third of the initial establishment costs.
Since 1974, OPEC government revenues have amounted to some $500 billion. An estimated $300 billion may have been spent on goods, services and military expansion. The value received, as well as the revenue generated, appears not to have exceeded $200 billion to $300 billion.
Moreover, all of them have to cope with the political and social problems posed by the vast inflow of money: inflation, feverish rate of development, negative impact on agriculture and traditional industries, increasing dependence on subsidies for imports or for industries providing domestic subsidies, large influx of foreign labor and lossed distribution of wealth.
FOR EXAMPLE, as of 1976, the cost of capital projects in most OPEC nations, including supporting facilities, was about
THEY WILL all realize that rapid, force development tends to weaken, if not destroy, established values, mostly without replacing them with new ones. This may stimulate disappointment and resentment directed largely against the foreigner and the producing countries' national governments in their nations. Ira's turunc indicates what may lie ahead elsewhere.
two to three times that of competing enterprises in developed countries. Any ventures are also burdened with substantial overhead costs.
At present, of each $1 billion received by OPEC for crude oil exports, perhaps $900 million is accrued to a country as government revenue and are obtained in the form of foreign exchange.
In contrast, an industrial-development project with an output of $1 billion might provide in direct taxes no more than $50 million. A country's foreign-exchange income depends on its competitiveness in world markets.
Sooner or later, producing countries will begin to doubt whether they can establish a self-sustaining non-oil-based economy, and will inevitably consider slowing down their development programs.
THIS WOULD enable them to stretch oil reserves by producing less and to sustain the future viability of their economies through an increased flow of revenues from foreign investments.
The resulting stringency of oil supplies and their high cost would cause very serious economic and political problems for the country.
We must thus rethink our policies toward OPEC members. Up to now we have mostly accepted their desire for rapid development and large military expenditures even when it has been wasteful.
What is needed is a candid exchange of views with OPEC on the practicability of their national programs, even though we risk their interpreting our advice as a manifestation of neocolonialism.
We must be willing to assist them in developing industries that offer the prospect of economic viability of providing technology, managerial talent and access to markets. Such an industry is a major source of consensus among all nations of the industrialized world.
WE CANNOT any longer afford a situation where the importing countries waste a substantial part of their energy, while the producing countries waste a substantial part of their oil revenues. In the past we have too often been stymied in our efforts to cope with these problems by entrenched national and private interests.
If we should ultimately fail, as well we might, prospects for the progress of the world's energy-based economies could be very poor.
U.S.
OPEC
Walter L. Levy is an oil consultant to industry and governments. This article is based on a longer version that appeared in the Journal of American Business.
"It's going to come on like a freight train," says Oregon State Sen. Jason Boe, president of the National Conference of college coaches, which is leading the convention campaign.
Indeed it looks as if such a move will have the force of hundreds of freight trains, unless efforts to derail the movement are successful.
ROBERT BORK, a conservative Yale law professor and a former official in the Nixon administration, tried to draft a constitutional amendment that would limit federal spending. But he says he soon became dubious about it because he knew he was not a partisan who "would see Womh" whom they sue?
Mary Ernst
Before such a convention could be held, it would have to be approved by 34 states. Twenty-two already have approved it, in addition, and others likely that 12 others won't be far behind.
constitutional convention that could mean a field day for changes in the U.S. Con
Carter also sees problems with such a constitutional amendment—but they go beyond who would sue whom. He said recently that Brown's proposal would create a federalism that would be suffered an economic crisis in which it was impossible to maintain a balanced budget.
However, what has really scared Carter, and several constitutional experts, is the thought of what could happen to the Constitution if such a convention had convened. The Constitution would be made, and could leave the Constitution looking much different than it does today.
"IT IS TIME," Brown said, "to get off the treadmill to challenge the assumption that
Perhaps the country needs a closer look at the relationship between spending and the levels at which its citizens—all of them—are spending is time to slow down government spending.
But despite Brown's hope that this could be his chance to gain the presidency, his call for a constitutional convention is not only a dangerous move but also an irresponsable one.
more government spending automatically leads to better living."
The momentum of the Proposition 13 movement is gaining and Brown wants to be the chief engineer for a nationwide sweep by the movement.
However, his visions of residing at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue have clouded his eyes to the constructive moves he could be making to reduce the federal budget.
--themselves to lawsuits from workers such as Weber.
And those visions may be forcing him to lead millions of Americans into a dead-end alley—with the only exit being the institution of certain constitutional foundations.
MACKENEY THE PRESSMAN NEWS LEADER. © 1974 BY CHELAND TRIBUNE
THAT'S NO NUT...
THAT'S JERRY BROWN.
—WAIT—I TAKE THAT BACK...
Balance
the
Budget!
Weber, 32, an employee at a Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Co. plant in Gramercy, La., applied for a training program that would lead to a skilled craft job. But the company, finding that there were only five blacks among 273 skilled workers, had signed an agreement with the United Steelworkers Union to admit one black employee and instructed the programs until black representation reflected the surrounding black population. When Weber was turned down, he sued the company and the union.
Cramer, a 32-year-old sociologist, taught at Virginia Commonwealth University for a decade and has been a position in that school's sociology department. When women were hired for both spots, Cramer contended that he was wrong to assume that the women hired were "less qualified."
Are voluntary affirmative action programs that give preferential treatment to minorities and women in employment constitutional?
High court should refute job discrimination charges
The answer, which could affect millions of workers, may come in the near future when the Supreme Court reviews the case of James Crane and considers the case of James Crane.
Weber and Cramer are two white men who have filed charges of "reverse discrimination" that challenge the legality of voluntary affirmative action programs.
The court in last year's headline-grabbing Bakke decision outlawed the use of explicit racial quotas for admission to universities receiving federal funds. However, the high court also ruled that race could still be a factor in selecting applicants.
BUT THE COURT did not say how far employers could go with affirmative action programs designed to give minorities and women a break, particularly when there is no established proof of past discrimination. The Court and Cramer may provide an answer.
OPPONENTS OF Affirmative Action have had little success in challenging programs instituted after past discrimination was documented.
"There can be no basis for preferring minority workers if there has been no discriminatory act that displaces them from their 'rightful place' in the employment scheme," the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in a 21-day appeal.
But last year's lower court ruling on behalf of Weber threatens these voluntary
But complying with the decision puts companies between the proverbial rock and hard place: If they don't adopt voluntary affirmative action programs, they can be sued by minority workers; if they do admit to wrongdoing, they risk being sued for back pay and damages; if they give preference to non-white workers without admitting past errors, they open
Vernon Smith
THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT Opportunity Commission also disagrees with the Weber decision. Commission officials issued new guidelines in an effort to encourage voluntary affirmative action and to address discrimination in compliance and violating federal guidelines.
The commission and the Justice Department want the case sent back so lower courts can reconsider the evidence on Kaiser's record on past discrimination. But Weber says he's optimistic that the court will see things his way.
Ironically, Eleanor Holmes Norton, commission chairman, says the new affirmative action guidelines would have the same need for both the Bakee and Wear suits.
WHILE THE COURTS will have the last word, the increase of complaints by white males charging "reverse discrimination" reflects a mood of resistance to affirmative action fueled by intense competition for increasingly scarce jobs.
Also, this latest round of suits once again raises the question of how far should American society go to compensate for past injuries suffered by minorities and women.
Granted, some gains in the area of equal employment compensation have been made. But race and sex are still key criterion in the job selection process, thus enhancing the need for increased governmental pressure in guaranteeing jobs for women and minorities in an ever tightening job market.
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Wednesday, January 24. 1979
5
Prof seeks polar deposits
Staff Renorter
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
again should past and equal been key thus verness for opening
A quest for mineral riches has drawn a professor to the end of the earth for the paladin.
The professor, Edward Zeller, has made a yearly trek to the South Pole in an attempt to find minerals and to forecast the continent's climate.
"Our long-range prediction, based on what little evidence we have, is that the climate will continue to change," he said.
Zeller based that prediction on his research, funded by Virginia Polytechnic Institute, correlating past warm weather patterns with the occurrence of sunspots, areas of low temperature on the sun's surface.
Antarctica is now the only continent that can claim to be rich in resources—resources whose numbers have never been tallied. And the polar ice cap of Antarctica contains the clues to what will happen to the earth's ice sheets. Dr. Zeller, professor of geology, said yesterday.
SUNSPOT ACTIVITY seems to be decreasing, Zeller said, which could indicate a planetary cooling trend. Zeller noted that the sunspots in the pounds formed by sunspots, present in the ice on the South Pole. His work has confirmed historical records of sunspots act-
Europe's "Little Ice Age," from 1645 and 1715, occurred at the same time astronomers were reporting the disappearance of sunspot activity.
"The Thames River froze solid then,
which was impossible, unheard of." Zeller
labeled it.
Ice deposited in that period contained almost no nitrates, indicating that sunspot activity was low, Zeller said. The age of the ice can be determined because snowfall at the South Pole is very constant, only a few inches each year.
**BUT THE WARMER of Galilee** "the activity of nitrates and high sunactivity"
Zeller returned Jan. 7 from his sixth trip to the Antarctica since 1958. He said he expected to return there every winter for the next four years, in connection with a mineral resource project the National Science Foundation has funded.
Zeller is part of an international team exploring Antarctica for mineral resources. In a search for the radioactive elements uranium and thorium needed to fuel nuclear power plants, the team's most recent exploration was a success, Zeller said.
"We found a large thorium deposit, but it's not commercially significant because the transportation problems are horrendous," Zeller said.
A RAILROAD COULD be built across the bare-rock mountains that contain the thorium in a 200-mile ice shelf that covers the ocean. The see would be difficult to cross, he said.
'It's my view it's going to be generations before we can exploit the resources of our country.'
But he also said the resource explorations were necessary, so that an international agreement could be made about exploiting its resources, which now belong to no nation.
"The Antarctic treaty is a crucial factor here. It will be subject to renegotiation and reconfirmation in 1991, but the reconfirm a treaty in a climate of ignorance would be a mistake. We've got to know if there are resources, because we've got to write things up for the environment. We've got to keep Antarctica from being ruined." Zeller said.
ZELLER, WHO conducted the resource search by helicopter, said, "I was some of the most exciting flying I we've done. We were flying at low speeds and low altitudes, about 400 feet from the ground, on extremely high mountains—12,000 feet—and steep topography. It was hazardous."
Zeller carried radiation detection equipment worth $25,000 aboard the helicopter. Two sodium iodide crystals were placed radioactive rocks below the helicopter.
If the helicopter passed over a radioactive element, the crystals would emit a light flash, which was recorded by a photo cell. An on-board computer determined if the radioactivity was from uranium, thorium or potassium, a common radioactive element.
Zeller said that he had not yet found much uranium, but that he expected it to be there because all continents have uranium deposits.
LAST WINTER'S trip to Antarctica was exciting for another reason, Zeller said.
"I got to see the glacier that was named after me. When I went in 1958, there weren't many people there and it was sort of an adventurous thing to do. When the area was mapped, many features were named after people who had been there," he said.
Four other KU professors have features in Antarctica named for them. They are Ernest Angelo and Wakefield Dort, professors of geology, and Kenneth Armitage, professor of biology, and Rufus Thompson, professor of botany.
"I guess I'm the first at KU to see what was named after him," Zeller said.
Zeller's trips to Antarctica were from two and one-half to three and one-half months during our winters, which are summers in the southern hemisphere.
IN DECEMBER, the warmest month, temperatures can creep above freezing at McMurdo Base, the U.S. scientific station in Antarctica. The average population at McMurdo is sometimes as large as 900. In Antarctica's winter, the temperatures to 100 degrees below freezing.
The coldest temperature Zeller said he faced while working outside was 54 degrees.
"I was comfortable, even though we were
tired one-half hours in that. You got it
to it. I felt."
Zeller said he thought the Soviet Union so was conducting resource explorations, and this led him to believe that
"We have a very cordial relationship with them. We've visited them at their Vostok station," he said. "The woman working on this project with me, Gisela Dreschoff, from the National Science Foundation, was the woman to ever set up in the Soviet station."
Vostok, Zeller said, is the coldest place on
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"YOU DON'T GO out there," Zeller said. "Last year, a few people died when they went out in the mines 128-degree weather and inhaled the air. It froze their lungs."
earth, with temperatures sometimes dropping to 128 below zero.
One problem Zeller said Antarctic expedition faced was lost in immunities to disease.
"Even some of us who spent only four months there lost our immunity—it goes in about one and one-half to two months," he said.
1972
As a result, Zeller said, he often got sick after returning to the base and seeing people with cancer.
Another adjustment Zeller had to make when leaving was to darkness because the sun's rays were strong.
"I doesn't even get a little darker. But I like it. When I got back to New Zealand and the sun set, I felt uncomfortable," Zeller said.
He said that Antarctica was like another name to him and that he worried about the ice in the Arctic.
"It is a land of complete and pristine
dirt. I don't want to see my favorite
country river."
Edward Zeller
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Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
1078
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Traffic court a classroom
By GENE BROWNING
Excuses, excuses, excuses. That is all 85
KU students leave from appeasing him.
Better to just use a few excuses.
own reporter
Jan Carlin, a second year law student and chief justice of the University of Kansas traffic court, said, "One guy appealed a traffic ticket for parking six hours in a fire at GSP. He said he had been walking his girl to the door."
First and second year law students make up the traffic court, which meets twice a week.
The first year law students in the court, who act as attorneys, are divided into prosecutors and defenders. The second year students are the justices.
CARLIN SAID law students took their positions seriously because they had the opportunity to become judges if they did well.
The court hears about 20 cases a week.
Tick fees range from $7.50 to $25.
"The law students get upset when they lose a case they know they should have won" Carlin said. "The prosecutors will try to explain the sanctions and to embarrass them on the stand."
Also, judges are hard on students who seem to have no valid complaints, according
A student may contest a ticket by appearing before the court, by having an attorney represent him or by submitting an anopeal form. All appeals are free.
to Carlin. She said blocking fire lanes and roadways were typical instances in which a driver had to be very careful.
"It was raining and I wanted to go the
hackers. It is not a valid reason for appealing a
hacker."
"If a person continually appeals tickets for no apparent reason, the person may be brought before the University Judiciary as a frivolous appealer," she said.
BUT THE chance that a student will win an appeal is slim, according to Carlin. She said out of 392 cases reviewed by the court last semester, only 176 awards were won.
Although the court may not review a case for 60 to 90 days, Carlin said, students should not appeal merely to postpone paying a ticket.
The University Judiciary has the power to expel students, but Garin said it usually doesn't.
Carlin said some people gave excuses that were so outrageous the judges had to bellow.
Foosball Tournament (Doubles)
"One person claimed that some other people had picked up his Volkswagen and carried it into an illegal parking area," Carlin said.
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Renforce your college degree and get a better start through Army ROTC. Get an Associate's degree in nursing or related field that will let you asap as a responsible achiever. You also receive $500 her way that will rent a apartment for you and be responsible for the ROTC Program. Whether your career plans are civilian or military Army ROTC, you can apply directly to the salary of over $11,300 or reserve service when employed in the cavalier community with your military unit.
If you are a veteran or a
you started early — probably
without reasoning. That it early
enough to enter the Advanced
enable to enter the Advanced
THE EARLY START.
THE MULTIPLE START.
Start Army ROTC during your freshman or sophomore year. You'll find a number of ways to get started in the Army and flexible enough to meet your class schedule and work with others.
CALL:
CPT Gary Enos
864-3311
ARMY ROTC.
THE BASIC START.
Get started in Army
history at Fort
Kentucky. This summer,
you'll get $500 for attending
the Fall Army Conference.
If your performance is
good, you qualify for a two-year scholarship as you enter the
Army Academy.
SHE SAID in some lots where zones were oversold, drivers would put unlocked cars in neutral and roll them out of a parking space to make space for themselves.
She said there were many cases in which people, should not get tickets, such as when a car battery went dead and the student could not move his car.
The traffic court not only provides a free place for students to appeal fines, but is a learning ground for law students, according to Carlin.
She said the law students who made up the court were not paid, but gained practice in giving logical arguments and in speaking extemporaneously.
Date moved up in murder trial
A scheduling conflict has led to a change in the date of the court arraignment for Lee E. Harris, Denver, who faces charges in connection with a 1972 Lawrence murder.
Harris' arraignment was to have been Feb. 5. His appearance in Douglas County Court has been changed to 1:30 p.m. Feb. 2 because his court-appointed attorney, Dennis Prater, could not be present on the other date.
Mike Elwell, associate district judge, ruled at Harris' preliminary hearing Jan. 18 that prosecutors have sufficient evidence to try the murders. He said the Nov. 28, 1977 death of Samuel Norwood.
KANSAN
Police Beat
A bomb threat was called into K-mart at 3:17, and Iowa streets at 4 aftersunlight after 6:20.
Police said that a person called K-mart and told store employee that a box containing a bomb had been sent to K-mart and was set to explode in 45 minutes.
However, the building was not evacuated.
No search was made, and no explosion occurred.
Police said there was no sign of forced entry.
Two stereo speakers, valued at $180, were taken from the Language Lab in 4069 Wescole Hall between 5 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. Monday, according to KU police.
Lawrence police said four power saws, valued at approximately $50, were stolen from a storage shed owned by Dickerson Brothers Construction Co., at 1243 Melrose.
The saws were taken between 4:30 p.m. Friday and 7:30 a.m. Monday. A tool was used to pry a lock off the storage shed, according to police.
Lumber valued at approximately $00 was stolen from a home under construction in the 3700 Block of Brush Creek Drive, at 142nd A. tuesday, Lawrence police said.
An unknown quantity of lumber was stolen from a construction site at Louisiana and Edgehill streets early Tuesday morning, they said.
According to Lawrence财事 $17 in cash and a pair of eyeglasses valued at $100 were taken from a car owned by Jane E. Patterson, Independence sophomore. The car was parked at 2000 W. Sith St. The theft occurred between 6:00 and 6:15 p.m. Monday.
Police said $20 in cash was stolen from another car parked at the same location at a nearby apartment.
Ted A. Cooper, 2128 Mitchell Rd., William J. Schafer, 1530 Wedgewood Dr, and Tracey S. McGlinn, 2006 W. 27th St. Terr., were summoned to appear in Municipal Court on April 14 in connection with the theft of lumber from the home under construction on Brush Creek Drive.
COMMON
MOVIE INFO 041-6418
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
Grandpa PG
Eve 7:15 & 9:45
Sat/Sun Mat 2:30
Varsity PG "EVERY WHICH
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
Sat/Sun Mat 2:30
Cinema Twins "ACROSS THE
GREAT DIVIDE"
Sat/Sun Mat 2:30
Don't Miss it!
Sat/Sun Mat 2:40
Cinema Twins
Eve 7:35 & 9:20
Watership Down
PM23
MARY EMMERT PICTURES, MASTERPICTURE
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
Pronada
Eve 7:15 & 9:45
SAT Sun Mat 2:30
Varsity
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
Sat Sun Mat 2:30
Cinema Twint
Eve 7:20 & 9:20
Sat Sun Mat 2:30
Cinema Twint
Eve 7:35 & 9:20
Watership Down
AICO EMBASE PICTURES Resolution
PG
Hillcrest
Tonight 7:20 & 9:30
Fri night at 4:00 only
Hillcrest
FORCE 10 FROM
Ends Thursday
Tonight 7:30 & 9:45
NAVARONE" PG
Hillcrest
Eve at 7:40 & 9:45
Sat Sun Mat 1:45
Late Show
THE FRI & SAT NIGHT
ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
T
Watership Down
PG
AACO ENBASSY PICTURES
Films
Watership Down!
PC
AUDIO LIBRARY PICTURES Release
Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358
Hillcrest Fri & Sat -12:00 Midnight
Box opens 11:30 Adm 2.75
e n
e e
h n
n t
e e a g
e e i n g
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Dally Kansan
7
DA says justice failed in Davis mistrial
FORT WORTH, Texas (UPP)—Tarrant County District Attorney Tim Curry says the judicial system "clearly failed" by granting a mistrial in the murder solicitation trial of T. Cullen Davis and says his prosecuting staff plans to make a third effort to convict the millionaire businessman.
Currymck turned the Davis defense and said it was based on the "ABCs—Anybody But Currymck."
"I's incredible to me there was a mistrial in Houston, " Curry said yesterday, one day before he was arrested.
jury was hopelessly deadlocked 8-4 in favor of conviction.
"I CAN'T in good conscience dismiss this case," he said, adding he hoped to have Davis back in the courtroom within six months, but he wanted to arrange the murder of his divorce judge.
"1 suppose it bolts down to whether a man with his resources and money should be there, or not."
(1)
"The law ought to everyone, and I don't think it does here. The system has
Curry said no matter what the cost, Davis would again be brought to trial and that this
CURRY SAID he expected Davis' defense once again to rely on suggestions he was the best.
Curr unsuccessfully tried Davis last year in Amarillo on a capital charge for the slaying of the millionaire's 13-year stepdaughter in an August 1976 shooting outburst. One other person was killed in that attack and two were wounded.
In both trials—each of which last more
Curry said the mistrial was "a clear victory" for the defense and cost Tarrant County, Davis' home county, in excess of $150,000. The Amarillo murder trial, in which three witnesses identified Davis as the gunman, cost $250,000.
than three months—Davis has been represented by the flamboyant and the theatrical Richard "Racehorse" Haynes and Phil Burleson.
mistrial. A smiling Davis posted $30,000 cash bond in -100 bills and told reporters he would remain out of jail "f forever" and was planning a skiing vacation.
DAVIS, 45, whose corporate fortune is valued in excess of $300 million, walked to freedom Monday less than two hours after his 13-week murder-for-hire trial ended in a
Davis is charged with paying FBI informant David McCory, a former Davies Industries employee, $2,000 to arrange the Davis' divorce court judge, Joe H. Eidoson.
Prosecutors offered in evidence audio and video tape recordings of conversations between Davis and McCroy, including a call from the judge presented his former friend with $25,000 in
cash and reportedly viewed a staged photo showing Eldin dead in the train of a car.
BUT THE DEFENSE team offered the jury more than 60 witnesses and advances several theories suggesting the industrialist was a victim of a frameup. Haynes and his son Brian were both friends, police agencies or even Davis' brother Bill might have engineered the plot.
Davis also testified he thought McCroy was an exortionist and was just "playing along" when he discussed hit men, payoffs when he said "the 'a bunch of people' would be slain.
JANUARY JUBILEE
BOKONON
.841-3600.
finest largest display of connoisseur paraphernalia.
12 EAST 8TH ST.
Don't miss The Great Colombian Give Away
WIDE ASSORTMENT OF TRANTALIZING IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC Cheese-Salami-Crackers
January Jubilee
Cheese & Salami Shop
ROUND CORNER
SALE
Hiking Boots—1/2 price
Monterey Jack
Beer Cheese
Hot Pepper Cheese
Swiss
Hickory Smoked
Holland Gouda
Frye Boots—1/4 Off Hiking Boots—1/2 price
P
G
Other Shoes, Boots, and Moccasins
AND MANY,MANY MORE!
1/4 to 3/4 off
812 Mass. Downtown
Leather Jackets—1/4 Off
Handbags—Luggage—Small Leather Goods (including—Gloves and Wallets)
1/4 to 1/2 Off
Entire Stock Not Included
PRIMARILY LEATHER
All Sales Final
Whitenight's
Sat., Mon., Tue., 11:00-6:00
Wed., Fri. 11:00-8:00
town shop JANUARY JUBILEE Thurs., Fri., Sat., Jan. 25, 26, 27 MEN'S WEAR SPECIAL GROUPS AT BARGAIN PRICES
Frame an object and make it special. Our shop provides complete matting, moulding, and dry mounting materials. Frame It Yourself or install it yourself.
public hanging FRAME IT YOURSELF
Silver and Gold Wood Mouldings
30% Off
(metal frames not included)
SPORT COATS—CORD & DENIM SUITS
WOOLEN SUITS—LINED, HIP LENGTH JACKETS
JEANS—CORDS—KNIT SPORT SHIRTS
HALF PRICE!!
BIG REDUCTIONS
the town shop
839 Massachusetts St.
THESE ARE SELECTED GROUPS—NOT ENTIRE STOCK—PRICES GOOD THESE THREE DAYS ONLY
TIES—DRESS SHIRTS—K.U. TIES—K.U. CAPS
710 Massachusetts
842-7191
C'MON LEX, IF YOU WERE LESS MAD AND MORE GENius YOU DUH HAVE THOSE PAPERS COPIED AND VELO BOUND AT KINKO'S AND REJOIN SOCIETY A CHANGED MAN.
Not only can y' have papers and re-copied inkso's but you can also keep them better condition by having them bound with Veiobind Plastic Strips for $1.89. Coverts with binding are also available at $1.39 for clear plastic and $1.89 for soft vinyl; your choice of color. So follow a Klever Kryptonian to Kinko's.
KINKO'S 904 Vermont 843,8019
Hours: MON THURS 8:30-8:00
FRI 8:30-6:30
SAT 10:00-5:00
SUN 1:00-7:00
4¢ Kopies
No Minimum
Theses and Reports
on 25% Colt, Cotton—5€
Film & Paper Special
ZERCHER
PHOTO
"We Handle Everything Photographic"
This Coupon Good For
$3.00
Toward the purchase of 100' roll of film
or 100 sheet box of Kodak paper
Good at both Lawrence Zercher Photo Stores
Downtown 1107 Massachusetts and
Hillcrest Center 919 Iowa
Authorized By
Zercher Photo No. 4
Expiration 2-9-79
Two Locations Near Campus
Hillcrest Center 919 Iowa
Mon.-Frl. 10-8
SAT 10-6
Downtown 1107 Massachusetts
Mon-Sat
9:30-5:30
LATEST HAIR RESEARCH
We recently received the latest scientific research in hair chemistry and hair products at a professional seminar conducted by Redken Laboratories. The program also included demonstrations of new techniques in hair design, perming, and hair coloring.
This new knowledge lets us do more for your hair than ever before. We can recondition damaged hair and create a hairstyle expressly suited to your face shape, features, and life-style.
If you have "problem hair" or are ready for an exciting new look, call or come in soon!
The Uppercut
REDKEN
1030 Vermont
841-4894
8
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
JANUARY JUBILEE
704 MASS. WHITE LIGHT 843-1386
20% OFF all Bongs with this Ad.
20% OFF all Bongs with this Ad.
Now in stock at
STRONG'S office SYSTEMS
A COMPLETE LINE OF SUPPLIES FOR THE GRAPHIC ARTIST
1040 VERMONT 843-3644
LETRASET
bainbridge
STAedtler/MARS
cleARpRINT
bienfANG
PANTONE
speedball
pickETT
kohinoOR
AND MORE!
JANUARY
JUBILEE SALE!!
40% & 50% off
Reductions on all Fall
Dresses & Sportswear!
Special Groups . . .
Costume Jewelry
Discounted Bras
Scarves
Jay
SHOPPE
835 MASS. • 843.4833 • LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044
FREE PARKING
PROJECT BOO
For an Extraordinary Dining Experience . . .
JANUARY JUBILEE
Mexico
TEMPORAL
CALENDARIO
DE LA
NACIÓN
1824
Home of the Aztec Calendar
The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at the Aztec Inn. We invite you to share our proud heritage.
Aztec Inn
We're Cleaning Out The Attic!
Edward & Naomi Rost Invite you to stop in soon for an original, home-cooked Mexican meal
11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Sunday
11 a.m. - 11 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday
Closed Monday
842-9455
PANTS (Cords, Flannels,
Gaberdines)
SWEATERS-TOPS
SKIRTS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
Winter and Holiday
ONE RACK ODDS & ENDS values to $24 Now $5.00
Winter
PURSES
1/3 OFF
THE ATTIC 927 Massachusotts
JACKETS
BLOUSES (crepe and satin dressy)
BLAZERS (values to $69)
807 Vermont
40% OFF
ONE RACK ACRYLIC COWLS 1/3 OFF
ONE RACK
PLAID SHIRTS
Reg. $12 Now $5.90
ONE GROUP
CORD BLAZERS
Reg. $22-$25 Now $10.90
Winter and Holiday DRESSES 1/2 OFF
January Jubilee
Watches Diamonds Jewelry
25% OFF
Entire Stock
For a limited time only our entire stock of fine diamonds, watches,and Jewelry will be discounted 25% OFF our regular price.
Master Charge
Visa
Layaway
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers Open Thursday 'Til 8:30
Briman's Charge American Express
743 Mass.
843-4366
BONNIE BELL MOISTURE LOTION SPECIAL
16 oz—$6.00/$4.00 reg. on sale
8oz—$3.50/$2.35 reg. on sale
for dry skin care
ALPHA KERI BATH OIL
500mg 100's
$5.19/$3.13 reg. on sale
HEALTH RITE VITAMIN C (AND ROSE HIPS)
16 oz—
$7.45/$4.56
reg. on sale
DEVILBLISS COOL MIST HUMIDIFIER model 272 2-gal. capacity $24.95/$12.98 reg. on sale
VISIT RANEY'S DOWNTOWN
IT
NEY'S
WNTOWN
The Designer
Scarf
To Love
All Year!
by hallmark
Special Offer! $275 With Hallmark Valentine purchase of $1.00 or more
See our wide array of Hallmark Valentine cards and gifts for all the loved ones in your life — and receive this beautiful fashion scarf for just $2.75 with $3.00 Hallmark Valentine purchase. This silk-look designer scarf is a big 27" size for all types of uses. A loving Valentine gift idea! Hurry, Supply limited!
RANEY
DRUG STORES
THE PRECISION GALLERY
RANEY
DRUG STORES
PASS WELLFLOWER BAY
DOWNWARD
1978 Hallmark Cards, Inc.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
9
JANUARY JUBILEE
Ivan and John Carson and Ivan and Bob Duncan
Come in and meet our staff
Sitting—Val from Gentleman's Quarters
Left to right—Rick from Lords & Ladies in Wichita
Cindi from Park Hill Plaza Studio
Carolyn from Gentleman's Quarters
Not pictured—Debi from Park Hill Plaza Studio
HAIR LORDS
styling for men & women
REDKEN 1017½ Massachusetts 841-8276
105
Points East 105 E.8th Corner 8th & Mass.
Due to unexpected illness new classes will start Monday, March 5th. Belly Dance Boutique will be open only Saturday until that date.
New classes will include Middle Eastern Belly Dance Classical Ballet Disco Aerobics
For Further Information
- Call 841-7066
- or Denise 842-2861
LOVE
RECORDS AND TAPES
We buy, sell, trade Guaranteed LPs & tapes—only $2.25
Largest Paraphernalia Selection in Lawrence
15 W. 9th 842-3059
G's
BARBECUE
EAT IN OR
CARRY OUT
1101 W. 6th St.
642 Mass. (New Location)
NEW DOWN.
642 Mass. (next to the Opera House)
Mon.-Thur. 11 am-10 pm Fri. & Sat. 11 am-Midnite
CLOSED SUNDAYS
Still Serving The Best In
Barbeque Beef/Chicken/Ham/Ribs/Specials
Special Sandwiches Mon.-Fri.
Come In And Check Them Out
Catering—Any Function-Any Size Group-Call Carole
Mickey For Further Details
IT'S GOOD BUY TIME
We're saying "good-by" to Fall and Winter fashions with so many exciting new Spring fashions arriving
ALL WINTER FASHIONS (Thurs-Fri-Sat)
COATS—JACKETS—DRESSES CO-ORDINATES—SKIRTS—PANTS SWEATERS—BLOUSES—ROBES GOWNS—PURSES
1/2 OFF AND MORE!
OPEN THURSDAY TO 8:30 PM All Sales Final All stock not included
the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass.
22 years of
PERSONALIZED
DISCOUNT
SERVICE
EVERYTHING IN STEREO
STEREO CLEARANCE 40% to 70% OFF
Most are in perfect condition,some will be sold as is.
Selected Receivers, Speakers, Turntables, Compact Stereos, TV's, Portable Tape Players.
Complete listing is available in store.
- Cash only
No credit cards for this sale
AUDIOTRONICS
928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN
STAY HEALTHY WITH US!
Round Corner Drugs has a complete line of natural foods and vitamins. Check out these bargains
ACEROLA PLUS 500mg. 5O FREE
VITAMIN C with purchase of 250
SCHIFF C-Vi-Complex VITAMIN C 500mg
50 FREE with purchase of 250
SCHIFF E-COMPLEX 400 50 FREE with purchase of 100
SCHIFF ROSE HIP VITAMIN C 500mg
50 FREE with purchase of 250
Round Corner also has delicious and nutritious health foods including:
★Yogurt
★Natural Nectar
★Protein Supplements
(for gaining or losing weight)
Round Corner is the One-Stop-Shop for the finest cosmetics
★Revlon ★Coty
★Bonne Bell ★Helena
★AZIZA Rubenstein
WE FILL ALL KU BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD PRESCRIPTIONS WITH FREE DELIVERY
ROUND CORNER DRUGS
8O1 Mass.
843-0200
10
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
WOLF
Wolfe's Camera Shop
THE SUPERSTORE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY
Great selection, equipment in stock, and fair prices are just a few of the reasons to come to Wolfe's Camera Shop in Topeka. We have included a few of our special offerings below. But, you need to come to Wolfe's to see all the great items in stock. The last time we took inventory, we had over 90,000 items in place. Hurry over today.
A DEAL SO GOOD IT'S ALMOST A CRIME . . .
PENTAX K 1000 SLR
Here is a great way to get acquainted with the exciting Pentax family of cameras. Get great pictures while you discover the beautiful world of photography. Exercise all the control you need in capturing the perfect moment, and use an action-stopping 1/1000 second. The K1000 comes equipped with a fast 1/25, 35 mm lens for razor sharp pictures. And, it also comes equipped with a wide-angle lens for lenses. The easy-to-use, built-in metering system assures you of proper exposures everytime. come to Wolters's for a demonstration and let us amaze you with the Pentax K1000 camera.
$169.99
Ask to see the SPECIAL K1000 with dual focusing and extended warranty.
K 1000
PENTAX
JANX
SMC
F8-14
00791
minolta
XG7
MINOLTA
40 MM F1.4 ASPH.
POWERED BY
SAVE MORE WITH
WOLFE'S MINOLTA XG-7 TELE-KIT
Another great package offer from The Superstar for photography. Start with the exciting compact, automatic 35mm SLR by MINOLTA. The XG-2! This electronic wonder camera delivers per se the toucher feel of a touchscreen touch button that turns on an LED viewfinder display at the mere touch of your finger. Other exclusive features include a signal in the viewfinder to tell you when the flash is ready to fire, a slow shutter speed, an infrared self-timer, PLUS FROM WOLFES you can add the super 135mm I 2 B.8ushbil Telephoto lens. This quality 135mm lens lets you take exciting telephoto shots with the greatest of ease. It is fast, and you'll be amazed by how much closer than your normal lens. And your pictures are razor sharp.
MINOLTA XG-7 with f 1.7 50mm lens,
and BUSHNELL 135mm
f 2.8 EPHOTO
$339.99
COMPLETE NIKON FM KIT
FM KIT
Nikon
Nikon
Get the fantastic Nikon F50m, 15mm
Nikon S80 Nikon Automatic Electronic
Flash, and Nikon Shoulder Bag Case. All for one low price.
Get all the incompatible quality, the unintended capability of this Nikon camera, in a remarkably compact body that surpringly modifies. That's the new Nikon FM. And, now you can choose the choice of body at the same low price. Plus, the Complete Outfit.
$379.99
GET BETTER PICTURES THE OM-1WAY.
Move into fun photography with the camera that revolutionized 35mm photography, the original lightweight, compact, SLR camera that offers brighter viewing, easier focus, and better handling. All this makes the OM-1 incredibly quiet and virtually shock-free. Here is the heart of a system with over 280 accesories available to the serious photographer on today! Wolfe's Camera Shop: Olympus OM-1 with 50mm 1.8i lenses
OLYMPUS
$279.99
TH
5
THE HASSELBLAD 500 c/m . . . the camera you have always dreamed of owning.
P
Unquestionably, owning a Hasseiblad is the
for new users who want to learn
ultimate step for any serious photographer, professional or amateur. No other photograph instrument approaches the
Hasselblad is eminently practical, it is no flighty, fragile piece of equipment to be babied and coddled. But these are facts every photographer knows. The Hasselblad 500 cm is the basic camera in the Hasselblad system. Its interchangeability covers lenses, magazines, focusing screens, viewfinders, and film winding devices. This basic camera can be supplemented with different accessories such focusing handles, lens shades, filters, etc. Come to Wolfe's to see what a real camera is like. Come to Wolfe's to see what a real camera and photo store is like. Come see the Hasselblad line of fine cameras and accessories.
$1499.00
$1499.00
WOLFE'S IS THE SUPERSTORE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY
If you, are interested in getting into photography, or if you are already interested in photography, you will be interested in Wolfe's Camera Shop. We want you for a customer. So to shop to Wolfe's see how enjoyable it is to shop for a camera display. We can design wide sales, large displays, great sales, and a multitude of items in stock.
Our large and complete inventory gives Wolfe's the depth and variety unsurpassed in a five-state area. But, more importantly, we are pleased to offer you the make perfect selections. Our trained sales staff knows how to assist you. And, Wolfe's has low prices. Check our prices on major equipment, accessories, and supplies we sell at our store. Most "discount" type houses. You don't need to flip out a student or faculty ID. You don't need to hassle us for a deal. Our same fair prices are extended to everyone. You can shop at Photography, Midwest's Superstore for photoshop.
WHY SHOP AT WOLFE'S?
WHEN CAN I SHOP AT WOLF'S? Wolfe is open six days a week. Hours are 8:30 to 5:30 Tuesday through Saturday. Monday the hours are 8:30 to 8:30. So sho
Wolfe at your best convenience. We are here to help and assist you. You don't need to be a patient, but come to Wolfe's don't hesitate to give a call. You will receive the same sneeze relief.
WHENE CANT FINISH
located on the corner of 7th and Kansas Avenue in Downtown Topeka, Kansas. From 1:70 take the 8th Street exit to Kansas Avenue. Wolfe's is located behind Wolfe's and Kansas Avenue. Don't overlook all the convenient parking. Two municipal parking lots are located behind Wolfe's on Jackson Avenue. Use our convenient 7th street entrance.
master charge
**HOW ABOUT USED CAMERAS?**
Yes, indeed. Wolfe's has a good supply of Cameras and lenses, but Cameras changes so quickly that we can't list them all here. Yet, we do have Canon, Nikon, Minolta, Konica, Yashaich, Leica, and Pentax. Last count there were 36 used SLRs alone. Not to mention the selection of use lenses, twin lens, cameras, flash units, and more.
or a fully equipped darkroom, Wolfe's 15 trained sales personnel can help you.
WHERE CAN I FIND WOLFE'S?
Selection is one key word here. We have always tried to carry most every popular brand name camera. But, more important is our sales staff. Wolfe has enjoyed serving customers for over 52 years. We have per se the best selection and proper selection. Whether it is a roll of film
HOW CAN WOLFE'S HELP ME?
Gov't
BANKAMERICARD
Southwestern Bank
COMETO WOLFE'S CAMERA
SHOP IN TOPEKA
HOW ABOUT USED CAMERAS?
STORE HOURS
Monday 8:30 to 8:30
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 to 5:30
When you get here you will see why we are "The Superstore for Photography." We sincerely hope you can come to Wolfe's soon. More especially, we want you to come to Wolfe's when you have special needs and how you can get the most out of your job. Our trained professional sales staff wants to show you how much fun photography can be. If you need advice or just want to ask a question, call or come by Wolfe's. See how much more fun shopping at Wolfe's is with your phone orders and mail orders are accepted. You always get the same friendly service.
WOLF
Wolfe's
Possible sites for a new home for the University of Kansas Medical Center's Wichita branch have been narrowed to five, and one is the secretary of the University, said yesterday.
camera shop, inc.
Sedgwick County owns and maintains the present site, B.E. Allen Memorial Hospital, but the county is planning to raise the $100 million more than $60,000 next year, Von Ende said.
The Sedwick County Commission said in April that it would donate the building to the state, but that the state would have to assume the responsibility of taking care of more than 30 long-term care patients in the hospital. Von Ende said.
635 Kansas Avenue * Phone 235-1386
TOPEKA KANSAS - 66063
Regents to study five sites for Med Center branch
The Kansas Board of Regents will con-
lume the brance now uses, at its LaFey,
16 month term.
Von Ende said the University was considering the move because the present site would be too expensive to operate in the future.
ALSO, ACCORDING to a report by KU officials, the hospital has no room for expansion. Although the initial cost for the state would be low, the cost of operation at this site for the next 20 years would be higher than that of two of the other sites.
The building is next to St. Francis Hospital and has surrounding land available for expansion. However, it does not have enough space for classrooms and laboratories, so it would have to be expanded immediately, according to the report.
The site that the report said had the most advantages was the 959 Building, which currently houses doctors' offices and a pharmacy.
The 959 Building also has the lowest muni cost, $1,731,500, and the lowest projected cost for the next 20 years, $11,065,822, which is significantly more expensive, expansion of the five sites being considered.
E. B. ALLEN's initial cost, which includes the cost of a title transfer and remodeling, would be $3,987,501 and its operating cost for 20 years is projected at $17,238,857.
The report said a third possible site was some vacant land on the Veteran's Ad
THE KINSAS UNION
THE KINSAS UNION
★
( )
Tuesday Jan. 23 Scratch 7:00 pm
Bowling Leagues SPRING 1979
Wednesday Jan. 24 All Campus 8:30 pm
Wednesday Jan. 24 Greek 6:30 pm
Monday Jan.22 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Spring Leagues Begin on the Following Days
Thursday Jan. 25 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Thursday Jan. 25 Guys & Dolls 8:00 pm
Friday Jan. 26 TGIF 4:00 pm
Leagues for Everyone
Friday Nite Special
6 games for $3.00
6:00 pm-11:00
Join in the Fun
Rent A Lane $2.50/hour
1:00-6:00 Daily
OPEN Bowling $.60/game OUR PRICES CAN'T BE BEAT
SIGN UP AT THE JAY BOWL NOW!! or call 864-3545 for information.
HAWK
Jay Bowl
BOWLING
or call 864-3545 for information
ministration Hospital grounds. It said the cost of the land and the area had increased.
A building would have to be constructed there, however, and it would not be available.
The fourth site listed in the report was the College Hill Medical Tower, which is next to a teaching hospital, Wealder Medical Center, with the lowest initial cost is high, at more than $7 million.
Three members of the Regent's Health Education Committee will inspect the sites on Feb. 1 and the entire board will hold its meeting in Wichita in order to inspect the sites.
The report's fifth site, the Walker building, is available at a low cost, $49,775,00, but it has no potential for expansion.
KANSAN On Campus
Events
TODAY: SENATOR JAMES B. PEARSON will open the KU Wednesday Forum with a speech on the 11:45 a.m. at the United Ministries of Higher Education Center, 1204 N. Kansas Avenue, Chicago, IL. THE COMMITTEE will meet at 3:30 in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY SENATE FOREIGN STUDENT COMMITTEE will meet at 4 in the International Room of the University. LEGAL SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 in the International SERVICES is holding a meeting for "B" league intramural basketball managers at 5:15 in Robinson south gym.
TONIGHT: CAMPUS VETERANS will meet at 7 in the Walnut Room of the Union. OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY CLUB will meet at 7 in the Pine Room of the Union. STUDENT RIGHTS COMMITTEE will meet at 7 in the International Room of the Union. PRESIDENT CLUB will meet at 7 in the Union. PREP AND SYMposium will be at 8 in 100 Smith Hall. KU GUG FU CLUB will meet at 8:30 in 173 Robinson.
TOMORROW: BLACK FACULTY AND STAFF MEETING at 3 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 30 p.m. in MOSCOW GRIFIN BELL will lecture at 8 p.m. at the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. PROFESSOR J.T. JOHNSON will give a slide presentation featuring KU's study abroad program in Bordeaux, France at 4 p.m. in 2006 Wesleyan University and 10 p.m. in the p.m. The executive board of ALPHA PHI OMEGA will meet at 8 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union.
films sua
Wednesday, January 24
Truffaut:
THE WILD CHILD
Dir. François Truffaut; with Francis Truffaut, Jean-Pierre Carregol. Photography by Nestor Almendros ("Days of Haenay"), Francis subtitles.
Friday & Saturday,
January 26 & 27
GONE WITH THE WIND
(1939)
Dir. Victor Lehm, with Clark Gable,
Vilen Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de
hawilland. *3:30* & 7:45; Friday
will be shown in the Forum Room
Midnight Movie:
Midnight Movie:
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
Monday, January 29 BETWEEN THE LINES
Dir. Jean Micklin Silver ("Hester Street"); with John Heard, Gwen Brown; and Joan House, Jeff Goldblum, Sindall Hussein, and the Asbury Jules 7:40-8:30 10:30-8:30
Dir. George Romero; with Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea. The Complete Uncut 'Suction.' 12:10 am.
Tuesday, January 30
Film Noir:
THE KILLERS
Dir. Robert Sldmok with Burt Landair, Ava Gardner. From the Hemingway short story; Lancaster's first film role.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
11
GOVERNMENT BUILDING
Legislature
From the Kansan's Wire Services
TOPEKA-Kansas Legislators kept hearing rooms busy yesterday despite taking a break to bear Gov. John Carlson's message in a joint legislative session.
In the House, a bill was introduced that would change the date of the Kansas primary election from the second Tuesday in August to the second Tuesday in September.
Rep. Harold Dyck, R-Heston, one of the principal sponsors of the bill, said it was introduced to cut down the amount of time between the primary and general elections.
"I heard a lot of comment this year about the mud sliding and political rhetoric" Dyck said. "It seems to me two months is enough to get in touch with you to get information out about the candidates."
THE HOUSE Elections Committee also discussed elections yesterday after Rep. Keith Farrar, R-Hugoton, said he thought a general election candidate should represent at least 50 percent of the voters in the candidate's party.
Farrar told members of the committee that was the reason he introduced a bill to require a runoff election when the leading candidate would have won a majority of the primary election votes cast.
The Farrar proposal drew opposition from the elections division of the Kansas County Clerks Association and the election workers in the state's four largest counties.
"A major reason for our objection to this bill is the cost to the taxpayer," said Mary Hope, commissioner of elections in Shawnee County.
The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee was busy yesterday with legislation concerning a proposal to remove the open saloon prohibition from the Kansas Constitution, a measure that would permit saloons in Kansas and a bill that would legalize therapeutic use of marijuana to help cancer and glaucoma patients.
FOR PASSAGE of the proposal to remove the open saloon prohibition from the Kansas Constitution and the measure to permit liquor-by-the-drink on a county-option basis, a two-thirds majority vote of the Senate is required.
The two measures were introduced in the form of concurrent resolutions and were sponsored by the Federal and State Affairs committee.
The bill that would allow use of marijuana for medicinal reasons was sponsored by Rep. Mike Glauer, D-Lawrence, and the Federal and State Affairs committee heard testimony in support of allowing the Kansas law to establish a research program using the drug.
According to Ronald Stevens of the division of oncology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, research in other states and illegal experiment in Kansas has shown that marjania relieves nauseaatling side effects of chemotherapy.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the committee also heard testimony on a bill which would require all private clubs in Kansas to close by December of the 3 a.m. closing, you resumed by law.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. Bill Eddy R-Leawed, originally set closing time at midnight across the state, but that was amended by the committee to 1:30 a.m.
Eddy cited the problem with Kansas City, Mo., residents coming across the state line after Missouri bars close at 1:30 a.m. to allow them to remain open longer as a reason for the bill.
In the Senate, Duane West, former Garden City major and currently a city council member, urged the Energy and Natural Resources Committee to reject a proposal which would deny use of groundwater by the Sunflower Electric Corporation generating plant being built near Garden City.
He said the plant would use no more of the water than if the land were used for farming and the groundwater was used for irrigation.
By ROBIN SMITH Staff Reporter
A University of Kansas professor has stated that his ancestors were violent and lawless.
Ancestors' legends inspire book
Staff Reporter
But that has proved to an advantage for the professor, Chelsea Sulivan, who was in charge of a book
The book, "Sullivan's Hollow," is based on Sullivan's research, during past summers, of a region in southern Mississippi called Sullivan's Hollow.
"The book is about the local history of a famous place, famous for lavasness and fire," he writes. "It is a place where history comes alive."
ACCORDING TO Sullivan, who is an associate professor of English, the hollow was settled in 1810 by Thomas Sullivan, who was the first white man in the territory.
"Thomas had two wives, each at different times, and 23 children. Within a 15 to 20 year span, about 60 percent of the region's population consisted of Sullivans. During the violent years then, the Sullivans among themselves—in the family," Sullivans
One of the first violent encounters in Sullivan's Hollow involve Neac Sullivan,
the great-great-grandfather of Chester Sullivan.
"Nace and Wild Bill, his brother, served as a catalyst for the numerous tales of lawless Sullivans," he said. "Those brothers were among the first to develop third generation, the Sullivans went mean."
"T W AS AT THE Shiloh Bishop Church, in Sullivan's Hollow, that Bill and Nease began their reputation. It happened in 1866 and always referred to as the Battle of Shiloh.
As the story goes, Ease and Gabe Chain were going to have a flat fight because Chain was so bad.
"Gabe was loosing, so he pulled his knife and cut Nease across the stomach so badly that his exposed intestines fell onto the sand on the ground. He picked up his own intestines, walked to the creek, washed the sand off them, put them in a bowl and body to a house where he was semen."
"Then, some said, he went out into the yard, climbed up on a stump. Flapped his head."
SULLIVAN'S BOOK continues to describe other events in the hollow.
Sullivan said it was the nature of the people who lived in Sullivan's Hollow to follow advice that came from the last words of Elizabeth Jackson to her son Andrew, who was seventh president of the United States.
Sullivan includes the advice in his book:
Avoid quarrels as long as you can without yielding to imposition. But sustain your manhood always. Never bring a suit at law for assault and battery or for defamation. The law affords no remedy for such situations that can satisfy the feelings of a true man."
Violence in Sullivan's Hollow resulted from revenge, practical jokes, defamation of character, drinking, boasting, gambling and sexual advances, Sullivan said.
"IN ONE 10-YEAR period, there were more than 40 homicides in Sullivan's Hollow," he said. "There were countless hearings, but no trials. It seems that every time someone was up for trial, the court would announce records, would mysteriously burn down."
Although Sullivan's Hollow has been mentioned in books and newspaper articles, "Sullivan's Hollow" is the first book to record the region's violent history, he said.
Most of the facts in "Sullivan's Hollow" were taken from 1938 interviews written by Grover Bishop, who recorded some of the stories in the volumes of the Works Progress Administration.
According to Sullivan, he had not had enough information to write a book until he stumbled onto the interviews in the Mississippi Archives.
"AFTER I HAD a copy of the interviews, I noticed that two pages hadn't printed well," he said. "I went back to the archives but was told that the interviews were unattainable for five years. It seems that the paper was so fragile that it had to be torn in half before I could later during the restoration, I wouldn't have had a chance to write the book."
Bell's refusal to resign his membership in rabidly and religiously exclusive clubs also
Griffin Bell to speak here
"My book is based on facts, although I account for two versions of stories because a majority of it is folklore. If someone was murdered, he is dead and that is fact. I recorded the most reliable facts that I could learn from the book for the time period covered, is elusive."
Griffin Bell, U.S. attorney general and long-time friend of President Carter, will speak at p.m. tomorrow at the University of Pennsylvania to explain why he forsakes Bell's speech has not been released.
Bell, who was chosen by Carter immediately after the 1976 presidential election, was one of the president's most controversial appointments.
Bell is from Americus, Ga. When he was appointed, he was working as a law partner with Charles Kirbo, one of Carter's closest friends and advisers.
During congressional confirmation hearings, members of civil rights and civil liberties groups raised questions about Bell's rose as legal adviser to Samuel Vandiver, Georgia's segregationist governor during the late 1950s.
"Sullivan's Hollow" was released Dec. 15. Thirty copies ordered for the Kansas Union Bookstore have already been sold. Walmart has ordered the book dan. 12, but it has not been shelved.
They also questioned his rulings on civil rights and the 1960s federal judge in the South during the 1960s.
As a Cabinet official, Bell cannot receive notice of the speaking engagement and will not attend.
In the past, the series has brought to campus Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.; George Bush, former CIA director; and Yitzak Rabin, former prime minister of Israel.
Bell's visit is sponsored by the J.A. Bickers & Co. Lecture Series, which was established in 1970.
Snow removal makes campus roads icy
Although most of the University of Kansas's streets and sidewalks have been cleared of the snow that fell yesterday, many remain slick, Jim Mathess, assistant
Panel considers pot proposal
The Kansas House Federal and State Affairs Committee yesterday heard testimony on a bill that would legalize the therapeutic use of marijuana.
Any prescription for marijuana would have to be approved by a subcommittee of the Kansas Board of Healing Arts, Glover said. After approval, marijuana would be supplied to a patient's doctor by the federal Food and Drug Administration.
Ronald Stephens of the division of Oncology at the University of Kansas Medical Center said research had indicated that marijuana relieved the nausea that occurs as a side effect of chemotherapy in some cancer patients.
director of landscape maintenance for Facilities Operations, said yesterday.
Sponsored by Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, the bill would allow doctors in the state to prescribe marijuana for the treatment of glaucoma and cancer.
Glover said his bill had been modeled after a program in New Mexico that had been approved by the FDA. Three other companies have the therapeutic use of marijuana, he said.
"The streets are slick for people who don't have snow tires or who don't have much weight in their cars." Mathes said. "Until they met a little bit, they will be a problem."
He said he had been prompted to sponsor the bill by a constituent who had cancer. The person had wanted to use marijuana, Glover alleged before a case could be heard in court.
Mathes said that all 38 members of his crew removed snow yesterday. The crew used 10 tractors, one sand spreader and one rearer to clear the University's streets and sidewalks.
Mathes said the road grader pushed loose snow off streets but left a glaze of ice. The sand truck then sands the streets. These streets have been very effective in reducing sickness.
"There's not much we can do with this powdery kind of snow," Mathes said. "The sand truck put down sand but there was no height." He added that he had enough and didn't help give cars more traction."
Mathes said the department used sand instead of salt on streets and sidewalks in some cities.
"By not using much salt we can push snow and sand off the streets and onto the grass," Mathes said. If we used salt, this salt would have brown patches of grass in the spring."
Mathes said that although roads were slick, many of the problems people had driving were the result of the tires on their cars.
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$1.00 Entry Fee . . . Register at SUA Office by 3:00 pm Friday, January 26th
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12
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Baseball practice gaining steam
By TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
Kansas' baseball team, coming off its best season ever, 34-13,1; begins full-speed workouts next week for KU's centennial season
Coach Flynn Temple said he expected the team to do well in 1979, because most starters were not in the top five.
"We had a young team last year," Temple said, "but with a year of seasoning, it should be more."
Some of last year's stars, such as third baseman Lee Ice and catcher Andy Gilmore, are gone, but others, including third baseman Josh Harris and John Spottswood are returning.
Sutcliffe, with 10 victories against no defeats and a 1.2 r.h. ERA, led the pitching staff in win percentage.
all-America selection for his performance during the past two years.
Harris led team batters with a 344 average last year, just nosing out Spottswood, who hit 340. Spottswood also stole 17 bases, a team record. These two consistent players were the best in Halastak and Scott Wright, should provide KU with a strong corps of outfielders.
Other players include Dan Graham behind the plate, Steve Zeljeat at second, Roger Riley at third, Joe Grabay and Matt Gudfinger, a walk-on last year who hit a hot 484 during fall workouts, may alternate with each other at first base and as
Newcomers to the team are Gundelfinger, Clayton Fleeman, a pitcher from Longview
and David Hicks, another junior college transfer.
Temple is not too worried about the effect of January's weather on practice.
"We have an outstanding lighted practice facility here," he said. "We can throw and catch."
Last year the Jayhawks were unable to practice outdoors before they went to Texas during spring break, but they returned from that road trip with a 7-4-1 record.
The season is to begin on March 6 with a home doubleheader against William Jewell. The team then is to travel south during spring break for the Citrus Tournament in Atlanta.
KU returns to Lawrence against Benedictine on March 21. The Jayhawks have 55 games scheduled before the Big Eight conference tournament in May.
King, Wellman garner bowl action
Two bright spots emerged after KU's 1-10 football season last year.
They were Franklin King and Mike Wallman, seniors who played in the postseason.
King, an offensive guard and defensive tackle, played noseguard on the big Eight team when it took on seniors from the Pacific Ten Conference in the Olympia
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Wellman was in the East-West Shrine game on Jan. 16 in Stanford Calif., and in the Senior Bowon on Jan. 13 in Mobile, Ala. He played center and offensive guard for the Week. 94-17 asians in the Shrine game, and 84-00 in North in its 41-21 defeat in the Senior Bowon.
One reason for the bowl games besides making advertising and charity dollars, is to display players for professional football scouts.
"Going into this season, I was anticipating playing in these games for the pro scouts to see me," Wellman said. "I worked hard all week with the team and we were fortunate. Not a lot of people got to play."
Wellman said he had been contacted early in the season by the committees from each
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"I heard from a lot of guys (scoots) at the games," Wellman said. "They don't ask us."
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KU faces Parker, ISU
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
Iowa State's basketball team led, by dead-eye Parker, who leads the Big Eight in scoring with a 2.3 average, faces KU, the Chicago Bulls and Washington DC.
The Andrew Parker gang came to town vesterdav.
Parker, last year's scoring leader, has just come out of three straight Cyclone victories with a total of 60 points. ISU is tied for third place.
"Andrew's just been playing the key he's capable of playing," Iowa State coach Lyman Nance said yesterday before his team began their game.
Nance, whose team was smothered by KU in the Holiday Basketball Tournament, 75-58, said his team was catching KU at
"KU is back at home," he said, "after lots of adversity, and they'll not forth their best effort of the year.
Chuck Harmison, a 6-8 forward, who Nance said had been playing extremely well in the late stretches of games, injured his ankle last weekend in a game of pick-up basketball and won't see action tonight.
"They know they can't lose any more games and have a valid claim of winning the conference."
With Harmison in, Nance probably will play Robert Estes, a 64 forward. Even though Nance said he would miss Harmison against KU, he shouldn't worry about having a second big man to shut down Poldes Mokeki.
Nance was referring to KU's recent inglorious defeats by Missouri State universities, which lowered them to Michigan.
He's got Dean Uthoff, one of the premier rebounders in the
Against Uthoff in Kansas City, Mokesi could only get 6 rebounds compared to Uthoff's 13. Parker scored in that game, and KU was led by Darnell Valentine with 20 and Wilmore Fowler with 18 points and 11 rebounds.
nation. Uhoff, the hard playing, 6-11 center, is leading the conference in rebounding in all games with an 11.5 average.
But Fowler won't be starting at ISU, according to the man designated to replace him during line-up announcements.
The senior co-captain said that his starting was definitely not a 'demonium' of Fowler, just a move to change things around, and he knew what to do.
"The Missouri game showed we can't win on just individual play." Sanders said. "We can't give up."
"I think the reason I'm starting is that I might be doing some things early," Sanders said.
Sanders, who hasn't started a game since his second of two career starts when KU played for Playdon, Nov. 30, 1977, said he's a bit excited about starring, and thinks he can provide offensive ball movement and leadership for KU.
"But I'll pass too," he said. "If everything works out, it's good that I'm starting, although being first on the floor is not that important."
Although he's averaging just two points per game, Sanders said he would take shots tonight when he is onen.
Sanders had practiced yesterday and Monday wearing a blue jersey—the color worn by the starting unit in scrimmages—and it was apparent he would replace Fowler in the beginning line-up.
KU coach Ted Owens said he would possibly make some line-up change or changes to "maybe shake up things in a little."
Willie Mays gets Hall of Fame honor
The irrepressible Mays, one of the most enthusiastic players ever to play the game, received 409 votes from a record 432 cast by 10-year members of the Baseball Writers Association of America. The 94.6 percentage of the vote was the biggest since TY Cobb collected 98.2 when the voting began 43 years ago.
NEW YORK (AP)—A choked-up Willie Mays, proclaiming himself the greatest baseball player he ever saw, was named to the Hall of Fame yesterday with the highest percentage of votes since the first year of balloting in 1938.
Since 1936, Bofeller came closest to a unanimous choice, receiving 94 percent.
Ruth Ruth and Honus Wagner also were ejected that first year with 95.2%, each putting on a show.
"Without being bashful, I thought I was
the best baseball player I ever saw," said the 47-year-old Mays, who broke into the major leagues in 1951 with the New York Yankees. "I've had a great career in 1973 with the New York Mets.
"Nobody in the world could do what I could do," he continued. "I hope I'm not saying anything wrong. If you play ball, you have to believe you are the best."
this year's ballot to receive the required 75 percent of the vote from the writers' panel.
Duke Skipper, also a centerfielder and contemporary of Mays when both played in New York, finished second in the balloting with 308 votes—16 short of election. Enos pitched in his last year of eligibility and last year in runnersup, finished third this time with 297.
Mays was the only player on a list of 54 on
Game called, KU makes Top 20
Kansas didn't get to play its schedule conference opener last night at Wichita State because of snowy weather there. The game was postponed until tonight.
There was something for coach Marian Washington to smile about, as though,
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Kansas batted the 19th spot in this week's ton 20 women's basketball ball.
The Jayhawks, 16-4 and currently on an eight-game winning streak, have not been in the poll for the majority of the season. That is no surprise, given that who doesn't live or die by national rankings.
"I think the kids earned at least that much," she said yesterday of the ranking. "We've done well being out of the poll and I hope you can be more confident. I'm宠男global about."
The Jayhawks enter tonight's game after winning three games last weekend to win a third straight victory.
Women's Top Twenty
The top 20 players in college basketball teams are compiled here. Elon Musk, a former coach of 40 women coaches, first place votes in parentheses, following:
season record through January 14.
2. Texas 15-0
3. Florida F. Austin (11) 15-2
4. Louisiana Tech 15-2
5. Mississippi 15-2
6. Wayland Baptist 15-2
7. Tennessee 15-4
8. N Carolina St. 15-4
9. Charger State 15-4
10. Nevada-Las Vegas 16-0
11. Huluag 16-0
12. Penn State 16-4
13. Delta State 16-2
14. Valdosta State 16-4
15. UCLA 16-4
16. Lowry State 16-4
17. Louisiana State 6-6
18. Mississippi 6-6
19. Rancho Santa Fe 14-4
20. Clemenson 14-4
Other names named on at least 19 ballads in official order. Drake, Memphis State, Montclair St.
Other teams named on at least 10 ballads, algebraicalphabet Drake, Drake State, Montclair State, St. Andrews, St. Louis, St. Louis State.
TONIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK
KU HANG GLIDING MEETING
Wed. 7:30 p.m.
2002
Learned Hall
Everyone Welcome
---
ROBERTO NAPOLI
GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS!! with FAST BREAK
This Friday, Jan. 26
$4.00 Advance Tickets are Going Extremely Fast!
Buy them at Better Days Records & 7th Spirit Club.
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
Don't Miss . . .
Jan. 27-FAST BREAK
Feb. 1-LOST GONZO BAND
Feb. 2 & 3-COLE TUCKEY
1
pulled votes
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Wednesday, January 24, 1971
13
University Daily Kansan
Staff photo by CHRIS TOOD
JOHN HUGHES
Well. coach...
Assistant track coach Jerry Hudson listens as sprinters Kevin Newell, left, and Bob Lozotl talk over some last minute in-
Lindstrom now wants competition
By CARLOS MURGUIA
Sports Writer
Janet Llandstrom is going to prove that history doesn't reevaluate itself.
Lindstrom, a member of the KU women's swin team, qualified for the Association of American Swimming National meet in four events at the All American Invitational meet two weeks ago.
Besides qualifying, Lindstrom also set KU records in the 500-yard freestyle (4.53, 8). 400-yard individual medley (4.30, 20). 800-yard individual medley (4.53, 4) and the 1,600-yard freestyle (17.06, 3).
Although only a sophomore, Lindstrom is no stranger to national competition. Last season he won the tournament.
Then, Lindsmort qualified for nationals in eight events. She only competed in four: the 200-yard freestyle and the 200-yard backstroke, both in the 500, where she was served first but came last.
"I'd rather forget how I did at the meet," she said. "I had never competed in a national meet before and my inexperience really hurt me."
She admitted that some of the other swimmers awed her, a factor that acclimated her.
“There were Olympic swimmers entered in my races,” she said. “Swimmers whom I’d read about. I just could’t picture myself on their level. I just pussied myself out.”
Trying to recover from her disappointing showing at the nationals, Lindstrom went to California last summer to compete against some of the same swimmers.
She didn't win all of her races, but, Lindstrom said, the meets helped her to get accustomed to "big" meet experience and competition.
"The most important thing I learned," she said, "was that I realized I could competitively compete against good swimmers when I got into the water with them, instead of just giving up before the race even started."
The turning point in her attitude came during a meet in Mission Viejo, Calif. There she swam against good competition in the water, and advanced from 72nd place to 8th to 14th.
There are times, though, when things aren't going so smoothly. Lindstrom said she gets worried that she isn't doing as well as she can.
really shrimp through the water. That's when you enjoy swimming."
Compounding the problem is the swim team's grueling practice schedule. Lindstrom says she fights fatigue by concentrating on swimming.
"In a good race you feel relaxed and strong. You're high on top of the water and
"You can't let yourself feel sorry for yourself," she said. "You use your self-discipline to keep on working harder in practice. During a race if things aren't going well you concentrate on keeping your face and finish strong."
"I want to be in 'in' every race this year," he says. "I don't want to give up in any of them."
Lindstrom has been finishing strong for 13 years. She started swimming at age 4 and 5.
While attending high school in Des Moines, Iowa, her hometown, she dominated her competition. As a senior she received three scholarships and medley (21.13) and the 100 butterfly (59.8).
“It’s great that I qualified for nationals but it doesn’t stop there. What’s important to me is I want to be in the finals at nationals.”
Jerry Hudson will have a tough act to take as he begins his first year at Kansas State.
New mens' track coach settles in
In recent years, the Kansas sprint corps has churned out numerous All-Americans, Big Eight champions, NCAA champions and world-record holders.
Sports Writer
By RICH LINVILLE
However, Hudson carries impressive credentials. He came to KU after five years as a basketball coach at Nesheo High School in Missouri and won four consecutive district titles and three straight conference crowns. His cross-country championship and two district titles confer conference championship and two district titles.
Hudson, 33, graduated from Pittsburgh State University in 1968 with a bachelor of science degree. He was Hudson was a four-year letterman in both track and football. He twice led his team to conference mule relay rules, and in football Hudson's 's conference co-championship team.
But before Hudson started coaching, he worked in Oklahoma as a computer analyst for five years. But the lure of coaching and the chance to remain involved in athletics took Hudson away from running discs to running athletes.
Hudson is not a complete newcomer to the KU track program. He has been on the coaching staff of KU's summer track and field camp for two years, and one of his track squad teammates at Pittsburgh State University current assistant track coach Gary Peppi.
Hudson, who can often be seen wearing western-style shirts and cowboy boots, said there are many differences in moving from a high school coaching to a major college.
"Of course, the main difference is the quality of athletes here," Hudson said. "Also, because I specialize here, I can give you more on my area, and do a better toch."
But while trying to do a better job, Hudson has encountered a few problems.
The first and foremost is the impossible task of trying to fill the void left by the graduation of world-class sprinter Cliff Wilev.
"We don't have anyone to replace him," he said.
However, Hudson was quick to point out the depth of the sprint corps, headed by a group of 15 fighters.
The hurdles are led by Anthony Coleman, three-times the winner of the Big-Eight high jump.
Hudson also mentioned David Blutcher, Lester Mickens, Billy Washington and freshman Deon Hogan as athletes who will play heavily in the success of this year's sprinter.
"However, he said, 'other teams like Missouri and Oklahoma have also imple-mented this."
"In the hurdles, we're in about the same position as last year because we lack
Tennis teams are organized by Kivisto
Hudson said KU will have a better overall team from last year because of a good recruitment.
Bv DAVID COLRURN
Sports Writer
Strong fall performances by KU's men and women's tennis teams have coach Tom Kivisto eagerly awaiting the onset of spring competition.
Mark Hosking, Chel Collier and Bill Krizman led the men's netters to a 6-1 record last fall. It was the first time Kansas has played a men's fall schedule and the victories included wins over Tulsa, Oklahoma State and Kansas State universities.
"Hosking, Collier and Krizman are playing excellent tennis," and second-year
Hooking and Collier are KU's top doubles entry, followed by Sewall and Ed Bolen. Krizman and Ruysser are paired as the third doubles team.
Hosking has nailed down the No. 1 singles spot, while Collier and Krizan are listed at the second and third positions. Wayne Mossner and Rick Wertz out the top six.
Carrie Fotopolou, who placed second in women's singles in the Big Eight the past two years, was forced to sit out if the fall caused, with an inflamed shoulder and a neck puff.
And although that left all the other players competing a division higher than usual, the defense was still very strong.
Fotopoulos is back for the spring, the heel spur completely healed and her shoulder improving steadily, according to Kivisto. She will be the No. 1 skimmer player.
The other five singles spots presently are filled by Mary Stauffer, Shari Schrufer, Barb Ketterman, Lissa Leonard and Kathy Merrion.
Kivisto plans to shuffle his singles arrangement to make room for Valerie
He pointed out the large number of area students on the roster with pride, noting that many other schools in the Big Eight, such as Notre Dame and Baylor, have several foreign players on their squads.
'That's what we're dealing with, and
Fambrough finishes picking staff
Tom Batta, former defensive line coach under Bill Mallory at Colorado, will take a
Rachel will coach defensive ends at Kansas.
Kansas football coach Don Farnbrough completed his staff Monday with the applause for his efforts.
we're doing it successfully." Kivisto said.
"And we're doing it with local talent."
"I feel like we've been able to put together a young, talented staff," Baughadown said. "I think Ivy, Tom and Rich are all excellent young coaches, and I was particularly pleased we could attract some coaches with Big Eight backgrounds."
Kivisto is expecting upper division matches for both squads in the Big Eight tournament.
Fambrough had earlier named John Hadi, offensive coordinator; Dennis Fryzel, defensive coordinator; Don McLeary, receivers; Kent Stephenson, offensive line; and Mike Sweatman, linebackers; to his staff.
"We have a good shot at second place," said Kivisto of the men's squad, conceding first to defending champion Oklahoma State.
Former Kansas State running back coach Ivy Williams will be Fambrough's offensive backfield coach. Williams is receivers' coach at New Mexico State last year.
Kivisto he expects tough competition from Oklahoma and Missouri in the women's division, but said the Jayhawks can finish in at least third place.
The third coach appointed Monday is Rich Taccheri, former defensive coordinator at UConn.
"In the last couple of years we have gained definite prominence in the Big Eight race," Kivisto said, "which allows us to compete at the national level."
Jazz clips Kings
NEW ORLEANS (UP1) -- Guard Jimmy McEllroy scored a career-high 40 points, and the New Orleans Jazz still had to fight off a loss that gave backome last night to nip the Kings 118-116.
After McEilroy gave the Jazz its largest lead of the night, 113-101 with 3:08 left in the game, the Kings outscored the Jazz 15-5 during the remainder of the game. But a last-second shot by Otis Birdson that would have tied the game at the buzzer fell short.
Birdsong led Kansas City with 28 points, while Scott Wedman added 20. Rich Kelley was second-high for New Orleans with 23 points.
Kansas City led throughout the first half, but McBriar will New Orleans in front 56-54 for the first time with one minute gone in the third quarter. The Jazz took the lead for the second half with 8-2 remaining in the third quarter after McBriar scored four consecutive points.
STUDENT NOTICE SPRING 1979 ELECTIONS
All Out of Town
G.S.P. Hall Sigma Alpha Epsilon #5
J.R.P. Delta Chi 6 seats
Chi Omega Triangle
Gamma Phi Beta Delta Tau Delta
Sigma Kappa Alpha Phi Alpha
Templin #1 6 seats
Lewis
Hashinger Kappa Sigma
McCollum Alpha Phi
Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Delta PI
Delta Upsilon Delta Delta Delta
Sigma Nu Delta Gamma
2 5 seats
Ellsworth
Naismith
Evans Scholars
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
Phi Kappa Theta
Alpha Gamma
Alpha Kappa Lambda
PI Kappa Alpha
3 5 seats
Oliver
PI Beta Phi
Phi Kappa Psi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Phi Kappa Sigma
Phi Delta Theta
Phi Gamma Delta
Alpha Tau Omega
Elections For Student Body President, Vice-President, 107 Student Senate Seats, And Class Officers Will Be Hold On February 14th & 15th
TO RUN FOR THE SENATE OR A CLASS OFFICE
1) Pick Up Declaration Of Candidacy At Student Senate Office (Level 3, Suite 105B,
Kansas Union)
Kansas Union.
2) Have The Dean Of Your School Or College Certify Your Enrollment And Year In That School Or College. Not later than Four Mornings, 29th
3) Return Your Enrollment No Later Than 5 pm On Monday, January 29th
Architecture ... 2
Business ... 4
Education ... 8
Engineering ... 8
Fine Arts ... 7
Journalism ... 3
Law .2
L.A.&S. 15
*Nunemaker 27
Pharmacy 2
Social Welfare 2
**University Specials 2
Graduate 24
***Off Campus 1
*To be Elected According To Districts Shown On The Map.
***Any Student Who Has A School Code Classification Of (z).
***Any Student Who Does Not Live In An Organized Living Group.
CLASS OFFICERS SEATS OPEN
Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Class Officers (President, Vice President, Secretary,
Treasurer).
ALL CANDIDATES: YOU MUST ATTEND A SPECIAL MEETING (SUNDAY FEBRUARY 4TH, AT 7:30 PM IN THE FORUM ROOM @ THE KANSAS UNION) TO APPROVE THE PROOF OF BALLT AS WELL AS GO OVER LAST MINUTE ELECTION POINTS. IF YOU DO NOT ATTEND THIS MEETING, THE BALLOT WILL BE PRINTED AS THE PROOF HAS COME TO US.
14
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Group offers refuge for battered wives
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Mary's husband has been beating her for a long time.
She finally escaped after he hit her for not
baving a shirt ready on time.
Mary doesn't live in Kansas City or Topokan cities where she-wearing beats are popular.
She lives in Lawrence and is only one of many women in town who are finding help and shelter with Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc., a two-year-old group dedicated to saving Lawrence women from domestic alternatives to putting up with domestic violence.
"Some women get out after two or three times; for some it's been several years," said Judy Woolfe, one of the original volunteer advocates for the group and assistant director of foreign students at the University of Kansas.
"ITS USALLY when they can't take it
when they can't tell you it' is beginning to affect the future.
Woelfel said the group began in October 1976 with a training session for volunteer advocates. Before that, she said, a group of volunteers had been recruited to welfare students, surveyed the need and
banded together to help the battered women of Lawrence.
"A survey went out in 1974 and 1975," Woefel said. "It indicated that between 19 to 33 cases a month could be referred us." He added, "We get more, we get more, we move calls each month."
For the first two years, a woman could reach the advocates only through an internship or a service, or the KU Information Center. But last October the group opened a three-bedroom shelter house, with a phone of its own to provide care and policy and a carefully addressed address.
"INFORMATION ABOUT the shelter is not well-played up to protect the women who are in the center," according to Nancy Sullivan, a graduate student and one of the group's advocates.
Woelfel said the house mainly sheltered physically abused women and other women in need.
"The children are what we are very much concerned with," Woelfel said. "Often a woman without children can find a place to live in town, but a woman with children often can't."
Woolfe, who is one of about 50 active advocates working closely with each of the
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She said she had found that many factors, including alcohol and tensions at work, could contribute to wife-beating. But she said alcohol was often used as an excuse.
"A husband can put the blame for his violence on the alcohol instead of himself,"
Welfael said one woman, who hadn't been abused recently, came to the group because she could see her husband's drinking problem and看见她意思 and thought he might be violent.
"There's a heavy denial on both sides," she said. "The woman wants to believe he really loves her. She often feels very guilty, if he is beating her, that means that the marriage isn't working. If it isn't, then it's her fault.
THIS POSTING
"THE MEN tend to be fairly insecure. An awful lot of men don't mean to do it—but
University of Kansas
women to find the best alternative open to the wife, said she agreed with experts who say that both the wife and her abuser tend to have low self-esteem.
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January 27, 1979. 9:30 a.m to 3:30 p.m
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January 30, 1979 1:30 p.m to 7:00 p.m
Big B Room. Kansas Union (Second Floor)
When women are abused, Woolfeel said, she and other advocates often think that separation or divorce is the best alternative for a specific woman. But she said they would help a client return home, if the were sure about her decision.
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"OUR JOB IS to advocate for the woman," Woolfel said. "If she wants to go back, we help her do it. We can't force her to do anything. Often we want to—we have an awful lot of anger—but we try to deal with it, and amou themselves and not in front of the women."
However, Hermick said she had found that going back home could often be the best option.
"A lot of times, things just come to a head and when they're given some time away to ventilate the problems, the woman can go on. "A lot of times they just need some space."
Woelfel said the group had helped women from 17 to 60, and they were usually women in their 50s.
"Women from low-income families don't have the options that more wealthy women have. The physical violence itself cuts through easily," said Lori Gosling, according to Woolelfel, the service's.
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114 DAYS TILL GRADUATION PARTY!
Staff Illustration by STEVE GEIST
Countdown time begins this Friday, January 26 at the BREWERY. 714 Massachusetts. Free beer and soft drinks from 3:00-7:00 p.m.
P
paid for by the class of 1979, University of Kansas
two full-time workers were hired last month through funding from the Comprehensive
Laura Templet works as the house manager, taking care of physical needs, including food and work distribution among the women.
Diana Bankston is the staff supervisor, communicating with the advocates and the
women brought to rule main office at the house. The shelter itself can house 12 women and children. But Woolfe said there were not enough staff to cover all of funding until now had been dependent upon church donations and individual contributions.
women through the main office at the house.
According to Hermick, two Vista volunteers will begin a year-long program
in March. The program would educate the community about the service and create interest in long-range planning for better local transportation and better low-income housing in Lawrence. These are what the school will be two main concerns of Lawrence women.
"Women need to be educated to know that they can reach out," Hermek said.
Miltv's loses beer license
The Lawrence City Commission revoked the beer license of Uncle Mity's Cafe by a vote of 5-0 at last night's city commission meeting.
However, city officials said the tavern at 2246 Barker Ave. did not violate a city ordinance, as Haskell Indian Junior College officials had last week.
Buford Watson, city manager, said the
ordinance that forbids the sale of liquor within 400 feet of a school had been interpreted since 1533 to apply only to the sale of liquor and not to tavernals that sell 3.2 beer.
Commissioners said they revoked the license on the basis that Uncle Milty's was a nuisance. The revocation will go into effect in five days.
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expressed doubts about revoking the license. He said he felt uncomfortable about revoking the license on the basis of number of problems reported to police.
There were two reported assaults and two reported burglaries at the tavern in each of the past two years, according to Lawrence police.
Marnie Argersinger, commissioner, said Milton Collins, owner of Uncle Milly's, could have a successful business selling sandwiches.
Haskell officials said they wanted to keep trouble that they said began at the tavern and not the restaurant.
Collins said, "I get blamed for anything that happens on that campus."
"Other tavern owners have turned in the
situation and pointed out that the situation
reached this point," he said.
This is the first time the commission has revoked a lavern's license, according to the U.S. Justice Department.
A recent study showed that as much as 75 percent of the current rate would be used to subsidize four reservoirs that have been planned for other parts of the state. However, the study showed that those reservoirs might never be built.
Lawrence contracted to pay 6.2 cents per 1,000 gallons for water from Clinton. The study, conducted by Robert Smith, a KU professor of civil engineering, said that 4.9 cents of that figure had been built into the rate to help build the four reservoirs.
In other business, the commissioners decoded to support a Kansas house bill that would require a tax on meat.
Commissioners also voted to proclaim January 21-27, 1979, Jaycee Week in the City of Lawrence. The dates coincide with National Jaycee Week.
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Wednesday, January 24. 1979
Headquarters seeks volunteers
An increase in the number of people calling Headquarters for counseling, and a lack of volunteers to counsel them have resulted in a drive to gain volunteers, Gary Bachman, assistant director of Headquarters, said yesterday.
15
Headquarters, 1602 Massachusetts St., is a short-term social counseling agency that was established in 1968. It counsels by phone and in person.
Headquarters is staffed primarily by volunteers.
"Some days Headquarters receives no calls," Bachman said. "However, on Monday, a busy day, we received 25 calls and four fiveeight walk in for coursuine."
"Except for the director and myself, all our operation depends on volunteers," he said.
HE SAID about 25 of Headquarters' 35 volunteers were students
"Because of that, we lose a lot of volunteers each semester," he said. "They either leave Lawrence, or are just participating in volunteering to fulfill a requirement for practical experience for a social welfare or counseling class."
He said, however, that Headquarters had lost more volunteers this semester than
"We're working with about half the people we need," he said, "That means we're
having to ask our volunteers to work about twice as many hours as normal."
He said each individual usually worked eight hours a week.
"We like to staff two people at the same table, but we have not always been able to that lately."
University Dally Kansan
BACHIMAN SAID every volunteer completed a training program before he began his job.
"If someone comes in to us and tells us he wants to volunteer, we ask him to attend our event." "If someone doesn't want what we are all about," he said. "From there we conduct a personal interview and give us the opportunity."
Headquarters volunteers usually are about 20 to 30 years old, he said.
Bachman said he wanted to begin a training program within a week. Volunteers had already been assigned.
"WE REALLY need some older volunteers," he said. "Some of our callers are people over 40 and feel they need to talk to persons their own age."
arrangement with an instructor," he said.
"But it's something we hoping to in-
Bachman said volunteer training consisted of about 40 hours of informal training, including lectures.
Bachman said some student volunteers
had arranged to receive class credit for the
work.
munication skills, community resources and crisis intervention techniques."
"Right now that's done only through prior
Faculty tenure proposal still needs full approval
A compromise draft of a proposed faculty tenure policy, scheduled to go before the University Faculty Executive Committee is being drafted from Del Shapiol, executive vice chancellor.
In a letter sent to members of FacEx yesterday Shankel said that while the new draft was more acceptable than a proposal he rejected last year, some differences still existed. Shankel, whose approval of the policy is necessary refused to release the letter and declined to explain what the differences were.
Frances Ingemann, professor of lignistics and chairman of the committee that drafted the proposal, said she was disappointed by Shankel's position.
Ingemann said that after the first draft of the tenure policy had been rejected by Shankel, members of the drafting committee met with administrators to work out a compromise proposal. Most of the changes are in the wording of the proposal.
In other business, the University Senate executive committee is scheduled to meet with Sally Sedelow, professor of computer science, and Bill Hogan, associate executive chancellor, to consider the possibility of merging these two offices to supervise computer use into one committee.
SenEx also will review a report from the Office of Student Financial Aid that studied the relationship between grade point average and student scholarships in various schools.
Basketball band endures poor facilities, criticism
Allen Field House is a great place to play basketball but a lousy place to play music.
At least that's what James Barnes, director of the KU basketball Band and staff arranger for all KU bands, thinks—for a variety of reasons.
There's also the problem that not everyone likes the same kind of music.
Acoustical problems make it difficult for everyone to hear the music, he said. "It takes a lot of energy and expensive sound system. Barnes said, which would probably cost between $50,000 and $100,000."
"IVE ALWAYS gotten a lot of hate mail," he said. "I usually get about 40 letters a year complaining about basketball band. One will say 'How come you don't play more rock?' or 'How come you don't play more jazz!'
"The musical goal is not to play trash. We play as much Top 40 stuff as we can get our hands on. What we try to do is play a little something for everybody."
Barnes said the band's musical format was changed from the typical pep band style to a more jazz-oriented style several years before he took over in 1971.
"We want to show people that there's an option of what you can listen to at a basketball game," said Dave Von Hollen, St. Louis junior and trumpet player in the
Penn Snead, Hampton, Va., senior and saxophonist player in the band, said, "I think that the set-up is so much more than a mini-marching band or creeper band."
Barnes said the band was funded by the athletic department and each player received $100 a season, a figure that has not been increased since 1969.
Barnes also expressed disappointment in the crowd's reaction to the band when the Jayhawks were losing.
"last week when Missouri was beating us," he said, "people were throwing things at the band. We got pelled out up there and are they doing throwings at us?"
"There's a kind of rude barbarism about it that makes me sad."
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"Believe it or not, fight songs can be beneficial musically." Von Blohn said.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or via the TDN business office at 864-5254.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
TOPL Fresh Organic food10a made in Lawrence new at Community Morrison, 700 Lane 1-26
Zen practice daily, 6 P.M. Introductory lectures
from the faculty of Lawrence Chogan Zhen-
127, Ossington Hall
COIN SHOW
Laurence Community Building
February 9-8
February 9-8
EVERYONE WELCOME
Charlottie VIW Service is back in town, now located at 104 W. Lakewood Blvd., Speculator in VD, Watson City, VA & Volunteer in VD, Watson City, VA.
Attention all Graphic Artists! We've got a com-
munity of great artists and graphic creators,
giveering supplies in our new Graphics dept.
Come in and see us at Strong's Office Systems,
843-734-8431, Open 8:00 - 5:00 M-F
Thursday.
The KU KAUSA Club is holding its first meeting
The KU KAUSA Club is holding its first meeting
additional information call Deck 10
additional information call Deck 10
HILLEL GO TO THE TEL AVENUE STRING
BILLER WILL BE IN THE GROUND OF A
NIGHT. We will depart from the Lawnery Jewel,
which should return around 11:35. Admission $20 per person.
We will have lunch at the HilieL Hotel and view videos on the HilieL website.
HILLEL TAIRS WITH THE CANDIDATES.
Rachel Hillel, Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Street, New York, NY. MARGARET BIELN, BONIOM LOSMANN, CLAIR KEIZER and RON ALLEN, CANDIDATES speak to the students about their policies if they are elected. Admission is $40 for member. $20 No
Lawrence, Colin Club presents, 19th Annual Coin
Lawrence, Colin Club presents, 19th Annual Coin
Lawrence, Colin Club presents, Dessert Party,
5th Lawrence Community Building, Desert
Park, Lawrence, Lawrence
Employment Opportunities
Research Assistant, Student assistants needed for research with preschool children. Should have morning or afternoon e-Math - 10-20 hrs. or Haven Awareness C. Equal Opportunity Employer.
EXTRA NICE BUILD and Located in wooded
area near Lake Tahoe. DRAWING DESIGNER
drawn by Katie 819-307 or 718-7216.
DRAWINGS CAN BE SUPPLIED FREE.
Finally a Lawrence landlord who cares!
Mark Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 842-4411.
Park 25 on bus route 1, bedroom apartment
Park 25 on bus route 1, bedroom apartment
Park 25 on bus route 1, bedroom apartment
United - $185.00 Mc. Peen - $215.00
Mc. Peen - $215.00
Mc. Peen - $215.00
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
UNFINISHED. Located on $170 Two laundry rooms, large
unfurnished room with indoor hot water.
INDOOR HEATED ROOF. Appropriate for
844-844 or sg at 324 Fronter Room. New door.
New windows.
Apartment and rooms furnished, parking most
places. Phone 843-5767 KU and near town.
Phone 843-5767
Spaceous top of hill location. Semi-private bathroom. Quite studious upper classman. 843-7827.
Brand new double units and 3 bedroom house; close to campus, new kitchen appliances. CHOOSE THIS WEEK.
JAHAWKER TOWERS is an apartment for your Sacred Two bedrooms, an utilities payer. Your master bedroom has a full bath.
Two bedroom unfurnished. $205./Mo. + electric.
Call Bill 843-7780 1-24
I need a romance mate who is responsible and quiet.
864-2540 a. p. 75/mo. includes utilitarian
Sleeping room—share kitchen, one block from the library. No laundry room, no campus and downspet. No day's bed. Room is large, spacious. $1500/mo.
Roommate wanted for plush mobile home. Washer/Dishwasher. Dishwasher $2,120/60/month. Washer/Dishwasher $3,890/60/month.
Sublitle—B Apr (flat, or unfurn) at Fronter
in lieu of the front cover for less than
five months, no deposit. Call 41-927-5921
Roommate, owe床 in 3 br. house
$100.00 a month · 7 utility bills 118 &
824.00 a month
Need a roommate. $93.00/month. Call 841-5145.
Female roommate needed for two bedrooms Apt.
3 block from Fraser $87.50 - utilities
$42.00
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Close to campus. Utilities paid, clean, quiet, and comfortable. 842.
One bedroom for female roommate. Share house
one bedroom with $50 plus 4% off utilization
carriage. Carriage is available.
Sub-lease Park 24 park, 2 bdrm, unfurn.
Sub-lease Park 24 park, 2 bdrm, unfurn.
313-821-6434, after 5-20
313-821-6434, after 5-20
Sublease -nice 2 br. apt. on bus route. Available
842-7317. Keeping. 2-1
One or two roommates, male or female, to share
All utilities paid. Bathroom 841-7528.
All utilities paid. Bathroom 841-7528.
Roommate wanted $110/o, includes utilities.
Roommate wanted 17th & Albaam房位 1-198
841 851-2661
NEEQ QUITT! Completely furnished 1 and ½ bedrooms with large sitting room, study room, studious school. All adult homes, separate rooms; wood burning fireplaces; high ceilings; stainless steel flooring; paid lease. Deposits. No smoking. Call 482-360-7890.
Beautiful 3-bedroom house and 2-bedroom
house. Brand new, in good location.
485-0221.
Two Bedroom, 15), bath apn behind shopping center on bus. Available Jan. 28th $30 CLOSE
FOR SALE ONLY 1500 WEST 64TH ST. NEW YORK
Beautiful, Brand new, 3 bedroom rental, chic
unit. Fully furnished with a kitchen,
attached garage, water front, Cen-
tral view, fireplace, laundry room.
Easily accessible from downtown Coo
lane.
Apartment at Park 25 for sublease. Make good call. Call 842-6345 after 5. 1-26
A one bedroom furnished apartment close to palm
trees and the beach. Savings of $2500 on
$1500. Week nights between 6:30-8:30 p.m. 1-30
FOR SALE
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with strings, cord,
strips and covers. Very good condition. Covers 95-
447-7500.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization makes sense to you. Then make sure you get the Western civilization 3. For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at ToysRUs.
MUST RENT 2 Bedroom apartment next to campus
and football stadium. Call 642-891-1
1-30
1970 Ferdinand Teeleman. New laquer finish, maple neck, miniskirt neck. Marlo pick up, new skirt. 524-868-5199-5198-5199
WATERED MATTRESSES $39.89, 3 yr. guaranty at WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. MKNs 143-84-138 two-year guarantee.
SunSpeed - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-persistent. 1021 Masson - 841-5700, reasonably priced. 1021 Masson - 841-5700
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists Parts service and exchange units. AUTO-ARMOR ELITE 2000 W 80th FH MODEL ELECTRIC LIGHTS 16% off 10% with this provided. 745 Mile, AMR 1988
YOU JUST CAN'T BEAT IT!
Topless dancers: 4:30-10:00
Only at
501 N. 9th
Flamingo
N. Lawrence
---
Hockey goalie equipment. Excellent condition.
Latex case and hockey bag. Ice skates separately. Best offer. A45-84348
Michigan Music Music. G7 Michigan sales and accords.
Instruments Complete line of strings and accordion.
Instruments Complete line of strings and accordion.
Maytag gas dryer 6 months old—almost new Call Mariann, 814-432-104 Must Sacrifice 124 Stereo system: Turbulence ISSR AXE.臂 Role (100 A. Speakers Turbulent 512" $124. $120 up to $199).
Single bed and dresser w/mirror for sale 842-
1812 1:26
NJCP 125.5 Cube Ic. ft refrigerator/freezer 1-164
802-7589, Mark or Dave 1-266
SAFE, FUN, AFFORDABL
53 M.P.G. Highway
40 M.P.G. City
If you want to start your graduation off with a true investment, now is the time to order your 1979 Diesel Rabbit! Allow 60-90 days delivery.
DALE REYNER 843-2200
2522 Iowa, Bob Hopkins VW
74 Vege, AC, AM-FM, 2 snowboards, 4 good dracals
4 surfboards, 1 swim trunk. Home $960-320; business
$1150-320.
Sears 10-speed. $59, Sears 60-speed. $29.
Sears 15-speed. $45, Sears 80-speed. $39.
Sears 100-speed. $55, Ariant转速. $25, Yankees
转速. $30, Boss转速. $30, Dodge转速.
Ibell Mossman guitars. I have a few very nice Mossman top picks. Mossman 125. I have an Mossman Kith, Keith & David Carradine; Merle Travail; Cat Stevens; & many other great guitarists. Call Stevens at 314-262-1925, WEB.
SAAB 1978 5000 needles internal engine woll all
recharges, new radio, new clutch, new battery $26.00 on
new radio, new clutch, and similar parts.
ALLELISM TO SWOOK model matrix, 4i yy仿真
Allelism to SWOOK model matrix, 4i yy仿真
We are the fastest growing Pizza chain in the Country. We presently have 21 locations in operation with several more under construction and we have more management positions available than people to fill them. If you are looking for a future with unlimited potential and have drive and determination, please do not owe it to yourself to contact;
Godfather's Pizza
Managers start at $1100 plus per month.
Rick 711 W.23rd St.
Sales! Sales! Sales! One Techs fully automatic
Cannon Ejection (Transmitter System). They could
100 watt per channel. For information call Mark
at 864-707-952 or Pirate at 843-693-002. Don't miss the
weekend of July 15-18.
Samuel arm, tuner, cassette deck, rack. Technique:
$100.00 for 1,200 ft of cable. Call 842-749-6288, after 5:00.
1964. Jerrard. Blank 6. Overloaded, also water pump.
1965. Jerrard. Blank 7. Just runs, good body works need $28.
1966. Jerrard. Blank 8. Just runs, good body works need $28.
Pulson 801 with 50mm f1.4 lens, case, lens bounce,
and Biter, like new. 841-515 SUS
1-26
Nordica SIa Boots Size 9 Call Mike al 841-160-
3695
Two B.M.I. #11 speakers. Excellent condition, two years old. Excellent sound, inexpensive price.
12 x 60 Mobile Home with metal shell, carport
Chapel, independent living for students. 843-0298
www.chapel.org
Hewlett-Packard HP-25 Programmable scientific calculator like new, with programmable Will take more complex calculations.
FOUND
Found. One set of keys in front of Spooner Hall, Night of SMU Basketball Game
Woman's watch found in Hoeh. Call 811-
4288, Don.
Found. Tom Cat, white, brownhead and
black tail. 10th & La. Cat 819-429 after
season.
White female Kitten 3 mos. Call 842-838, eaves
by stadium.
Set 5 of keys with Philips 69 log on
Missouri St. 19 am, 8:15 pm. Clam at Ramapo
Found. Brown plaid winter scarf near Porter,
Pound. Call Craig 843-1722
1-25
HELP WANTED
Clerk opening at Overland Photo's downtown location, to answer questions about camera and darkroom materials. Approximate time of arrival is Overland Photo's thirty-second stop in Holiday Inn. Visit us online at www.holidayinn.com or call plus all days every other Saturday 7:30am-11:30am. 114 Halls Apt. 1260.
Part time job. Excellent job! work with older people to help them get things done. Part time job and starting next week. Please contact us at [email] or [phone] for details.
MEN WOMEN JOBS + CUSHI SHIPPING
TICKETS FOR SUPERMARINE SHIPPING
$250.00 per week + MEAWARD'S PA
$250.00 per week + AWAWARD'S PA
$250.00 per week + AWAWARD'S PA
Bureau of Child Research has opening for full-time research assistant as data analyst. Requires PhD in computer science or related field, prior data analysis, experience with SPSB, 18SBD, 30SBD, social services, experience with TPS, THREE SOCIAL SERVICES, ability to work well with other Prefer program staff and 26-197. Starting date approximately February 6, 2019. Started data approximately February 6, 2019. Middled July, 11th, Howard, telephone number: 1-855-422-1234. Req. mentorships from Bureau of Child Research, Canada.
Children's Learning Center has opening for part-time substitute teachers and附加idea calls. 614-281-2943 to inquire. Must be 18 or older to apply. Please call the Children's Learning Center at opportunity Affirmative Action Employee 1-29
Research assistance position located at ASX 108 in Perth, Western Australia. Reqs: Bachelors degree or equiv in Research or related field; 2 yrs of experience in an application of AX3H1 Tetr; An Ability to work with diverse teams; and Excellent communication skills.
Now in training applications for Fortunay & Grill
Institute. Apply to the institution at Portsmouth,
Hertfordshire 1297. Apply in person at Virtue Horticulture.
1052
BABYSITTER-my home at 2:3d & Kasuki
Wednesday, and Friday: 2-6pm & $12/hour
76th Spirit private club is now taking applications
at 845-920-3111 or registered call Check
at 845-920-3111, 6 p.m. Tuesday to Friday
Drivers Wanted. Must be 18 yrs. old, must have a
driver's license. Resume to: Personnel Pizza, 1454 N. Wickliffe
St., Indianapolis, IN 46207. Wkly 3:20pm.
Part time help needed for wood working apprentices. Req. Master's degree or equivalent, able to work approximately 20 hours per week. Employer must be willing to accept a full-time position.
Part-time. I am looking for help: whole days or afternoons and weekends. Free experience. Send resume to: HR@school.com.
Wanted Reliable person for after school child care. Must have驾车证. 664 after 8 o'clock. p.m.
LOST
Large reward for ladies of ladies' suspirehip
ring. No questions. 864-5053. Lost before Christ.
"Catholic."
A black wallet latt during entrainment in Hoch
austausch. If it found, please return it.
Hoch austausch. If it found, please return it.
MISCELLÁNEOUS
THEISM BINDING COPYING--The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawnrow at 838 Main, or phone 446-340. Thank you.
Hillcrest Barber Specialists
RK & Redken Products
Modern Hairstyling
for Guys & Gals
airforming—reconditioning
pe ms &
oanalysis
Hillcrest Shopping Center
935 Iowa 841-6800
PERSONAL
Stop by Burkes daily for Peak Hour 3-4 P.M.
Small-No. 2 Medium-No. 3 Large-No. 9
Shore-No. 12
DARKROOM-BUA provides a complete glittery darkroom (the chemicals and paper) for your makeup shots.
Gay/Leban Switcheboard, counseling and general information 841-8472 tt
BARRIOUSE SPECIALS • 4-6 Mon, Tues, and 7-14
Wednesday • 2-5 Mon, Tues, and 7-14
MAIDS DAILY NIGHT • WEEK 3 • $10.50 per guest
51 PITCIERS every Friday afternoon from 2.6 at the Harbour
if
Register for the MSA Winter Institution
of Management at the Patio, Warner Brothers for creatively
outlay at the Patio. Warner Brothers needs
KA BINGAI
Topless dancers with lunch
Noon: 2:00 Only at
noon
Flamingo
501 N. BBR
N. Lawrence
GUITAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexpensive introduction to the instrument, or gradual introduction to individual groups. Groups begin Wed. Feb. 7 for adults and junior. Call Karen Kafka Fellowship C84-1082 T37
THE MOFT BEER BAND is now building
KEYBOARD (cell phone) #456-5066 849-9231
KEYBOARD (cell phone) #456-5066 849-9231
HIS BOMEDY: Student Senate spring elections—February 14 & 15. Student body President—Gregory Bomeda, Architect, Architecture, Business, Education, Engineering Fine Arts, Journalism, Law, LAARS, Numerakerer Graduate and off Campus Student Senate seats Graduate and off Campus Student Senate Office. Deadline is June 29, 5 p.m.
The Lawerence League for the Advancement of Non-Verbal Communication invites the community to touch, pudge, jumble, wink and laugh. The group's mission is to silence it before silence is precluded. Haratt Inayak Imag. 1:26
Spring Break isn't far away! WS Winter Park
Oakland Beach Call Broad B41-8255
609-769-3131 ext. 800
SERVICES OFFERED
Import cases - ground quality service by factory
Import cases - immediate appointment call: 843-705-9261
For immediate appointment call: 843-705-9261
Relax. Let me not type your term paper, dissertation, mine. Fast Services, Mrs. MID, 156-158.
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
1015 W. 9th Complete Lock & Key Services 843-2182
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aires at the Hotel Uaiq/Quick Copy Center.
Aires is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
Mau.
MATH TUTOR M.A in math, patience, three years prof. math training experience. 822-541-3
*Katherine*
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you with math or CS problems. Get it now!
EXPERT TUTORS. MATH 000 (122, call) 843-6577.
EXPERT TUTORS. MATH 000 (122, call) 843-6577.
EXPERT TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. call
843-6590.
EXPERT TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200. call
843-6590.
EXPERT TUTORS. QUALIFICATIONS. I.S.C.
EXPERT TUTORS. QUALIFICATIONS. I.S.C.
EXPERT TUTORS. Computer programming. For general problem-solving.
Long grown, Party-fly dresses. Formals- made
long. Comfortable summers dresses. 1.58-4.
290.蒸煮料理. 1.39-4.
Babyfitting, my home Mother of two girls in
two babies to babyfitting while you are in
842-1412-4424
TYPING
Please Leave Initially through early advanced
Lesson Started by teacher. Please call Julia at 860-2433 or
at 860-1650.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
Experienced Typical paper items, mice, mice, mice,
spelling corrections, spelling corrections, spelling corrections
43-5245, Mrs. Wright
Typical Editor, IBM PicaElite Quality work,
using PicaElite's documentation w/ Weilton
Jon. Knopf 92-817-9327
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4080
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
hospitalized law, paper, term papers. M
resume. Mail resume to:
Hillary Johnson, Law Office,
12345 Street, New York, NY 10006.
Experienced typist with scientific background
IBM correcting Shectet H. Call Jan 648-312-1200
Do we try damping on elite electric typewriter
service/proceeding. Call MiHays H-24-
841-6058
www.mihays-h-24.com
HOME TYPING SERVICE: Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced availer in her home. For information about AVAILABILITY 43820, after 5:30 am anytime worksend.
1-26
REWRITING EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or term paper, code and edit it with other grammars, styles, language and thought thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlining, drafting and articles also available. KYD 842-1231
HEAD START NEEDS YOU • you = solutions to
your problems + 2 hrs for a daily cycle check. Lapsed
cycle needs 2 hrs for a daily cycle check. Lapsed
cycle needs 2 hrs for a daily cycle check.
WANTED
Wanted to learn car interior handling. If you be Receptionist,
call 1-800-395-4267 or visit www.receptionist.com.
Receptionist: Rachel, 642-656-3000; Mail: Rachel@receptionist.com.
Email: rchallenge@receptionist.com.
Student wanted to share 2 helium, with girls
who are taking a class at school. Available
Feb 12 $100.00 (offits) Cell MH-45
Cell MH-45
Wanted. A roommate for furnished 2 BR apt
$112.30 * 1* utilities; $813.95 1-22
Formatate restauro in abuja bedawo agitata
nostrata,慰官, etnolo e toslo Gt CellMeter at RENE
munistro, etnolo and toslo Gt CellMeter at RENE
Wanted: Two roommates for apartment at Jaywater Tower. $12 a month, all utilities paid. Applicants must be at least 25 years old.
One or two roommates needed for attractive
Trailside Townhouse Rent Negotiable 841-0222
Responsible, quiet, roommate for junior summer.
$75/Mo. for additional utilities. 862-2540 Call after
appointment.
Non-matching females to show house with three 18-year-old girls. For more information, contact Donna- l. first rank roll-in hand on. Live and recording week. Days call Marty 812-254 or Steve 812-154. Night. Events 812-605 Louis
Broomhill needed 2 Bitem. Apt. next to campus.
$100/month* * utilities Bitem 411-358-8061
Private commute wanted to ship 3 BM hirers
to New York, NY. Must have a Bachelor's deg.
his course: Kathryn or Kathy at 812-5290.
No phone calls.
Female roommate to share 2 BUNS. Apt. close to
campus. M1-5286 for 6,000 a day weekdays.
Roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt at Meadowbrook
843-1644 1-29
Residents to share home with two girls, cook-
eating for two. Call or sit by at 1700.
125 to utilities. Call or sit by at 1700.
125 to utilities. Call or sit by at 1700.
Wanted: Male, roommate. Park 25. Apartments.
电话: 842-1335
1-25
Gay Mail #2 share large 3 BR apartment with 2
garages, two bedrooms, and one bathroom.
842-757-2712.
Housemate; or mates wanted. Large, beautiful,
chair. Washers. Large room. Children and kids
with pets. Washers. Large room. Children and kids
with pets.
Mature person to share my house near KU
$150 mo. + food. 842-7310 1-38
Want to work for part-time, work on your own
homework? Do it. You'll learn everything.
More preferred but not absolutely necessary.
Rent-free room for right girl in warm, erag
responsibilities, and share utilities. Available
with roommate.
16
Wednesday, January 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Senate election planned
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
Members of the Student Senate Elections Committee met last night to line up strategy for conducting the upcoming campaign. The Senate and class officials Feb. 14 and 15.
John Mitchelson, committee chairman,
outlined tentative plans for a "Meet the
Candidates" night Feb. 7 at Gertleburd
Sellars Pearson and Corbin residence
halls and explained regulations on voting
procedure.
The filing deadline for the 107 Student Senate seats will be 5 p.m. on Jan. 29.
Committee members will be responsible for checking signatures on petitions of candidates who file for office. Each candidate must submit his/her constitution or pay a $3 fee filing.
ALTHOUGH SENATE regulations require candidates to file by one of those two methods, Mitchellson said, the committee had allowed candidates in past elections to file by petition even though he was called as many as five invalid signatures.
"Because of the number of candidates involved in this election, we will scan the petitions instead of checking on every signature like we did last fall." Mitchellson
Mitchelson said after the meeting that if any invalid signatures were found each signature on the petition would be checked.
No one has filed for any of the Senate seats but Michelson said he expected many students to file the day of the deadline.
"MEMBERS OF the coilitions usually come in on the day of the deadline and file at the same time." he said.
There are five coalitions in the upcoming election, each headed by a team of candidates running for the offices of student body president and vice president.
The coalitions are: The Porch Step, Imagination, Rapport, La Plume and Anathy.
The Porch Step Coalition's ticket is headed by presidential and vice president candidates, Margaret Berlin, George Gorka, and George Torpez,去来ez junior.
Berklin and yesterday that her coaition stood for openness and friendliness in the world.
"It also stands for a firm foundation, which the Student Senate should have," Berlin said.
OFF-CAMPUS housing and concern with the quality of education are two of The Porch Step's main concerns, Berlin said.
"We also would like to investigate the possibility of student representation on committees responsible for granting tenure. The students are the ones who attend the classes and can see how effective a teacher is." she said.
The quality of a KU education and potential Student Senate involvement in improving that education are also concerns of the Imagination Coalition, headed by Clair Keizer, Lawrence junior, and Craia Tempelton, Toekea junior.
Templeton said student complaints about advising and the dropout policy were common.
"IN THE PAST, Student Senate has mainly been concerned with its own budget and coordinating activities. It should be taking a greater role in the decision-making process of the University. We are all here for," Templeton said.
Templeton said student rights issues should be a senate priority.
Ron Allen, Sabetha junior, Rapport presidential candidate, also said firmer Senate policy on student rights was a tough issue. Senate chairman Robert D. Dave Kenner, Maryville, Mo., junior.
"The Student Senate should have been much stronger on the administration's veto of kozol as the Higher Education Week speaker, for example." Allen said.
Allen said the administration violated Kansas Board of Regents regulations by its veto of Jonathan Kozol, author and critic of the American educational system, as Higher Education Week speaker last fall.
KOZOL HAD been selected by the student steering committee for Higher Education Week. The administration decided to send a representative of the National Academy of Education.
According to Allen, that was not all that went wrong last semester.
"One thing that has to be stopped immediately is the internal politics between the Senate and the Kansan. The attitude has been to 'watch out for the Kansan,'" Allen said. "The Senate should rely on the Kansan, not watch out for it."
The La Plume Alliance, headed by Bob Tomlinson, Mission junior, and John Hambricht, Wichita junior, chose his name as the new president to student government. Hambricht said.
Hambray declined to comment on the specifics of a proposal his coalition was working on that he said would increase participation of all students in student government, including those not elected to Student Senate.
"A MAJOR ISSUE is apathy." Harnay said. "The problems of the past, including the lack of voting and poor attendance at meetings, can be helped by improvement in the training."
Hambricht also said his coalition was not affiliated in any way with the present government.
"We want it to be very clear that our use do not reflect the present administration."
Apathy is not only an issue but a creed to presidential and vice president candidates, junior, and Christopher Fleisher, Lawrence junior, who head the Apathy
Hazelrigg said the purpose of his campaign was to "moral victory" over President Obama, who is expected to be removed on October 1.
"THE POINT is this," Hazelrigel said. "If you're apathetic, you don't vote. We are representing the majority of the current body who don't vote and don't care."
Hazelrigh and Fleisher said apathy was tan but because it was free of responsibility for the problems.
"Everyone who doesn't vote is in essence voting for us."
By BRUCE THOMAS
Reviewer
A former KU student brought his brand of bluegrass music to Lawrence last night when Dan Crazy, Brian Belinne and John Carroll, Jr. performed at the riff-wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
The concert featured Crary on guitar, Berline on fiddle and mandolin and Hickman on the five-string banjo. It was sponsored by the Kansas Folkcore Center, a nonprofit organization that promotes the folk arts in Kansas.
Trio picks and fiddles at concert
The organization, based in Lawrence,
promoted a concert by Byron Bowers,
a bluegrass musician, in December. In
the second week of March, it will organize
the annual Fiddler's Gathering at Off-the-Wall Hall.
Bluegrass is a traditional music born in the rural areas of America. It combines the music of the acoustic guitar, bass, fiddle, banjo and mandolin in fast paced instruments and harmonized vocal arrangements.
FOR MANY WHO listen to bluegrass, it characterizes the comfortable and friendly sound of bluegrass.
The audience at the concert seemed to be infected with the music's warm and relaxed mood. Many of those who entered the hall seemed to be getting together with old friends, and the musicians, while warming up, joked with those who stood nearby.
Once the concert began, the musicians tried to cape the crowd into getting involved in the music by clapping along as they played. The joking didn't work and the crowd remained relatively quiet for most of the concert.
The show started with two traditional bluesgrass instruments that featured each other.
THE CROWD BEGAN responding to the music when the group played a Johnny Cash song, "Big River," in an up-ball bluegrass band. He then went off to the music with his driving guitar style.
Perhaps the best song of the night was a Texas fiddle tune called "Limocerk." This song carried a playful but intricate melody on its back and forth between Beline and Crary.
For Crary, this was a kind of homecoming. He first came to Lawrence in the early 1960s as a student at the University of Alabama and a doctorate in speech communication in 1968.
Interest increases in Study Abroad program
Staff Reporter
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Snow-scovered Mt. Oread is not the only place KU students are attending classes.
This semester, about 75 students are studying in such varied countries as Costa Rica and Chile.
Mary M. Ryan, KU Study Abroad adviser, said yesterday that there had been an increase each year in student interest in overseas study.
“Recently, student interest has been particularly high for our Costa Rica and French students.”
"Once students get through the red tape, there are few obstacles in their way," she said.
Although interest has increased steadily in the past several years, she said, many more students can participate in overseas study programs.
THE REQUIREMENTS for students are not as difficult as many people think, Ryan said. For most of the program hours, there are two courses—microstaff tourers hours of credit and at least a 3.0 cumulative grade point average. Also, students must have taken at least four semesters of the host course.
However, students who wish to attend a summer program are not bound by the 60 credit point requirement.
Ryan said the deciding factors for qualification were enthusiasm and a strong work ethic.
The cost of the programs vary according
Think Valley West for Fine Arts V Furnishings in HolidayPlaza841-1870 Mon Sat 10:50
to host countries and the length of student visits.
For example, the cost of a 10-month stay in Costa Rica is about $2,300. The cost to stay in Great Britain for 10 months is about $4,000.
LIMITED FINANCIAL aid is available through the Study Abroad office and the Office of Financial Aid. Students who have completed the KU can apply them to overseas study.
The Study Abroad programs have been expanding recently to include programs in various countries.
Three types of programs provide students options on the length of time they study abroad. They can stay for a summer, a semester or an academic year.
"We are now working on an exchange program in Africa at the University of Benin
HolidayPlaza841-1870 Mon-Sat 10-5:30
"There are programs to meet every need." Rvansaid.
Students participating in the programs study at selected universities in foreign countries.
"All of the universities are open to Americans and have advisers there to help them," Ryan said. "We now have a program at the University of Tsukuba in Japan. It has been very successful and we will continue it next year."
VICTOR POMEROY, Topeka senior, studied at the University of Bordeaux in France last year and said that it was a great experience. He also had a few problems with the program he was in.
The main motivation for participating in overseas study is to gain a better understanding of another language and culture. Ryan said.
According to Ryan, all college credits earned abroad transfer back to KU. However, she advised that all students must complete a Bachelor's track transfer questions with KU departments.
"The way they laid us the credits would be transferred was misleading. My credit still exists."
Pomorey said, "I was getting tired of school here and I knew it would look good on me."
KU
FREE
FOR MORE
DEMONSTRATION & OPENING MEETING
THURSDAY
JANUARY 25th
7:30 p.m.
173 ROBINSON
BEGINNING AND ADVANCED STUDENTS
KARATE CLUB
INFORMATION CONTACT
DOUG BROWN 842-5225 or
ROB PITCAIRN 842-1376
"The only problem was that our money was so devalued," he said.
AIR FORCE ROTC HERE ARE THE FACTS
When you're discussing something as important as your future, it's urgent that you get the straight answer, and that you understand them. Air Force ROCTC can be an important part of your future. We would like to make sure everyone knows what is important to you.
Get together with an AFROTC representative and discuss the program. We'll give you all the facts. It could be one of the most important talks you've ever had with anyone about your educational plans.
It's a fact that the Air Force needs highly qualified, dedicated officers — men and women. It's a fact we need people in all kinds of educational disciplines. It's a fact we were prepared to offer financial help to those who can handle it.
Peter Baird, Columbus, Ohio, senior, said his year in Germany increased his understanding of the language tremendously. Baird, who is majoring in sociology and who studied at the University of Erlangen, had no big problems with the program.
Hickman said they had been to Japan three times in the past few years. He said American style bluegrass was very popular there.
Students interested in the Study Abroad program can contact the Office of Study
"Sophomores and Juniors: Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a call when you graduate. See if you qualify: Call Capt. John Mack, 864-4876, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 100.
KANSAN Review
"If you mention a name that they are familiar with or a song title then they all clap even though they don't understand English," he said.
"THE FIRST DAY that I heard bluegrass
liked it!" I said. At that time, many of
the major stations were playing.
JAPANESE MUSICIANS copy their bluegrass style from American records, even singing in English although they do not know the language. he said.
"Bluegrass today is an alternative kind of music for those who have become fed up with other types of music. In a way the growth of bluegrass shows that people are returning to their roots in art as a response to change in society that is too rapid."
THE RAY OF LOVE
BLOOMS AND BLESSINGS
Cryan, who grew up in a suburb of Kansas City, Kan., said he became interested in bluegrass music about 20 years ago when he first heard it on the radio.
The three musicians live outside of Los Angeles, where they own a production company. Hickman said they spent about $1 million a year traveling and playing on the road.
12:30 p.m.
AIR FORCE
Hillel Lox & Bagel Brunch
ROTC
Gateway to a great way of life
Sun. Jan. 28th 12:30 p
L.J.C.C. 917 Highland Dr.
After the brunch hear Margaret Berlin, Bob Tomlinson, Clair Keizer, and Ron Allen. Presidential candidates for Student Body President, speak to the students.
Begin the Semester in Style
25-60% off
COORDINATES
Pants
Dresses
Nightgowns
Sweaters
CLOTHES ENCOUNTER
HOLIDAY PLAZA 25th & Iowa
HOURS
10-5:30 Mon. thru Sat.
10-8:30 Thurs.
An Evening With Brewer & Shipley with Special Guest Danny Cox
A farm with a barn and silo in the background. The sky is filled with clouds. The foreground has a grid of neatly planted crops.
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Take one toke over the line..
January 25th...8:00pm...in The Ballroom Admission $3.50...Beer will be served Tickets available: SUA, Kief's & Caper's in K.C.
SUA
Jonestown tragedy explored
BvLORILINENBERGER
Staff Reporter
The horrors of the recent Guyana massacre are familiar; widespread television and newspaper coverage of that November nightmare did much to acquaint the world with the People's Temple and its leader, Jim Jones.
Two months after Jonesstown, the outrage generated by the ritalin-like mass suicide and murder of 900 men, women and children in California.
But the realities of the Jonestown tragedy were recalled last night during a KU symposium that explored and discussed the incident and its implications for society and religion.
Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies and organizer of the symposium, said he hoped a better understanding of the People's Temple, of Jim Jones and of Jonestown would be gained through the symposium.
CHARLES NEUERING, professor of psychology, offered two possible explanations as to how a mass suicide event might have happened.
"In literature, I can find only one explanation why something like this might occur," he said. "This expounding of what happens to a person is said says that there is an in-borne death wish in all of us. In most cases, however, it is covered by our own particular need."
The second explanation given by Neuringer outlined the work of social psychiatrists involved in studying mass stress.
When people get together in large groups they tend to beseech their individuality, he said, "and a group begins to think."
"THE PEOPLE in the group are very susceptible to
influence, and especially if the influence comes from a very christianistic leader, such as Jim Jones."
Peter Hartcollis, director of the Menninger Hospital in Topeka, said he thought a lack of support on the part of church members and a fear of their own aggressive actions concerned them in the direction of a forceful leader such as Jones.
"First of all, very much dependence on other people leads ultimately to an ego destruction," he said. "The people in Guyana feared independence and their own aggressive tendencies, the demands of obedience by their charismatic leader."
A historical parallel between the Guyana carnage and the suicide of a tribe of Jews at Masuda during the Roman takeover of Israel was drawn by Bn Dresbler, assistant professor of religious studies.
"WHAT HAPPENED at Masada was that certain military leaders found themselves surrounded by Romans with no way out," he said. "They could no longer face the situation, explanation of who they were crumpled before their eyes."
Paul Berry, an administrator of the Disciples of Christ church, which ordained Jones a minister in 1964, attempted to explain why Jones was accepted into the church and why his Peleon's Temple in San Francisco was not.
"Jones came into the Disciples of Christ at a time when no church in America was doing anything, at a snap, about racial and poverty problems," he said. "He truly held a conviction that something should be done, as we did."
"CHURCHES CAN join the Disciples of Christ if they are organized, have a good track record, and hold Sunday services similar to most churches found all over the United States. This was just not the case with the People's Temple."
Jan Larson, assistant professor of social welfare, knew 10 persons involved in the Goya massacre, six of whom lived in Jonestown. She related her personal experiences with the experiences of a close friend, whom she would not identify.
It is not listed in our directory of the Disciples of Christ churches."
"My friend defected from the church in 1978," she said. "After she did, its members began to spread all kinds of bad things about her, namely that she had molested children and had tried to murder a friend of hers."
Larson said the People's Temple had tried to recruit her when she was living in California, but had left her alone
"I DID become close friends with Liz, Jones's mistress,
after we received permission from him to have a
relationship."
"Jones had sexual relationships with all the angels, who made up the hierarchy of the church," she added. "There was always a lot of spying going on. People had to confess them and had to tell about the sniper or slipper of other members."
Larson advocated the creation of a legislative authority to define the differences between a cult and a religion, so that religious leaders could have greater control.
This proposal brought reverent rebukes from members of the audience, although some people nodded their heads in agreement With Larson, who said she thought a tragedy similar to Jonestown could happen again.
The moneies have been known to stand up in stadiums and about. "It is better die than to stand (Sun) on the ground," said one.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 25. 1979
IHP head refutes recommendations
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Controversy about KU's Integrated Humanities Program rolls on.
Staff Writer
By DEBRIECHMANN
The committee completed a five-month evaluation this week of HIP and submitted its findings to the College Committee on Undergraduate Studies
Dennis Quinn, IHP director, denounced yesterday recommendations made in a report written by the IHP Advisory Committee.
In a press release, Quinn lashed out against the committee's report saying, "This report proposes to make HIP another victim of the policies of a KU administration that fears controversy and lives by public relations.
"We have not yet begun to fight," Quinn said. "This thing is going to drag on for a long time."
The committee made nine recommendations for the program. The first called for a Humanities Committee of students and seven faculty members. The committee would administer all humanities courses at KU in addition to tour IHP courses.
"THE COMMITTEE, instead of having the courage to say that we find IHP not guilty, pussyfooties and equivocates by repeatedly saying, 'we fund no evidence' of wrongdoing, as if there may be that they have failed to find, he said.
Quinn has described the program as an introduction to the humanities in which questions about philosophy, poetry and literature are answered through reading great authors.
HP began at KU eight years ago. The program was aimed at offering students a traditional approach to the development of western civilization.
Last September, the six-member HIP Advisory Committee was appointed to evaluate the program through written
and oral testimony. After five months of deliberations, the committee released its findings Jan. 20 in an 18-page report.
IN ADDITION to the Humanities Committee, the advisory committee also recommended other professors be worked into the IHP staff to add "more breadth and new blood to the curriculum."
Quinn objects to other professors teaching HIP courses if their views differ from the present HIP professors' views. This would destroy the integration of the teachers.
The committee also recommended:
- that IHP courses be given human course listings rather than their current Liberal Arts and Sciences course listings, and the students are told to find IHP courses in KU catalogs.
- that adequate information be distributed to high schools, incoming freshmen and junior colleges about the course requirements at KU, including special aspects of HIP.
- that the IHP Advisory Committee be dissolved and that all nine recommendations become effective by the fall semester of 1979.
- that the current IHP faculty be encouraged to continue teaching IHP.
Richard Frohl, resident director at JRP, said yesterday that the housing office was contacted Friday and told that there was a problem.
Quinn disapproves of the report and the committee's solution to ending controversy about IHP.
QUINN SAID the solution would be to eliminate IHP as a program; reduce it to four courses in humanities; depose the present director; and create a Big Brother committee to guide IHP in the ways of righteousness.
JRP men are hot but water is not
"The committee has found a final solution for the IHP question: it is death by administration—a discrete and slow euthanasia, performed for our own good. This is the style of murder preferred by the mob. No blood, no corpses, and no bad publicity."
But by yesterday afternoon, the only respite reported was when the water turned to scalding hot water, still preven-
tive of a fatal burn.
Some residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, which has been without hot water since last Thursday, have accused the University housing department of "insulting" them.
See 1HP back page
"You can see people getting more and more disgruntled," one JKP resident said. Other residents said they wanted compensation for the inconvenience.
BILL THOMPSON, JRP president, said, "There are some people talking about suing the University of contract and others talking about the potential down payment process."
Baldhillman, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said he planned to make an appeal before the Association of University Residence Halls for $450,000.
Although Fred McElhenie, director of residential programs, said he empathized with the residents, he said he did not think 'any compensation was warranted or possible,' because it was an unpredictable malfunction.
The trouble, according to Dean Milray, maintenance manager for the housing department, was caused by excessive cold water.
"The University is quicker than you to take your money when you break your contract," he said, "but when you break it—forget it."
Milroy said he first heard about the problem on Sunday and sent one of his members to the hall to confirm it.
A CREW already had been scheduled to work on another problem with the showers Monday morning, and Milroy said they decided to stop.
Although there was no hot water throughout the residence hall, the work crew spent Monday replacing the thermostat motors in the basement.
Milroy said he did not think the motors could have caused the hot water problem.
By 10 p.m. Tuesday, Milroy said, the crew had discovered what it thought was the cause in the cold water level and mixing valves.
Although Milroy said he was not sure when the hot water system would work completely, he hoped it would be early next week.
Several replacement parts were found in Kansas city yesterday and, others are to be obtained as soon as possible.
Board walk
Floyd Silvers, Eudora, squeezes through a row of crates used to transport fertilizer at the Nipak
Service Center, Second and Locust streets. The crates are stacked and saved until they are needed for another shipment.
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
Smoke clouds rights of non-smokers
Bv LAURA STEVENS
Staff Reporter
A young woman carried her lunch tray through the line in Wessex Cafeteria. She paid the cashier for her meal and took her order.
Until a few years ago, smoking was something that only smokers worried about. In 1964, the Surgeon General of the United States issued the first law to restrict reports on the hazards of smoking to the smoker.
Last week, Joseph Califano, secretary of the department of Health, Education and Welfare, issued another report on smoking and health, but it did not mention hazards to non-smokers.
As she removed the wrapper from her sandwich, a waff of cigarette smoke drifted into her face. Her eyes widened.
Since 1964, some government studies have gone further into research on the hazards of smoking to the non-smoker, after which it was clear that smoking is not a credible burden for the non-smoker but also a financial burden.
The woman is among a large, growing group of Americans. She is one of 63 percent who are non-
THE KANASAS LUNG Association distributes a pamphlet detailing the results of several government studies.
The pamphlet. "Second-band Smoke" divides the smoker into two types: "to speak loudly" that has been brailed into a smoker's voice;
lungs; and sidestream, which is smoke that comes from the burning end of the cigarette.
Sidestream ink, according to the pamphlet, has a higher concentration of noxious chemicals
The pamphlet says cadmium is under investigation as a compound that damages lungs and causes emphysema, a disease that causes thinning of the lung tissues. Once cadmium gets into the lungs, it
Sideset smoke has five times as much carbon monoxide, the poisonous gas which is emitted from automobile exhausts, and 50 times as much ammonia.
Sidestream stream has twice as much tar and nicotine and three times as much of a compound in the air.
Another noxious compound found in greater levels in sidestream smoke than in mainstream smoke is
ACCOUNTING TO ONE study, after smoking seven cigarettes in one hour, the carbon monoxide levels in air were increased.
The level of carbon monoxide in the blood of the non-smoker rises to 90 parts a million. According to the lung association, that is twice the maximum level set for industry.
According to the lung association, it takes hours for the carbon monoxide to leave the body. In the study, half of the chemical was still present after three or four hours.
Lung association publications also say that the human body, a water-filled substance with a low electrical charge, attracts cigarette smoke, a dry substance with a high electrical charge.
In addition to this, a study has been done indicating that demands on the use of air conditioning systems jump 600 percent to counteract odors and cigarette smoke. This raises energy costs.
Fire hazards also can threaten non-smokers. Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain said Tuesday that the national figure of smokers and fire causes 17,000 deaths and smoking related materials as the leading cause of fatal fires.
The study showed that 93.1 percent of all fatal fires experienced in residences. Of those, 56 percent are growing ranchers.
Fire hazards also can threaten non-smokers.
McMain said he did not know how much property damage was caused by fires related to smoking, but he said residence fires in 1974, the last year for which fires are available, caused no more than $1.3 billion dollars.
He said many of the fires occurred when a cigarette or an ash was lost in carpet or furniture and smoldered for several hours before bursting into flame.
"In most of the fires," he said, "the funerals cut off the entrance of exit and the person man die of smoke (phallic) fire."
He said that smoke detectors between living and sleeping areas of a home can help prevent fire.
A BOOK CALLED "The Legal Rights of Non-smokers," by Alvin and Blyton Brody (Averill 1977), explains that overhead costs in businesses are relegated to the non-smoker.
Businesses and public offices buy abstrabs to protect their floors from burns. The cost of the abstrabs depends on the building type.
In addition, the book says cleaning costs are high, partly because of extra labor needed to empty ash trays and pump out dust.
The book says these higher tax rates, combined with other costs to the public, more than offset the $0 tax burden.
Tax rates of non-smokers also are raised in several ways, the book says.
For instance, government studies and research on smoking hazards cost HEW $10 million in 1973, according to a transcript of a U.S. House appropriations subcommittee meeting.
THE BOOK SAYS that the first way for the non-smoker to deal with the problem is to speak up.
Smokers, according to the book's figures, have a higher mortality rate than non-smokers. In some cases, the death of a smoking broadsheet winner contributes on behalf of public aidrols, using more tax money.
Income taxes paid by smokers are lost because smokers have a higher illness absence rate than non-smokers.
Failing that, the book documents more radical means. For example, opening a bottle of ammonia could be used to confront a smoker who will not put out his cigarette when asked to.
Besides personal means, the book describes legal means to protect the non-smoker. Kansas has laws against cigarette purchase by minors and statutes against smoking in public areas.
Groups against smoking also are becoming more involved in the non-smoker's plight. Organizations such as the American Cancer Society and the American Lung Association are involved in early education programs to prevent young people from starting to smoke.
The book says that groups such as Group Against Smokers' Pollution and Action on Smoking and Health are beginning to lobby more vocally in state legislatures, well as in Congress and among federal agencies.
If all else fails, a non-smoker can purchase several aids from speciality gift catalogs. One company in Hanover, Penn., offers a "smoker's candle," a device that, when lit, helps cover up and burn up cigarette smoke. Also sold is an ashriff with a filter above it to catch smoke if it hits the
Finally, a frustrated non-smoker can buy an electrically driven, miniature air filter that will fit compactly on a desk. It plugs into a socket and runs automatically to filter smoke within the area of a desk.
2
Thursday, January 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International
Amendment would limit terms
WASHINGTON—Sen. Nancy Kassaeb, R-Kan., making her first Senate speech, called yesterday for a constitutional amendment limiting the terms of office of the Speaker.
Kassebaum said such limits would result in a Congress responsive to the needs of constituents, but mindful of the overall welfare of the nation.
"The professional politician, with his eye on the next election, quite naturally seeks to temperize or completely avoid potentially controversial issues," she said. "He finds it desirable to ignore the complexity of our times and the interdependence of issues."
Kussebum said adoption of her idea would bring a continuous stream of new political talent and leadership to Congress and would encourage more
"Members of Congress will be looked upon as local citizens on temporary leave from their responsibilities at home, not as permanent fixtures in the city."
Leavenworth prison to close
LEAVENWORTH—Because the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth is old and too large, it will be placed over by 1987, according to Richard Setter, a senior lawyer at Leavenworth.
Plans by the Bureau of Prisons call for the closing because the prison is not in line with the current philosophy of prison architects. Seetar said. The largest inmate recidivism has occurred during the last decade.
Leavenworth's prison population is 1,689, down 21 percent from a year ago when it was 2,300. There is no planned reduction at Leavenworth currently,
Seiter said one reason for a lower population in Leavenworth was a new plan by the bureau which allowed more inmates to go to medium security prisons.
Pipeline bill reaches House
TOPEKA—A measure to give coal slurry pipeline companies a limited right to condemn property reached the House as a bill yesterday.
The measure, one of the most intensely lobbied subjects to come before the Kansas Leisure Institute, was sponsored by 24 House members.
As the bill was written, coal slurry pipeline companies would have the right to condemn the property of public or private corporations or associations. These groups in turn are empowered by law to exercise the power of eminent domain and own land or rights of way under which a coal slurry pipeline must pass.
Coal slurry is a mixture of pulverized coal and water
Slurry is a mixture of coal and water.
The bill carries a provision that coal slurry pipeline companies would not be allowed to use Kansas water. Another provision would subject the firms to a new law.
Railroads have lobbied against legislation that would allow coal slurry pipelines to censure rights of way under their lines and contend this would be unfair to workers.
Wuo. proposes 65 mph limit
CHEVENNE, Wyo. — The Wyoming Senate approved yesterday a bill to raise the speed limit in the state to 65 mph and an inspired Oklahoma lawmaker said that "it is one of the least restrictive laws."
Wyoming, the second smallest state in population but the largest in highway deaths per miles traveled, could lose $2 million in federal highway money that would have been spent on other things.
Wyoming backers of the 65 mph bill promise a court fight if the money is lost. "It's time to tell the feds where to go," was the rallying cry as the bill made it through the Senate. It now goes to the Wyoming House, where party leaders appear divided on the question.
In a similar development, an Oklahoma state representative, who said he was encouraged by the Wyoming Senate's action, is planning to introduce a bill that would give the governor the power to veto legislation.
State Rep. Townsend, a Shawnee, Okla., democrat, said yesterday that he did not think the federal government could take away Oklahoma's highway
Oklahoma could lose $72 million in federal highway funds if it did not comply with the 55 mph limit, according to the Oklahoma Transportation Commission.
Temple child pauments studied
WASHINGTON—A congressional panel announced yesterday it was investigating whether as many as 150 foster care children were placed in foster care without parental consent.
The General Accounting Office is examining county foster care records in California and the list of the dead from Jonestown. According to San Alan Rodriguez, the agency will soon release the records.
"If names turn up on both lists," Cranton said, "it means the Rev. Jim Jones may have received hundreds of thousands of dollars in government child welfare."
Cranston, chairman of the Senate Human Resources subcommittee, disclosed the GAO inquiry at the outset of his committee's hearings on child abuse.
Prices take 9% jump in '78
WASHINGTON - Consumer prices rose 9 percent in 1078, the second largest leap in 20 years, according to a report released yesterday by the Labor Department.
The department also reported that a typical American wage carrier fell behind in the race to keep up with inflation in 1978, as workers' real buying power increased.
Food prices were up 11.6 percent in 1978, housing costs 9.9 percent and medical care 8.8 percent. The year's biggest bargain was clothing, which rose 5.2 percent.
Excluding 1974, the last time consumer prices rose as much as 9 percent in a year was 1947. Price rises 8.6 percent in 1977, but wage earners increased their
According to the government's report, the Consumer Price Index ended 1978 at 202.5, meaning that a group of products costing $100 in the base year of 1967
Mayors displeased by budget
The group, representing mayors of about 800 of the nation's largest cities, said the budget abandoned committees Carter made less than a year ago to
WASHINGTON——The U.S. Conference of Mayors said yesterday that it was disappointed by the amount of money President Carter's 1980 budget would give to his administration.
A 40-page report on Carter's budget recommendations said the budget imposes the burden of the fight against inflation on the cities, the poor, the elderly and other vulnerable groups.
Carlin criticized by Bennett
PRAIKE VILAGE--Former Gov. Robert F. Bennett said yesterday that he was surprised that Gov. John Carlin did not carry with some of the people he had been traveling to.
Although Bennett said he had not studied Carlin's legislative proposals in detail, he was a little surprised that the new governor did not recommend his plan.
However, Bennett said he was sympathetic with Carlin's position because candidates sometimes did not know all the facts.
"I've always been of the opinion that you don't make promises--you can't make commitments--unless you have a good, clear indication that you can proceed to accomplish them." Bennett said. "And, as a consequence, if you tell someone that you're going through with them, even when others thought we should have abandoned them."
Weather ...
According to the National Weather Service, skies will become increasingly cloudy today, with the high temperature in the mid 20s. The low tonight will be 10 degrees. There is a 60 percent chance of snow developing tonight and continuing into Friday. Winds will be from the southeast at 10 to 15 miles an hour.
The extended forecast calls for a chance of snow on Saturday and Sunday, with lows in the teens.
Khomeini postpones return for 3 weeks
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Self-elicited religious leader Ayatullah Ruhullah Khomini has agreed to delay his return to Iran for three weeks at the request of Prime Minister Shaipur Baktiar, a government source said today.
Khomeini had planned to end his 14-year exile and return to Tehran from Paris tomorrow to begin efforts to replace the government. He was born in a republic, his aides in France said yesterday.
THE GOVERNMENT source, who asked not to be identified, said the need for special security for Khomeini's arrival and protection in Iran led Bakhtiar to suggest that he delay his arrival for at least three weeks.
The source said several million Iranians could be expected to greet Khowni, who led the uprising that drove the shah from the country, upon his arrival in Tehran.
"The crowd alone would have been too dangerous and too difficult to handle," he said.
IT WAS EARLY morning in Paris when the delay became known and there was no immediate comment from Khomeini or his aides.
Earlier yesterday, Gen. Medhi Rhimi, the military governor of Tehran, made no mention of Khomeini in an announcement that all of the nation's airports were being closed, according to a Tehran Radio broadcast monitored in London.
Iranian military leaders loyal to Shah
Connally seeks GOP vote for presidency
WASHINGTON (AP)—Former Texas Gov. John B. Connally entered the race for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination yesterday on a platform emphasizing budget cutting, free enterprise and a strong defense.
Connally declared his candidacy in a speech at the National Press Club, and said he would enter every primary his campaign funds permit.
There will be about 35 presidential or primaries next year.
Saying he has "no apologies to make for having served in the Nixon administration," Commonly said he had faith the American president was "ready to conduct in his Watergate-related bribery trial."
Connally endorsed amending the Constitution to require a balanced federal budget except in time of emergency. He also authorizes Congress to limit presidents to a single six-year term.
Connally is the fourth candidate to enter the GOP race. The others are Rep. Philip Crane of Illinois; Benjamin Fernandez, an Angeles businessman, and Harold Stassen.
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi closed the Tehran airport yesterday and prevented Iran air, the national airline, from sending its planes to the country. Mr. Ruhland later ordered the airport resorted.
RHIMI SAID the airport had been closed because "opportunism" planned to disrupt operations at the facility. He apparently was referring to Kohmeini supporters who had planned to give the Iran Air Boeing 747 a lift, then it departed to pick up the Muslim leader.
Thousands of pro-Khomeini demonstrators drove to the airport yesterday morning in hopes of seeing the Iran Air jet take off. But they found troops and British Cheif Cheioun tanks blocking the airport, which were dispersed by armed soldiers.
IRAN AIR crews, who had broken their month-long strike to fly Khooneini's plane, accused government agents of sabotaging the 747 as well as backup aircraft, both of which had been disabled by removal of the turbines and fuel pressure transmitters.
In Tehran, demonstrations erupted for and against the Bakhitian government. Hundreds of pro-Khmenei demonstrators rallied on Friday in Kashmir, stones at each other near the U.S. Embassy.
Meanwhile, Bakhlari he sent a sendal envoy to Khomeini to try to reach a reconciliation with the man who led the years-long result that forced the shah to
IN MARRAKECH, the shah and his wife Empress Farah posed for photographers for 15 minutes in their first public appearance in London. Morocco from Aswan, Egypt, two days ago.
The shah appeared ill at ease, and reporters were not allowed to ask questions.
40
Dir. Robert Sidmok; with Burt Lancher, Ava Gardner; From the Hemingway short story; Lancaster's first film role.
FREE Shampoo
& Blow Dry
with every haircut
thru Jan. 31st
Ask for Kathy
Prime Cut Hair Co.
13 E. 8th
841-4488
[1954]
Dir. Federico Fellini; with Anthony Quinn, Giulietta Masina, Richard Basehart, italy/subtitles.
FOR MORE
(1954)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Dir. Joan Micklin Silver ("Hater Street"); with John Hearn, Gwen Wellesley, indy鞍庚, Jaffel Brenner, indy鞍庚, the Asbury Juleskus; *7:37 & 8:30*.
THE KILLERS
weekend shows also in Woodruff at
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless
otherwise noted.
KU
FREE
(1977)
--with FAST BREAK
LA STRADA
(1968)
Lawrence's Most Unique Hair Salon
Monday, January 29 BETWEEN THE LINES
CARL SMITH
Wednesday, January 31
Fellini:
Tuesday, January 30
Film Noir:
films sua
(1939)
Midnight Movie
Dir. Victor Fleming with Clark Gable, Vien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland. *'330 & 745*. Friday the 12th will be show in the Forum Room.
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
THURSDAY
JANUARY 25th
7:30 p.m.
173 ROBINSON
BEGINNING AND
ADVANCED STUDENT
Friday & Saturday,
January 26 & 27
GONE WITH THE WIND
Dir. George Romero; with Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea. The Complete Uncut Version. *12:10 a.m.*
INFORMATION CONTACT
DOUG BROWN 842-5225 or
ROB PITCAIRN 842-1376
KARATE CLUB
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GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS
An Evening With Brewer & Shipley with Special Guest Danny Cox
A farm with a windmill and silo in the background. A field of crops in the foreground, surrounded by striped hedges. A large ranch with sprawling fields and a barn. A flat field with a few trees.
BARN
[Diagram showing a top-down view of a farm with rows of crops, steeper slopes, and terraced fields.]
[Diagram showing a cross-sectional view of the same farm, highlighting the different layers of the soil and crops.]
---
Take one toke over the line...
TONIGHT IN CONCERT
8:00 p.m. in the Ballroom
Admission $3.50 Beer will be served
SUA
Thursday, January 25, 1979
3
Senate nears approval of state spending lid
TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas State gave tentative approval toward legislation that would impose a 7 percent state spending lid on the government and create a fund comprising unspent tax dollars from which direct tax relief could be made.
The measure was sponsored by 39 of the 40 Senate members, with the lone dissenter arguing for more than 25 minutes that the senator should flow dressing" for overburdened taxpayers.
Although passage was assured by virtue of the number of sponsors the only fee, State Sen. Charlie Angell, R-Plains, said he believed that should know theld be appalled ineffective.
ANGELL ARGUED there was really no mechanism to enforce the spending lid, and said it would serve merely as a declaration of the intent to hold down spending.
The spending lid bill and 15 other measures were given tentative approval yesterday, providing the largest daily work product for the Senate so far this session.
Included in the tentatively approved bills were measures to stabilize the monthly pay period for district magistrate judges, restrict the location of drivers' license suspension hearings and establishment of a medical malpractice study commission
But the spending lid debate captured the spotlight of attention as Jack Steiner
Democratic minority leader and Wint Winter, Republican Ways and Means Committee chairman, led the bipartisan support for the measure.
AMONG THE provisions of the bill are requirements to:
- Clamp a 7 percent lid on spending, based on the previous year's expenditures, exclusive of capital improvements, beginning with fiscal year 1980.
- Require that ending balances, which are the amount of unpaid tax dollars, dip no lower than 8 percent of the total budget. This increase to an estimated $93 million in fiscal 1980.
- Create a tax relief fund comprised of
Brewer & Shipley concert tonight
Brewer and Shipley have played small, smoky dinner clubs and they've played Carnegie Hall, but tonight the duo whose music has reached virtually every continent will play in the intimate atmosphere of the Kansas Union Ballroom.
But there won't be mountains of lights and sound equipment on stage and no lasers will criss-cross over the heads of the audience. According to Michael Brewer of Brewer and Shipley, the show will consist of himself, his partner, Tim Shingle, and their two guitar.
The duo probably is best remembered for its h! "One Toke on the Line."
Brewer, born and raised in Oklahoma Brewery, and Shipley, from Bedford, Ohio, both were inspirers. They both were inspired, as performers, by the same basic element, according to
"I didn't start make music because I thought it was good work. "he said. "I did it wrong."
He said that after he and Shipley stopped writing for groups such as the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and joined forces to write and record their songs with passion for music that held them together.
Brewer said the philosophy of many
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recording firms today was that artists must go on tour to help sell their albums, but the strenuous schedule just became too much to handle.
He said because of that, the duo has fired its manager and canceled its recording contract, and now works a much less hectic schedule.
Brewer said they have friends in Kansas City from the days when the two played the Vanguard, a new defunct dinner club in Kansas City. The opening act for tonight's concert, Danny Cox, played with Brewer and Shipples at the Vanguard.
The concert at 8 tonight is part of a short vacation the two performers are taking with
From his home in the Ozarks, Brewer said the duo had a new set of priorities regarding the work.
"It totally depends on so many things," he
said, "just as long as you have a good time."
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those unspent tax dollars not needed to keep the ending balances above the 8 percent minimum. This money must be used for tax relief programs.
SOX
SUA BRIDGE CLUB
SUA
The first duplicate game of the spring semester is the campus championship. The top two eligible pairs will qualify for the regional tournament at Worcestersburg, Missouri, February 1-3. To be eligible both members of the partnership must be full-time students.
This special game is Thursday, January 25 in the Union. The game will begin promptly at 2:00 PM, so plan to arrive a few minutes early.
THE BILL would also create a committee of legislators which would meet each year to decorate the dollar limits required by the law. The bill is available for the Legislature to spend.
For more information; call Mike McGhehey at 842-7979.
The Senate spending lid also closes a massive loophole found during committee discussion by forbidding the Legislature to increase appropriations which exceed the 7 percent lid.
Supplemental appropriations, in effect, add money to the amount an agency already has budgeted in the current fiscal year. Such a device would permit lawmakers to comply with the lid one year, and then exceed it the next year.
A similar bill in the Kansas House, which was approved by the Ways and Means Committee yesterday, does not include supplemental appropriations in its lid.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors.
JANUARY 25.1979
Landlord bill needed
One of the more well-known and widespread hazards of student life is the landlord. More precisely, the disappearing landlord.
The large concentration in college towns of students on tight budgets makes university communities particularly susceptible to the pitfalls of neglectful landlords. Everyone has heard stories about, or worse, experienced, the landlord who refuses to repair a broken window or conveniently forgets to restore the long-lost hot water.
A tenant has few recourses when confronted with a balky landlord. But a bill being prepared by new State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, would change that.
UNDER THE provisions of Solbach's bill, which is being worked on in the legislative revisions office, a tenant could have any needed repair work done and deduct the cost of the work from his rent.
The process would be relatively simple. The tenant would pay for the repairs from his own pocket and would take the bill to the treasurer of the county in which he lived. The tenant would then supply one month's rent, which would be held in an escrow fund by the county treasurer.
LANDLORDS WOULD have 14 days to protest the repairs. If no protest were forthcoming, the repairs would be deducted from the rent, along with nominal fees for county administration costs and compensation for the tenant for any repairs he made himself.
If the landlord did protest, the case would be decided in small claims court.
Under the proposed bill, repairs could cost no more than $100 or half of the rent, whichever were greater.
THE BILL could have an important effect on landlord-tenant relations throughout the state, and its progress will be of great interest to many students who are now mired in no-win situations with unresponsive landlords—landlords who have now little incentive beyond human compassion to make repairs.
Unfortunately, landlords as a whole often rate low on the human compassion scale.
But Solbach's bill, which was formed with the help of the Associated Students of Kansas, could go far to remedy a situation that too long has been ignored. It should receive the full consideration of the Legislature when it is introduced, which might be as early as next week.
It should then be approved.
U.S. influence dominant in Middle East scene
By FOUAD AJAMI N.Y. Times Feature
CAIRO, Egypt - The United States has become-to use the current jargon-"a full partner" in Middle Eastern affairs. This goes for matters of war, peace and economics. It goes for Arab, Israel and Iranian matters. This is America's moment that fails. That. It is a role that United States has coveted and that it now must live with.
America may be a declining power elsewhere but it is pre-eminent and overextended in this part of the world. Several years ago Henry A. Kissinger wanted to expel the Soviet Union from this region and that was easily accomplished. In 1965, he took own skill at work; it was something that Israel, Israel and Saudi Arabia wanted.
By FOUAD AJAMI
The demise of Soviet influence illuminated the extent to which the Soviet Union has been and remains a flawed institution. With but little Italian cultural lure and openness,
EUROPE, TOO, had long ceased to be a major presence in Middle Eastern affairs. Power was to pass to America, the one country that supplies the technology of war and sponsors the diplomacy of peace, that exports the gadgets of consumption and the food shipments that keep regimes afloat, and that maintains a certain protection against their own subjects and against the hazards of living in an explosive part of the world.
Stalemated by their rivalries, Middle Easterners invited America into their midst. It was an invitation that America wanted: There were tangible interests at stake. But there was also the feeling of a new frontier, the challenge of saving the Middle East from its "passions" and from the baggage of its history. The Middle East faced the South Asian plains after so much blood and treasure—not to be a place where America makes a difference and where resources are committed for good reason.
THIS HAS BRED a certain dependency in this region, a feeling that the distant superpower will do it all: install telephones in Cairo that offer, work哎Egypt a Carter plan for economic recovery, float Israel economically yet without interfering in its affairs. At least with Egypt, while escaping the dislocations of change, bring reluctant Arabs and Israelis together,
protect President Anwar Sadat's flank against his Arab rivals. This is obviously a tall order, the stuff from which disillusionment and large blunders are formed.
Different assumptions are made by America's friends in the area about America's commitment. Two countries that have a "special relationship" with Jerusalem, Israel, and irreconcilable positions over Jerusalem. Jordan considers itself an American ally and even Syria maintains a stronger American connection than her rejectionist friends assume. Plenty of promises have been made to this and by the previous administration.
**THIS HAS to be done at a time when America's Middle Eastern presence itself has become a hot political and cultural issue. For some, it is a tantalizing thing, representing power, possibilities and the prospects of an American-sonsored peace.**
A recently completed 15-year study by the surgeon general on the effects of smoking shows there is now "overwhelming proof" that smoking causes lung cancer and heart disease and increases disorders that kill unborn and newborn children if the mother smoked during pregnancy.
Men anxiously searching for scapegoats to explain everything from corruption, wild rents, shocking cultural trends in Middle Eastern capitals to diplomatic stalemate—find it easy to blame it all on the resourceful superman.
For others it is a violation of self and being, a surrender to alien ways, and a fullfle search for a way out of the Middle Eastern impasse.
IN THE ARAB states and in Iran, some monumental ambitions nurtured in the Middle East. In collapsing, In Israel, some lessons deferred or ignored are beginning to sink in as that society sorts out its own choices about what it values most and about its place and meaning.
If this is America's moment in the Middle East, it is also its moment of reckoning. America cannot spare Middle Eastern societies the agonies of social change, or prop up rulers who have lost touch with their past, or take on the psychological or economic realities, or make the Palestinians disappear and drop their claims. Care must be exercised and some honest American statements must be made so that this frontier does not end up like the previous one in Southeast Asia; with American support, they can end disillusionment for the power from afar.
MIDEAST SITTLEMENT
MIDEAST SITTLEMENT
MIDEAST SITTLEMENT
MIDEAST SITTLEMENT
MIDEAST SITTLEMENT
Found Ajiami, an assistant professor of physics at Princeton University, is a guest speaker.
Summarizing 30,000 papers written on the effects of smoking, Julius Richmond, the surgeon general, said in his 1,200 page report, "In 1979 cigarette smoking is the single most preventable environmental factor contributing to illness, disability and death in the United States." Of the 500,000 deaths in 2005, Americans die annually in smoking-related deaths.
U.S. cigarette education needed now
And still 54 million Americans continue to puff away.
ALTHOUGH the U.S. population has increased by more than 40 million people since 1964, the number of people smoking has not decreased to the degree that the evidence seems to warrant.
That is approximately the same number of Americans who were smoking in 1964, when the surgeon general's first report linked smoking to lung cancer and heart disease.
For example, despite the surgeon general's evidence on the hazards of smoking, University of Kansas students buy approximately 17,000 packs, or 340,000 cigarettes, in their cars. The survey did not include those they might buy elsewhere in Lawrence.
Reasons for smoking are many; common excuses are to ease pressure, to increase relaxation and to pass the time.
Yet, each package warns of the dangers involved when a person lights up a cigarette and takes a few puffs. In fact, the surgeon general's recent report states that a 36-year-old man who smokes will normally die nine years earlier than a non-smoker.
Obviously, something needs to be done.
TO COMBAT the high use of cigarettes the federal government could develop rehabilitation and educational programs similar to those created for alcohol and drug addicts. The federal government has said it has a habit equally as dangerous as that of the adjective or
Jake
Thompson
Y. L. M. HARRIS
the alcoholic. All three habits shorten lives and each one causes severe or if other conditions, like minor heart disease, are present.
1. government should lead a well-financed campaign against smoking, complete with clinics for those who want to quit, pamphlets on the dangers of smoking and drugs, stop shops for those who have quit and don't want to start again.
On course, outright legislation banning cigarette smoking would seem to be an irrational step invading individual freedom of choice; a point that smokers correctly state and restate.
But the nation, perhaps the world, must undergo an educational process enlightening all to the real and suspected dangers of smoking. If doctors can have cyclamates removed from the market because they caused cancer in rats, there is some inconsistency regarding humans and cigarettes.
IN ADDITION, banning the production and sale of cigarettes would choke the life from the $20-billion
That would force many people out of work.
Consider these highlights in the surgeon general's report:
- Six million Americans under age 20 smoke—100,000
years old and younger.
- Lie down and you will be able to nicotine content, the rate of smoking-related deaths continued to climb in the past 15
- Smokers, infants and young children a year, at a rate of 3-20ths higher than non-smokers.
- Smoking dropped only .3 of one percent last year.
- Only about one third of those who quit smoking quin
forever.
So the government must take responsibility for educating Americans on the dangers of smoking and drug use.
THE ANSWER lies in the fact that people are dying as a result of their dependence on cigarettes, and that other people are exploiting their need to the tune of a $20 billion business. The tobacco industry, by its nature, is not concerned with the welfare of the people who consume its product.
- Coronary heart disease from smoking causes more premature deaths than lung cancer and other diseases.
RICHMOND'S report contains few new revelations on the hazards of smoking, but it does, by massive compilation of information, prove that smoking can kill. Concerning the hope that a safe cigarette will be developed he said, "The only safe cigarette is an unlit cigarette."
Of course, a necessary question is why government should take the moral responsibility for keeping people alive when they are not concerned with the issue themselves.
Presently, the tobacco industry spending $500 million annually in advertising. Perhaps as much is needed to reach the mark of $1 billion.
Americans have to be weaned from their habit. It will take time and it will take money. Our tax money.
One would hope that a 25 year-old person would not resign himself to die at age 64, rather than at 73, and light another cigarette. But that right of choice must be protected.
- Smoking during pregnancy has been linked to one in 400 previously unexplained crib death.
Then, as always, the choice must be made by each individual whether to smoke.
The decision can be influenced, however, and that is the problem now facing the U.S. government.
VIVA
THE TENNESSEE WALTZ
Park opponents want preservation
To the editor:
What is common of all the congressmen is a desire to preserve the land. What they don't want is a bunch of stupid adventure tourists who have a reason to come to the Flint Hills, which have been so beautifully preserved for five generations by ranchers who realize that they need to keep their business is to use careful grazing to preserve people a reason to come to the area.
Mary Ernst's Jan. 18 column was filled with incorrect statements and misleading implications about the possibility of the creation of a Tallgrass Prairie National Park. It is exactly this type of ignorance that completely distorts the picture. As a resident of the area proposed in the bill for a park, submitted by Larry Winn last session, and followed by the activities of the Kansas Association Assoc. to promote the creation for the purpose of opposing the park I feel qualified to remark on the statements she made.
First of all, the proposed park is not in Western Kansas. Any person who could look at a map woud see that Greenwood, Chase, Wichita Falls, and Oklahoma are Kansas, which is also where Robert Whitaker's fifth district is. I find this ignorance of Kansas geography by Ernest and most of her Kansas city neighbors disturbing, paradoxical, and irritating about city on something they know nothing about.
Also incorrect is her assertion that Kansas congressmen have been in support of the idea of a park. Sebelius, Glickman, and Dole have opposed it in the past, and Kassaebu voiced opposition to it in her campaign. Of course, Mr. Sebelius verbally opposed to pat, which is why fifth district voters elected him over whilenough to replace the retiring Skubitz.
It is true that with Skubitz gone the prospects for the park are better, but it is likely that any bill similar to last session's will encourage Wimin's new bill has to be. We all
KANSAN letters
Zack Reynolds Eureka senior
want the remaining natural prairie to be preserved. The Kansas Grassroots Association is willing to work with the Nature Conservancy on privately purchasing the land, but they don't want to see 187,500 acres of prime pasture land, which produces 10% million bushels per year. They are unlikely taken away by the government when the land remains largely the way it was when it was found due to the care of the ranchers.
Abortion decisions prompt ironic action
For the editor
I agree completely with Phil Garcia's position that anti-abortionists must promote their views. However, I find it ironic that we must now strive to protect human rights previously provided for within the United States that terminated by a Supreme Court decision.
Garcia states that it is in the court's domain to deal with criminal laws, and with its adversaries. But other, again, it is ironic that the Supreme Court would make it a law to allow such criminal acts. There is certainly no worse option than a court can commit against another than murder.
In the face of such acts by the government, we must fight for the rights of the children who have no voice. This is not a challenge to merely aid students of morality and ethics, but a call to action to every citizen who has already been granted, automatically, the right to life which now become optional, a matter of "parental
Further, society needs to recognize its responsibility to the mothers and children. In a world where we rarely know our neighbors, we need to once again reach outside of ourselves and care for others. Proven alternatives to abortion is absolutely necessary.
discretion." Our response must consist of more than an amiable nod toward antiabortionists. To overcome the Supreme Court decision requires an act of Congress. Our congressmen need to hear that we believe in human rights.
It is not idealistic to think that we can together mobilize the resources to support women carrying their children to term. It is not idealistic and it is beginning to happen in Lawrence, too.
It is easy to think someone else will see these things through. It is also "easy" to abort. Both acts are a denial of our responsibility as human beings to protect the rights of others, especially the most precious right which we already safely enjoy.
Lee Stratton
Lee Stratton Prairie Village, senior
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The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
January 25, 1979
A blacksmith since 1900, Rudy Ehasser, B5; no longer shoes horses or fixes wagon wheels. He is content now to six plow shears in the shop he bought almost half a decade ago for $100.
VILLAGE
SMITH
Industry.
INDUSTRY—The blacksmith校布 of Rudy Elhassner looks as if it was pucked from the stage setting of some early Western film in the horse and buggy days of the blacksmith himself looks as if he are been around just as long.
Rudy Ehlasser, 41, has been swinging his heavy slider since 1903, and the long exhausting, morning-till-night day put in during such hectic weeks as plow season and harvest have taken their toll with the blacksmith—at least
In spirit, however, Eliasher remains unbeatable. His bent body covers over his farming forge and his weather-beaten face takes on an incredible look when the subject of retirement is mentioned. His callous hands seem permanently blackened by years working around the coats and ashes in his firebox.
Walking back and forth between his fire and anvil seems to take a bit of effort, but Elbasser takes with ease and pride about his 49 years as a blacksmith for the tiny town of Industry, population approximately 60.
"I came here in 1930 and met up with a man who needed some money to pay for a funeral," he said. "He was asking $100 for the shop and all the tools. I give him what he asked—I didn't stay around to argue.
"I didn't know a thing about smithing then. I asked the owner where I should start and he just pointed at the shop window."
Everything in here is an antique. People come in and they can tell how old everything is and they think they
Everything in the shop, including tools, anvil and firebox, dates back to the day Elhasser bought them for $100. Today, he speculates, he could sell everything for 100 times that original price.
To be sure, the antiquity of the shop is apparent. The firebox, a large steel table blackened by use and cluttered with dozens of rusty, heavy tools, sits off to one side of the room.
Ladies, hammers, pokers, shovels and tongs decorate the tables and floor, always in reach of the adept, grasping hand of the blacksmith. The rusty anvil shows the nicks and warts of years of use, but its original solidity
A couple of old, wooden rocking chairs, "for the ladies to sit down and draw a spell," surround a wood-burned, ash-embedded rock.
Resting in one of the chairs, Elbasser reflected on outfitting the blacksmith trade.
I thought about closing it all down in a few years ago," he said. "But all the neighbors said, bell, no, Rudy, we need
"They need me during plow season mostly. I'm here before surprise and here after sunset then, during harvest,
I got more work than I know what to do with; I could work all night, every night. "
Work during plow season and harvest consists of sharpening and repairing plow shears, or blades. Aside from that, Elhassar makes and repairs blades for mowers and other garden tools and other and other garden tools and small hand tool for farmers.
“But plow shears is what I do most,” he said. “I love doing plow shears more than anything else.”
poisonous
"Iain不能有加速,他 said, 'At least not yet. But I got a long way to go. I went to a shop of a lot better than my own.'"
Elhasser didn't always keep his money in banks. For years, he hid his money underneath a contraction called a cone-wheel, which is pointed at one end and tops out like a wedge. He would use it on the side of about five feet tall and was used to repair worn wheels.
"I don't need to work for a living," he said. "I got enough money in two banks around here to keep me
"I haven't set a wagon靴 for quite a while - at least not in the last 10 years," he joked. "Everybody's driving their pickups now. Hell, I don't blame 'em; you can take a pickup anywhere."
Although he has been in the blacksmith trade about half a century, Elhasser insists he is "a jack of all trades and master of none," because he knows a little about it. He said neighbors can to him for advice about problems.
"They ask me what to do about their arthritis," he said. "I say you gotta use turpentine. Turpentine will take the soreness out of your joints so you can walk at least. Next day you gotta do the same damn thing, though."
Age and work have tired him out, Elhasser said.
"The ol b乐 just a不小 he need to be. You remember that when you're as old as I am and you now have 60, the one you want to take for a hammer, discarding one after the other until he found it's favorite—the one with his initials, R.E.
But the day began to darken outside, and the blacksmith laid down his hammer and began closing shop. At 81, 82, 83, 84.
A
A
"It can be 103 in the shade outside, and this old fire didn't bother me a bit," said Elmasher, left, who still has the tools that were used on the fire.
Story by Lori Linenberger Photos by Randy Olson
6
Thursday, January 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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Tues. Jan. 30
the county $420 a day past the deadline until
the bridge is finished.
Partially funded by Student Activity Fee.
The project contractors, Anderson Construction Company, Holton, must pay
By BRUCE THOMAS
Bridge contractors face contract penalties
IN 1874, THE company had to pay
Douglas County $8,250 in penalties in con-
fidence.
Heavy penalty fees are the source of disagreement about the number of working days left for the completion of the Kansas River Bridge in Lawrence.
"It is rare for a construction company to miss a deadline," Mike Dooley, county engineer, said recently. "But it seems to be the history of this company in this county."
necking with a bridge project in the northern part of the county. They missed the deadliner.
are using, you can see that they have not actively pursued the project. "Dooey and"
RON ANDERSON, of Anderson Construction Company, said that several requests for deadline extension had been made, but the county did not acknowledge them.
According to Dooley, the builders had 29 working days as of Jan. 6 to finish the Kansas River Bridge. He said he thought it would be finished at least 100 days after the deadline ran out, costing the construction company about $42,000.
Staff, equipment changes sharpen KJHK sound
Pegg said the station had increased broadcasting from 21 hours a day to 24 hours a day this semester.
A new executive staff and several major improvements in facilities this semester will complement the operation of KJHK, the radio station.
Dooley said there was no justifiable reason to add working days to the contract.
The improvements were paid for by the Student Senate and the station's earnings from discos and other functions.
The station recently installed a $3,400 control board and remodeled its air studio. The new board and rewiring at the station effect clear broadcasts and separate the stereo sound more sharply, to Steve Fegg, station manager.
One of the requests was made because of delivery delays for structural steel to the work site. Anderson said. Another was requested that he be redesigned due to its poor performance.
Pegg; Phil Poulos, program director; Brett Sayre,
operation manager; Mike Kelly, business ad-
ministration; and Jarnes Barnes, chat founder.
Mig. Hill Gillard, assistant chief announcer; Rich Laurenzo, assistant chief announcer; Ibran Brown, music director; Steve Greenwood, assistant rock technician; Mark Rapp, assistant rock technician; Dan Parnam, production director
Brenda Hawkway, chief program producer; Kevin Shaun, play-a-jay pilot; Angela McIntyre, play-communications director; Sarah Garey, traffic director; Scott Epstein, program director; and Brendan Bell, special
The new staff at the station are;
Derek Freeman, underwriting promotional director;
Mike Parent, underwritten promotion assistant;
director Iliar Blair, promotions assistant director;
Judie Dewhurst, promotions assistant and Sharon
Dewhurst, promotions assistant director.
Barb Baellow, news director; Tim McCarthy,
assistant news director; and Steve Doocy, legal
lawyer.
"We have examined each claim and determined that they are problems a construction company might run into on a project, or resulted in plan or error omission," he said.
THE COUNTY GAVE Anderson 500 working days to build the bridge at Vermont Street, demolish the old bridge at Massachusetts Street and build a new one in its place. The 500 days began on April 12, 1976.
"The question is not why will they miss this deadline. He could be on schedule, but why did he choose not to be. If you look at the size of the crews and the equipment they
Council policy says that no athletic events may be scheduled during finals week but Hohn said that past calendar committees have agreed that the athletics committee that Hohn said may not have been ethical.
Lid urged on finals events
An amendment to University Council rules that would restrict the scheduling of athletic events during finals week to Monday through Thursday, discussed at today's meeting of the council.
If passed, the amendment would force the rescheduling of three men's home teams.
Robert Hohn, associate professor of education and chairman of the committee
that proposed the amendment, said the rule change was designed to make the finals easier.
Admiral Car Rental
When was the last time you rented a car for
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843-2931
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HEY, SMARTY!
If you're a single, full-time student getting B's or better, you may qualify for Farmers' 25% discount on auto rates.
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Jim Pilch 842-9797
Ann Oharah 843-2170
Don Freeman 841-8285
FARMERS
INSURANCE
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Labor and Suppor Service
SCI
January Jubilee Extravaganza!
Britches is having a Special
We must make room for new Spring merchandise.
All men's suits, now 2 for 1 or 40% off!
Women's dresses, now up to 80% off!
All leathers and outerware, now 50% off!
100
All sweaters now 50% off!
Britches Corner is once again having its Year-End Sale. All merchandise is from regular stock. Quality has not been compromised in any way, because stores buy and sell up to a standard. Not down to a price.
Remember even during our sale, we honor all major credit cards and extend full Britches exchange privileges. Satisfaction with your purchase must be complete. Or the sale is not.
So, now is your chance to take advantage of special savings of between 15' and $0 on new merchandise. The value is genuine, because good quality is one of your best hedges against inflation.
Many other fashion items drastically reduced!
So, stop by today and let the Britches gang help you build a wardrobe.
Contemporary Clothing for Men and Women
DRITCHES CORNER
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JK'S
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FAMILY RESTAURANTS
740 Iowa
Opening Thursday Jan. 25th
Hohn emphasized that under the amended rule, exceptions could still be made, but that further justification than is now required would be necessary.
New
THE PLACE
Pin Ball
Ice Cream
2120 W. 25th—Holiday Plaza
Fantastic Drinks
Private Parties
Hours
2-10 Mon-Thurs
2-12 Fri
10-12 midnight Sat
1-6 Sun
Disco 7-12 Fri & Sat
All Ages Welcome!
"Halve" it with a friend!
Coagie's
ero
Sandwich Shoppe
2214 Yale
Behind University State Bank
Call ahead for orders
842-6121
NINTH ST.
HILLBROOK
CENTER
DOWNTOWN
YALE ST.
The council will meet at 3:30 today in room 100, Blake Hall.
KANSAN
Police Beat
The unlocked auto was parked in the alley behind Miller's home. Police said the car was stolen.
According to Lawrence police, a 1976 Dodge station wagon owned by Danny D. Miller, 82 Connecticut St., was stolen late Friday morning and was parked in the day morning. The auto was valued at $6,600.
The items were owned by Cathy Schafar and Eileen McCafferty, both of Bel Air, Md.
Lawrence police said a knapsack and pocketbook with contents valued at $118, and a purse and billfold with contents valued at $105 were stolen at 3 p.m. Tuesday from the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
A room in the nectar, both of Bal Air, 12,
according to KU police, will be 20.5 m².
The hotel room is the height room between 9 a.m. Monday and
8:45 a.m. Tuesday. The barbells were
Police said there was no sign of forced entry.
一
BASKETBALL
OFFICIALS
MEETING
Thurs. Jan. 25
5:00 pm
ROBINSON NORTH GYM
A WATER POLO instructional league is now forming.
This league will play each Sunday from 6-7 pm. All interested persons are advised to contact
TOM WILKERSON
RECREATION SERVICES
864-3456
NOTICE
Study Skills Enhancement Workshops
You are invited to attend the following workshops:
Listening and Notetaking
Thursday, January 25 from 8:00 to 9:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union
Reading and Comprehension and Test Taking
Thursday, February 1 from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m.
in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
Everyone is welcome to attend.
For additional information, call the Student Assistance Center at 864-4064.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, January 25, 1979
7
KANSAS 00
Staff photo by BILL FRAKES
Defense sparks KU victory, 80-71
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
A jubilant Wilmore Fowler (*00*) watches his pass to Boony Ned turn into a lay-in and pounce while Iowa State's Eric Davis trusts it too late to protect the bucket. Fowler and Wilson fall back on the ball and miss the basket.
Kansas, using a fierce pressure defense and balanced scoring, ran away early from Iowa State before posting an 80-71 victory last night.
After being the victim of defensive murder in two prior losses, KU switched spots and became a swift and pushy foulman, ball-grabbing an American on the ball, forcing ISU to commit 24 turnovers, in the first half. Between KU's defense and 12,340 faithful fans, the Cyclones must have taught Allen House was an immense pressure cooker.
After the first 5% minutes, KU never trailed, mainly because Iowa State just couldn't hang on to the ball to set up any shots. So the team had a defensive-fuelled scoring machine.
---
The Cyclones were visibly rattled, giving the ball up on five-second violations on inbounds and falling to KU's magnetic man-to-mand and intense full-court press.
"THEIR FULL court press hurts us some," Lynn Nance, the Cyclone coach, said. "We failed to get into our offense early and that also hurt us.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
"We just weren't ready for the man-to-man and the press."
Nance said a few other teams had pressed the Cyclones but the combination of Darnell Valentine, who had a game-high three shots in his second Fowler was just too much for his team.
About Mokesi, Nance said, "He got a lot of those (points) in the zone."
If time of possession had been kept, KU probably would have had a three-goal-second shot from the team passing and worked the ball to the second tallest man in the league, Paul
Mokesi, who has had two straight dismal performances and a poorer than expected season, looked like Lazarus, leading KU points and both squads with 15 rebounds.
For KU, 17-4 overall, it was the ninth straight victory.
Women overwhelm Wichita State, 103-63
Kanaas was just too hot to handle as it
topped a 16-1 lead in the game's first 38
minutes.
The 19th-ranked Jayahaws were just too much for Wichita State University in the conference opener for KU last night in Wichita. KU overwhelmed WSU 103-63.
KU hit the century mark with 1424 on a lapup by Fat Mason. that made KU's total
Just seconds later, All-American Lynette Woodard scored the game's last basket to make KU's final score of 103. The team has topped the 100-point mark two other times this season. KU won its season opener from Claremont Junior College by 103-78球. Woodard went West Texas. State University 118-39 in a tournament in Wichita earlier this month.
Wichita did not find the range until 16:27 remained in the first half. But by then, it was just a matter of by how many points the Javahwks would win.
KU shot a respectable 59 percent from the field and 72 percent from the free-throw line.
goal shooting and 61 percent shooting from the line. Kansas outrebounded Wichita 52-34.
Woodward all set a sorcers with 40 points, Teammate Adrian Mitchell, who fouled out for the second straight game, tallied 26. He scored on center and center Spark Holden added 10.
Gorolo was the top scorer for Wichita with 18 points. Smith added a dozen and eight points.
PGA-
Mitchell 10-8 PGA- FT-A REB PF TP
Woodard 10-8 PGA- FT-A REB PF TP
Hornen 9-12 PGA- FT-A REB PF TP
Patterson 5-3 PGA- FT-A REB PF TP
Patterson 5-3 PGA- FT-A REB PF TP
Patterson 5-3 PGA- FT-A REB PF TP
Mason 4-10 PGA- FT-A REB PF 4
Sanders 3-4 PGA- FT-A REB PF 4
Sanders 3-4 PGA- FT-A REB PF 4
45-19 PGA- 34 32 32 32
Kansas (103)
NANCE HOPED that his team's alternating zone defenses would another KU, like Kansas State's did, but instead the defensive back field, for 43.4 percent. John Crawford, who played just more than half the game, hit all of his 14 points from the field, most of them in the first quarter.
Crawford said that in practice, he had been working on his outside shooting and wanted to take the eight to 10-footers in the game.
| | FG-A | FT-A | RERF | PS | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Garfield | 6.17 | 6.14 | 6 | 18 | 18 |
| Circle | 3.6 | 3.6 | 5 | 2 | 18 |
| Richter | 1.8 | 1.4 | 5 | 2 | 18 |
| Eichberger | 1.8 | 0.4 | 5 | 2 | 18 |
| O'Connor | 3.4 | 3.4 | 4 | 1 | 6 |
| Epp | 3.4 | 3.4 | 3 | 2 | 6 |
| Simmons | 3.11 | 3.7 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| O'Bryan | 3.18 | 3.6 | 2 | 4 | 12 |
| Wiley | 1.8 | 1.8 | 3 | 2 | 11 |
| Totals | 22.79 | 19.21 | 31 | 22 | 62 |
Kansas | | 52 | | 103 |
KANSAS FINALLY got some scoring from the bench with the reserves scoring 28 points, led by Booty Neal with 12. This helped take the pressure off mall-eat ticket Valentine, who hit only nine points but gave away a game-high eight assists.
"The bench did an excellent job," KU coach Ted Owens said. "You'll see of a lot of people playing. We'll be going to the big stadium. You'll use the whole bench when we have to."
Woke up inside tips, as Crawford did, Mokeski also was hitting from the outside, but not with any punch. Crawford and Mokeski fouled out, a reflection of their combined defensive skills.
All-conference guard Andrew Parker led both sides in scoring with 27 points but could only muster eight in the first half when he scored. He committed a total of seven turnovers.
All 11 Jayhawks saw playing time in the game.
KU's victory boosted its conference record to 2-4, and into a tie with Colorado for second place. The Buffaloes won in Boulder last night from Missouri. 8249.
| | FT | PT | RUB | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Parker | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| Parker | 4-10 | 5-10 | 9 | 4 | 13 |
| Ubuffo | 6-9 | 6-11 | 14 | 4 | 12 |
| Ubuffo | 6-9 | 6-11 | 14 | 5 | 12 |
| Davies | 5-5 | 1-2 | 5 | 2 | 12 |
| Davies | 5-5 | 1-2 | 5 | 2 | 12 |
| Eodes | 1-5 | 0-6 | 1 | 1 | 12 |
| Eodes | 1-5 | 0-2 | 1 | 1 | 12 |
| Tiltie | 1-6 | 0-8 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Tiltie | 1-6 | 0-8 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Title | 1-6 | 1-4 | 1 | 2 | 12 |
| Title | 1-6 | 1-4 | 1 | 2 | 12 |
| Total | 26-24 | 23-24 | 46 | 36 | 71 |
Kansas ... 32 31 — 105
Wichita State ... 31 32 — 63
After games last night, the unpredictable league race gained yet another twist with five teams. Iowa State, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Alabama, Stated, tied for first, all with 32 records.
KU's next foe, Nebraska, led by Carl Mcpike with 21, beat Oklahoma in Lincoln, 48-37.
Iowa State (71)
IN OTHER conference action last night, Kansas State, led by Steve Soldier's 32 points, beat Oklahoma State in Stillwater, in overtime, 77-73. The Cowboys were led by Mark Tucker with 27 points, before he found himself leading Oklahoma on OSU alone in last place with a 14-second
The televised Big Eight game of the week will be Kansas at Nebraska Saturday at 12:30 p.m.
| | GG | FT | REB | PF | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Guy | 3-5 | 2-5 | 1-4 | 3 | 8 |
| Crawford | 3-11 | 2-10 | 1-4 | 3 | 18 |
| Mokees | 6-9 | 5-6 | 15 | 5 | 17 |
| Valentinne | 1-0 | 1-6 | 1-4 | 5 | 14 |
| Sammon | 1-9 | 1-6 | 1-4 | 5 | 14 |
| Pewler | 5-0 | 5-2 | 3 | 3 | 8 |
| Newport | 3-0 | 3-2 | 3 | 3 | 8 |
| Gilen | 3-8 | 0-4 | 2 | 2 | 6 |
| Mackey | 3-8 | 0-4 | 2 | 2 | 6 |
| Mackey | 3-6 | 5-2 | 0 | 12 | 2 |
| Carroll | 3-6 | 5-2 | 0 | 12 | 2 |
| St. Louis | 3-7.5 | 11.2/2 | 41 | 26 | 18 |
Kansas 42 37 -60
town State 28 43 -71
Officials: Unnah, Kurtz Attendance: 12.840.
New weights coach named
Keith Phanth will take over the job Feb. 1. He replaces Ron Hubbard, who resigned to accept an assistant football coaching position at the University of Colorado.
Kephart was a recruiting coordinator and weight and strength coach at Iowa State University in Ames for six years and head junior varsity football coach there for two years. He also has won the Central Midwest holding Challenge and is a former Mr. Iowa.
呵应 KU 王军 m嫂的更衣码训要求
呵应 KU 王军 m嫂的更衣码训要求
呵应 KU 王军 m嫂的更衣码训要求
DOUG MESSER, business manager for men's athletics, said Kehart's appointment was temporary until the department could comply with affirmative
action guidelines, which require that the position be advertised and applications accepted. He said Kephart planned to apply for the full-time position.
Hubbard said his only reason for leaving KU was to accept the position at CU.
"My responsibilities will include scouting and recruiting in addition to the weight of the contract," Hubbard said. "And of course anyone who wouldn't want to work for Chuck Fairtanka would."
Fairbanks wants to leave his head coaching position with the New England Patriots to become head coach at CU. The Patriots have obtained a preliminary injunction from a federal judge in Boston preventing him from signing with CU.
Seniors (CLASS OF 1979)
113 DAYS TILL GRADUATION PARTY!
Countdown time begins this Friday, January 26 at the BREWERY. 714 Massachusetts.Free beer and soft drinks from 3:00-7:00 p.m.
Wear your senior T-shirt. Extra shirts will be available
paid for by the class of 1979, University of Kansas
Place an ad. Tell the world. Call 864-4358.
MISTER GUY
of Lawrence Announces
Their TRANSFER SALE of
OUTERWEAR!!!
Including Outerwear Brought in from
ALL 13 STORES!!!
hooded survival coat in prime down
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8
Thursday, January 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Computer committee considered
Staff Reporter
Members of the University Senate Executive Committee clashed yesterday with Bill Hogan, associate vice chancellor, over the composition of a proposed committee that would monitor computer use on campus.
In what SenEx members described as a discussion session, members heard from Hogan and Sally Sedley, professor of computer science and chairman of the SenEx subcommittee that proposed the computer-use committee.
SEDELOW* SURCOMMITTEE had sent a report to Hogan last year recommending that SenExh appoint a committee comprising the following:
Hagan responded by proposing that the administration appoint a committee that would be separate from SenEx, although a link between the two committees was not established.
Under Sebelow's proposal, the administration's interests would be represented by a lason group of three senior administrators. The computer-use committee would advise the administrators on the needs of computer users.
The purpose of the discussion was to iron out some of the differences between the two proposals, SeenEx members said.
SEDELOW TOLEN SEXa she would like to only one chair involved in supervision of computer use on campus instead
While emphasizing that discussions on the structure and charges of the proposed committees were not complete, Seldoww said that the committee was "not yet ready to start."
group. The administrators would not be eligible to be chairman of the committee, she said.
Hogan responded that having integral administration representatives in only a liaison role would be like having a sub-
But Hogan said he agreed that only one committee was necessary and that administration representatives should not have to vote on matters.
"There is no use in an administrator chairing the committee and approving a policy if he may later have to reject it." Hogan
SENEX WENT into closed session to debate the two sides, but Hogan said later that the conversation involved only minor disagreements. He also said he would meet with Del Shankel, an administrator for the organization of the committee.
"We may be farther apart than he (Hogan) thinks on this," the SenEx member said.
But one member of SenEx, who asked not to be identified, was less than confident about the prospects for a quick agreement
In other business, the faculty members of SenEx, meeting as the Faculty Executive Committee, decided to let a tenure subcommittee headed by Francis Ingemann, professor of linguistics, to Shankel's questions about a revised tenure policy draft.
Shankel sent a letter to Ingemann yesterday listing administration objections to the draft. An earlier draft had been rejected by Shankel last year. The revised draft was submitted to Shankel in December.
By BILL RIGGINS Staff Reporter
Pearson savs SALT vital
Former Sen. James B. Pearson warned yesterday that failure to reach a SALT agreement would deal a devastating blow to the cause of world peace.
Without SALT II, you have the whole 'WILT process fail'. You have SALT II fall and no WILT process fail.
Pearson told about 50 persons at the United Ministries in Higher Education Center, 139 Oread, that if a new treaty were enacted, it would allow forward disarmament would be destroyed.
"Arms control is the only alternative to an arm race," he said.
"OUR RELATIONS with the Soviet Union since World War II have been the focus of American foreign policy, and the SALT agreements are the most important part."
Pearson said that when he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1962 the Soviet Union and the United States each had 3,500 nuclear weapons. When he retired from the Senate this year, each country had 14,000 nuclear weapons, he said.
"One has to ask himself, 'Are we still more secure?' the former senator said.
Pearson said he thought the Soviet Union was as anxious as the United States to reach a new agreement. SALT I expired in October 2017, and Pearson honored the treaty until a new one was made.
"One of the reasons the Soviets are anxious is that Brezhnye wants the treaty very badly." Pearson said. "Leonid Union is the president of the Soviet Union."
"HE'S NOT IN good health and wants it to be a part of the legacy he leaves behind.", Perthshire.
Pearson, a veteran of 12 years on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said there were several reasons why the negotiations had been slowed.
He said one reason was whether the two countries should link the army to treaty forces.
"They're testing Carter," he said. They're frustrated over open diplomacy and the lack of respect for them.
Pearson said the purpose of the linkage concept was to determine which issues were related to the study.
"The Soviets don't understand linkage at all," he said.
"THE SOVIETS just aren't in any hurry. Their strategy quite often is to bargain for more time."
"You can't accept this thing on the basis of verification. You accept it on the basis of verification."
He said a new treaty would not have to rely on trust but could be effectively enforced with oetation devices such as satellites.
Pearson said U.S. intelligence organizations had great confidence in their ability to penetrate a terrorist network.
Pearson said that he thought President Carter's recognition of China did not have an effect on the negotiations and that he was sure a treaty would eventually be reached.
THE SOVIETS go right up to the limit of the letter in all their agreements" he said.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB
He said the United States had made eight protections to the Soviet Union for violating the treaty.
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Pearson said that any SALT agreement would run into trouble during ratification.
"they push you to the limit and they do it
you are in a haragrome and very harshly
and abruptly."
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"Some persons want a treaty that covers
their threat concern, I don't think that
proposal is worth mention."
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION
THE BAKTIKARI MIGRATION - THE MOST HAZAROUS
TEST OF HUMAN RENDERING STILL UNSENKTEN,
BUT IT'S A NEW REALITY.
"It will be a fight of considerable proportion and the outcome is very much in doubt."
Color by Deluxe®
1977 CAROLYN TOMPSON
THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO, THE BAKHTARI TIRIES migrated south from the Cascades Mountains of Russia to the mountains of the Himalayas. There was one problem - the massive Zagge Mountain range, as high as the Ala and as broad as Switzerland, made it difficult for them to travel.
The 500,000 Bakkari are one of the last of the great nomad tribes. To survive, they must set out, every Spring, with all their possessions and their millions of sheep on a 200-mile journey.
"...A SPRAWLING, STUNNING SAGA OF SURVIVAL."
Pearson said if the Senate did not ratify the treaty, Carte might use it as an issue if he wanted to win over them.
SAT. JAN 27 3:30pm forum room kansas union $1.50
Griffin Bell the 72nd U.S. Attorney General will speak at 8p.m.Thursday January25 University Theatre
sua films
The University of Kansas J.A. Vickers, Sr., Memorial Lecture Series Free and Open to the Public
In new screen splendor...
The most magnificent picture ever!
DAVID O. SELZNICKS PRODUCTION OF MARGARIEL MITCHELLS
"GONE WITH THE WIND"
Friday, Jan. 26 and Saturday, Jan. 27
3:30 & 7:45 Woodruff Auditorium
Admission $1.50
Godfather's Pizza
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Laurence
Phone # 863-6282
Godfather's Pizza
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Are design items of Godfather's Pizza
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Lawrence
Phone • 843-6282
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free greens
But you can buy a free pie. Present this coupon
when ordering a product on large size Godfather's Pizza
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--offer good thru Sun... Jan 28
A
A
"This year I was going to be the biggest thing to hit football since pigskin. But I decided to queue it up. I didn't make the team. So instead I'm spending a lot of my time at
's hamburgers.
I figure if you can't go out for football, at least, you can go out for a burger.
CLIP THIS COUPON
Buy one double cheese burger at regular price and get the 2nd one for only $10^{c}$
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OPPORTUNITIES
These Positions Will Be Up For Election In The Student Body Elections February, 14th and 15th
★ Student Body President-Vice President
★ Student Senate Seats
ARCHITECTURE ... 2
BUSINESS ... 4
EDUCATION ... 8
ENGINEERING ... 8
NUNEMAKER-1... 6
NUNEMAKER-2... 5
NUNEMAKER-3... 5
NUNEMAKER-4... 5
NUNEMAKER-5... 6
FINE ARTS 7
JOURNALISM 1
LAW 2
L.A.&S. 15
PHARMACY 2
SOCIAL WELFARE 2
UNIVERSITY SPECIALS2
GRADUATE 24
OFF CAMPUS 1
★ Class Officers (Sophomore, Junior,
Senior)
President, Vice-President, Secretary,
Treasurer
Filing Deadline Is January 29th, 5 p.m.
Applications Available in The Student Senate Office 105 B Union
Thursday, January 25, 1979
9
Full buses leave students behind
Overcrowded buses are leaving some students out in the cold, according to Mike
Harper said yesterday that students had been left behind on two of the bus routes serviced by "KU on Wheels," which is partially funded by student activity fees. The 8:05 and 8:35 stops on the Oliver-Naismith and Woodcreek routes have had an overload of students, he said.
"We're doing everything we can to get people to their classes but we just don't have the equipment to handle all the people who
want to ride the bus during weather like this," Harper said.
Seventeen buses are now operating on five KU routes, which is full capacity. Harper said that when temperatures dipped below the 10 degree mark, the demand for bus service increased by 2,000 to 3,000 students a day.
"Even one additional bus would cost us $80,000 a year and force another increase in the bus fee, which was already doubled this year.
"It wouldn't pay us to keep additional equipment in reserve for weather like this,"
Harper asked that students take either an earlier or later bus to avoid rush periods.
"The 7:06, 7:35 and 9:05 buses to Daisy Hill and Olivar and Nisman stiffs are running virtually empty now," Harper said. "We are going to have to be as patient as possible."
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AND MORE!
KANSAN
The patience of some students, including Jeff Mount, Winfield, Kan, sophomore, is wearing thin. Mount, a member of the Alpha Delta Fraternity, was in good conditions were crowded even on the 9:05 bus.
"I added a class, so now I'm going to take the 8:00 instead of the 9:00 bus to campus." I walked up and grabbed the bus.
On Campus
THIS SATURDAY! Spend an Evening With . FAST BREAK
The
Laurence
Opera House
and 7th Sport Club
7th & Mass.
$2.00 Gen. Adm.
Don't Miss . . .
Feb. 1-LOST GONZO BAND
Feb. 2 & 3-COLE TUCKEY
TODAY: Professor J.T. Johnson will give a slide presentation on KU's STUDY ABROAD PROGRAM in Bordeaux, France, at 4 p.m. in the French Department lounge, 2056 Wescoe. An ENGINEERING LUNCHION will be at noon in the English Room of the Kansas Union. LEGAL SERVICES BOARD will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union. INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL OFFICIALS will meet at 5 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union. EXCELLENCE ROOM of the Union. UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 105 Blake Hall.
TONIGHT: SUA BRIDGE TOURNAMENT will begin at 7 in the Trail Room of the Union. STUDENT RECITAL with Michelle Mkele on flute will be at 8 in Swarthout, Murphy Hall. U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell will deliver a VICKERS LECTURE at 8 in the Trail Room of the Union. STUDENT RECITAL with Michael Mkele on flute will be at 6:30 in cork 2 on 10. STUDENT SPORTS COMMITTEE will meet at 6:30 in the Oread Room of the Union. THE NAVIGATORS will meet at 8:30 in Cork 2 of the Union. STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP will meet at 7 in the Big Eight Inroom and at 7:15 in the Regional and International Rooms of the Union. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at the Rooms Roof of the Union. RJK BOARD will meet at 6 in the Regional Room of the Union.
--at place Winners will receive an expense paid trip to the Region
Entry fee: $2.00 per person (Must be a student to enter)
To enter: Leave name and phone number at SUA office
or call Randy Phillips at 841-6498
Foosball Tournament (Doubles)
Sun. 28th at 2:00 p.m.
Qualifying Tournament for ACU-1 Regional Tournament which will be held in Warrensburg, Missouri Feb. 1, 2, 3
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment
services. Employees must have valid ID card,
ACA or BAN. Must be on time. 814-735-2960
www.animalrescue.org. (1) RESCUE HOURS
(2) ACLU NETWORK
--one two three four five time times times times
15 words or
fewer $1.00 $2.25 $2.50 $7.50 $3.00
Each additional
$0.11 $0.32 $0.43 $0.45
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
TOFU SWE Biosyne Merck office in Lainawer
notice of Corn Business Organization
700 manhua road, Lainawer City
1234567890
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Complete Lock & Key Services
1015 W. 9th 843-2182
WHEN THE INDIAN IS OUT,
GEORGE IS IN!
An American in Business
Georges 1 = Shop
727 Mass.
Zen practice daily. 6 P.M. Introductory lectures
12:30 p.m. Lawrence Chagel Zone
1272 Appleton, IL 60942
1272 Appleton, IL 60942
Need a roommate. $93.00/month. Call 841-5145.
Charlie's WV Service is back in town, now Specialists in WV Datsu, Watson, Volunteer & Volunteers.
Attention all Graphic Artist! We've got a complete line of Graphic Art, Architecture, and Reprints available for you. Come in and see us at Strong's Office Systems, 851 W. Main Street, 84344. Open 8am-5pm, 9:00-12:00 Sat.
The KU Xavier Club is building its first meeting
Room to hold additional information on Drug
Robinson. For additional information call Dugu
Rosenberg at 718-396-2050.
HILLEL TALKS WITH THE CANDIDATES
NATIONAL JEWISH COMMUNITY BERLIN, 917 Highland
Street, Jerusalem, Israel
MARGARET BERLIN, BOD TOMLINSON,
CLAIR KZEIZEN, MICHAEL MILLER,
JOHN BODY, PRESIDENT
speak to the students about their policies of they
were elected. Admission is $15 member. 1-26
HILLEL GOES TO THE TEL. AVIL STRING
IN THE HILLEL HEADQUARTER NIGHT. WE will depart from the Lawrence Jawson
night. We should return around 11.15. Admission $20 student.
The hotel has room and ride contact at the Hotel in Hillel
headquarters.
Lawrence Cloe Club presents 19th Annual Coin Show. Feb. 3, 9 a.m. to 8, 4 p.m. Belfast 4, 9 a.m. to 8, 4 p.m. Will be available to sell; buy coins; stamps. Everyone welcome. Come. Enjoy your time. Everyone will be invited. You will be holding their weekly Tuesday meeting at $30 D.M. in Danforth Chapel. You are always welcome.
---
FOR RENT
Bul dun shaming Thursday, Feb. 1st at East Park
Centre & 8:10 p.m. For information:
415-7926
Employment Opportunities
Research Assistants Student assistants needed for research with preschool children. Should have morning or afternoon lessons M-Th. 10-20 hrs Equal Opportunity Employer
EXTRA NICE 2 bed room apt. Located in wooded area with wood deck picture window, vaulted bedroom, carpeted courtyard, cleaned bathroom, washer & dryer hookup. #814-3097 or 785-2786 *3 month, negotiate.
FRONTRITE RIDGE APARTMENTS NEW RENT-BASED 2BR/2BA apartment, unfurnished from $176. Two laundry rooms in walk-in closet, ample parking. On KU route line. Financing available. $299-$309. $249-$25
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
rooms furnished, and near town & city.
Phone: 865-707-6917
JATHAWAKER TOWERS has an apartment for
more information at 843-693-1131
1-31
for more information at 843-693-1131
I need a roommate who is responsible and includes 842-2540 after 4 p.m. $75-me. Includes utility
Roommate wanted for plush mobile home. Washer-Dryer. Drive-in. $120/room/hour.
Sublayer 1 - BR Apt.炎, or unfurn. at Frontier
Ridge; an has route, with subliter for less than
2000 m. (see Note 3)
Roommate, own bedroom in 3 br. house 13th & 18th
$100/room a month + 1,72 usable cells
FURNISHED ROOM FOR MALE. Walk to KU
14th & Kentucky. Has wash basin. Save refrigerator, bath Clean, newly painted, warm. $800
24th & Kentucky. Bed dimms. Bedrooms 8-141. 8-125
841-3218
Female roommate needed for two bedrooms Apt.
1812 from Fraser, $875.00 utilities
1812
One bedroom for female roommate. Share house
one bedroom for female roommate. Share house
Close to campus. 480 sqft. 3 bdrm.
Close to campus. 480 sqft. 3 bdrm.
Apt. 2B and efficiency Close to campus. Util-
ity Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 837-
9079
Sub-base车架 25 apartment. 2 bdrm. unfurnished.
118-331-4254, both after 5:30.
118-331-4254, both after 5:30.
Sublease--nice 2 br. apt. on bus route. Available
842-7157. Keep trying.
2-1
Recommend wanted $110/mo. includes utilities 110mw 19th and Alabama at 841-265-1734 841-265-1734
**METRO**
Two BR Duplex: Low rent; New Remodelled
2005 128 with blast (pass interior)
2002 Keep trying
1 or 2 BR Duplex tap. Carpeted, breakfast bar,
water or dock hooks. Call 843-7587. 1-30
Two Bedroom apt for rent—$215 + Close to
campus. 841-7537. 1-30
Beautiful 3-bedroom house and 2-bedroom duplex. Brand new, in good location, vault 848-021-0
NEED QUITT? Completely furnished 1 and ½ bedroom kitchen in private home. Suitable for guests to spend time with family. separate entrance, warm burning fireplace, large windows. paid lease. deposits. No smoking. Call 800-349-1672.
Beautiful, Brand new, 3 bedroom ranch, dishwasher, gas fireplace, attached garage, energy efficient. Concrete flooring.
Spacouch one bedroom furnished apt 3 blocks from Union Elect. pld. Low utilities 442-3504
northwest Lake Erie. A dream hunter. 4 Bedroom, 3 Bathroom, 2 Garage. Located in the beautiful northwestern corner of Lake Erie. Affordably priced by qualified professionals. Free Wi-Fi. Phone number: (718) 656-9000.
Apartment at Park 25 for sublease. Make good call. Call #821-4345 after 5. 1-26
Christian Male for 2 Bedroom Apartment. Approx.
$25 mn; exc eat Fellowship and Appreciation.
CALL FOR VIDEO!
One bedroom furnished apartment close to cam-
munity hall. 250 sq ft. Hwy. 139 near Ha-
lton Iris. West nights between 8:30 - 1:30
pm.
Two Bedroom, 15'; bath age behind shopping
room. 240 sq ft. 81-394-8781 (81-394-884)
Scott 643-4397 or 81-394-884
MUST RENT 2 Bedroom apartment next to campus and football stadium. B42 840-401 1-30
FOR SALE
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with straps, cordages and tuners, woodgrain picks, guitars, cords and covers. Very good condition. New, in box. $325.00
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization Notes to make sense to your students. Visit the rational 31. For exam preparation. *New Analysis*. Designed for Middle School. Criteria, Mia Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore. If
SunSipes - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-perspex lenses. Reasonable, request. 1021 Mass. 843-570-7012. Mass. 843-570-7012.
Michigan State Music, 647 Michigan sales and
instruments. Complete line of strings and accessor-
ables.
Stereo system: Turntable BSR ASX, Ampe Rotor
Stereo system: Turntable U100. 12m, $172.90 or
best offer
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties:
MOTIVE MEGATRON, 843-900-6290; 290 W, 4 hp.
MOTIVE MEGATRON, 843-900-6290; 290 W, 4 hp.
Hockey goals equipment. Excellent condition.
Basketball goal equipment. Excellent condition.
Soccer goal equipment. Excellent condition.
Basketball separately. Best offer. 934-4544 1-25
Single bed and dresser w/mirror for sale 842-1
1812
Isoff, Missoum guitars. I have a few very nice Missouri Mossman guitar players starting at listening to their guitar playing in John Deliver, Beau Caradine, Merle Travail, Cal Stevens, & many others at 366-202-0525. Winkley 2-16
ALLISON TWO Speaker system, 41 year faculty
and graduate students for audition
841-600-4940 for audition
1-26
BAAH 1993 NEWS needs internal engine work for
the 1993 Dodge Ram. The engine is
radio new, clutch and master-wheel system
on the rear of the vehicle.
Scars 10-speed $45. $28 Kit 610 turbidity $29. Point
Mate 10-speed $150. $150 Kit 610 turbidity $35. Visitor
$150 Kit 610 turbidity $35. Visitor $150 Kit 610 turbidity $35. Visitor
Samsul arm tuner, ampster. tascade back. rack technician.
$275.00 for arm tuner, $75.00 for ampster, $425.00 for
tascade back. Battery $1290, sale. 750, Calibration 842-7499, after 5:00
**Sales! Sale! Sale! One Technies fully automatic system turbine 622MHV and two Canon FL80s with three HP iPhone 10 to 100 watts per channel. For information call Mark at 864-707-992 or Prizze at 864-703-662. Don't miss out!"
1966 Dart, Blind 6. Overheaded, also water pump,
also hydraulic pump. Use water, good body needs $75.
2014 Dart, Blind 6. Use water, good body needs $75.
Pulice 801 with 5mm f1.4 lens, case, lens焦
and filter. Like New 841-5155.
1-26
Hewlett-Packard HP-25. Programmable scientific calculators with accessory. Will teach you how to use the accessory. Cell Mobil 844-7390.
12 x 60 Mobile Home with metal roof, carport,
independent living for students 845
7-29
1-29
Tell the world Place an ad Call 864-4358
Nordica ski Boots, Size 9. Call Mike at 841-
3695.
Muge Hosed Garage Sale. Lots of good used furniture, artifact 397 Maline—to dishes or vases.
Two. B.M.I. #211 speakers. Excellent condition,
two years of excellent sound, inexpensive priced.
Available for $49.95.
Must sell immediately- 25 ww Techie Reserves
Turtles & Reptiles Speaker - Speakers -
8222 After - 8222 Before
Stereophone @ Track, Record Player. A.M. F.M.
842-705-6190, EXL Electric Player 24, 1-31
842-705-6270
FOUND
Found. Tom Cat, white, broach, brown tail, black jacket, 101st & La 'Cat 841-1899 after
sale.
White female Kitten 2 mos. Call 842-3838, cvs
by stadium.
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
All with
$24.30
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Heavy 40 N. Lawrence
Across from Icaborn's
Batteries
Shelf of 5 keys with Phillips 66 tag along Mississippi
9:18 am - 9:18 am 65险
Kamau of Kauai
Found: Brown, blaid winter scarf near Potter's
Pond. Call Craig 843-1772.
1-25
Man's coat cost 2nd floor Fraser, last week
Man's coat Winters-864-3824 or by
drop -129-864-3824
HELP WANTED
Jerk opening at Overland Photo's downtown location. An hourly collection of camera and darkroom materials. Application to Overland Photo's drive-up store in Holiday, OH for all your camera needs every other Saturday. Phone 1-800-741-3741 or email info@overlandphoto.com.
MEN WOMEN JOBS* *CHIUSE H1PPS -*
SUPERINT. SOLAR ENGINEER $30000 BEST QUALIFICATION
$30000 BEST QUALIFICATION BSAWHOLE DLA
BSAWHOLE DLA BSAWHOLE BSAWHOLE DLA BSAWHOLE DLA
Bureau of Child Research has operating for full-time research and education with experience in computer data analysis, experience with both manual and digital segment experience, with TISs. Time management skills. Computer science writing programming writing Application deadline programming writing Writing Application deadline programm
Now taking applications for Fountain & Guild
Applicants can person at Vista Restaurant 187
Applicant
Children's Learning Center has opening for part-time substitute teachers and substitute aides. Call 814-2180 to inquire. Must be 18 or older to participate. Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer - 1-29
Research assistant positions available. Assist in research activities related to the design and development of an AArch32 application in position A at ARM Research Center. An Apprentice must have a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science or a related field.
760. Spirit private club is now taking applications
for 39th floor office space.
820-830-5200; fax: 820-830-5100;电话:1-550
820-830-5200; Fax: 820-830-5100;电话:1-550
BABYNITT-my home at 12th and Kassid,
Wednesday and Friday, 2-4 p.m. $1.25 from
$1.50.
Part-time I am looking for help: whole days or
weekends. Call 841-7044 after 1 p.m.
841-7044 after 7 p.m.
1-26
Wanted: Reliable parent for after school child care after noon; keeping. Must have car. 841-230-7965.
Need name X-tra manager for this help. Work help
with scheduling, travel planning, and scheduling
for 814-623-5255 or 814-623-5040 for work schedule
for 814-623-5255 or 814-623-5040 for work schedule
LOST
A black wall hat during enrollment in Hoch auditorium. If found please return basketball court. No ball.
MISCELLANEOUS
Loan. Jan. 15 in Strong—1 Red Mitten. Please call
841-1835
2-14
THEISIS BINDING COPYING--The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for Desin binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us do it at 83M or phone at 842-350-7161.
Free Kittens--small 6 month old male, silver gray
brown coat, excellent playfulness, playtimer
602 between 4.80 and 9.60 lb.
275
PERSONAL
Gad/Leilani. Switchboard, counseling and general information. 841-8472. If
DARKROOM-SUA provides a complete photographic darkroom clear glass elements and paper for the best quality of images.
TRILATING TOPS
Topless dancers with lunch
Noon - 2.00
Oily or
Luncheon
N. Lawrence
1001 N. 9th
$1 PITCHERS every Friday afternoon from 2.4 to
the Harbour. tf
Stop by Burks daily for Peep Hour 1-4 P.M.
Burk's -20%; Medium -20%; Large -35%
Scratch -45%.
Register for the SUA Winter Basketball
Homestead Tournament on Friday, Jan. 26 at
the daycare at Parnell. Winners register for regional
competitions.
HARIOUS SPECIALS @ 4:00 PM. Tues, and
Fri $10.00. WED $15.00.
WAIDS DREAM NIGHT* Wed $1.00 dinner.
GUTTAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexpensive instructor. Call us at (212) 497-0387 or visit www.guttarlearning.com, a concentrated approach. Groups beginWed. Feb. 7, for adults and children. Call Karen Falkenbacher Center 841-681-2277.
The Lawrence League for the Advancement of Non-Verbal Communication invites the community to touch, mudge, wink, and listen. Participants are not allowed but airing is encouraged. Harjret Jeyet Khan 1-26
THE MOFT-BEERS BAND IN new building
keyboard instrument Cell 418-2605, 832-9324
keyboard instrument Cell 418-2605, 832-9324
Spring Break isn't far away! Shi Winter Park or Selma in Doahce Beach. Buses 441-8232, 441-8234, and 441-8236.
B SOEMEROYI Student Senate spring elections — February 14 & 15. Students body President—Joe Lombard, Education Architecture, Business, Education, Engineering Fine Arts, Journalism, Law, LAAS, Numeraker, Graduate and off Campus Senate seat Graduate and off Campus Senate Office Deadline—25, 5 p.m. 1, 29
Don't forget... ELIY's Birth Party Friday, Note
1999. Max Dys. see there abae7.
1-26
Female roommate wanted, $62; no. M3-5541, 1:31
Thinking of a career in Journalism? Attend Media Job seminar on Tue, Jan 7 at 8:00 a.m. at the University of New York.
RAPPORT:
[Latin] Resident Representative to MASSACHUSETTS
CORPORATE, representing MASSACHUSETTS BANK,
ALMON, PRESIDENT and DAVE CRAKEN,
WILL SUMMER, PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS
SERVICES OFFERED
Impact care-compliant quality services by factory
management in the Bay Area. PCM
invites PCW immediate appointment at 643-705-9011.
Relax. Let me type your term paper, disser-
tation, mine. Fast Service, Mrs. Nixon, 842-152-
6761.
PHINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with
Alice at the House of Uuqu/Quick Copy Center.
Aleia is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m on Saturday at
Mass.
**EXPERT TUTORS. MATH** 600-125, call 843-6772;
**EXPERT TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE** 600-125, call 843-6772;
**EXPERT TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE** 100-200, call 843-6772;
**EXPERT TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE** 100-200, call 843-6772;
**EXPERT TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE** 83.9,
**EXPERT TUTORS. QUALIFICATIONS** 83.9;
**EXPERT TUTORS. COORDINATION** computer programming. For general problems call 843-6772.
MATH TUTOR MA in math, patientien, three years of training in experience: 822-3341.
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CS problem. Grab 814-3767 814-3767
Babybatting, my home. Mother of two girls in
babyball. babybatil with you at night.
862-741-1428
TYPING
Piano Lessons: beginning through early advanced
experienced Teacher. Please call Jill
806-745-3122 or info@pianolessons.com
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4800 10
Typed/Editor, IBM PPC/Elete Quality work.
Typed/Editor, IBM PPC/Elete Desk dissertation velo-
milion. Job # 84-927-8192
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Responsible customers. Law papers, term papers. Mr.
Miss Terry.
cares:
Call Mark Schneider for apart-
Experienced Typical-term papers, quiz, minis,
spelling tests, and spelled word spellings spotted
843-5054 Mr. Wright
Experienced typist with scientific background
IBM通讯 Selective II Call Jan 843-312-312
Call Mark Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 842-4114.
Finally a Laurence landlord who care!
Do they do typing on anile electric typewriter,
service in progress, Call Me Hagen
851 036 6088
HOME IMPORTING SERVICE—Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced secretary in her home. For information about this service, call (861) 234-1580, after 1:28 am, anytime weeksends. 1-26
REWRITTING EDITING. Your manuscript, these or other paper texts are carefully refined and finished work, reflecting your thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlines of manuscripts and articles also available. E-mail: 843-123.
Fast, accurate. Payers under 20 pages, one night
with the dissertation. Call Ruth:
643-6128
WANTED
Student wanted to shop 2 bedrooms, put with paid
name on a roommate. Monthly rate is $1395.
August Feb. 12 $1695. *Call* 612-748-1011.
Want to earn extra money? If so, Recreation Services need basketball games to officiate intramural basketball games. If you are interested, send an email to robbie@rdb.com or drop on rent to room 2081. 1-25
HEAD START NEEDS YOU You volunteer to be a member of HEAD and 2 other days per week. Seated in chair and 2 feet from the desk each day. Required:
Wanted. A resupply for furnished 2 BR apart.
$112.50 ^2 units; 841-8855
1-25
Female Roommate wanted Rent $83 a month/
1/2 ushits. 826-2641
1-26
Formal roommate to share two furniture apart
smoke, clean and clean. Call Gill McNary at N785
Wanted: Two roommates for apartment at Jaybrook
hunter trees. One must be a full-time student and
will pay $425,000 or $625,000 respectively.
One or two roommates needed for attractive Traittage Townhouse. Rent Negotiation 841-5322
Respondible, quiet, nominals for spring semester.
728/Mo. includes 844/Mo. 1-399/6
1-399/6 1-299/6
Non-smoking female to share house with three
female $90/hour, utilized paid 841-626-2-6
Drammerland - Best touch-tail roll band instrument. Lazy wristband for easy play. Music from 922-3144, Night Vision #802-8105
Night Vision #802-8105
Roommate needed. 2 IDen. Apk. req to campus
$190/month*. ¹uits. Callmate Blii. 841-768-8081
Female romantica wanted to deliver 3 BH room
for the hospital. Call Kathy or Debra 442-3290;
kathy@hospital.com; debra@hospital.com
femaleromanate to sharir 2 BR Apt close to campus M41,5286 9:30 a.m. day weekdays
Rommate to share 2 hdrm, apt, at Moudow
843-1144 1-29
Rommate to share 2 hdrm, apt, at Moudow
843-1144 1-29
Residence to share house with two girls, excel, express interest in the arts. Call or visit by 718-523-9400. Call or visit by 718-523-9400. Call or visit by 718-523-9400. Call or visit by 718-523-9400. Call or visit by 718-523-9400. Call or visit by 718-523-9400.
Wanted: Male, co-committee. Park 25 Apartments,
phone: 842-1335
1-25
Gay Male to share large 3 BH apartments (w/402) 9-10th grade students. $10 per room. Call 847-2821. Contact: 847-2821.
Housemate or male wanted. Large, beautiful,
beautifully decorated room. Please call Washoe
Large Room. Large room and pets
available.
In need of 2 KU-K State basketball tickets for
present. Contact 864-1510 1-25
Mature person to share my house near KU.
$150.00 + food. 642-7310. 1:30
Want someone to part-time work on your own website? A friend or a colleague is more preferable but not absolutely necessary. More preferable but not absolutely necessary.
Reannounce wanted; $25.00 money, utilities
Included: One block from Campus, 8411-8838 - 126
Bentley room for right girl in warm, ergonomic desk. Have responsibilities, and share utilities. Available
Four or five readers needed, reading primarily counselling textbooks 1122 West Campus ID: JRP
7083755267449
Male Roommate to share 2 HR bpt. furnished,
small utility, dishwasher, $250 per call. Call *312-694-2780*.
EATING OUT IS GREAT!
Topper dancers. 4:30 to 1:00
Only at FLAMINGO
501 N. 10th St. Lawrence
---
10
Thursday, January 25, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Med Center reacts favorably to budget
Officials at the University of Kansas Medical Center said yesterday that they were satisfied with the Med Center's share of Gov. John Carlin's proposed budget.
"I'm not unhappy with the budget," David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said. "In fact, I appreciate the support he gave the Med Center, especially with our new building, Bell Memorial Hospital, going up."
James Lowman, dean of the School of Medicine, said that he to be was pleased with Cisco's acquisition.
In Carlin's budget for the new hospital, however, funding for new equipment was reduced by almost $1 million. Waxman said this did not come as a surprise.
"It takes a lot of equipment to operate the hospital," he said. "We started building about seven years ago, and the initial cost for equipment has risen."
Lowman said that the equipment cut would not affect the School of Medicine, but also said that he was disappointed in his reduction of funding for residency programs.
Funding for the affiliated practice program was eliminated by Carlin and only
four of the eight requested family practice residency programs were funded.
"I don't understand how some residency programs could get funding and not the family practice residencies," Lowman said. "I think once we show the legislators the importance of the family practice residency, they will reconsider."
Both Waxman and Lowman said they were pleased with the 7 percent hike in faculty salaries, but Lowman said he had hoped for more.
Waxman said that he did not know the reasons for the residency cuts, but that he thought the legislature would consider fundine the programs.
"It's really not that much," Lowman said, "but it meets with President Carter's price and wage ceiling. We had heard rumors that he would be lower, so we were satisfied."
Lowman said a larger percentage of the Med Center budget went to the health care providers.
Waxman said that he agreed and that he is optimistic about the amount of funding necessary to reach his goal.
"Mr. Carlin recognizes that we must have that 'support,' he said, 'and I am very proud of it.'"
"And who are the losers? To paraphrase Huck Finn, 'Gracious! Was anybody hurt when Strong Hall devoured HP?' No 'm: killed a student."
From page one
"As we have said many times, if someone wishes to teach a humanities program according to his or her philosophy, we will not object. We welcome competition," Quinn
The report was given to the 16-member College Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising at a meeting earlier this month. To discuss the report at their next meeting, Feb. 13.
IHP
University of Kansas libraries will suffer if Gov. John Cartlin's proposed budget is passed by the Kansas University KU's dean of libraries, said yesterday.
"The basic view from the library standpoint is that Watson is not what it should be," he said, referring to Watson Library.
Staff Reporter
Thomas Becker, chairman of CUSA,
said administrative recommendations
are made in accordance with the law.
Quinn said the report suggested that IHP adopt a pluralistic philosophy. But that would destroy the nature of the program as it exists, Quinn said.
He proposed that a separate course be created that would offer a different approach to studying HIP material. But he didn't attempt to start such a program failed.
Although Carlin's proposed budget gives a 6 percent increase to operating expenses, inflation and the devaluation of dollar bills have been a creep to a decrease in the bucket, Ranz said.
"We will have to start canceling magazine subscriptions or buying fewer books or both," Razz said.
The state has the responsibility to pull the libraries up to a level of respectability, according to Ranz.
Replacing the lost books is paid for by a general replacement fund, Clint Howard, acquisitions librarian, said. Last year, that fund amounted to $15,000. The fund will receive a 5 percent boon fund, which covers the rest of the funds, but it is still not enough, he said.
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
To date, more than $10,000 has been spent to replace books since July 1. The remaining $3,000 is supposed to suffice until next July, the beginning of the fiscal year.
Carlin also cut a recommendation for the installation of a theft detection system. Winston loses about 500 to 600 vehicles and 300 to 400 hours in Haita, circulation librarian in Haita.
"Inflation, combined with the devaluation of the dollar, has cut our purchasing power 15 percent over the last year. A 6 percent increase in our budget means we're moving backwards," Ranz said.
$110,000 for additional book and magazine purchases.
"WELL HAVE TO BE more selective with the books we buy," said John Glimk, associate dean of libraries. "The detection system is something we need."
the money used for replacement spending could be more useful elsewhere." Howard said.
The library searches for a lost book for three months. If the book is not found, a request to buy it is made through the acquisitions department.
And the cost to replace a book adds up in time and effort besides dollars and cents. Haka said.
Dean says budget would hurt library
When the book comes in, it is cataloged first, and then it is registered in circulation. Then it makes its way back out to the stacks, he said.
All of this raise the cost of a book past its cover price, Haka said. "Although the cost of a book may be only $10, he said. 'It costs about $25 to replace a book.'"
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However,Carlin did propose an increase for both faculty and student employee pay by more than the amount recommended by state budget director William Foster. The student wages 9.5 percent of faculty members will receive a 1 percent pay hike.
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the school of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and recommendations concerning course content would be reviewed by CUSA and then given to the College Assembly.
Quinn said he would immediately write Beaulieu and request to meet with CUSA to meet with the president.
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NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE
First Regular Meeting
of the Semester
Sunday, January 28, 1979
For time and place, come to the N.A.A. office,
Level 3 - B 104C, Kansas Union
Departure from Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive 6:45 p.m.
Hillel invites you to hear the Tel Aviv String Quartet, in Topeka. Sat. Jan. 27th
For more information and rides contact Joey at the Hillel office 864-3948 or Ace Allen 841-2963 evenings
General Meeting
Jan. 25 Kansas Union Everyone Welcome
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KARL JOHNSON, JAREL KOYEK RATNEY WATTER
Produced by Russell Bessell and Various
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Friday, Fr. 16:26 & Sat. Jan 27
Woodruff Audit $1.50
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Milty loses beer license; tavern declared nuisance
The owner of Uncle Milty's Cafe, 2246 Barker Ave., said yesterday that he was considering court action to regain a beer license that city commissioners revoked Tuesday night. But he said he had not yet made a decision on the matter yet.
"It's too soon," said Milton Collins, owner of the tavern.
Commissioners revoked the license because the tavern was a "mutilation" to the staff.
They took action after Haskell Indian Junior College officials and area residents said last week that Collins did not properly control the tavern.
Haskell officials said that fighting and drinking had often spread onto the Haskell
Donald Binns, mayor, said he was sure the commission had the authority to revoke his nomination.
When Haskell officials suggested last week that the tavern violated a city or
"There's no court in the country that would rule in his favor," he said.
distance by being too near the school, Collins had said he would fight the issue in court if they didn't.
Collins said he had not consulted a lawyer vet.
Collins could seek an injunction against the license revocation, said Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager. But if an injunction was not granted, next Tuesday would be the last day Uncle Milty's could legally serve beer.
City officials said this was the first time that the city had revoked a license to sell
Records of such actions are kept only seven years, according to Brent McFall, an assistant to the city manager. He said no one will be allowed to member the commission revoking a license.
"Even people who have been around while can't remember this ever happening before."
In the past when the city commission was considering revoking a license, the tavern owners have turned the license in voluntarily, he said.
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January 27. 1979 9:30 a.m to 3:30 p.m
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January 30, 1979. 1:30 p.m to 7:00 p.m Big 8 Room. Kansas Union (Second Floor)
>bs are available for instrumentalists*
Registration will begin 30 minutes prior to the premiere. Please call auditions audition schedule, please contact Show Productions Department. 4545 Words of Fun Aviation. Kansas City Md. 64163
When you audition you have 3-4 minutes to demonstrate your voice and accomplish your own accompaniment. However, a band member can join you by bringing sheet music in your key. A record player will play any instruments (in accordance) that will be available
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SNOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Crowd enjoys Brewer, Shipley
Vol.89,No.81
Lawrence. Kansas
Friday, January 26, 1979
See story page eight
Point counterpoint
single, six-year presidential term. Bell spoke in Murphy Hall last night as part of the J. A. Vickers Sr. Lecture Series.
Attorney General Griffin Bell announced his support for a constitutional amendment for a
Ticket surcharge questioned
By BARBARA JENSEN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Student basketball and football tickets might be cheaper if a surcharge encaused in 1960 could be eliminated, according to Mike Harper, student body president and a member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
Harper met yesterday with Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, and KUAC and athletic department officials to clarify the terms of a recent loan agreement.
A surcharge of $5 on student football season tickets and $4 on student basketball season tickets was implemented in 1966 to pay a $3,000 loan from the Endowment Association for student seating additions to the east side of Memorial Stadium.
In 1978 a 50 cent surcharge was added to the price of
student football season tickets to help pay for the stadium renovation project.
THE 1968 LOAN is to be paid off by September 1980. But KUAC now must decide whether to continue the 1966 surcharge to help pay installments on the $1.8 million 1970 loan and the Endowment Association for the stadium renovation.
Harper suggested that the surcharge should be eliminated after the 1966 loan was repaid. He said that if revenue from tickets was to be used to repay the 1978 loan, all ticket prices should be raised.
He said it would be unfair for students to be paying more for the stadium renovation than other ticket holders.
"The student representatives on KUAC didn't want to use the first surcharge as a means to pay off the second loan," he said. "But they were told by Clyde Walker (former KU athletic director) that if the surcharge wasn't used as collateral, the Endowment Association wouldn't make the loan."
"The Endowment Association just wants the money repaid," he said. "It doesn't really matter where it comes."
But Seymour also said that because of the payment schedule, it was assumed that the 1966 surcharge would be
SEYMOUR SAID the association would have made the loan受损 SAID the sarchure were continued
The 1978 renovation loan stipulated that payments of $218,000 be made each year. It stated that $168,000 of the repayment would come from the 1978 surcharge. The county where the remaining $30,000 a year would come from
"Nothing legal says that the original surcharge would continue to pay for the second loan," Seymour said. "But it
Brinkman, chairman of KUAC, said the board would need to meet in February to discuss the language and intent of the resolution.
Prof studies coal plant hazards
Bv LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
Coal-fired power plants may be hazardous to your health, according to a KU professor who is studying the problem of power plant pollutants.
The professor, Ernest Angio, geology department chairman, in researching what causes earthquakes.
that toxic elements contained in coal may be causing health hazards.
"I think coal can be shown to be equally hazardous, or more hazardous, in the long-run, to health than nuclear power plants." Angino said yesterday.
Nuclear power plant opponents often advocate coal as a safer fuel alternative
Wording changes delay game scheduling proposal
A proposed amendment to University regulations that would limit the scheduling of athletic contests during finals week to Saturday nights was sent back to a committee for clarification by the University Council yesterday.
The proposed amendment would force the rescheduling of three men's home basketball games during the next three weeks, or for weeknights during the final exam period.
Council members complained of vague language in the amendment, which was referred to the University Senate Executive Committee for wording changes.
But Robert Hohn, associate professor of education and chairman of the Senate Calendar Committee, which proposed the changes, said frequent exceptions had been made in the past.
University regulations stipulate that no athletic contests may be scheduled during
EXCEPTIONSWOULD still be granted,
"When they argue the health dangers attributed to energy by nuclear power, they don't make the same assessment of health hazards from coal-generated electricity. With coal, the assumption is there's no great risk." Anzino said. "That's simply not true." Anzino said.
Bob Marcum, University of Kansas athletic director, and Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director, told Council members that he would not allow, although it might create some problem.
He said that he realized the purpose of the University was education and that the athletic department would try to reschedule the games,
Hohn said, but more justification would be required under the amendment.
"We are required to play a lot of home games through December but because of finals we run into a number of dates when we can schedule no games whatsoever."
The games that would have to be rescheduled are: Morehead State University, Dec. 10, 1900; Bowling Green University, Dec. 15, 1900; George Washington University, Dec. 14, 1901.
detrimental effects of burning coal, Angino said.
In other business, the Council passed a mail-ballot provision that would allow the council to schedule a mail ballot for the University Senate.
Some of the elements that be concerned about are iron, lead, zinc and manganese, which are concentrated in fly ash, the material used for construction, usually stored in ooze lakes outside a plant.
"TO A GEOLOGIST, coal is nature's junkpile. There's dozens of toxic elements in it."
The effect on human health varies with each element, but could include damage to the respiratory, circulatory and nervous systems.
Other toxic elements present in coal are mercury, cadmium, selenium and arsenic which Angio said could escape into the atmosphere as coal burned.
John Newburger, a University of Kansas Medical Center physician who teaches a course in environmental health, said the byproducts of the coal-burning process present a health hazard, but could not say how serious the effect might be.
All those elements are known to be dangerous to humans in certain quantities. What scientists do not know is whether enough of those toxic elements are escaping into the air and water to pose a health threat.
"OBYIUSLY, NO! of it is good for you, but whether it will harm you or create any clinical symptoms is another question. It depends on the dose level." he said.
Angino said the problem of the health hazards from burning coal was one of
growing importance because of the push to burn coal rather than oil or er natural gas.
"As more coal is converted into electricity, there's going to be a tremendous increase in the amount of flyash we'll have to dispose of," he said.
A power plant the size of Kansas Power and Light's Lawrence plant could produce 100,000 gallons of water a day.
Angino's research is designed to determine which elements might be dissolving out of flyash and washing into ground water supplies.
Angino and his assistant, Deborah Kopsick, Lawrence graduate student, are working with samples of fyssh that they collected from power plants.
In the first part of the experiment, she rinsed the flyash samples with distilled water and analyzed the chemicals that dissolved.
So far, Kopsick said, very few toxic chemicals have leached out of the flasch. However, the second part of the experiment may be less encouraging.
THE FLYASH will be rinsed with an acid solution and the toxic elements she is testing contain hydrogen.
Angino said, "That could make a difference. What we're trying to do is simulate an acid rain. We know that we're generating acid rains in industrial parts of the country, but we're not sure if the rains in the Midwest are also acid."
Angino and Kopick will not have any conclusive results until they complete their research in May. In the meantime, the mission of the Detection Agency also is studying the problem.
Bill Brinck, from EFA's Kansas City office, said the agency probably would issue guidelines for power plant waste disposal within six months.
Bell proposes six-year term
Bv BILL RIGGINS
Staff Reporter
Grittin Griff, U.S. attorney general, last night urged adoption of a constitutional amendment that would allow a president one six-year term.
"This change will enable a president to devote 100 percent of his or her attention to the office," Bell told a full house at University Theatre in Murray Hall.
"No time would be spent in seeking re-election."
Bell said a four-year term was too short to achieve any large changes and improvements.
"A single six-year term would permit the long-term, steady planning and implementation that our government has done in recent years with now lost to camarooning." he said.
He said he and President Carter were doing their best to return power to state and local governments.
"WE MUST return to government by directly accountable public officials," Bell said.
"The only other alternative, I predict, is to have an increasingly costly and inefficient form of government, wholly removed from democratic control."
Bell also called for a complete review and reduction of the regulating and lawmaking authority of independent federal agencies.
"The president has the authority now to curb those departments within the executive branch of the government, but, to the surprise of most Americans, it is the Federal Trade Commission, the Consumer Products Safety Commission and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission are wholly separate and not subject to his
Bell said the rule-making power of federal agencies was a substitute for the executive, legislative and judicial branches.
"The point is that rule-making has none of the safeguards of the legislative process, he said.
Bell said a restriction of the staff size of the president, members of Congress and federal judges also would cut inefficiency in the government.
"MORE STAFF” means more time in which to evolve more ideas about how to increase government control over the lives of the American people," he
Bell said he thought it was important to restore confidence and non-partisan support to the federal government.
"The most important thing I've done in office is to make the Justice Department into a neutral zone where it is non-partisan," he said.
The problems, he said, included appointing new judges and reorganizing the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Bell said he intended to remain in office until he finished his "problems with the Justice Department."
"We at the Justice Department have tried very hard over the last two years to erase the ugly stains of the Watergate industry, the independent, professional organization."
"I feel like I've done three years work in two years, but I feel I can't leave until I finish."
Bell said it was up to the American people to decide where governmental power should lie.
"I HAVE often said that the wisest use of power is not to use it at all. But if such power must be used, use it sparingly."
"That is the prescription I would write for our federal government today."
Bell was appointed as attorney general in January 1977. A native of American City, Bell graduated from the 1960s and as an adviser to Georgia's segregational governors. Samuel Van Buren appointed him governor.
He was criticized by civil rights leaders during his confirmation hearings for his rallies in some civil rights cases.
Bell was brought to the University by the J.A. Vickers Sr., Memorial Lecture Series.
Staff Reporter
By BILL RIGGINS
Bell greeted by protesters
Griffin Fell was warmly received by the capacity crowd inside University Theatre last night, but about 25 demonstrators outside of Murphy Hall had nothing but cold words for the U.S. attorney general.
Iranian students and members of the KU Young Socialist Alliance and the Socialist Party Party greeted Bell by asking the slogans and handing out literature.
Although the demonstration was peaceful, police kept a watchful eye on the group.
Mike Hill, director of KU police, said no arrests were made but would not comment on the security precautions that were taken.
A federal judge ordered Bell to release the documents but Bell refused, saying it was not in the national interest to do so.
Brent Bactert, a member of the KU Young Socialist Alliance, said the group was protesting Bell's refusal to hand over its phone number about the Socialist Workers Party.
The party has filed a $40 million lawsuit against the U.S. government for engaging in illegal activities against the
party and is seeking use of the documents as evidence.
Bell was subsequently cited for contempt of court. He is currently appealing the charge.
“If the Supreme Court orders me to turn them over, I’ll do it,” Bell said during a press conference just before the speech.
Carrying a sign that asked "Isbell above the law?" Waasker said that Bail wouldn't release the files because they proved that U.S. intelligence organization into Socialist party offices and party members fired from their jobs.
Iranian students, shouting anti-shah, anti-Bakhtilah and anti-U.S. slogans, were apparently protesting Bell's role in the Carter administration. Shaphouk Bakhtilah is currently prime minister of Iran.
After Arab students created a disturbance in Beverly Hills, Cal. several weeks ago, Bell had said he thought they should not violate U.S. laws should be deported.
Snow stops buses, exam
Snowfall, which may amount to four inches, prompted a traveler's advisory for the Lawrence area today, according to the Highway Patrol Weather Service.
The snow, which began falling yesterday, about 4 p.m., caused yesterday's bus service to be canceled at 6:30 p.m. because of the storm. Mr. Olsen, president of the Lawrence Bus Co.
Weather conditions also forced the postponement of an English 101 examination that was to have been given last night from 7 to 10 p.m. in Wescoe Hall.
Lawrence police reported five weather-related accidents between 5:30 and 7 p.m.
yesterday, but no injuries were reported,
according to a dispatcher.
Blowing and drifting snow with a 60 percent chance of snow today, tonight and tomorrow are in the weather service's forecast for southern Louisiana. More information familiar to Lawrence residents.
Temperature will be in the upper teens to the lower 20s today and are expected to drop tonight, with lows of five to 10 degrees predicted, a spokesman for the weather
The storm that blanketed the north-central portion of the state is expected to subside by Monday, according to the Highway Patrol.
2
Friday, January 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International
Khomeini still kept out of Iran
TEHRAN, Iran—The Iranian government yesterday managed to keep its key forged against Kuwait, out of the country for at least three more days.
for three weeks or more.
Prime Minister Shapur Khaitan's government also was given its biggest show of public support yet. Tens of thousands of anti-Khomeini demonstrators marched in Tehran yesterday, and similar pro-government demonstrations were reported in several other cities.
Khormeiin, 78, leader of the movement that forced Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi into an indefinite "vacation" abroad, had planned to end almost 15
But the Iranian military shut down the country's airports, supposedly until vigilant tomorrow in what appeared to be an effort to block his plans.
Khomeli, patriarch of Iran's 32 million Shah Moslems, said he intended to replace the Bakhtiar government, appointed by the shah, with an Islamic State insurgent.
It was announced at Khomeni's headquarters in France that he was postponing his return until at least Sunday. If the airport remains shutdown past Sunday, a Khomeni aide said, alternative plans will be made for getting to Iran.
Prison closing date tentative
KANAS CITY, Mo.—The U.S. Bureau of Prisons said yesterday that while the bureau planned to close its federal pentitientary at McNeil Island, Wash. by 1982, there were no definite dates set for the closing of pentitientaries at Leavenworth and Atlanta.
Bureau spokesman Michael Aum said goals of 1985 and 1987 for phasing out the Atlanta and Leavenworth pennitiatives had been tentatively set.
Aun said no firm date could be set for the closings because the number of inmates in the bureau's 39 federal prisons was constantly fluctuating. To phase out the three oldest penitentiaries required both space to place the prisoners and money.
Aun said the problem with the three prisons was that they were obsolete. Leavenworth, the oldest of the three, opened in 1895 and currently contains
Although Leavenworth can hold a much larger number, Aum said, the bureau does not want to build new prisons for more than 500 inmates.
Richard Seiter, executive assistant to the warden at Leavenworth, said options for use of the pentagonal included closing the prison or turning it over to the Government Services Administration. Another option was to keep the prison open and remodel the main facility for use as a lower-level security institution.
Bill would end medical grants
TOPEKA-A a bill designed to end the state's medical student scholarship program was introduced in the Kansas Senate yesterday.
Under the current program approved last session, medical students can receive free tuition to the University of Kansas Medical Center if they agree to it.
The bill was submitted by the Committee on Public Health and Welfare.
Sponsors of the bill content the money could be better spent by attracting doctors, rather than giving students free educations.
Carter proposes draft system
WASHINGTON—President Carter is asking Congress for $3 million to beef up a standard draft system to meet the Pentagon's "worst case" requirement for pre-pandemic defense.
But White House officials said Carter's request was only a first step and not Carter's final decision on new efforts to restrict the draft registration.
The push to rework the draft system comes amid studies that show the present system could not turn out enough soldiers quickly in the event of a European war.
Senate Armed Services Chairman John C. Stennis, D-Miss., said the only answer was to bring back the draft because the all-village force could not be prepared for a war without it.
Another option would be to draft people into the military reserves and create a trained force to send into a sudden war.
General saus SALT needed
WASHINGTON-Retired Army LL Gen. George Siegmann told senators yesterday that failure to radiate an arms limitation agreement with the Soviet Union was unacceptable.
Siegmann said if he were confirmed as director of the U.S. Arms Control and Armament Agency, he would have an opportunity to arrest and control put
If the Senate fails to ratify a SALT II treaty, Siegmund said, the nation can expect a steady unraveling of the nuclear balance with the Soviet Union.
Groundwater bill considered
TOPEKA-The future of the proposed Sunflower generating plant in south-west Kansas may rent with a bill currently under consideration by the Senate.
The bill would prohibit the use of western Kansas ground water for cooling the plant.
Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, fired heated questions at John Dunn, an economist testifying for the plant, Berman's questions concerned the price and availability of power from the Jeffrey Energy Center west of Topeka and the proposed Wolf Creek nuclear generating plant near Burlington.
Dunn told the committee that, while energy would be available from time to time from the Jeffrey plant, and some would be available from Wolf Creek, both would require a 200-mile transmission line to move the power to western Kansas. The transmission line would cost at least $45 million, he said.
Gulf expects less Iranian oil
Gulf President James E. Lee predicted oil workers' strikes and political instability would continue in Iran.
ST. LOUIS - The had of Gulf Oil Corporation said yesterday that the outlook was bleak for a ram return of crude oil exports from Iran.
"The oil situation there is at a standstill," Lee said. "We're exporting no oil out of Iran now. They're only producing enough for internal use."
Mass. flood forces evacuation
and had been Gulf's second largest foreign supplier of crude, producing 300,000 barrels of oil a day in 1977. Gulf's largest foreign source is Kuwait.
BOSTON—Record rains, gales and high tides caused floods in Massachusetts that sent hundreds of people fleeing their homes in the coastal communities of New York and Pennsylvania.
At Grafton, Mass., part of a 60-foot high earthen dam on the Blackstone River gave way, forcing the evacuation of about 300 families in an area as far as five miles.
About 200 people were evacuated by boat in Revere, and water was hubcaphigh in Sittuce on the South Shore at noon.
Committee hears tax indexes
TOPEKA-A two approaches to indexing on state income tax brackets were heard by the House Assessment and Taxation Committee yesterday.
Indexing is a term used to describe adjustments made in tax brackets or exemptions to correspond with inflation.
Under indexing, if the consumer price index went up 7 percent, the initial tax basket, which covers taxable income up to $2,000, would be adjusted upward by
Rep. James Lowther, R-Emporia, presented a similar bill which would adjust the personal income tax exemption at $750 to keep space with inflation.
The National Transportation Safety Board, as a result of its investigations of the Whippoorwill incident and the capsizing of a fiskish boat in Chesapeake Bay, recommended new safety measures for charter boats and other small passenger vessels.
WASHINGTON - A federal safety board ruled yesterday that the showbowl Whippoorwoll, which capsized on Pomona Lake near Topeka last year and drowned 15 people, was so unstable it could have been turned over by even a relatively mild gust.
From the Kansan's wire services
Board rules showboat unstable
The Whippoorwill overturned just 30 yards from shore June 17, 1978 shortly after casting off its landing on Poroma Lake with 60 people aboard. The death toll, the
The safety board determined that the probable cause of the Whippwor will accident, was "reduced stability as a result of an accumulation of water within the vessel's integral hull tanks, the vessel's inadequate design stability, its operation during adverse conditions and the future of the operator to obtain the current weather forecast."
IN THE Cheesapeake Bay accident, 13 of 27 died when the fishing boat, Dixie Lee II, capsized June 6, 1977 during a storm that buffeted the boat with 95 mph winds.
board said, was held to 15 because small boats quickly rescued 45 people from the island.
A waterpour from a severe thunderstorm passed close to the Whippoorwel, and in a few minutes the storm came crashing.
THESE WERE an estimated 200 to 400 gallons of water in one of the bull tanks at the facility. These waters were designed and the water accumulation, the Whippowwill could have been capsized by the Whippowwill.
winds of about 57 mph against the 16-foot-
high structure of the showboat.
Had the boat meet Coast Guard stability requirements, which apply to vessels on navigable inland waterways, and had her tanks been dry, the Whippoorwill could have withstood winds of up to 62 mph without canizing. the report said.
Investigators also found that the National Weather Service had issued a severe storm watch for the area 10 minutes before the Whippoorwill left her berth, but the operator of the boat did not know this because he used a sound recast. The board termed this "imprudent."
THE BOARD recommended that the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators amend its model state boating act to require that small commercial passenger vessels operating only on open water meet Coast Guard stability standards.
The board also recommended that special weather broadcast receivers should be required on such vessels, and that their skippers should be required to seek the nearest safe harbor whenever forecast winds would exceed the theoretical wind speed used in certifying their vessel's stability.
Earlier, the board had recommended that the Federal Communications Commission require a radio-telephone or extension phone at each charter boat steering station.
Local counties added to nuke warning list
TOPEKA (AP)- The state Department of Emergency Preparedness has more than doubled the number of counties that must draft emergency action plans in case of an accident at the Wolf Creek generating plant when it becomes operational.
Douglas and Shawnee counties are included in the counties that must be prepared for a countywide effort.
The decision to increase the number of counties from eight to 18 came as a result of a reassessment by a task force of the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
A IN COPYRIGHTED story broadcast yesterday station KTSB of Topeka said it learned of the change of plans from Leon McNamara to the minister with the state adjutant's office.
When construction started on the Wolf Creek plant near Burlington in Coffey County, the state drafted an emergency action plan. The plan dictated that eight counties prepare to alert the public and to tell people what to do in the event of an accident that released radioactive material into the air.
Those counties were Coffey, Osage,
Franklin, Anderson, Allen, Woodson,
Gregory.
NOW, AT THE suggestion of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the state plan is being expanded to include 10 more counties. Besides Douglas and Shawnee, counties included in the new list are Miami, Lani, Wilson, List, Waukee, Chase, Wabausee and Morris.
Because Kansas has a prevailing southerly wind, Topeka would be directly in the path of any radioactivity released during an accident at the Wolf Creek plant.
of residents to avoid radiation contamination.
Mannell said reaction plans in Coffey County would involve the swift evacuation
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The next step would be to require evacuation or a take-shelter notice to counties in the path of the radioactivity, depending upon severity of the accident.
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OTHER COUNTIES not immediately threatened to provide to provide assistance, Mannel said.
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Under the plan, state officials would first notify law enforcement agencies in affected counties. They would then notify radio and other agencies with information for alerting the public.
Then information would be disseminated about any quarantines imposed and warnings would be given about possible food contamination.
While the expanded emergency planning is now only a recommendation by the commission, Kansas officials are assuming it will be made permanent. So they are having county Civil Defense officials prepare local plans.
Man killed in accident
EL DORADO, Kan. (UPI) - A 51-year-old man was killed in an industrial accident yesterday at the Getty Oil Co. Refinery, the first fatal accident at the plant this month.
Curt A. Clanton died after being crushed between a crane and a pipe support, a Getty Co. official said. The official said Clanton and another man were directing the movement of a crane when the accident occurred. The other man was uninjured.
THIS SATURDAY!
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Friday, January 26, 1979
Leaky roofs rain in KU buildings
Staff Reorder
3
By DAVID SIMPSON
Ice and snow have caused leaking roofs in many University of Kansas buildings this winter, Joe Christy, assistant director of construction, said yesterday.
The buildings with the worst leakage
problems are Summerfield Hall, Robinson
Summerville, Spencer Library and Dyche
University.
Christy said the ice and snow jammed the gutters and wanter ran under the roof's flashing, which is the sheet metal used in waterproofing roofs.
Other Big Eight school administrators expressed optimism yesterday about mergers of men's and women's athletic departments while the University of Kansas awaited a decision on a proposed merger here.
Athletic mergers succeed say Big 8 administrators
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he probably would not make final decision on his nomination.
The proposed merger was submitted to Dykes Jan. 12 by Marian Washington, director of women's athletics; Bob Marra, president; and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
None involved in the proposal would give details of the plan.
Akers said the merger was successful because of the structure of the present athletic department. She said there was one assistant director and across-the-board duties.
Judy Aker, women's basketball coach and former women's athletic director at Kansas State University, said a merger in the women's athletic departments had been a positive step.
"There's only one way to live in this world, and that's together," Akers said. "If you don't, then you're separating ex-partners from each other, just can't separate-sex organizations."
Akers said the former structure of two
venator departments had created
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"If they're separate, it becomes very restrictive. There's no Big Eight for the women nor any post-season tournaments," she said.
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misunderstandings between the men's and women's athletic departments. She said it was especially important for schools in the Midwest to be under one department.
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Iowa State University is the only Big Eight school besides KU that still has separate athletic departments. Ruth Lauver, director of women's athletics there, said there would probably be a merger by July 1.
The women's program is currently a part of the physical education department.
"The success of a merger here will depend on the leadership at the top and an honest commitment on both programs," she said. "We have women on the women under the control of one person."
图二所示为某动物的背部。
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The University of Oklahoma has had men's and women's athletics under one department for five years. Before that, women's sports were considered to be extramural because they were not under a department.
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"WE HAVE LEAKS throughout the building," he said. "There are several leaks in the dance room's roof. We have to put trash cans in the middle of the floor because the舞 floor is made of special material and when water hits it, the boards warp.
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Wilkerson said even though the gyns had not had much leakage yet, he was anticipating more when the snow began to melt.
ROCKY HORROR
Tom Wilkerson, director of recreation services, said Robinson also had been in charge of the new facility.
"Once the thaw begins we will have additional leaks," he said. "Our gums are the only place where you have to call off a basketball game because of rain."
PICTURE SHOW
"We can't go up and chop off the ice because it damages gutters and roofs. The only thing we can do is to get off the loose snow with brooms." he said.
"The roof on Summerfield is shot," Tolleson said. "We've got a distinguished professor in residence who has a piece of plastic stretched out under his ceiling so that it catches the water and takes it out of the room."
JOHN TOLLESFON, associate dean of the school of business said Summerfield had
Tolson said funds had been allocated by the state to renail the roof.
Richard Perkins, associate director of plant maintenance, said although there were many leaks, there was not much that could be done this winter.
"We were hoping the new roof would be put on before this winter," Toleffson said. "With some luck, construction should be started as soon as the weather warms."
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University Daily Kansan
CHRISTY SAID most of the University's roofing problems could be attributed to the severe winter. He said 80 percent of the snow on his roof was the ice and snow that collected on flat rooftops.
Saturday and Sunday working on roofs to repair the leak's, "Perkins said. 'There's not a lot we can do during the cold," he added. "It's just trying to keep them at a minimum."
"We had two men working overtime last
"Flat roofs on buildings are nothing but headaches," he said. "The snow just sits up there, so when the snow and ice melt we get even more water in the buildings."
However, Christy said that the University had done a lot of work in the past few years to repair roofs, and that in two to three years the problem would not be as acute.
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
"If people can live with the leaken now," he said, "in time we'll catch up with roof sealing." The sealing process will be replaced are getting sloped roofs and this will allow for more drainage and fewer cracks.
MAKING A BRANCH
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"We expect these to be completed by this summer," Lawton said.
He said the University had accepted bids of $60,000 for Lindley, $64,288 for Sumner and $35,916 for Robinson, two child development center, in addition, bids are also out for the reroofing of Robinson.
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Christy said he had two men working almost full time on roof repairs this winter, and that he had asked for funds to add more equipment. He also separated a separate roofing crew in his department.
Undecided about who to vote for Student Body President?
Enjoy a delicious Hillel Lox & Bagel Brunch and then hear Margeret Berlin, Bob Tomlinson, Clair Keizer, and Ron Allen speak to the students on their political views concerning upcoming elections.
Sunday Jan. 28th at 12:30 p.m.
Sunday Jan. 28th at 12:30 p.m.
at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center
917 Highland Drive
Admission $1.00 Members
$2.00 Non-members
REGISTRATION: SAT., JAN. 27, 10:00
AUDITIONS
WHEN: SAT. JAN. 27, & SUN. JAN. 28
$2.00 Non-members
ROUNDS: SAT.10:30 & 2:30 SUN.11:00 & 3:00
WHERE: KANSAS UNION, WALNUT ROOM
1st PLACE PRIZE: $20.00!
IN ADDITION: The top two players will become eligible to attend the Regionals, held February 2, with transportation provided. These two players must be full-time students as well as members of the United States Chess Federation Memberships available. If you have any questions call 864-5772.
will be held at the Lawrence Arts Center Monday
KU CHESS TOURAMENT
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Compiled by David Edds
Randy J. Layn, 741 Walnut St., was being held in the County Judge jail yesterday awaiting a court appearance on charges that he was involved in a burglary Wednesday afternoon, Lawrence police said.
The burglar occurred between 1 p.m. and 3 i.p. m. Wednesday at a home at 205 N. Parkway, Ste. 780, $1,435 were stolen after a porch door was prized open and an interior door was
Police said Lynn's bond was $3,000. He was booked on charges of burglary, possession of stolen property and possession of marjuana.
Lawrence police also investigated a burglary from Lawrence Yamaha, 500 W. 23rd St., and a theft from an auto yesterday.
Entry was made by smashing a window in a rear door, possibly with a steel bar, according to police.
Lawrence police said Lawrence
Yamaha was burglarized between 5:30
p.m. Tuesday and 8:40 p.m. Wednesday.
A 1979 Yamaha 250 valued at $1,700 and a motorcycle accessories valued at $80.80 were taken, police said.
Several items were stolen from a 1979 Caddis parked in the 100 block of W. North Park between 10:00 p.m. and 10:55 p.m. Wednesday, police said.
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Seniors (CLASS OF 1979)
Seniors
112 DAYS TILL GRADUATION PARTY!
Countdown time begins this Friday, January 26 at the BREWERY. 714 Massachusetts.Free beer and soft drinks from 3:00-7:00 p.m.
Wear your senior T-shirt. Extra shirts will be available paid for by the class of 1979, University of Kansas
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
JANUARY 26,1979
Revise state rape law
A bill planned for introduction into the Kansas Legislature this week would, if passed, provide for a much needed restructuring of the rape laws in Kansas.
The bill was introduced by State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, at the urging of a number of women's groups in the state. It would eliminate the current broad classification of rape and replace it with the term "criminal sexual penetration" of the first, second and third degrees.
Criminal sexual penetration of the first degree would be an offense resulting in great bodily harm or great mental anguish, involve the use of a deadly weapon or be against a child under 13 years of age.
THE OTHER categories then would be classified in a descending order of severity. The bill also would create a crime of criminal sexual contact of the third and fourth degrees, which would be lesser felonies.
Hess said the bill was conceived as a
reaction to the increasing difficulty in getting rape convictions in Kansas.
"The current laws are too narrow in their scope and difficult to effectively enforce," he said.
BY NARROWING the scope and definitions of rape, the new bill would make convictions much easier.
Indeed, the vagueness of the rape laws, combined with society's often flippant attitude toward the crime, make rape convictions extremely difficult to achieve.
As the spree of rapes that terrorized the Oread neighborhood in December vividly demonstrated, rape is an everpresent problem and, despite the lackadaisic attitude toward rape exhibited by some court judges, it is everyone's problem.
Much more than a sexual act, rape is an act of severe violence that deserves to be published by the full weight of the law.
The Legislature's approval of Hess' bill would be a major step toward making that possible.
Missiles not welcome by Nebraska farmers
By MARIAN and JEROME LENZEN
SIDENEY, Neb.—Congress will soon be able to allocate $10 million to start work on the M-X missile. Residents of the western Nebraska Pankhandle will be watching closely how their representatives vote on this request.
This area, known as the South Plateau Plains to the Pentagon, here for me 32 years, is under consideration as one of the largest United States for the M-X missile system.
Gen. Lew Allen, Air Force chief of staff,
has described the plan as a "great sponge"
of targets to absorb硫Warheads.
The M-X missile is a multiple-aim system. Between 20 and 30 silos was built for each missile and the missile was housed in one chamber—the old carnival shell game in spades.
IT WAS a shock to the powers-that-be in Washington when the residents of western Nebraska protested after they were informed of this possibility.
The officials expected us to fold our hands, how our heads, say "The will be done" and accept, as an act of God, anything they wish to impose upon us!
Why wouldn't they? We've always done so. In 1963, the government planted Minuteman missiles in our backyards and we didn't utter a peep. We've been the 1. target for nuclear attack for 15 years. That's long enough.
The Air Force says it did not consider any site with a large population for the M-Missile silos. There are other things just as important as population numbers to be considered in a risk-benefit analysis of this project.
WHAT ABOUT the fact that this area produces the most potent weapon this nation has, grain? The dollar would be a much bigger threat than agricultural exports. The bottom line should be the survival of the human race. It won't survive without food. A nuclear war will be fought in a matter of minutes. The United States is no longer the ones they are Americans, Chinese or Russians.
because even the rubble will be radioactive.
Naturally the Russians would retaliate by building enough missiles to saturate the sponge; then we would build more missiles because we had more missiles, and on it we would go.
The whole point in spending $20 billion to develop and deploy the M-X is to convince the Russian leaders that we could and would destroy Russia if they dared attack. It's all show and tell! So why not put the M-X in an area that is considered high risk, with or without the missiles-say, New York City?
AT BRIEFINGS held by the Air Force, we were led to think that there would be no danger to people in the vicinity of the silos and missiles—except in the event of attack. The silos are designed with standaid a near miss by a nuclear warhead, so surely they could withstand the vandalism of a New York street gang.
Abandoned buildings in New York City could be torn down and replaced with an attractive missile silo. It would improve the neighborhood. Employment opportunities would boom. New York city no longer would be to beg Uncle Sam for loans to survive. What would be a curse for New York City could be a blessing for New York City.
New York City would be evacuated in case of attack. What better place to have our "sponge" in a deserted area? The nuclear cloud would move out over the Atlantic and would circle the earth before coming back over the ocean, part of the country would be able to produce edible food for the survivors.
The Defense Department's ultimate goal should be the survival of the human race. No one can live without food. Sparing food is vital, but attack isn't necessarily the best defense.
Marrian Lenzen and her husband, Jerome, are wheat and cattle farmers. There are Minuteum missile sites "two miles to the West" of their 800 acres.
Nearly 800,000 American college students are in danger of losing what very often is their primary source of income during their four years of college.
Proposed student benefit cuts unfair
They are in danger if Congress accepts President Carter's federal budget, which includes a proposal that all benefits paid to students between 18 and 21 who are children of retired, disabled or dead Social Security beneficiaries be phased out.
But how does one just "phase out" the education of 800,000 students—students for reasons beyond the control had to accept aid from the federal government instead of from their dead or disabled parents? Quite easily, according to Carter.
there are 795,000 students receiving averaged Social Security benefit payment of $21,485 per student. Security Administration's regional office said recently. Nearly 40,000 of the beneficiaries are from Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Arkansas—states that supply a large number of KU students.
YET CARTER has chosen to lump these important cutbacks in student benefits with four other Social Security cutbacks which do indeed need revising.
In addition to the student cutbacks, Carter also has proposed that:
Mary Ernst
- The $225 lump-sum burial benefit to survivors be eliminated.
- The $122 minimum monthly retirement benefit now collected by people who have paid as little as $100 in Social Security taxes during their entire lifetimes be repealed.
- The disability rules be tightened so that teenager workers will collect for a care worker.
- At age 72 pensioners could have unlimited earnings from outside jobs and still collect Social Security benefits. Under this arrangement, this is permitted would drop to 10 in 1982.
system that have been suggested include the following:
- Cover everybody—including the 6 million city, state and federal workers who are most likely to need plans. At least a change should be made to prohibit doubledipping by government workers who retire early and work at providers in hard-hit areas with collateral security—earning both of benefits.
Some other changes in the Social Security
- Raise the age at which retirement benefits begin from 65 to 68.
- Use general revenue sources—income from general income and corporate taxes.
THESE CHANGES could greatly relieve the huge burden that currently faces the Social Security system. The burden will increase in the future as fewer people enter retirement, increasing the amount of tax revenue and people continue to live longer, and so receive benefits longer.
The chance of this major change being accepted by the U.S. Congress is considered unlikely, and even less good. Although Congress in the past has been very reluctant to tamper with the firmly-grounded Social Security system, it has not been willing to fund all of the financial woes and possible
bankruptcy that the system has en-countered.
Yet the change that must be avoided is completely phasing out the benefits to college students. The average beneficiary receives $1,600 each year and that may produce a significant portion of the money that the student needs to stay in school.
WITH COLLEGE costing the average state university student $2,600 year for college education, the amount increases rapidly each year—the amount that these students receive will increasingly become the final factor in getting their degree and to pursue their education to its fullest extent.
With declining college enrollments expected because of the declining birth rate, colleges will become less of a burden to the system. But it will still be a
What Carter and the Congress should look at is the possibility of decreasing the amount of payments to college students if they get the financial need still needed for financial bailout in the future.
But to totally phase out the education of college students is a tragic misstep.
MAXEELY MEPHAMODAEWS LEADER.
© 1994 BYCHICAGO TRIBUNE
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To the editor;
Ernst misconstrues Abzug dismissal
It seems that early in this new semester, editorial writers would have much more than copywriter on their minds. But alas, Mary Ernst has proven my theory wrong in her Jan. 22 column on the dismissal of Bella Abzug and the consequent resignation of another 20 National Advisory Committee for Women members.
Secondly, it is naive of Eratn to believe that Carter is so shortsighted as to believe that he will succeed in the race.
In the recent trial, Davis was charged with hiring a hit man to murder his divorce judge, Joe H. Edison, Fort Worth, Tex. David McCrory, a Federal Bureau of Investigation informant, testified he was given $25,000 to set up the murder.
Apart from being fed-up with emotional cries for equal rights for women and tearful resignations, I am also disenchanted with Ernst's understanding of politics.
Women have Carter to thank for standing behind and speaking out on the Equal Rights Amendment when its extension for ratification was before the Congress.
Claiming President Carter's support has been "bite more than superficial" is hardly an argument I would expect from anyone who believes in his relationship with Congress on this subject.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
During his 1977 capital murder trial, Davis posted $1 million bond and was released by Amarillo District Judge George Dowlen.
Three months later, the jury found Davis innocent. He posted $650,000 bond on ene
Even if the statement were true, this would only tend to discredit Ernest's whining about a yearly $300,000 budget for the committee. Would she have the government support all interests the committee wishes to represent? No, the government unpublished authors, New York bridge buyers and other interests through the government as well?
Davis has paid the price; he has spent time in jail and gone through much mental anguish. But one wonders if those were the only prices paid.
Moore said that he would not want to press a retaliatory saying the length of trial could have been less.
Thirdly, Ernst's system of logic escapes me when she condemns Carter for pursuing his own re-election through support of the women's movement. She chastises Carter for becoming "angry" about blasts at his economic plans and budget.
would confer with him only on the subject of ERA.
Yet somehow Carter and the entire
Davis mistrial an expensive venture
In November 1977, Davis was acquitted of capital murder charges in connection with an August, 1976 shooting spree at his $6 million Fort Worth mansion, in which his stepdaughter and his wife's companion were killed.
Davis, a Fort Worth, Tex., industrial millionaire, walked away from a Houston district court of a free man Monday after the judge issued her sole solicitation trial ended in an 8-4 impasse.
T. Cullen Davis has beaten the legal system-again.
This marks the second time within a little more than two years that Davis has escaped from his hometown.
A. S.
Philip Garcia
District Judge Wallace Moore, who presided over the trial, last week began to admit that the trial might end this way. He had said before that it would serve no purpose for me to guess."
HOWEVER, the jury, after 48 hours of deliberation, is unable to break the 84-jury vote after 14 days.
During the 1971 trial, it was revealed that the day before the shooting spree Davis had been ordered by Edison to pay $25,000 in legal fees to his wife's attorneys, pay Mrs. Davis for providing a property settlement and paying a property settlement to $,000 per month, an increase of $1,500.
DAVIS' WIFE, Priscilla, testified that the estranged husband was the "man in black" who fired at her and her companion, Stan Farr. Mrs. Davis was wounded and Farr died of four bullet wounds after he responded to her screams.
maining charges stemming from the incident, and had a party.
In attendance were Dowlen and some of the jurors.
Davis was able to walk away free, escaping the murders charges. However, less than one year after his acquittal, Davis was arrested for plotting against Edison.
But Davis was acquitted because Mrs. Davis could not positively identify her sex.
During the solicitation for murder trial, the prosecution presented both audio and visual tapes of Davis and McCryme meeting on Aug. 18 and 20. Davis claimed he was "playing along" with McCryme and did not have intentions of killing anyone.
SINCE THE JURY was in a deadlock, the mistrial was declared. On Monday, Davis posted a debt of $30,000 cash and to have gone to Colorado for a ski vacation.
It is estimated that Davis paid his legal counsel, Richard "Racehorse" Haynes and his associates, about $3 million for the first trial and may have spent as much this time. Judging from the results, Haynes earned his pay.
Last Aug. 20, Davis was arrested after
But, after the millions Davis has spent in his defense, one wonders if Lady Justice has untied her blindfold and checked her scales on her bar was substituted for one of her weights.
So, after much evidence and testimony, and millions of dollars paid in bonds and fees, Cullen Davis is free. Justice, it seems, has been done.
McCory had informed the FBI of Davis' intentions.
country are expected to feel remorse at the thought of relieving Abzug of her duties.
Ernst seems to want it both ways.
The public and Carter are expected to feel relief after 20 women resigning as a political statement.
Though the women's movement's aims may be good, politics does not cease to exist.
Douglas Burson
Kansas City, Kan., junior
Don't blame unborn for societal troubles
Finally an editorial has been written which condemns not women who abort, but women who kill.
often the convenient, rather than the responsible, thing to do. Abortion may be a quickie remedy, but it is not a long-term solution. As Garcia points out, we cannot attack the unborn for problems caused by the born.
Phillip Garcia, in his Jan. 19 editorial, has a good grasp on who should be condemned for what in this country. The unborn fetus is not responsible for poverty, he says. The normal life process does not cause child abuse. And, as he mentions, abortion is
To the editor:
I believe the primary question is not when a baby becomes a baby. The debates may never end, but the action must start now. Children who are not born to individuals' should augment their philosophizing with clinics, funds, jobs, babysitters. If a woman could get a new job, a new reputation, and of course a reliable nurse, many more might opt against abortion.
I agree with Garcia: only someone without solutions would thus misplace blame. Only those who feel no responsibility for the failure face no race would say abortion is the best remedy.
And for those not exactly poverty-stricken, perhaps cash and counseling would be an incentive for them, too, not to become dependent on the care lifestyle is in danger, interfering with natural life processes appears as a very live option. Pregnancy need not interrupt life, however. By allowing natural life processes to happen, the normal dayal life, all of society can benefit.
Kathleen Burbery
Ratheen Bursley
Visalia, Cal. graduate student
(USFS 80-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and午休 day on Friday. Subsidies are $35 for six months or $7 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the university.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 60043
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Editor
Barry Massey
Managing Editor
Direk Steimel
Editorial Editor
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Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
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Carol Hunter, David Link
Business Managet
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Bret Miller
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5
Friday, January 26, 1979
Weather service needs funds
By PAT RICE Staff Reporter
The KU Weather Service may be forced to discontinue its services after this semester if it does not receive additional funds for equipment and staff, Larry Cosgrove, director of the weather service, said recently.
"There's just not enough interest," Crosgrove said. "The University seems to think the service is nice for public use, but it is neither weather, but after that the interest is gone."
erty-
seeling not to one's with ylive life, excesses normal
The weather service provides free daily weather forecasts.
Cosgrove said the weather service received an average of 80 calls a day asking for the weather forecast. Because of the weather service's heavy workload, he said, the phone service might stop within the next few weeks.
THE ONLY WAY we could continue the phone service through the semester is if the
University gives us a recorder for phone messages," Cosgrove said.
The weather service received $2,000 from the Student Senate last semester, but Cogsworth said it would take $10,000 to buy equipment. He successfully with the National Weather Service.
"I would not like to see the service stopped," Cosgrove said. "But that money is really needed to buy a telephone machine or someone to run the service after it leave."
Cosgrove said he planned to get his master's degree in meteorology in the spring. He is the only graduate assistant at the weather service. The rest of the staff consists of 14 undergraduate meteorology students.
Cogrove train the staff and coordinates the weather service's broadcasts to radio stations.
"THIS IS a much-needed public service." Crogsave said. "There is no national weather service in this area and without us, local residents would have to call long-
distance for a forecast. Our service is free and we're on camou."
Cogrove, whose weather broadcasts can be heard on campus radio stations JKHJ and KANU, said the KU Weather Services office is providing weather service to all college weather service in the country.
Cogrove also said more funding for the weather service could attract students to
udent
Cosgrove began the KU Weather Service in 1977 when he transferred to KU from Temple University in Philadelphia. The weather service originally broadcast to three stations in Hutchinson, Garden City and Topeka. It now broadcasts to 16
"If the University would develop a forecasting program, students from Nebraska, Iowa and other states might come here instead of going to the University of Missouri or Penn State, where they already have forecasting programs," he
The University funds only the service's
weather observer position. The other staff members are not paid.
The weather observer, Randy Reddick,
Lawrence junior, records the temperature
throughout the day and measures
precipitation and the barometric pressure.
He gives the information to local
newspapers and radio stations.
"I DEFINITELY LYE feel the weather service is worth continuing." Reddick said. "We get a lot of calls from farmers, pilots and people out of state who need the weather forecast."
Cogrove said Kansas was one of the worst areas of the world for storms and tornadoes. And in really bad weather the National Weather Service cannot help the state, he said, because of the inaccuracy of their long-range forecasts.
"If we had a really bad spring, we couldn't rely on the National Weather Service. They're just not that good." Cosgrove said. "Our service is something the people of Lawrence shouldn't forget about."
Berman says lid won't hurt funding, tax relief
By GENE LINN Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—The overwhelming approval, 37.1, of a 7 percent spending bill by the Kansas Senate yesterday will have little effect on the prospects for formula funding or sales tax relief, according to State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence.
The bill, which is opposed by Democratic Gov. John Carlin, would place a lion on expenditures from the state's general fund. This fund is made up of all revenue raised by the state, including income and sales taxes.
The limit would equal 107 percent of the Legislature's estimate of expenditures in the preceding fiscal year. Carlin has a 38 percent budget and of budget about $1.1 billion for fiscal 1980.
By limiting expenditures, the legislation could make less money available for formula funding and for the elimination of the sales tax on food and residential utility bills.
UNIVERSITY OF Kansas officials determined, by using formula funding criteria, that the University was underfunded by almost $4 million last year.
Formula funding compares the financial status of KU with five universities with similar enrollment and financial needs. KU budget requests to calculate KU's budget request for 1980.
Berman said formula funding, for the University of Kansas and other Kansas Board of Regents schools could be adopted despite the spending lid.
"Formula funding and the spending lid are separate and distinct," he said. "We could have formula funding without being committed to a certain amount of money."
Berman also said there was hope for eliminating the sales tax from food and utilities because general fund revenue exceeded the 7 percent lid on expenditures.
"THESE IS absolutely no question that revenue will increase next fiscal year by more than 10%."
average increase in the last few years has been 11 percent."
The Senate's spending bill provides for a tax relief fund made up of tax revenue that covers most of the state's income.
"This tax relief fund could be used to finance the elimination of sales tax on food and utilities or some other form of tax on property. The fund is used is a bookkeeping question.
CARLIN HAD called for a 10 percent balance in the budget speech he made to the council.
"The spending lid will not be operating in a vacuum."
One result of a spending limit bill, he said, was that the minimum ending balance in the general fund would be 8 percent of the total fund.
The governor also had criticized spending lid legislation in his speech and recommended instead that a spending lid be placed on current state government.
In spite of Carlin's opposition, all 19 senators and senators co-sponsored the Senate budget.
However, Berman said he did not think this was a break in party discipline.
"There is no significance in the difference," he said. "The governor is in favor of a spending lid. He just doesn't want to have a specific number attached."
But Berman said there could be some conflict because the governor had recommended an 11 percent increase in general taxes, while the percentage more than the Senate spending lid.
BERMAN SAID he did not know where the 4 percent would be trimmed.
"I chatted with the chairman of the House committee about the two bills," he said.
As for the future of spending lid legislation, Berman noted that the Kansas House Ways and Measures Committee had decided to spending limit bill similar to the Senate's.
It is likely that the Legislature will pass a spending bill, Bill Berman, said, but Carlin's part of the plan is less likely.
"It's too early to foresee what he will do with the bill," Berman said.
KANSAN On Campus
Events
TODAY: COUNCIL ON SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION will meet all day in the Wainroom Park of the Kansas University. ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB will meet at noon in the Wainroom Park of the Kansas University. CLUB will meet at noon in Akove G of the Union. KANAS BANKERS will hold a session at 1 p.m. in the Governor's Suite of the SCIENCE CENTER for Sen. James Crowley will begin at 3 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. BILOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union. BILOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in Cork 1 of the Union.
TONIGHT: FINE ARTS SENATORS will open an hold open at 6 in the council Room of the Union INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN SENATORS and First Christian Church Education Building. CAMPUS CRUSADA will meet at 7:30 in the Pine Room of the Union. A STUDENT RECTI BULY by Sae Moeen and Jeanine Gilman on 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murray Hall.
FASHION SHOW given by Delta Sigma
wheel will begin at 8 i n the 8 Room of the
hotel.
TOMORROW: STUDENT RECITAL to Kimberley Kennedy will begin at 8 in Swartworth Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHELTEES will host a disco dance at 8 in the Walnut Room of the Union.
SUNDAY: A COMEDY MATINEE entailed "America Laughs: Film Comedy from 1913 to 1958" will begin at 1 a.m. p.m. at Whitson School Auditorium, 17th and Arlington High School, where the program on music at 2 p.m. in the Contemporary Gallery in the Museum of Art.
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University Daily Kansan
Off-campus students to elect own senator
Bv CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
Although 50 percent of the students at the University of Kansas live off campus, these students for the first time will choose their own student senator next month.
Spending limits for all of the campaigns have been established in the rules of the Student Senate. Student body presidential and vice president candidates are
The off-campus seat, established by the Student Senate last spring, is one of 107 senate seats, 12 class offices and two senate offices to be filled following the Feb. 14 and 15 elections. The off-campus senator was appointed last semester.
Mitchelson said he was more concerned about low voter turnout than with a lack of candidates. Ten percent of the student body was also against his 's election for the present administration.
The off-campus seat will allow students who live off campus to elect someone in a similar living arrangement to represent them.
The Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association, the Association of University Residence Centers and the Panhellenic organization supplied with a seat in the Senate. It is up to the organization to fill that seat, John Mitchelson, Senate Elections Committee
Mitchelson said, "A lot of people may not even know there is an off-campus Senate seat open. This way, they have the same opportunity to run as students in other living groups."
Candidates must either pay a $3 fee打印 or submit 50 signatures of their constituents to place their names on the ballot. The candidates will print for these offices is Monday at 5 p.m.
He said, "A lot of graduate students don't seem to have time for Senate. They have half a million excuses for not running. I'm not saying that's good or bad."
Candidates for the senate seats are allowed to spend three cents per constituent or $35, whichever is more. All candidates are required to submit a financial audit to the elections committee within two weeks after the election.
Nunemaker seats are available to freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The 27 seats are divided into five geographical districts.
"We are concentrating on publicity," Mitchelson said. "Also, I contacted each organized living group for a member to serve on the elections committee."
Mitchelson expects a crowd of candidates to file on the last day. However, he said there had been no nominations for the seven graduate student seats last fall.
Mitchelson said he had two reasons for recruiting his committee members in that
"Number one, I needed the help," he said.
"Number two, I thought if someone in a house or hall were involved in the elections, I might stir up some interest. I hope it works."
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Friday, January 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Men eye NCAA marks
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
Bob Timmons, KU head men's track coach, could be looking past the opposition in KU's second indoor meet tomorrow in Allen Field House.
Timmons doesn't mean to belittle North Texas State and Wichita State universities, KU's opponents, but he is more concerned with qualifying his athletes for the NCAA Indoor Championships Mar. 9-10 in Detroit.
"At this point in our schedule," Timmons said, "we don't have as many guildifiers for nationalists as usual.
"Saturday, we'll be trying to get people qualified. We want to do it now because next week (in the Oklahoma Track Classic at Oklahoma City) we'll have
some real pressure on us. Qualifying then will be an absolute must."
So far only two Jayhawks have met the NCAA standards. Kevin Newell has qualified in the 440-yard dash and Jeff Lynch is just over the pole vault requirement by six inches.
"IM DISAPPOINTED so far," Timmons said. "I'm not displeased with the athlete. We just got started too late. I had to explain with what's happened in our workouts."
"From finals to the second week in January, we went without a team workout. This program can never afford to do that again. Because of the bad weather across the country most of our athletes had no place to train properly."
"I'm hopeful that we can pick things up a little bit this weekend. We don't know a
lot about the other two teams, but I'm more concerned about our own improvement. We're not in very good shape and we need a conference meet is just a month away."
However, distance runners Bruce Coldsmith, Rick Enzs and Paul Schultz are sidelined with minor ailments and will miss the triangular.
THE JAHYAWKS could get a boost from freshman spinner Deen Hogan and freshman jumper Sanya Owalbol, both of whom may return from the injured list. Hogan has recorded KU5 best mark in the league and Owalbol has the best triumph.
Field events are scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. and the running events at 6:30. Oklahoma State also was entered in tomorrow's meet, but later scratched.
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Women expect to win 2nd meet
By CARLOS MURGUIA
It isn't a question of whether KU's women's track team will win tomorrow's quadrangular meet. What is in doubt is KU's margin of victory.
Snorts Writer
At least that's the way coach Teri Anderson views the match-up against North Texas State, Wichita State and Dodge City Community College in Allen Field House. Field events will start at 5:30 p.m. and running events at 6:30 p.m.
"I expect the team to win the meet." Anderson said. "It's not that the other teams are weak. It's just that we are so hard and aggressive, we don't think we will be pushed that much."
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KU is expecting competition from North Texas State's Jule Bergeron in the 60- and 300-yard runs and Ileanne Hocking in the 1,000-yard run.
Dodge City's best hopes for high finishes are Lawrence's Pat Miller in the long jump and Juanita Neff in the 600-yard run. Wichita State's Helene Kimbrugh could be a threat in the 600. The Shockers also have a strong shot putter, Natalie Polk.
KU HAS already qualified in six events for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for women's nationalists and Anderson said she would teach them a lesson. Learn members would qualify tomorrow.
One RU athlete who won't have a chance of qualifying at tomorrow's meet will be All-American and American record holder in 300-yard run, Shelia Calmese. Calmese is still nursing a hamstring that also kept her out of last week's meet.
"Michelle Brown and Maureen Finholm both have excellent chances of qualifying in the mile," Anderson said. "And, if the team had a good chance of winning, of then there could be some more qualifiers."
Representing KU in the 60-year hurdles will be Lori Lowry and Gwen Poss. Both Lowrey and Poss already have qualified for national.
KU's sprint event entrants will be led by Lori Green and Amy Miles. Will run in the 60-yard dash while Green will run in both the 60- and the 300-yard run. Green has
already qualified for nationals in both of these events.
KU WILL BE represented by the Vicki Simpson and Deane Horn in the 601; participant numbered #142.
Debbie Hertzog and Wendi Warner are scheduled to compete in the 1,024-yard run. Hertzog, Warner, Brown and Finholm are KU's two-mile relay team.
For the first time this season, a three-mile race will be run. KU's entrants will be
Michigan State loses by 1
Michigan State superstar Earvin Johnson, who scored the six last Sipart points — a second inning goal — on Monday.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Fresnau Keith Smith sank a free throw with no time last left to give Michigan a 49-48 upset in the victory over fourth-ranked Michigan State.
Competing in the field events will be KU record holder Linda Newell and Deby Douglas in the shot put, KU's long jumpers will be Shawn Corwin, Bev Fuller and Miles. Fuller and Corwin are also competing in the high jump.
NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE First Regular Meeting of the Semester
For time and place, come to the N.A.A. office.
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--the game-fouled Smith as the freshman drove to the basket for a shot.
Then they tried to work the ball in for a final shot. Smith drove toward the basket and Johnson slapped his arm as the freshman tried to shoot.
With the score at 48, Michigan got the ball, worked the clock down to 44 seconds and called a time out. The Wolverines then scored the clock up to 15 seconds and called another time out.
After a heated protest from Michigan State Coach Jude Heathete, Smith took his game-winning shot and was mobbed by the capacity crowd at Crisler Arena.
sua films
(1939)
Friday & Saturday,
January 26 & 27
GONE WITH THE WIND
Dir. Victor Fleming; with Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland. *w*:330 & *7-45*. Friday will be shown in the Forum Room.
Midnight Movie:
(1968)
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
(1977)
Monday, January 29 BETWEEN THE LINES
Dir. George Romero; with Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea. The Complete Uncertainty. 12:10 am.
Dir. Joan Micklin Silver ("Hester Dir., John Micklin Silver ("Hester with) John Gwen, Wellen, insynday Crouse, Jeff Wellen, insynday Crouse, Jeff the ABSJuryes: 7:30-8:30 & the ABSJuryes: 7:30-8:30
Tuesday, January 30 Film Noir:
Tuesdav. Januarv 30
THE KILLERS
Dir. Robert Siodmack; with Burt Lanker, Ava Gaskin; from The Hemingway short story; Lancasters first film role.
Wednesday, January 31
LA STRADA
(1954)
1854
Dir. Federico Fellini; with Anthony Quinn, Giulietta Masina, Richard Basehart, Italy/subtitles.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
This Column gets much complaint from trots who pay they do not know what we are talking about, or else appraise it as foolishness, mishash and infenitious fraud. Sometimes ago it was supposed to be an act of deservedher and his six or more children. Although offered a loan of money she decided they would pay their own way to buy the property. County but labor and work and obey God's 4th Commandment:“SIX DAYS SHALT THOU LABOR” and depend on Him to bless and provide (What we need is for our children to be FAITH in GOD!) It also told how this Lady recently found a $20.00 bill that promptly proved its way back to the owner. She was then given the million dollars a year by theft and getting evidence that many of their own employees were guilty. Then attention was called to the 5th chapter of the Book of Joshua that told of the STEAL and the terrible judgment of God upon the man his wife, children, life, and possessions. “THE STEAL” and “3223:‘BE SURE YOU FIND YOU OUT!’” Then was quoted the first recorded words of Christ after His baptism, recorded in Matthew and Luke. Then it was reported that EVERY WORD THAT PROCEDEED OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD!” The article closed with quote from John McCarthy: “IF I WASH THE NOT, THOS HAS NO PART WITH ME!”
verae 17: "YE FOOLS AND BLIND . . .
and infemous trach", it is to be feared they fit into Christ's words found in the 2nd of Matthew.
verse 13: "WE POOKED AND BELIED"
verse 24: "YE BLIND GUIDES . . ."
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"SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES!" In Deuteronomy 17:18-20 God says to His People, whom later he will He make Kings and Priests unto Himself: "GET YOURSELF A BIBLE, A LIFE THAT YOU WILL LEARN TO FEAR THE LORD YOUR GOD, TO BE PRIDE PRIDE OUT OF YOUR HEART CAUSING YOU TO THINK YOU ARE BETTER THAN YOUR BRETHREN, AND TOKEEP YOU FROM TURNING ASIDE TO THE NIGHT, AND TO WEAR WITH HIS SUPPORT AND STATUTES, TO THE END YOU AND YOUR CHILDREN MIGHT LIVE A LONG AND BLESSED LIFE IN THE LAND GOD GIVES YOU
Friday, January 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Staff photo by BILL FRAKES
Field House friend
Floyd Temple is a busy man. Besides coaching KU's baseball team, a job he'd done for the past 25 years. Temps serves KU's
athletic department as Physical Plant Director. His 'other' job involves overseeing maintenance of KU athletic facilities.
KU takes streak to KSU Classic
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
Kansas hopes to pull repeat performances in this weekend's Kansas State women's basketball Classic as the Jayhawks play two teams they have already beaten once this season.
KU opens tonight with a 6:30 game against the University of Minnesota. Host-KState will play Texas Women's University in an 8:30 game,
Tomorrow night's action puts Kansas against Texas Women at 6:30 and K-State against Minnesota at 8:30. All games will be played in KSU's Abaun Fieldhouse.
Both Minnesota and Texas Women's have been Allen Field House victims this season for the Jayhawks. KU beat Minnesota 81-63 in its home opener in November, Women's women to Kansas 83-62 two weeks ago.
Kansas has posted a 17-4 record, including nine straight victories. The Jayhawks have outscored their opponents in those nine games 795-529 for a per game average of 88 points. KU is ranked 19th this week in the NFC West and last appearance in the noll for several weeks.
"We're executing better and our defense is sharper," she said yesterday. "I hope that will create a different climate on the floor of the office. We'll clubcubs (from than the previous games)."
Minnesota, 7-8, recently upset Draphe University. Drake, who dropped out of the top 20 this week, has been one of the four most helpful KU, in a game in Iowa in December.
The Gophers are led by Linda Roberts, who scored 20 points in her team's earlier loss to KU. Washington said Roberts was a winner over Minnesota's biggest scoring threat.
in freshman guard Merry Johnson. Johnson, who Washington tried to recruit, scored 22 points to TWU against KU two weeks ago.
KU has a scoring punch of own in three Jayhawks who are averaging in double figures, Lynette Woodard has a 30 point team. KU has two points Wednesday night against Wichita State.
Texas Women's also has a scoring threat
Adrian Mitchell owns a 18-point per game average and 5.29 Holden has a 14-point per game average.
'Hawks to face Huskers
Kansas travels to Lincoln tomorrow for a regional television televised basketball game
Both teams are coming from Wednesday night victories. KU, with a strong defense and balanced scoring, beat Iowa State 80-71, Nebraska traced in victory Oklahoma 74-68.
KU coach Ted Owens said he would use the same starting line-up against the Cornerskins that he did again in 2016. Troy Davis, Dariqki Deski, David Valentine and new starter Brad Sanders.
The Cornhuskens are expected to start with 6-8 field Carl McPike, who scored 21
KU raised its overall record to 10-7 and is now tied for second place in the Big Eight conference race with Colorado with a 2-3 win. The team will be in a five-way tie for first with a 3-2 record.
points against the Sooners, 6-7 forward Andre Smith and guards Mike Naderer.
"The teams in the league are so close in ability," he said, "and playing in your home environment gives you just a bit more of an advantage.
"But when you already have an outstanding team like Nebraska, that little
On days when KU's men's basketball team is playing, Floyd Temple might be at Allen Field House from 7:30 a.m. until midnight.
By TONY FITTTS
Temple likes 'other' job
Sports Writer
During the day, while Ted Owens is worrying about whether the Jayhawks will play well enough to win that night, Temple is worrying about whether the court will be clean, or the right names will be on the scoreboard.
During the game, while Owens stalks the sidelines, yelling at the officials and urging on his players, Temple sits with the KU police chief high above the arena floor, scanning the building with a pair of cameras, looking for problems in the crowd.
After the game, when Owens is talking to reporters, Temple is supervising the cleanup of the Field House. Owens may leave an hour or so after the game. Temple and his crew often stay until 12:30 a.m., just picking up the "big stuff" from the arena. It takes three days to get the place swept and mopped in preparation for the next event.
"This is a perfect working situation. There's no rigid schedule — I just get here around 7:30 and go when needs to be done. Eight-to-five would be boring."
TEMPLE, WHO WILL be 5 on Feb. 3, has been head baseball coach at KU since 1964. But his "other" job, as Physical Plant manager of an athletic department, also keeps him busy.
THE PHYSICAL PLANT Director is responsible for the maintenance of and physical planning for all indoor and outdoor facilities operated by the athletic department. This involves coordinating the work of staff with the needs of the athletic program.
"If all I had to do was coach baseball," he said, "it would drive me up the wall. There's nothing I can't do."
His job with the athletic department keeps Temple busy year-round. But the coach demands that he is also on the sidelines.
He has been plant director for the past four years. Before that, Temple was an orphanage.
Temple is well-suited for the job. He has been associated with KU athletics since 1948, when he transferred here from Cofinley College. College to continue a baseball career.
Twenty-five years as head baseball coach make Temple the longest-tempered active Kansas head coach. Only F.C. "Pho" (now F.C.) has won more than 50 years, coaches at Kansas for a longer time.
He earned letters in football and baseball at Kansas before graduating with a B.S. in
Skills developed during these years of coaching are useful in coordinating maintenance work, Temple said. He stresses the importance of "teamwork, loyalty and pride" in maintenance as well as on the baseball diamond.
"WE HAVE A unique maintenance staff
here," Temple said. "They have a little more talent than the normal maintenance crew. One of them specializes in carpentry, knitting, and leatherworking, and graphics for the athletic department."
"But when a big job needs to be done, like cleaning up the football stadium, everyone knows it."
"We have an outstanding crew, with a great deal of pride in what they do. I give the credit for any success in this position to the personnel."
The position of plant director was created to fill a gap which had grown along with the program. Temple assumed duties which included working as an assistant迪格 Messier, assistant athletic director for business. Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director, was also responsible for some of the work.
"He has seen the development of the facilities and how they got to where they are today. Messer said. "This past experience helped me understand the ability to solve problems more quickly."
Waugh said that the position was ideal for both Temple and the athletic department.
He said that it would be unconventional to hire a coach for a sport like golf or baseball who would only be actively coaching and recruiting for a few months out of the year.
BEING PHYSICAL Plant Director doesn't interfere too much with his coaching duties, according to Temple. He said he has never been on the time as coaching football, for example. One of Temple's biggest worries is Allen Field House. The building is in use 6:30 in the morning until 10 at night, with acclimatization from jogging to varsity basketball games.
Temple himself probably spends as much time in Allen Field House as anyone. His office is located in the southeast corner of the second floor, but he may often be through the corridors of the Field House, looking for something that needs to be done.
The large number of events scheduled in the Field House, Temple said, and their public nature expose the building to the public more than any other University building. The more time keeping the building clean than they spend on almost any other project.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sports Roundup
Men tankers to CU
After a convincing 82-29 victory over Oklahoma State last weekend, the KU men's swimming team travels to Boulder to take on Colorado in a dual meet today.
"I thought he had a good all-around effort," KU coach Bill Spahn said. "Dave was one of the freestyle races against probably the best competition in the Big Eight. Steve Graves also had two good races and Rick Jenks swam really well on the relays and 90-yard
"I expect Nebraska to swim a good
kemp said. They finished third in the
100-meter race."
"I hope we swim as well this weekend and we did against Oklahoma State," Spahn told reporters. "We'll have to contend with the altitude. Colorado also has a fine team. They're a lot like Iowa State—they don't have a lot of people, they have some good individuals."
Swimmers face NU
KU, now 3-2 in dual meets, may need a similar effort against the Buffaloes.
The RU women's swimming team will face stiff competition when it travels to Lincoln tomorrow to face Nebraska in a dual meet.
Nebraska, according to Kansas coach Cary Kempt, is a talented squad capable of winning.
before, so they definitely have a lot of talent."
KU won the Big Eight last year and defeated Nebraska earlier this season by finishing third to Nebraska's fourth in the Nebraska Invitational in December.
The Jayhawks will, however, be swimming at less than full strength because Erin McMorrow and Gladney Nohinek will not make the trip because of illnesses.
Nevertheless, Kermp said he hoped his squad would continue to improve and quality more swimmers for the Association of Women's Athletics for Women's national meet in March.
"The competition will be good enough," he said, and we think there is chance that I can win.
Gymnasts hit road
The men's and women's gymnastics teams will both be on the road this weekend.
The men travel to Cedar Falls with a dual meet with Northern Iowa tonight and then head to Normal for a double dual with the University of Southern Illinois University tomorrow.
KU's women face Oklahoma State and Texas A&M tomorrow in Stillwater. Okla.
"Northern Iowa isn't particularly strong. Lock BLOOD, men's gymnastics coach, said "Southern Illinois and Illinois are the best." We have, we have, so it should be a competitive meet.
The women will have to contend with a nationally ranked team for the second week in a row. Oklahoma State currently is ranked 12th in the nation.
STUDENT NOTICE SPRING 1979 ELECTIONS
All Out of Town
S.P.I
Sigma Alpha Epsilon #5
delta Chi
angle
Delta Tau Delta
Alpha Phi Alpha
6 seats
4
5 seats
Templin
Lewis
1 6 seats
Hashinger Kappa Sigma
McCollum Alpha PhI
Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Delta PI
Delta Upsilon Delta Delta Delta
Sigma Nu Delta Gamma
Corbin
All Scholarship Halls
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Sigma Chi
Kappa Alpha Theta
Beta Theta PI
Acacia
2 5 seats
Ellsworth
Nalsmith
Evans Scholars
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
Phi Kappa Theta
Alpha Gamma
Alpha Kappa Lambda
PI Kappa Alpha
3 5 seats
Oliver
PI Beta Phi
Phi Kappa Psi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Phi Kappa Sigma
Phi Delta Theta
Phi Gamma Delta
Alpha Tau Omega
Elections For Student Body President, Vice-President, 107 Student Senate Seats, And Class Officers Will Be Held On February 14th & 15th
TO RUN FOR THE SENATE OR A CLASS OFFICE
1) Pick Up Declaration Of Candidacy At Student Senate Office (Level 3, Suite 105B,
Kansas Union).
2) Have The Dead Of Your School Or College Certify Your Enrollment And Year In That
School's College.
3) Return Your Enrollment No Later than 5 pm on Monday, January 29th.
3) Return Your Enrollment No Later Than 5 pm On Monday, January 29th
STUDENT SENATE SEATS OPEN
Architecture 2
Business 4
Education 8
Engineering 8
Fine Arts 7
Journalism 3
Law ... 2
L.A.&S. ... 15
* Nunemaker ... 27
Pharmacy ... 2
Social Welfare ... 2
**University Specials ... 2
Graduate ... 24
***Off Campus ... 1
*To be Elected According To Districts Shown On The Map.
***Any Student Who Has A School Code Classification Of(z).
***Any Student Who Does Not Live In An Organized Living Group.
CLASS OFFICERS SEATS OPEN
Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Class Officers (President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer).
ALL CANDIDATES: YOU MUST ATTEND A SPECIAL MEETING (SUNDAY FEBRUARY 4TH, AT 7:30 PM IN THE FORUM ROOM OF THE KANSAS UNION) TO APPROVE THE PROOF OF BALLOT AS WELL AS GO OVER LAST MINUTE ELECTION POINTS. IF YOU DO NOT ATTEND THIS MEETING, THE BALLOT WILL BE PRINTED AS THE PROOF HAS COME TO US.
8
Friday, January 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Brewer & Shipley, Cox give lively show
1978
Brewer & Shipley
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
Lawrence Opera House, 644 Massachuset st.
From that point on, the two, who now make their homes in the Ozark Mountains, served up a feast of new songs, old favorites and requests shouted from the hungry
Spare Time
Night Life
- Cole Tuckey, Feb. 2-3.
- Lost Gonzo Band, Feb. 1.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
851 Break, Jan. 26.
• Fast Break, Jan. 2R
- George Thorgood and the Destroyers;
Fast Break, Jan. 28.
"Indian Summer" and "Watchtower"
were two such requests. According to
Michael Brewer, the song "Watchtower" is
one of the songs a regular request at
most of their concert.
Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St.
- Claude Williams and the Gaslite Gang
i.e. 26/27
Opening their country rock show with what they consider to be their only folk song, "Do a Small Favor for Me," Brewer & Shipley kept the show rolling with their hits, "Crested Butte," "Tarkirk Road" and "One Toke Overse The Line."
By MARK L. OLSON
"60 STATES of Freedom" ended the evening of country rock for the team of Bowie.
BUT THE DUO that once called Kansas City, Mo., its home pulled favorites from its eight albaurea and left no doubt with those who cared about professionalism that helped make it famous.
Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
Skunk Valley Boys, Jan. 26-27
- Alice Cooper, Feb. 19, 8 p.m., Kemper Arena.
- Tel Aviv String Quartet, featuring Yona Ettinger, clarinetist, Jan. 27, 8 p.m., White Concert Hall, Washburn University.
Kansas City
Concerts
Their performance last night was the result of that experience and achievement.
- Willie Nelson, Feb. 25, 8 p.m., Municipal
- Boston, March 12, 8 p.m., Municipal Auditorium.
they neared the end of their show, they broke into a series of up-beat songs that brought the audience back to life. "Wichi Tai To" was the last song of their regular album in a standing ovation from the crowd that brought the two back for one more song.
Theatre
Both Brewer and Tom Shipley appeared relaxed and almost nonchalant on the stage, which was nearly bare except for two speakers and the performers' microphones.
- Lynette and the Journey Clok by Bri
A2301, KU Theatre for Young People, Feb. 3,
2017.
From their beginnings as solo performers in the early 1960s, to appearances on the "Tonight Show" and in Carnegie Hall in the early 1970s, their performers have become a f-honed act.
Cox opened the night with his brand of bawdy rhythm and blues, and had members of the audience tapping their toes from his first number.
A frequent performer in Lawrence and Kansas City, Cox nearly stole the show before Brewer & Shipley had a chance to take the stage.
The snowstorm that hit Lawrence late yesterday afternoon may have kept a few people away, but the more than 500 who made it to the concert were treated to tight, warm, professionally-run shows by both acts.
It has been a long time since they played together at the Vanguard coffeehouse in Kansas City, but Brewer & Shipley and Danny Cox put on a dynamite one-two punch performance in the Kansas Union Ballroom last night.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Between the Lines, dir by Joan Mickin
Silver Jan 29, 7:30 and 9:30
- The Killers, dir by Robert Sidick with
* La Strada, dir by Ferdiece Fellini with
* La Strada.
- Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, by Tennessee Williams, Lawrence Community Theatre, Jan. 26-27, 3:00 p.m., Jan. 28, 2:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets.
- Gone With The Wind, dir. by Victor Fleming, with Clark Gable and Vivian Leigh, Jan. 26-27. 3.30 and 7.45, plus Night of the Living Dead, midnight movie.
And at one point, during another song, "Brain Damage," they stopped singing, but continued playing their guitars. It appeared to be a moment of forgetfulness on the part of the two, but they recovered so smoothly it almost seemed as if they had planned it.
Films
- Far From Vietnam, dir. by Goddor,
Renaus, Varda, Marka, invens, Ivons, Louchand,
and others.*
KANSAN Review
During the course of the $1\frac{1}{2}$ hour show, the two performers, who have been a team since 1968, mixed tales of past road shows and color-off anecdotes to entertain the crowd.
SUA
THEY TOLD of a show in Indianapolis, where an elderly man fell out of his front row seat just as they strummed the first chords of "Watchtower."
'Magic' nothing but cheap tricks
Rv.IEFFGREEN
Reviewer
Despite tolerable performances from Anthony Hopkins and, astonishingly from Ann-Margaret, "Magic" does not live up to the pretensions of director Richard Attenborough. He is a master of his craft, but pretense. And it fails on an artistic level because Attenborough makes numerous unappeasable concessions to the commercial necessity of eliciting squails of fright.
Review
The significance of the title escapes me, for the main character, interpreted by Hopkins, is in fact a ventriloquist who has bombed as a magician but who ultimately achieves recognition as a straight man for a Charlie McBeth-like dummy. His success is due to his supposedly novel ability to communicate articularly amusing comments in the mouth of the dummy.
Thus, Corky Witthers (Hopkins) finds himself on the verge of fame and fortune in the form of a pilot special on NBC, but everything goes awry when he refuses to undergo the training. Meanwhile, his co-pilots, Corky fears that he will be found to be mentally
unbalanced, and with good reason. Corky's tortured psyche has become meshed with the dummy to which he owes his success, and this comes as no surprise, for this film is a highly anticipated and livestock reports. From this point on, every development in the film's plot is easily anticipated. Surprise, essential to successful horror films, is nonexistent here.
The plot's unbearable monotony should ideally be mitigated by the lofty statement of the relation between the author and his subjects, to his dummy, that is, his art of creative impulse. Yet the seemingly gratious introduction of hackneyed symbols, such as the all too numerous shots of Corky starring in *Melancholy*, a satirical rob these scenes of their integrity, leaving the impression
that they were added at the last minute as an appeal to intellectuals in the audience.
All that is left, then, is the gore, and there is enough to satisfy the most demanding connoisseurs. Attenborough is not content to alert us to the fact that Coryk has murdered his agent, played by an unimpressive Burgess Meredith, and so subjects us to a highly improbable and thoroughly repignant scene in which Corky bidegones his agent to death with the dummy. Nothing is left to the imagination, but he does it. In the burlesque. This would be perhaps excusable in an unabashed horror flick, but in this film, which pretends to some higher significance, it is inappropriate.
The screenplay not the product of William Goldman, Were author of the novel of which the film is an adaptation, its shortcomings could be explained as an incept screenwriter's failure to fully realize the potential of a struggle for identity lies not in Corky's mind, but in the film's script, who self-consciously vacilates between the commercial appeal of gore and the desire to convey a noble message.
Recitals
Student Recital Series
- Sue Moen, oboe, and Janine Gilman,
clarinet. 12:68, 8 p.m., Swarthout.
- Robert Neu, clarinet, Jan. 29, 8 p.m.
Swarthwout.
- Kim Kennedy, voice, Jan. 27, 8 p.m.
Swarthout.
SUA plans 2 trips; 2 others canceled
Although it is without a chairman, the SUA travel committee is planning two spring break trips. Two ski trips have been canceled.
Hal Eden, SAU adviser, said yesterday that Tim Stites, the former travel chairman, did not return to school this semester. But he said the staff would be given the decisions that Stites would have made.
Spring break ski trips to Vail and Winter Park. College, were canceled because of cost issues.
"It didn't work because there was a lack of initiative and availability of places to stay," he said. The organizer did not call early enough to make reservations at the ski
The Vull trip would have cost $250 a person, Eden said, and SUA decided that was too much.
Kevin Keling, organizer of the Summit,
Colo., skip trip over spring break, said he
would be happy to see him again.
The Winter Park trip also was not planned well, Eden said.
Because the other two ski trips fell through, arrangements for a trip to Summit, Canyon Lake and Snowbasin were made.
"I worked mostly by myself, or with Hal Eden," he said.
3 choirs to perform in KC
Keiling said he had planned for 98 people. After finding that the other trips would not work, 36 more places were added to the Summit trip. The trip now is sold out.
Three KU choirs will join the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra next week in two performances of Benjamin Britten's "War" and Richard Strauss' "Symphony No. 30." p.m. in the Music Hall in Kansas City, Mo.
"We budget across people to absorb the cost of advertising and transportation. Some trips have to make money to cover ad expenses that were those that were canceled." he said.
He said he began working on the trip last spring by contacting renters in Breckenridge.
About 120 members of the Chamber Choir, University Singers and Concert Chorale will sing the work, which also was performed by the combined chorems and the KU Faculty
The planner of the Padre Island spring break trip Janel Ringer. Quinter senior, assistant captain.
"The trip has been planned in the past, so we had a pretty good idea of what to do," she said.
Eden also said any extra money was used to support other activities sponsored by SUA, including the crafts and forum programs which usually lose money.
Eden said the SUA travel program was not subsidized and that 37 people were required.
"I think we'll have no problem filling the remaining soos." she said.
Ringer said 186 spaces were available and two busloads were already full.
James Ralston, director of choral activities, said the choira rehearsed the "War Responders" choirs and said Maurice Pennis, music director of the Kansas City Philharmonic, will conduct the singers in rehearsals Sunday and Monday to prepare for the first performance Tuesday.
Chamber and Symphony Orchestras in December.
Staff photo by BiLL FRAKES
Touche
Steven Mokotsky, graduate student in theatre, appears to taunt his partner as they rehearse for the Feb. 23 production of "Romeo and Juliet."
Cast crosses foils with fencing champ
Staff Reporter
By RHONDA HOLMAN
The audience gasps as Tybalt lungs past Rome's protecting arm and slays Mercurio in one final thrust of the deadly, silver sword.
Only the actors and their director know the hours of practice spent incorporating the expertise of a world champion fencer into the action.
Audre Sadure, 39, who won the World Master's Championship of Fencing in Germany, directed by the director of the KU production of "Romeo and Juliet," and the play's cast in achieving a sense of reality in the on-screen performance. The uniform sharp, unupped swords in the play.
SINCE WINNING the championship, Sudre has worked as a free-lance technical advise for staged fight scenes in movies and in rare cases, university productions.
"I just feel like the fight work is very important," said Wright. "It has to be authentic and theatrically exciting for the audience."
Sudre, born in Casablanca, Morocco,
said that he strove to achieve a historical authenticity about the flairting.
"My job is not only to stage the exchanges but to develop that feeling. I concentrate on a few things and in those few movements, I try to get them to have good technique, the feeling of the mood of the audience, the feeling of the fencing combat of that period."
"In the case of a cast with no experience, you try to teach them a mood," he said. "Jack Wright decided to do his 'Romeo and Juliet' with a certain feeling pertaining to that period—a roughness and earthy feeling."
SUDRE SAID that fencing took about 15 years to learn successfully, and that what he did with the cast was merely to
In addition to his world fencing championship, Sudre also holds black boards in bjuo, alki-do, karate and kendo. He is a free-lance photographer, a pilot and a former member of the Cornell University theatre arts faculty.
stage a fight and minimize the dangers of actual fencing on stage.
"At this point in the rehearsing, I have to take out the emotion of the action to master the movements," he said, but his cuts on his arms from the last four days.
"The blades are sharp. It's very easy to have an accident. A great deal of concentration is necessary to avoid it."
Wright said he agreed that safety was a problem when seeking authenticity in combat scenes.
SUDRE SAID the weapons were also as close to being historically correct in design as possible, although the blades of the play's time were a bit heavier and wider than the ones being used in the KUK production.
cense weapons permit a lot more activity, action and passionate moves than the actual weapons of the time would," he said.
Sudre said that few fencers experts did technical advising, but the good ones were able to make it a living because of the great demand.
He said that he had learned to work with directors and respect their individual ideas about a production.
"I've helped stage 'Romeo and Juliet' six or seven times and I never done it the same way. You always want me to do it. Whatever the director wants me to do, I do. They'll suggest something and if it's a good idea, then I'll transform the idea into
Sudre said that he presented the movements without indicating that they were dangerous and that the cast learned quickly, without fear.
"We've had maybe four days to work with the cast and even at this point, they're good enough to go on stage," he said.
Friday, January 26, 1979
9
Regents protest Carlin opposition
TOPEKA—Two members of the Kansas Board of Regents said yesterday that Gov. John Carlin's opposition to their resupply was motivated by partisan politics.
The two regents, Republicans Walter Hiersteiner of Fairway and Gee Smith Jr. of Larned, appeared yesterday before the State Senate Select Committee on Appointments. The committee, which reviews recommendations to make its recommendation Monday.
Hirstenetler said, "I think the result of Governor Carlin's strong desire to name the regents himself has been to inject more partnership into the matter than isISM."
After the committee makes its recommendation, the appointments will go to the
Senate floor for debate and a vote, probably on Wednesday. The Senate must approve appointments to state agencies by a simple majority.
Hiersenher and Smith, whose terms expired Dec. 31, were reappointed to four-year terms by former Gov. Robert F. Bennett five days before he left office. Carlin, however, said he had the right to name the new regents and would appoint a new chairperson at the Center and MacDonald of Hutchinson if the Senate rejected Bennett's nominees.
Both Smith and Hiersteer said that outgoing governors traditionally had filled vacancies that occurred during their terms that regents usually served second terms.
the Tel Aviv. String Quartet, in Topeka. Sat. Jan. 27th
Departure from Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive 6:45 p.m.
Hillel invites you to hear
Return from Topeka around 11:15 p.m.
Admission $2.50 students w/ID $5.00 w/out ID
For more information and rides contact Joey at the Hillet office 864-3948 or Ace Allen 841-2963 evenings
Smith said, "In the past 40 years no reagent appointed to a second term has not been confirmed. In fact, every governor whose term was expiring has appointed the regents whose terms expired a few days before his own."
strengthening of the board's integrity and independence," Heistersteer said. "And my not being confirmed would erode that integrity and independence."
Hierater侮し the rejection of the appointments would hurt the functioning of the
Despite the controversy over his appointment, Herstinger said, he thought he was being saddened. "It's not an issue."
"My confirmation will be a great
"I would have no difficulties whatsoever serving on the board under Governor Carlin," he said.
INTRAMURAL
BASKETBALL
FREE THROW
CONTEST
(preliminaries)
8 a.m.-12 noon
SAT. JAN. 27
Robinson North Gym
No entry fee
No pre-registration
Just show up
We are the fastest growing Pizza chain in the Country. We presently have 21 locations in operation with several more under contract, and we have more management positions available than people to fill them. If you are looking for a future with unlimited potential and have drive and determination you owe it to yourself to contact.
Rick 711 W.23rd St.
Managers start at $1100 plus per month.
---
Godfather's Pizza
Sun. 28th at 2:00 p.m.
Pizza
Foosball Tournament (Doubles)
Qualifying Tournament for ACU-1 Regional Tournament which will be held in Warrensburg, Missouri Feb. 1, 2, 3
1st place Winners will receive an expense paid trip to the Regional Entry Fee: $2.00 per person (Must be a student to enter)
To enter: Leave name and phone number at SUA office or call Randy Phillips at 841-6498
Now in stock AT
A COMPLETE LINE OF SUPPLIES FOR THE GRAPHIC ARTIST
WATERCOLOR
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LETRASET
bainbridge
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speedball
pickett
kohinoor
AND MORE!
KANSAN WANT ADS
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Aecomodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daly Kansan are offered to all students without regard to sex. Please contact the Admissions Department ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRE HALL
Booting, room-to-room, kitchen, one-bedroom flat
for rent or lease in a spacious building with
nursery and downtown. No juniors. Days 823-915.
For more information call (718) 674-3000.
--one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
power
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$4.00 $4.25 $4.50 $4.75 $5.00
CLASSIFIED EATES
FOR RENT
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.
--at 0099 Must Be there, Alba. 1-26
ERRORS
The IDK will not be responsible for more than two inceptive insertions. No allowance will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Nerd a roommate. 823-60 month. Call 841-5112.
1,790
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be played in person or by calling the DEB business office at 961-8254.
TOFU Fresh Organic biofiction in Laerwern
new at Newbury Mercantile 700 Lane 1-426
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen zenic daily, 6 P.M. in Chicago's Intrepid Museum
915 N. Michigan Ave., 212-727-4080, ZIN-
127 Gift Center, 84th St., Chicago, IL 60619
Attention all Gracious Artists! We've got a comprehensive list of Gracious Art, Architecture, and Ensemble Compositions in and near at St. Anthony's Office System. 9:30 am - 12:30 pm. 854-3241, 854-3240, 8-96-230-5701, 1-426-90-129-50.
BLOOPI
Topplees Dancers
4:30-10:00
Only at Flamingo
501 N. 9th
N. Lawrence
Employment Opportunities
HILLEL GOIN TO THE TEL. ATV SHRING
IN HILLARY HILL IN NEW YORK.
NIGHT WEAPONS will depart from the Lawrence
Station within ground 11.15. Admission $20 per
person and ticket fee to the HilieL
station and ticket fee to the Atv
station.
HILLEL TALKS WITH THE CANDIDATES
Bapel & Lotus Law
Barclays Community Center, 917 Highland Dr.
Dr. Anthony G. Harper
MARGARET BERLIN, ROB TOMMISON,
CLARIZER & RON ALLEN, CANDI-
AM & JOHN TROST
speak to the students about their pitfalls if they are elected. Admission is $20 per number. $20 New
Research Assistants. Study assistants needed for research with preschool children. Should have morning or afternoons (for M-TH). 10-20 hrs. Experience required. Employer at 8:30-10:00. Equal Opportunity Employer
Lawrence Club presents 19th Annual Coin
Show, Feb. 3 to May 8, to 8pm, Fri. 4 to 9pm,
to be held at the Lawrence Club. Everyone will be
welcome to sell coins, statues,Everyone welcome. Come enjoy yourself-24
Attention! The Christian Science Organization
of Pittsburgh is offering a $100.00
6-Pallet in Danish Church You are always
ready to make your contribution.
Sul d'anticipation Thursdays, 1f. at 1st at Park
Reserve Center Kick-off. For information,
contact us at info@parkreserve.com.
EXTRA NICE 2 BED room apt. Located in wooded area with wood deck picture window, vaulted ceiling, enclosed entry, dainishware, weather & waterproofing, 814-309-6178 or 876-258-3618 month, negotiate
FRIENDR HIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENT! BROOKLYN, NY. A spacious apartment, unfurnished, from $179. Two luxury rooms, large wells in closets, group parking. On KU this room is 32 feet by 20 feet, with a balcony and/or an air conditioner or is located at 845-444 or is located at 241 North Front Row. Foyer.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS has an apartment for
$34,000 per month. Call 618-259-7800.
T-31
618-259-7800
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most utilities used, KU and room rear. No pets.
Subject-1 - BR BM (acct or infirm) at Frontier
Subject-2 - BR BM (acct or infirm) at Frontier
first sent no deposit. Call 841-7037. 1:56
Female backups needed for two bedrooms Ant. packs from Praser 887.500 utilities 100 pcs
Ant. 2 BR and efficiency Close to campus. UU-12
Class. Clea, quiet, and comfortable. UU-12
Class. Clea, quiet, and comfortable. UU-12
Soha-Laque Park 25 apartment, 2 balcony, unfurnished,
1-bedroom. Apt. number 443-129 - Lakshmi-
512-421-1244, after 5:26.
One bedroom (for female roommates) Share room with 3 other girls. Bedroom $699 each. 1-268 1-268
Sublease: nice 2 ip, en pts. bus route:
842.757.137. Keep trying.
2-1
One or two residents, male or female, to share
participation of the study with two patients,
with two CAM 1411.
Ronaney wanted $170/mo includes withdrawn
from the lease, 17th, & Alburne AVE.
541-846-2626
3-126
1 or 2 BR Duplex hot-tub. Carried breakfast, butat
dryer, water dishes. N42-57328 1-38
492 JCP 5.5 Cible II: refrigerator/freestat Call
843-7028 Mark or Dave
1-82-768
Two SR DDJRs, Low rent, Newly Renovated
3.2m², dormitory block (please inform Call 859-674-
1014)
Two Bedroom Bath, fit tent-$215 + close. Toilets:
campus .451-7373 1-30
Beautiful 3-bedroom house and 2-bedroom duplex units. Brand new, in good location, call (866) 450-1234.
NEED QUIRT! Completely formatted 1, and 2 days old; apt to private home storage. All electronic items included. All home, separate equipments, windburn fire brigade, two (2) batteries. Mail in proofs. This paid Load. Dispense. No smoking. Call 805-736-4122.
Beautiful, Broad based, 3 bedroom rental, chalet-style property located in the heart of the city; attached garage; energy efficient. Cash on deposit required.
Southwest Lawrence, A dream home. 4 Bed rm,
new curtaining, all drapes and appliance. C.A.
Fam. Rm. w/窗簪. Bee Room. 2 car garage.
Room with qualified response
or students. M1-2864. 1-31
Two Bedroom, 10' hutch behind shuffling center and dressing room available. 25th, Cah-
center or 47th, Guest room.
Finally a Lawrence landlord who cares!
Call Mark Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 842-4411.
Spartan one bedroom furnished apt 35 from Union, Eid pdf. low utilities 842-304-001
FOR SALE
Studio Arti utilizes Paid -1 bk to campus community kitchen and bath. 842-0424 after 7:30 a.m.
Furnished room for rent. Close to Campus. Own kitchen, dish hatch, Utilities paid $75/month.
MUST RENT 2 Bedroom apartment next to cam-
puition and football stadium Cam-842-805-1
-130
Christian Male for $2 Bedrooms Apartment, Ap-
teryx 843-692 843-692
Three bedridden, unfurnished homes, currently hosting the elderly and the handicapped, need no bedsurfaces $722 a month; instead, bedding is provided by the agency.
Apartment at Park 25 for sublease. Make good
call. 842-7143 after 5.
One bedroom furnished apartment close to marmalade
one bedroom furnished apartment close to marmalade
iana is 7 weeknight between 6:30-8:00, 1-30
Christian hearing Very clear to campus. Call 812-6000 between 2-5 p.m. Keep trying.
Roommate to share 2 BR House. Close to Campus.
$85/month. Includes air conditioning. 841-489-1250
Prodiger Modelling Bass Guitar with strings, cordless, headphones, microphone, accessories, cards and covers. Very good condition.
$500.00
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure to check out our weekly notes—1-1 at Asskudy guide. 2 for class preparation 31 For exam preparation. *New Analysis Cities*. Mala Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore. If you wish. Mala Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore.
Sunbirds - Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-persistent.
1021 Mass. 841-7579, seasonally.
1022 Mass. 841-7579
Altruitor, starter and generator. Repeable Battery. Automotive charger. MOTIVE, ELECTRIC. 843-569-2000, 2000 W. 010. 18
Michigan Music Music, 647 Michigan sales and service offices. Instruments Complete line of strings and cello instruments.
Single bed and dresser w/mirror for sale 842:
1812 1-26
74 VAeg, AC, AM-FM 2 answers, 4 good riddle
questions, 13 answers. 60-Hour AC
business at $250/day 5-20 hours business
at $825/day 5-20 hours business
at $425/day
I驻 Moskau guitarists. I have a few nice nice Mountain Top top picks and I'm always ready to play! Merle Travis, Keith & Dan Carrudare, Merle Travis, Cat Sievers, & many others. They are in limited supply. Call Staffer at 917-354-6800 or www.moskauguitars.com
ALLISON. TWO Speaker system, 4U, year warranty, put a scratch. About half year warranty.
Samurai umi, tamer, canoeist dock, rack Trechier,
fishing boat, kayak. Prices vary by boat.
$1200, $1400, $720 Calm B52-7890, after 5.90
16. Darl Mast. 6 Overhudred, also water pump.
18. Darl Mast. 4 Overhudred, also water pump.
20. Pair Play. Rally body, good body needs $15.
22. Pair Play. Rally body, good body needs $15.
Fuji 801 with $5mm f1.4 lens, caen, lens井 and filter L1f, new #81-515
1-26
Sales! Sales! Sales! One techniques fully automatic
Transition System! They could happen up to
100 watt per channel. For information call Mark
43 (866) 252-7497. Don't miss an opportunity!
Call anytime!
Stereo/USB 9 Track, Record Player, A.M. F.M.
Stadium 500, 600, XLt Electr. Fire 41" 240
Wide 500, 600
.
Nordica Ski Boots, Sizz 9. Call Mike at: 811-2695
Heffley-Peard HP-25 Programmable scientific calculator. Like new, with accessories Will take up to 60 minutes of use. (Ship within 48 hours.)
12 x 60 Mobile Home with metal roof, carport,
independent living for students. 841-929-0592
www.mobilehome.com
2. BMI 21-211 speakers. Excellent condition.
Must be fluent in Spanish, inexpensive position.
Must be: 843-6365.
Atlanta puppies, ACK, Be disorient; choose finch
and breed vaccinated. Vaccinated Puppies Shown.
Cooked meat and poultry may be consumed.
Found. Tom Cat. white body, brown head &
black collar. 10& ta. Cat B 481-439 abc
Must sell in immediately--25 watt Technology Recruis-
turn, Turnaround and Receiver Voice Speakers-5125
to 6000. See Offer #329.
Huge Hated Hotel Sale. Lots of good used furniture, antique $97. Mains—to dvnva.
Man's coat 2nd floor Fraser, last week
Rose Winters-864-3624 or drop by 215
Rose Hunters-864-3624
Round of set of keys in front of Spooner Hall,
night of Basketball Game 854-1192-
854-1192-
FOUND
Psychology book at Chi O. fountain. Jan. 24
turned in to police at Hec. 1:30
Pair of olympus with brown frames, new 11th and JIP on sidewalk. Call 841-0758.
Tired OF DORM FOOD? Come to PENTIMENTO on Sundays. 611 Vermont
HELP WANTED
MEN WOMEN JOBS*** CRISE SHIPS *
FREIGHTERS No experience. High pay* on
Europe, Hawaii, Australia, Sea America, Whale,
Pacific Ocean. Job location: 401-6053,
6005 Alesia, Ca. 92800. **4-17
New taking applications for Formula II & Gill
British Research Institute. Apply online at www.
BritishResearchInstitute.com. Apply in person at Vernon Hirst, 1207
Stamford Rd.
Research associate positions available. Aster is seeking a Research Associate to analyze data and perform statistical analyses in a process of an AAVR laboratory test. An equiv degree in a field of quantitative or applied mathematics or a Bachelor's degree in a related field. Send resumes to AVAIR LAB, 230 E. 17th St., New York, NY 10014.
Part-time help needed for our working part-
time position in a food processing plant. Applica-
tes to apply immediately, 28 hours per week,
and pay $1450.
Drivesy Mattel. Must be 18 yrs old, should have驾
driver's license in person. Domestic Sale. Mt. W. 250 Apple
Park. Fax: (316) 798-7474.
70th Sirp private club is now taking applications for cocktail waiters. It informed call Chelsey that the club had a new line.
BAPSTHTTE my home at 23rd St. A. Koch,
817-540-3655, Friday - Saturday 9:30am - 12:30pm
$125.00
Parttime I am looking for help with whole days or afternoon and weekends. Tee experience here.
Wanted: Relable person for after school child care, possible housekeeping. Must have age 18 and up.
Need some Xtra money for this week? Help us do more wardrobe and we'll pay $290. Call 617-543-8190 (for work week) or email resume@tcl.com 1-21
Mali assistant wanted 10.20 hrs per week. Must be able for work study. Study in paris. Please send resume to Mali Assistant, job@maliassistant.org
The University of Kansas seeks candidates for the position of Assistant Professor of Statistics, August 16, 1999 - Full Time. Assistant Professor of Statistics and graduate level courses, some clinical and graduate levels, and graduate level courses in form in coastal and with tenuity string format. Prior experience must include research or extensive utilization of data March 9, 1999. For further information, visit the university's website at http://www.unk.edu/term.html. University of Kansas Law - Kansas University faculty affirmative action emeeeer. Architectural science faculty affirmative action emeeeer. Architecture faculty affirmative action emeeeer. Religion,色理, sex disability, veteran status, and employment history.
LOST
A black wallet but durant enrollment in Hard
auditron. If bound, clean. Mint condition.
641 697 808
Lost Tuesday morning, n T1 calculator 843-
0328
Loet, Jan. 15 in Strong - 1 Red Mitt. Please call
841-1825
2:14
MISCELLANEOUS
THESISK BINDING COPYING - The House of Uther's Quick Copy中心 is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawyers. Let us enquire at 83 NM or phone 832-7160. Thank you.
Free Kitten--small 6 month, old silver silver
kitten. Price: $299.00; available 1-28
Free Kitten--small 4.00 inch, old silver silver
kitten. Price: $299.00; available 1-28
PERSONAL
Gap/Lexile Switchboard, counseling and general information. M41-6472 tf
FREE! Shortcourse in Business / Technical writing, Open to everyone every Thursday from 2:30-2:30 pm every Thursday from 2:30-2:30 pm 112c Summer班. First Session: Intrio to Clear Business/Technical writing 1,
BARRIOE SPECIALS - 4 am, 6 pm, Tues., Thurs.
$150 NAMES DUOYE NIGHT - $150 SAT
NAMES DUOYE NIGHT - $150 SAT
51 PITCIERS every Friday afternoon from 2-4 at the Harbour if
Stuy by Stuybda data for Period Week: 3-14 P.M.
headwear- 2, Medium- 5-16, Large- 5-16
Register for the NIAWI Northwestern Institute
Registration for the NIAWI Northwestern Institute
in April. At the institute, Winter weeks are required.
THE MOFTER-BERS BAND is from Jambalaya
the KEYBOARDING MACHINE. Call 812-5066, 812-9533
or email moftersbers@yahoo.com
GUTTAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexpensive introduction to the art of drawing. Prerequisite: Attempts on Grounds begin Wed. Feb. 7 for adults and juniors. Call Karen Foley Foreclosure 840-213-9777
The Lawmaker's League for the Advancement of Non-Verbal Communication invites the community to touch, ride, wink, and listen. Attendance will not但 but arrive at Harvey Jordan Khan . 1-36
Why did the chicken shop Vermont Street? To get to the Forklifties in Vermont. 7-31
Female roommate wanted $65.00 843-5541 1-31
Spring Break (int'r far) away! Wet Spring Park
or Sniin in Oregon Beach. Call Brad B41-825-3600
Training of a career in Journalism? Attend Matic Job training on Tuesday at 7:00 or 8:00
P陪-Meet me at the Penthouse for some open-
patio. A secret admirer
2-4
Revenue Manager, Thirteenth District, Crown Heights
Branch, NY. Requires Bach's or equiv in Finance or
Accounting, Bachelor's degree, 5 yrs exp in the field,
and 3 yrs of experience in the role. Send resume to:
Thirteenth District, Crown Heights Branch,
NY 11201.
Happy Birthday, Lena. Hold everything fine on the
tender tundra of Kauai. Love Sak!
No you looking for a good time? Call 841-6679
No experience necessary 1-26
Happy Birthday Marr. You don't look too bad
a old lady of 21. Love, Scott. 1-26
RAPPORT, Pramontac IA-20210401 to the
RAPPORT, Pramontac IA-20210401
market-1 or CHARACTERIZED BY HARMONY,
second and offering first for the RAPPORT
and offering first for the President and
KENNIE, View-Presented - 29
SERVICES OFFERED
Rehab. Let me type: your tenor paper, observations,
First Aid Service, Myer, N82, 185-634
PHINING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ursus/Quick Corps Center. Ali is available from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday at Madison, Mn.
EXPERT TUTORIALS MATH 609-1023, call 845-5722
EXPERT TUTORIALS COMPUTER SCIENCE 1008-1023,
call 845-5720
Need help in math or CS? Go to a tutor who can help you with your math or CS problem. You'll need a calculator.
MATH TUTOR M A in math, mathematics, three years professional tutoring training M2-531-MJ
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
TYPING
Babyspay, iy home. Mother of two girls in Meadowbrook will babywalk while you visit her home.
piano Lessons beginning through early advanced-
play age experienced teacher. Please call John
212-834-5060 or email john@philipson.com.
Long grown, Party-sun dresses. Portable-maid to order for easy sanitization. June 1-30.
Typef/Editor, IBM PIM Elite. Quality work.
collection. Mail back; distribution. Wednesdays
8M212F
**DID YOU KNOW?**
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980 tt
7 year experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Excellent job. Law papers, term paper. Mts.
W12. W12.2723
Enriched typetw with scientific background
ISB interface S-select D Call Am 482-317-319
Do all typing on any electric typewriter,
using a service wirerounding. Call Ms Hoyes
813-6564
Experienced Typical term papers, files, mice,
mice traps, mice traps, bloodreading, apocryphing
432-652-9014
HOME FVYING SERVICE 810-327-9655
Home FVYing, Inc. 1405 Main St. Suite 100, Dallas, TX 75210
matthew@homefvying.com 212-578-6800, attn: matthew.fvying.com
First, accept. Paper under 29 paper, one night
at a rate of $30. Call welcome. Call 843-628-5151.
8:30 am - 5:30 pm.
8:30 am - 5:30 pm.
**BWITNING. EDITING. Your nonmagnet, books or term paper edited into an article, you grate your own feedback and improve it through thinking with precision and ammunition. Outlines your ideas and articles also available. Outlines 842-1321**
Term
841-
2-29
Quality typing guaranteed—IBM Selectric T
nenser, thesis, dissertations, mice Carolle 8
1608 2
Discount Typing - 75s a page Call 842-0745 after 5 p.m.
DEAD START NEEDS YOU TO substitute for the team's backup and 2 for your last call each week. I request that you submit a written request by Friday, November 10.
Blanket shared to share 2 babies, with male
partner (age 6 mos) and female partner.
August Feb 14 $10,999.00 (affiliates: Call 518-736-5235)
WANTED
Female Recommence wanted rent $83 a month
1/3 sustails; 842-2611 1:28
Formal teamwork in towels two feet apart quarter-
circle, clean and wash. Call Colleen at 877-250-6144 or
One or two nominations required for attractive Traildale Townhouse in Nepalgute 811-0323
I. Available, quiet, reasonable for spring semester.
II. Includes materials: 840-3245; Call: 840-3245.
Nonwiving females to share house with three
females; 100/month,仗赊 paid; 414-820- 626
Dominique Lisi, 19, rocketed into mind control and murder in *Pulp* (2005), based on a novel by Helen Keller (84-51-14). Nighty, Kevin B. 802-805. Los Angeles, CA. © 2013 John Wiley & Sons.
Female commonly wanted to be BB house,
Bachelor's degree in health sciences or
equiv., Call Kaitlyn or Mike 586-203-9140.
F Grade rooms to share 2 BR. Apt to room:
RH-3862 - RH-3863 all day weekdays
Roommate to share 2 bdrm apt, at Window-
843-1144
1-29
Residents in share homes with two pairs, oakley
and walnut 1/2 of a square-foot homes. Call or visit at
810-743-1256. Call or visit by 810-743-1256.
Gay Male to make large 3 BR apartment with 2
Bathrooms, private kitchen and laundry.
Client area, clean and organized. K82-7571-7
(606) 942-2626
Honeymoon or unanticipated Larry, beautiful,
baby, with a heart of gold. Pleasant
weather. Large room, children and pets
suitable. 850-736-1922. www.houseofthebronx.com
Want someone for parturition but want my own baby? Need a partner who is not preborn. More preferred but not absolutely necessary.
Remonstrate wanted: $75.00 money, utilities
included. One bib from Campus: 8411-8828 - 136
Rent-to-own for right girl in warm, easy conditions, responsibilities, and share utilities. Available on weekdays only.
One roommate for Jayhawk Towers.
All utilities paid for. Coll at 943-854-724-
21.
Four or five reporters, reading primarily from the Hall, iron. (Akil, 641; 862-283. Ask for primacy.)
Male Roommate to share 2 BSP apt, furnished,
utility, dishware, $240 call Matt. Call 6021
6021
Responsible, inexperienced param nurse should be knowledgeable of basic nursing procedures and skills plus officers 842-848-9134 after six a.m. and on weekends.
10
Friday, January 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence market slow for video tape recorders
Video cassette recorders may be the wave of the future, but most Lawrence dealers say sales are slow.
Alen Robertson, owner of Servitronics, Inc. 610, Florida St., said recently he had sold only one record in the last nine months.
"I think it's the thing to come in the future. I don't think it'll catch on right away." he said.
The video cassette recorder is a small machine that attaches to any television set. It can play pre-recorded tapes, DVDs and CDs. You can record television programs on blank tapes.
Robertson said his only sale had been to a couple with a disabled child. He said they wanted to check out videotapes for the child.
Don Harrison, home entertainment buyer for Ed Mardling Stores, said the store had sold only two or three recorders and did not plan to restock.
"In 1978, the industry fell way short of what they thought they'd be selling. The same thing happened to us, that's why we're phasing out," he said.
Harrison said that companies like Paramount Pictures had promised to make a large selection of pre-recorded music, so that only a small number of tapes were made.
People don't want to spend more than $1000 on a recorder, and not have any tanes, he said.
Video cassette recorder sales were
"They aren't fast salesmen because they're pretty expensive, $1,100 to $1,200, but we've sold four or five in the last 45 days." Scales said.
He said the people who bought the recorders ranged from a University professor to a member of a rock band.
better at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts St., according to an employee, Joe Scales.
People who own these machines have the ability to record Home Box Office programs as well as commercial television programs.
The Hairbenders and Company, 1919
24th St., a beauty salon, uses its video recorder to instruct employees and to teach them how to respond according to Debbie Daniels, manager.
John Dennis, general manager of Sunflower Cabinetry, 644 New Hampshire St., said people recording HBO movies didn't interfere with his operation because they couldn't legally sell the tapes.
"We run tapes that show new hair care products and hair styles for the customers. The employees watch tapes of our new haircuts and techniques," she said.
Business classes learn philosophy
By GENE BROWNING
Staff Reporter
"We don't have a policy about this because it's a direct violation of the copyright law. It's a federal offence to break it, and any other program to sell," Dennis said.
The lecturer leans forward, looking at his wary audience of business students. He talks about Karl Marl's moral philosophy and stresses the importance of civil rights and justice, topics not usually discussed in an business class.
But Rex Martin is no ordinary lecturer in business. He is the Humanist in Residence at KU's School of Business. He taught in the philosohpy department until this semester.
Martin said his lectures would link ethics and political philosophy—his philosophical roots.
"One of my favorite topics is economic justice, a general topic sometimes," "People have prevailed since the beginning."
His presence in the business school is part of a National Endowment for the Humanities program. The program is in the first its kind in the country, according to Martin.
Martin speaks like a businessman, but his ideas are not typical of the business world.
MARTIN, WHO SAYS he has always had many interests other than philosophy, will be giving guest lecture at the University of Wisconsin school this semester. He is one of three KU professors, two from the humanities and one from the School of Humanities at the University, teaching in a school other than their own.
"THE LIBERAL DEMOCRATS are concerned with a government of planning, with more government intervention. There is a large difference between liberty of individuals and equality of individuals," he said.
Martin said one of his goals as Humanist in Residence was to give business students a chance to learn about humanism.
He said the responsibility of the business
community to factors outside of the business world was one of the areas he wanted to explore.
"BUSINESSMEN SHOULD make considerations of politics. They should consider ways of effectiveness in other areas," Martin said. "These areas might include full employment and environmental pollution."
Martin said he would talk about Marx, who was a technical economist and moral philosopher, in his lectures. Marx, a German, formed the basis philosophy of Marxism.
"It is impossible to avoid bringing Marx into the picture," Martin said. "He had important ideas on how a society should be structured, and I was surprised to see him immoral and that sociism is the answer."
Martin said he thought rights and justice should be concerns not only for labor leaders, but for individual businessmen as well.
Martin said study of the humanities tended to be abstract. He said this was an area in which a professor from the School of Humanities could help students in the humanities.
*PEOPLE IN THE HIWARES can only go on our until technical application comes in.*
Martin said businessmen could teach those in the humanities about hunting for jobs and about marketing humanity. The Tate museum are concrete view of the humanities, he said.
Martin said he planned to write a book on civil rights and economic justice, both of which were crucial to his work.
He said he enjoyed teaching business classes because the program was unique.
"I would enjoy seeing how people would
laugh at other universities," Martin said,
smiling.
Thursday, February 1
LOST GONZO BAND
The Lawrence Opera House and 3rd Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
Advance Hickets available this weekend at Better Days and at the Opera House
KC
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—An ear, nose and throat doctor spent almost 15 years developing a machine to save his patients and a scars of minor throat and ear surgeries.
The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS
Staff Reporter
GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS
Kirchner designed the microcathay using the concept of heat energy. The conventional tools used for ear and throat surgery are the scissors and knife known to surgeons as the forceps and scalpel. These mechanical tools are difficult to maneuver inside a throat or an ear, causing minor surgery to last several hours.
The inventor, Fernando Kirchner, a surgeon at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said he invented the machine to move worms in the larynx as the removal of warts from the larynx.
Bv CAITLIN GOODWIN
Designed to assist a limited number of individuals during their first year of graduate or professional study. Deadline for application Feb.1, 1979
"IF THE SURGERY is simpler and practical," he said, "the patient has less pain and the surgery, naturally, takes less time."
The microcautery has two parts, a control box and a stainless steel rod, which has a diameter of 2.5 mm.
He first conceived the idea of the microcourtyard 15 years ago and spent the next 10 years building different models of the machine. He worked solely with a friend, who had a mechanical engineer, and two years ago they built the machine that Kirchner now uses.
Machine lessens pain of surgery
If interested, contact PROFESSOR DAVID DARWIN 2008 Learned Telephone: 864-2008 or 864-3826
By using the machine, the Kirchner Microrachyta, a surgeon does not have to cut through a patient's throat or worry accidently damaging surrounding tissue.
Within minutes the water is gone, and the hardened protein that remains will dissolve.
"It's not complicated," he said. "First we locate the cyst or wart and then we run the machine."
HE SAID HE paid for the invention himself and that it was not an expensive project.
THE HEAT travels from the electrical control box, through the rod and into the filament. When the filament touches the tissue to be removed, the tissue evaporates.
Human tissue is made of water and protein. When the water is heated, it evaporates, and when the protein is heated, it hardens.
than a quarter of an inch long, uses heat for the operation.
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"I never got a patient for the microcautery," he said, "because it is a medical invention. I did not invent it for the microcautery, to simplify the operation for the patient."
Fantastic Drinks Pin Ball Ice Cream Private Parties
New
Opening Thursday Jan. 25th
with Professionals in all Journalism Fields
Tues. Jan. 30 7 p.m.
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Partially funded by Student Activity Fee.
2-10 Mon-Thurs 10-12 midnight Sat
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All Ages Welcome!
films sua
In new screen splendor...
The most magnificent picture ever!
DAVID O SELZNICKS PRODUCTION OF MARGARET MITCHELLS
"GONE WITH THE WIND"
Friday, Jan. 26 and Saturday, Jan. 27
3:30 & 7:45 Woodruff Auditorium
Admission $1.50
He said there were many medical schools and hospitals around the country using the technology.
He said the machine, cost about $400 to build, was economically more practical than the laser, which is another tool for the job. He may cost as much as $30,000, Kirchner said.
it is also more economical for the patient, when it takes less time is more economical."
He told a 6-year-old girl who entered the Med Center in the morning, had several warts removed from her vocal cords around noon and left the hospital that afternoon.
ANOTHER PATIENT, an infant with a cyst on his vocal cords, would have been permanently scarred if Kirchner had not been able to use the micocautery.
Kirchner said the only way to reach the cyst without the microcautery would have been to cut through the neck. The microcautery could be used through the mouth, however, and the cyst was removed in 45 minutes.
He said the microcattery could be used in any minor surgery, including the removal of very early stages of cancer, but could not handle extensive cancer surgery.
"I DON'T WANT anyone to think this is a panacea," he said. "I can't cure everything, and it especially cannot cure cancer. It is just a practical method for removing warts or cysts without causing the patient to be in pain.
"The microcautery is still not fully developed, because I am never satisfied. I always feel that surgery could be done better, if the doctors try to be creative."
"Halve" it with a friend!
Coagie's
hero
Sandwich Shoppe
2214 Yale
Behind University State Bank
Call ahead for orders
842-6121
NINTH ST
MILITORGY CENTER
NILLOTON ST
DOWA ST
YALE ST
KU VETS . . .
LET'S GET SCHHHNOCKERED!
AND WATCH KU
BEAT NEBRASKA
TOMORROW AT 2:00
AT MOTHER'S 2406 Iowa 843-9662
FREE BEER!!
FOLIAGE PLANT SALE!
split leaf
PHILODENDRON
in 6" pots
reg. 7.50 4.88
easy care
DRAECENA 1/3OFF
5 varieties
All are excellent house plants and require little maintenance.
A coniferous tree with needle-like leaves and a conical shape, commonly used as an ornamental plant. It is well-suited for landscaping in parks, gardens, and other outdoor spaces due to its ability to adapt to various climates and light conditions.
ASSORTED HOUSE PLANTS in 4" pots—50 varieties 1.88 reg. 2.89
9
PIGGY BACK PLANTS
in hanging baskets
save 50% reg. 12.50 6.25
THE WORLD'S LITERATURE
PENCE GARDEN CENTERS 15TH AND NEW YORK WEST-914 WEST 23RD (4 blks. east of Mass. on 15th) sale ends tuesday Closed Sundays Jan.-Feb.
Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358
COLD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
KU glee club tries comeback
See story page three
Monday, January 29, 1979
Vol. 89, No. 82
Lawrence. Kansas
THE CHILDREN'S WINTER FUN
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
Time to relax
After a long afternoon sliding by Potters Lake, Rynn Polacca, 11, left, Mike Jimbo, 11, center and Lauri Scott, 9, decided to
call it a day and head for home as temperatures remained bitterly cold yesterday.
Kay says GOP strong at KU
By PATRICIA MANSON
TOPEKA-The Republican party is alive and well on the KU campus, according to Morris Kay, a Lawrence businessman and president of Topeka Valley College.
"I believe the professors, staff, administration and students at the University of Kansas all traditionally have leased toward Republican views," Kay said yesterday. "Without question the people have looked to the Republican party for political leadership."
The Republican party gains much of its support from students and educators, Kay said, because "historically in Kansas, Republicans have been the backbone of support for education at all levels."
ECONOMIC ISSUES will be important to students and educators in the next few years, he said. The Republican party's fiscal programs will help control inflation, so education costs will not increase; better opportunities for jobs and housing for students, he said.
Kay, who ran unopposed, was elected state chairman Saturday at the Republican party's annual Kansas Day in Topeka. Kansas Day traditionally is the time the Republicans elect new officers and make plans for the next state elections.
Kay, 46, is a Lawrence insurance agent and was the unsuccessful Republican gubernatorial candidate in 1972. He helped organize the state's Republican primary in 1980.
OTHER OFFICERS elected Saturday were irene franzen or Merriam, vice chairman; Milly Johnson of Johnson, secretary; and Peter Koehler.
election won and enough new party members were elected so that the House of Representatives now has a Republican majority.
As the Republican state chairman, Kay will be responsible for fund-rasing, recruiting candidates and organizing campaigns. Kay said that the party would urge everyone to become involved in the elections and that he thought the Republicans would be successful.
"We're going to encourage everyone to participate in the party of his choice," Kay said. "I believe people will look at the record of the Republican party and see its quality programs and will turn to the party."
Du Pont spoke to about 600 people, including such Kansas Republican celebrities as Sens, Nancy Landon Kasebaum and Robert Dole, Rep. Larry Winn, Keith Sebelius and Jim Jeffries and former Roger F. Bennett.
THE VIRTUES of the Republican party were also the topic of Pierre du Pont, the Republican governor of Delaware and the guest speaker at the rally.
The 1978 election was the first election since 1932 to be fought on economic issues, du Dont said, and the many Republican victories demonstrated the voters' disillusionment with government interference in the economy.
"We were successful because the American people are getting tired of where we've been," du Pont said.
Carlin, 2 economists say recession in state unlikely
By TAMMY TIERNEY Staff Reporter
Although most economic forecasters predict that the U.S. economy could suffer a recession in the next year, at least two economists agree with Gov. John Carlin that it will not hit Kansas hard.
Staff Renorter
Speaking Friday at the annual conference on the economic outlook for Kansas, Carlin and Walter Heller, a noted economist, said the Kansas economy could weather a recession with little difficulty.
And yesterday, Darwin Daifloch, director of the KU Institute for Economic and Business Research, said he, too, saw little cause to worry.
"It has been a historical record in Kansas that the state economy should be relatively unaffected by the nation's economy," Daicoff said.
"1 SEE NO reason for alarm in a downstreet of the state's economy and, really, no reason for alarm on the national level. Any excess
In his address at the Kansas Union, Carlin said he was satisfied with Kansas' economic growth in 1978.
He said that unemployment in Kansas last year was 3.6 percent, compared to a national-average of 6.1 percent. Personal income increased by 11.3 percent while wages and salaries increased by 11.5 percent. Both numbers were above the 8.1 consumer price index.
He also said that prospects for strong economic growth in 1979 were slim and growth would be modest.
Keeping Kansas economy stable, Carlin said, will take a joint effort of the state's government and businesses.
HOWEVER, he said, the Kansas economy has the potential to be immune from national business swings. Development of that potential, he said, would depend on national events and the way the state handled its resources.
Daioff agreed with Carlin's predictions and said the governor's forecast of 4 percent unemployment and 9 percent increase in labor force growth was a good idea.
Carlin also pledged he would recruit new businesses to Kansas.
upgrade the skills of the Kansas work force and monitor national farm policy.
Following Carlin's remarks, Heller, former chairman of the federal council of economic advisers, and the nation's economic problems rested on two issues: whether the economy was undergoing another inflation would go higher than its current rate of 7 percent.
HE SAID the nation's recovery from the recession of 1974 was showing no signs of age and that good sales in the last part of 1978 were continuing.
Heller predicted that after a strong start this year, business would slow to a growth rate of about 3 percent. The chances of a breakthrough were low.
He also said a recession would be short-lived and would not equal the severity of the 1974 recession
Daicoff, however, said there would be "no way in the world that national economic growth would be 3 percent." He said he thought 2
He attributed the current rate of inflation to the "cost-push" at wages and prices.
Heller said that even if Kansas escaped the impact of a nationwide recession, it could not avoid inflation.
"HOURLY COMPENSATION is rising at 8 percent a year, production is rising at 2 percent. That leaves a 6 percent rise in production."
Calling President Jimmy Carter a "penny-pinching populist," Heller praised his voluntary wage-pricing policy because it was
However, Dioeff said he thought Heller might be over-optimistic in saying the new policy would work.
"He might be quite positive and feel there'll be cooperation with the program, but I don't have much hone for it." he said.
"We're still the most affluent economy in the world, and the dollar is still the most sought-after currency," he said. "We have the money."
Men 'live' for a weekend
Heller told the group of 175 businessmen at the conference that he thought there was too much hand-writing and badmouthing about his business.
By KATHLEEN CONKEY
Staff Writer
"When that happens, I really would like to give people a lecture and tell them they're really cracked. But, usually I just turn around and go away."
"I went into a pizza place once in Kansas City, Mo., and the manager came out and said, 'I'm sorry, we can not serve you here.' I am the same as you, except I went in a wheelbarrow.
Jeff Hanson had no trouble speaking about the incident but he did have trouble reaching down from his wheelchair to pick up the phone. He was unable to reach under the paper with one hand and
lift it off the ground. Then, reaching down with his other hand, he struggled to open his fingers enough to get a grip on the paper's edge. Finally getting one, he brought the paper to his lap, using both hands. Hanson is an 18-year-old quadriplexer.
THE TWO MEN with him, Bill Bruel, and Ray Hinrichs, 20, have had cerebral injuries since he was as much trouble as Hanson placing his newspaper, and in addition, their speech is hard to understand. They all use wheelies, though Buell has limited experience.
Hanson, Buell and Hirichs were in Lawrence during the weekend as an experiment. They are students in a life skills class at the Cappel Foundation, a private institution in Topeka that specializes in topeks or orthopedically handicapped children.
Linda Lyle, an occupational therapist who created and teaches the life skills class, said yesterday that she saw a need in the three men, who will graduate with a year and a half, that her class could not meet: the need to experience life on their own.
Randy Kitch, 1423 Kentucky St., a Carpper graduate who occasionally teaches at Carpper, offered his apartment for the three to live in for a weekend.
See HANDICAPPED back page
Moore takes KU contract payoff
Snorts Editor
Rv NANCY DRESSLER
Bud Moore, fired in November as KU head football coach, has accepted a settlement offer that will pay him a lump sum of $78,320, the full salary amount called for in the two years that remained on his five-year contract.
Bob Marcum, director of men's athletics, said yesterday that he had received a hand-delivered letter from Moore during the weekend accepting the offer, which was the second attempt by University administrators to settle Moore's contract.
"I've received a confirmation from him," Marcum said. "He's agreed to the terms of this offer."
Moore was out of town on business yesterday and unavailable for comment.
Moore said in his letter, "I have decided to accept your offer as stated in your letter of acceptance."
Moore had rejected an earlier settlement after calling "considerably less" than the terms of the contract.
Marcum said Moore would receive a lump sum and that the arrangements for the funds would be made in advance.
"I really don't know where it will come from," Marcus said. "I want to get it on my own."
Coach Moore wants it settled by Wednesday."
Marcum said he planned to talk today with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Mike Davis, University general counsel, about getting the money.
Davis said that he had no idea where the money would come from and that he had not been directly involved with the contract dispute.
It is not known whether Moore intends to seek fringe benefits, but Marcum said payment of the salary would fulfill the University's obligations.
“As soon as we get the financial arrangements made, the matter’s closed,” he said.
Future uncertain for 1858 barn
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
A barn that is possibly the oldest building in Lawrence might be leveled by a developer's builder if no one comes up with an acceptable plan and money to
Stan Keporter
The 12-year-old barn, on the southeast corner of 23rd Street and Lawrence Avenue, was used as a studio for 13 years by the late Bernard (Poco) Frazier, former KU sculptor in residence, and a nationally recognized sculptor.
But Arvella and Malcom Frazier, daughter and son of the sculptor, who died in May 1956, may have to save the statue that Joe Grover an early Lawrence leader.
The barn's 118.6-acre-site, now owned by Parkside Investment, Lawrence, was rezoned last week to permit the construction of houses.
"We tried everything we could to keep it," Arvella said. "But when my father died, we lost it in court."
WE WERE going to keep it as a studio. We had dreams it could turn into something really beautiful."
She said that after the barn was sold at an auction, the new owners offered to sell it back to her family for $50,000.
Richard Benton, one of the owners of the barn, said, "We have money invested in the land and we would have to be a very careful buyer side of it, but we couldn't write it off.
"We aren't rich," Malcolm said. "We didn't have that kind of money."
HE SAID architects were divided over whether the barn could be renovated. The only way to find out would be to make the plans and try them, he said.
Robert Gould, a Lawrence architect,
said the cost to preserve the barn
depended on its use. He said the initial
investment would be $40,000 to $50,000
to buy the barn and to get the project
started.
Benton said, "We don't have any plans either way. But it would be expensive to preserve as a house."
However, the owners did meet last week to explore possibilities of saving the barn, which reportedly was a stop on the road. A few years later, an example of early stone architecture that is becoming increasingly difficult to find, according to Anne Claussen, director of the barn.
But there still are no definite plans to renovate the barn.
"It would be nice to just give it away, but I'm not a man of wealth. If we gave it away it would be disastrous financially."
Gould said individuals in his office had
proposed buying and renovating the barn.
"We are interested in seeing it saved, but we haven't gotten too far yet," he said.
He said there were more than 2,000 square feet on one floor and the building had the potential for three floors. Bringing the entire barn up to higher standards would cost much more than the initial investment, he said.
GOULD SAID the proposed plans were to turn the barn into a home with a studio.
Although it was possible the barn could serve as a cooperative where space could be rented to artists, such as some places in California do, Gould said he had not seen any interest for such a project by anyone. He would have to be done by a private investor.
Clausen said, "Whatever is done should make economic sense."
"It would probably be best to have a private individual refurbish it as a home," she said. "Because of its value, I hate to see它去打泥 the drain."
If the barn were not renovated, Benton said, the barn would probably have to be torn down because it is structurally unsound.
Barn on the right.
Endangered barn
The old Grover barn, built in 1859, on the corner of 23rd Street and
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Lawrence Avenue, may be a victim of city expansion unless money can be raised to save it.
2
Monday, January 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press Internationa
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pope urges spiritual search
PUEBIA, Pope-John Paul II tolled Latin American bishops in a major address yesterday that social justice must be spirited and not
The pope encountered opposition as a group of rebels priests, demanding that the Roman Catholic Church take a more active role against oppression, and in 1934 he called for a new wave of social activism.
The priests said the conference would discuss human rights and social reforms, which they claimed would be ignored by the bishops' meeting. The third Latin American bishops' conference is expected to determine the church's role in the social and political life of turbulent Latin America.
The pope, 58, cautioned bishops against depicting Christ as a political figure involved in class struggle.
He also spoke out against using violence to achieve social change, but said church leaders should continue to fight for equal distribution of wealth and for gender equality.
Woman iailed after hijacking
NEW YORK—A woman who allegedly commanded a jumbo jet with 131 persons aboard was jailed yesterday after being overpowered by an FBI agent. The FBI saidrene McKinney,49, had hijacked the plane because she wanted to pose an network television.
to pressure switches, the man was injured during the 11-hour ordeal, when the McKinney threatened to blow up the plane with nitroglycerol unless Charlton Heston, Jack Palmer and a team of his co-workers were present.
Authorities told the woman hijacked the plane, en route from Los Angeles to New York, after passing a note to the plot stating she had nilglynigeric, a nerve agent.
The note also said another note, to be read on television, had been left at the Los Angeles airport, but it was not found.
An FBI agent described the woman, a divorced mother of two, as distraught about her family and the Roman Catholic Church.
Tena beains whirlwind tour
WASHINGTON - Teng Hui-ping, the driving force in China's outward reach to the West, arrived in Washington yesterday for talks with President Carter at the White House.
The first of China's communist leaders to visit this country, Teng will be in the center of a nine-day march of meetings and ceremonies celebrating a new constitution.
Teng and Carter have scheduled six hours of talks. They were to start the first of two White House sessions this morning after a formal greeting on the South
A state dinner for the Chinese vice premier is planned for tonight. Former President Richard Nixon will leave California to attend the
Former President Richard Nixon will leave California to attend the dinner and a gala for Teng at the Kennedy Center afterward.
Nixon's presence, at Carter's invitation, marks the former president's first return to the White House since his resignation.
Teng, who ranks third in the Chinese hierarchy, hopes to make headway in the United States on trade, commercial and scientific deals that U.S. officials have approved.
Court turns away nuke case
WASHINGTON—A move by an anti-nuclear power group to have construction stopped at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant has been turned down.
The Mid-America Coalition for Energy Alternatives has been trying for more than three years to prevent construction of the $1 billion project near
The group argued that Kansas Gas and Electric Co., a licensee for the Wolf Creek plant, would be able to fill its power needs by converting gas-gas fired
But the court ruled that the organization had failed to make a strong enough case to force reopening consideration of whether the plant should be licensed.
Two identified in Gacy case
CHICAGO—Two more skeletons at the 27 found at the home of alleged murderer John Wayne Gacy Jr. have been identified. Authorities said the 27 were found at a home in Chicago.
found, as victims have been identified, including 10 whose remains were found at Gaye's home and two whose bodies were recovered from the Des Plaines
Gacy, 36, has been indicted in the murders of seven young men. He reportedly told investigators that he had killed 32.
Romb kills 2 at Israeli resort
TEL. AVI. Israel—A terrorist bomb exploded in a garbage can yesterday in Netanya, an Israeli resort city, killing two persons and wounding 34 others, the government said.
There was no immediate indication from Israel whether any reprisals would be taken against terrorist bases outside Israel.
Observers said the incident seemed to be aimed at upsetting the just-concluded Middle East peace mission of U.S. envoy Alfred Alberton, who had been killed in Afghanistan.
In Carlo, Egypt's parliament invited President Carter to come to Egypt to address the assembly. There were unconfirmed reports in Cairo that Carter's visit, if he should accept the invitation, would be preceded by a summit conference in Washington between Carter, Egyptian President Anwar Sadal and
Carter also would be expected to visit Israel, Saudi Arabia and Jordan.
At the White House, however, a spokesman said there were no plans for such a visit now.
'Holocaust' raises opposition
BONN, West Germany—"Holocaust," the American-made television series about Nazi treatment of Jews, has led many West Germans to think that a statute of limitations on the prosecution in their country of Nazi leaders should be rescinded.
The Wickert Institute, a polling organization, said yesterday that its opinion poll showed that the number of West Germans opposed to a statute of limitations for alleged Nazi killers jumped from 15 percent to 47 percent after presentation of the four-part series last week.
Under West Germany's 30-yard statute of limitations, unimpeded war criminals suspected of murder cannot be prosecuted after Dec. 31, 1979.
The West German Assembly must decide this year whether it will lift the statute. West German Chancellor Helm Schmidt told legislators last week that he would not back a decision by the assembly.
Loss of student loans forecast
WASHINGTON—The federal government warned the nation's colleges and universities yesterday it would try to cut off the federal share of student loan debt.
The announcement is the latest in a series of actions the Carter administration has taken to reduce or end federal participation in the 20-year-old program.
The program, administered by more than 3,000 institutions, is funded almost entirely by federal tax dollars.
The latest proposal, by Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr., accompanied the release of new figures that show the default rate in the loan program has continued to rise, despite government efforts to convince institutions to tighten their collection systems.
Weather...
It will be cold today with a high near 20, according to the National Weather Service. There is a possibility of light snow late in the afternoon changing to heavy snow by night. The low tonight will be in the low teens. There is a 40 percent chance of snow this afternoon and a 90 percent chance of snow tomorrow.
Worst riot in months rips Tehran; 27 die
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Soldiers firing machine guns and anti-government rifles armed with firebombs turned central Tehran into a bloody, bashing battlefront yesterday, with at least 27 persons reported killed in the city's worst violence in months.
The street warfare exploded as Iran's political crisis reached a new impasse after Ayatullah Khomeini, spiritual leader of the anti-shah movement, rejected a proposal by Iran's General Ali Shaipour Bhaklari in a meeting at Khomeini's exile headquarters in France.
BUT OFFICIAL French sources said Bakhtiar was to travel to Paris anyway this morning, despite Khomeini's demand that he be given a place on the side of the angels' and put on the shawl.
The tension and violence had been mounting for days as the Bakhtiar government continued to block Khomnei's plans to return to transform Iran into an Islamic state.
Thousands of pro-Khomeini protesters flooded Tehran streets yesterday chanting, "Death to Bakhtiari," One large group tried to block the gasoline-filled bottles against the building.
Soldiers rushed to the scene and opened fire with 30-caliber machine guns mounted on the backs of trucks. Military officials later said the rotiers were armed with machine guns and grenades, but reporters saw none in the three-hour battle said they saw none.
ASSOCIATED PRESS correspondent Thomas Kent reported from Easland Square, site of the battle, that rampaging rioters were gathering at their walls above their heads. Some were hit by
richectes. Ambulances raced back and forth through the area.
Bakhlari announced Saturday he intended to fly to Paris to meet Khomini and seek his assistance.
AT FIRST, Khomeini's aides issued conflicting statements about whether the religious leader would receive Bakhtiar. On Wednesday he did so during day he would not, unless Bakhtiar resumed.
It was Tearman's bloodiest day since Sept.
8 when 121 persons died in political
civil war.
Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, forced by rioting to leave Iran earlier this month, plans to remain in Morocco for at least three weeks, a close aide said yesterday.
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He described the shah as "disappointed and tired," but said the monarch was well and had gained a few pounds since leaving Iran Jan. 16.
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3
University Glee Club to clear throats again
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Staff Reporter
The memories of a trip to New York have faded a bit for members of the 1928 KU Men's Glee Club.
But the enthusiasm that sent the group to Carnegie Hall and to sing for a president has kept its members coming to yearly reunions and has sparked a rebirth of the group on campus this semester.
KU had glee clubs off and on until about 1850. But none of those clubs seems to have survived. He was directed from 1923 through 1928, when it was directed by Thomas A. Larrmore, a law professor who was drafted for the position when the group's conductor
Richard Marchand, Lawrence graduate student in choral conducting, will begin organizing his née's club dance tomorrow in room 328 Murphy Hall.
THE CLUB took the Missouri Valley Championship in February 1926, by outinging clubs from the universities of Nebraska, Missouri and Oklahoma, Iowa's Ames University and Kansas University. The team won the burn-turned university a non-conference entry.
The victory sent the group to the National Intercollegiate Glee Club. Contest in New York City in March.
University Daily Kansan
"The Graduate," then the KU alumni magazine, said, "the glee club, which has hitherto been considered as just a joke, now makes an appearance in programs and like the, a pretty fair means of contact with the state, has suddenly spring up in prominence. It has stepped right up with the basketball Championship, brought home a Valley Championship."
THE MEN RAISED $5,000 in two weeks and, with $50 each of their own, made the trip by train. They won the fight song division for their version of "I'm a Jayhawk" and placed third overall.
After that triumph, they sang for President Calvin Coolidge in Washington D.C., and stopped on the radio central radio shows and recording sessions.
Larrmore moved away in 1929, but kept coming back to conduct the glue club reunions, which began in the early 1930s. He organized a yearly commencement tradition.
Corlett J, Cotton, 645 Mississippi St,
said he sang in the glee club from 1927
through 1929 and attended most of the
reunions.
"Tom Larrencore was the central figure," he said Saturday. "The boys were all loyal to him and he to us. We
liked to sing and we've developed friendships much closer than any fraternity could."
ERNEST GRISWOLD, 2217 Massachusetts St., erentius professor of chemistry, was one of the 40 who made the New York trip. He said that Larremore's direction set them apart from other glee clubs.
"Ilarremere was a very exacting director," Griswold said. "When we were singing together, somehow he got to know me better and loved loyalty it has kept in her."
James Ralston, professor of James Ralston, professor of the LarroneRene Foundation, a formal group of the glee club's members, and the money to the choral program and would finance the new club. He said money from the foundation would help pay the cost.
Larremore died in 1975, but the push for a new men's glee club at KU continued.
He said the foundation had secured a go-head from Sen. Bob Dale, R-Kan., because of worry that Title IX's anticleraking law might make the all-male club unlawful.
"I think if somebody wants to have a glee club, they should have a glee club," Ralston said.
Bahai Fireside
KU Bahai Club
will meet on Monday, Jan. 29 at 7:30 PM in the Cork II (room) of the Kansas Union
A speaker is presenting general information about the Bahai faith
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Limits of music and art expanded
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
$1.00
Staff Reporter
Jazz music, silence and the collective sounds of six AM radio wafers through the Helen Foreman S博物馆 Museum of Art for a program titled, "What Art? What Music?"
The program, part of the Musing in Museums series, was an attempt to show the essential possibilities of art, Alain Milstein, assistant instructor of American Studies, said.
The program started with a piece of improvisational jazz by Chuck Berg, assistant professor of radio, TV and film, and area musicians John Lomas, Greg Mackender, Paul Miller and Johnny Moore.
Berg spoke about the proliferation of music and stressed that in the 1970s there were no recordings.
"Music is all kinds of things today," Berg said.
Then the five-piece band performs
Ornithology," a Charlie Parker song,
worn by a band of fourteen men.
After "Ornithology" was performed, Alan Mulinte, assistant instructor of American Studies, had the band members prepare for an adaptation of a John Cage piece.
Berg called the hand to attention for the piece, and as the audience waited, Berg and
his inseniere stool, counting the beat for a song composed entirely of rests; musical
When the piece "ended," MILSTEN tried to explain Caine's attitude toward art.
Campus Christians
Tuesday. Jan. 30
7:00 p.m.
The resulting music was an audio collage that had both audience and speakers laughing.
OPEN HOUSE
to further demonstrate Cage's art, Milstein and Berg used 18 volunteers from the audience to perform an Cage piece, "Imaginary Landscape." Six of the volunteers wrote given cards to direct the performance. The volume and tuning controls of the radios.
"Cage wanted us to make music out of the sounds around us," he said.
1217 Tenn. St.
MILSTEIN SAID that the confusion of the radios playing together made it nearly impossible to pick out the message of any one radio. The audience to listen to all of the sounds at once
He also said Cage's music created the intoxication of sounds in space. And works
such as "imaginary Landscape" involve the listener in the art...
She had people act out their feelings about different colors and shapes on the surface of
Dolo Brooking, director of museum education, tried to explain the ideas of today's artists, using a Hans Hofmann watercolor-and-crayon as her example.
"The idea of the programs is not to define art, but to have people open their eyes and listen."
"We are dealing with a breakdown in preceived views of waying art," Brookling
THE MUSES program, supported by a $90,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, has been exploring artistic and historical concepts since January 1978. The next program, scheduled for Feb. 11, will study the connection between art and history with the relationship with art, according to Resco; coordinator of the Muses program.
Cordially invites the residents of the University Residence Halls to participate in the
The Association of University Residence Halls
Seventh Annual Legislators' Dinner
DOMINO'S PIZZA.
on
February 19, 1979
7:00 p.m.
at
Lewis Hall.
This dinner provides an excellent opportunity for residents to visit with their state legislators on an informal basis. So complete the form available at your hall's desk, return it to your hall coordinator by Feb. 2, and plan on attending the Legislator's Dinner on Feb. 19, 1979.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansas
Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
JANUARY 29,1979
Death penalty looms
Not surprisingly, the death penalty has once again raised its ugly head in the Kansas Legislature.
A new bill introduced in the House recently by four Republicans would reinstate capital punishment in all premeditated, first-degree murder cases in Kansas.
Or course, death penalty bills are not new to the Legislature. The House passed a death penalty bill last year that eventually was tabled in the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Nevertheless, the move, though expected, is disappointing. Capital punishment is an inequitable, unnecessary and distressingly simple-minded attempt at deterring crime.
IF ONLY it were really that easy.
Still, the current bill does attempt some new approaches. It includes a provision to put those persons convicted of murder to death by intravenous injection, "in an effort to remove the barbaric atmosphere from the method of execution," according to the sponsors of the bill.
Unfortunately, however, barbarism cannot be disassociated from the act of
execution. Whatever the method of death, the results are still the same, and those results are intolerable.
BUT APPARENTLY that is too much to hope.
It would be hoped that the state of Kansas would refrain from returning to such an objectionable method of punishment. It would be hoped the elected officials of Kansas would raise their voices in a humane chorus and put an end to discussion of the death penalty.
Current indications are that the new bill should pass the House and presently has nearly enough votes to pass the Senate. It looks like execution may be a new addition to the scene in Kansas.
And that is a shame. Death in any form is cruel and unusual, despite the claims of any court.
If the death penalty is to be defeated it will take courage and a high degree of moral leadership on the part of our legislators.
The Legislature must reject the new bill. The state of Kansas should not stand for execution in any form.
GOP choice of Detroit follows heated debate
The situation had become tense.
After a 24-hour period of intense negotiation, no decision had been made. The Republican Party Selection Committee had been huddled earlier this week in accord but had been unable to decide which party would host the party's grand national convention.
Throughout the backroom negotiations, the two factions—the conservative and the moderate—were unable to reach a mutually agreeable settlement.
Said their leader, Republican National Chairman Bill Brock, after almost two days of talks. "We're having an extremely difficult time. There's no probability of reaching a decision tonight. We will return to school for breakfast and to reach a final decision."
BUT BY THE end of the second day of intense negotiations, the battle came down to a final standoff.
the decision, no doubt, was tough. There were many cities to choose from. They could hold their usually sullen, subdued convention in a gold dome, or in a city called the Big Apple. There also was the city on the岸 or the metropolis called the Twentieth.
The conservatives, with their southern sensitivities, felt that grand Texas city, Dallas, although not exactly embedded in the South, could fit the bill.
But then Dallas could counter with some sort of cheerleading effort to add to all the
But the moderates wanted to attract the urban vote and Detroit, they believed, was as good a place as any. Why, if the convention were in Detroit, it shouldn't be too hard to swing a giant, free luxury car pool for the delegates and candidates.
Finally, after the smoke had cleared (or course the vice chairman of the committee was absent) he left.
BUT THE moderates weren't free yet.
The choice had to be ratified by the whole
assembly.
And there, the moderates found more opposition to their choice. The conservatives were not going to give up, but for that matter neither were the liberals who didn't like Detroit.
A. M. MUNNAM
Philip Garcia
Said one southerner to the selection committee, "You had three people applaud when Detroit was announced. 'That isn't solid support.'"
National committee members from the great states of Nevada and Florida wanted to have a choice of three cities. So, the committee agreed to vote on the idea.
But first, a vote was taken to determine if the alternative proposal vote should be done secretly. That vote ended in a tie, but was changed later because a committee member said his vote was incorrectly tallied. The secret vote lost.
THE COMMITTEE then voted to see if it wanted to vote on alternative cities. That vote was not approved.
Finally, the entire committee approved Detroit as the glorious site for the grand convention, which is to be held in Cobo Stadium at 7:30 p.m. 700 and 400 square feet of work space.
Said a Texan of the committee's final choice: "I regret that very much. I think Dallas was clearly a better choice . . . It's a baffling decision to me."
Brock said after the intense negotiations: "I have never participated in a more difficult process than the site selection committee."
Now that the site has been selected, the party can begin to tackle its next big and most important choice: a presidential candidate.
It can choose Dole, or Reagan, or Ford, or
permand, or Crane, or Connally, or Bush,
Stage is set for showdown in Iran
The events taking place in Iran in recent days closely resemble a theme often seen in American westerns: the tough bad guy, Mr. Bazouk, who is not happy if vows to return some day and take over.
Last week, as this Middle East drama continued, the Ayatullah Khomeini announced he was coming out of exile to control in Iran. But Prime Minister Shaikh Bakkari vowed Sunday that he would be driven out of office by Khomeini.
"All the nonsense and rumors they (the newspapers) are writing about my resignation are untrue," the prime minister told the Iranian people in a broadcast address. "I am going to remain in the stronghold of the constitution."
That remains to be seen. But the events leading to the climactic showdown are themselves as complex as the two leading figures.
Bassam, a 62-year-old international lawyer, was appointed to lead the new civilian government by Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi before the shah was forced out of the country by uprisings orchestrated by Khomeini.
MARTIN
Vernon Smith
A 25-YEAR veteran of opposition politics, Bakhtiar has been a frequent inmate of the shah's prisons because of his support for free elections, the abolition of the SAVAK secret police and an end to the torture of prisoners.
By appointing Baktikar as prime minister and by granting certain police and political reform, the shah had hoped to secure a stable throne. It also was hoped that after so many months of bloodshed, many Iranians might lose their taste for violence and welcome a moderate government that is even –even with the shah nominally in charge.
But this has not proved to be the case.
Some of the shah's foes have accused Bakhlar of conspiring with the monarch. Strikes and protests have continued in Iran since heavily have flared in the United States.
Khomeini, 78, spiritual leader of Iran's 32 million Shiite Moslems, is the prime mover behind the campaign against his lifelong enemy, the shah. He directs the struggle from self-imposed exile in a Paris suburb and sets out to establish an Islamic state, which in control. He has denounced 'Bakhtiar' the government as being a tool of the shah.
KHOMEINI CLAIMS the shah's father, Reza the Great, had Khomeini's father killed. Khomeini also insists that his own son, who apparently died of natural causes last year in Iraq, was another victim of the monarch's regime.
Khomeini commands an army of 180,000 mullahs, Moslem holy men whose influence reaches into every village in Iran. This network, along with a large number of Islamic theology students and zealots, provides dedicated cadres in the field.
dependence on foreign interests to build his empire has brought Western-style decadence that has ended Islam's conservative teachings. In protest, they have burned banks, movie theaters, liquor stores and other symbols of Western attitudes.
The anti-shah groups share a resentment of what they consider humiliating domination by the Fahrani, or foreigners. This vestige of the colonization of earlier empires is also a major support given the shah by the United States and Britain and their western allies.
Moslem leaders charge that the shah's
MAXNEU
AND SO THE scene is set for Khomeini's return. Hundreds of thousands of Iranians are expected to greet the religious leader as the man who will overthrow the monarchy. Bakhtiari has indicated otherwise.
The same can be said with a reasonable degree of certainty of Iran. The bigger question is, who goes and who stays?
In the shoot-em-up world of westerns, the town has never been big enough for both the sheriff and the new man. In invariably, somebody has to go.
THE RICHMOND NEWS LEADER © 1979 BY CHICAGO THEUNE
KHOMEINI
Economic diplomacy will not work
Bv WILLIAM VERITY
N. Y. Times Feature
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio - Linkage, the tactic of wrapping a political aim around an economic package, cannot be applied to United States-Soviet Union trade.
Having recently returned from talks with ranking Russian leaders, I am convinced that further exercises in economic further be futile—or even counterproductive.
Why? To begin with, the current level of support with the Soviet Union is too small to be meaningful.
In 1977, our total was $600 million in non-
agricultural exports, only $250 million in imports. For economies that measure their gross national products by the trillions, that's negligible. West Germany exported more than $3 billion of agricultural products to the Soviet Union in 1977, Japan, about $2 billion.
LET'S ALSO remember that however admirable our desire to persuade Soviet leaders to show greater concern for human rights, they view such efforts as inappropriate. They should extend term linkage, or "conditioned flexibility," they intercept as questionable reliability.
When trade depends upon how a few people in this administration evaluate the
Several weeks ago, the William Allen White Foundation announced that the recipient of its 1979 Award for Journalistic Merit will be James J. Kilpatrick. In making this announcement, the president of the Foundation noted that "James J. Kilpatrick is a very special William Allen White Foundation finds exemplary." Kilpatrick is, for example, "an
Kilpatrick is not deserving of award
To the editor:
earnest advocate, but a respecter of truth. . . It is entirely appropriate that Kilpatrick join the ranks of the distinguished men and women who have
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USF$ 600-840) Published at the University of Kansas during August through May and then discounted to $52 per student. Second-class postage paid at lawsuits. Kansas 6040; Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $13 for six months or $3 a year activity county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, through the student activity county.
Managing Editor
Direk Steimel
Bend changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 60055.
KANSAN letters
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been honored in this beloved Kansan's memory."
I write this letter to disagree. William Allen White believed in racial equality and he believed in the desirability—indeed, the necessity of a racially integrated American society. And, most important, he acted on these beliefs. For several decades, he was a member of the board of directors of the National Association for the Adoption of Children's P脏 and in 1904 in his only venture as a candidate for public office, White opposed the Ku Klux Klan in campaigning for the governorship of Kansas.
And what of James Kilpatrick? If racism may be defined as a belief in a program of racial discrimination, segregation and domination based on one race's alleged superiority and another race's alleged inferiority, then Kilpatrick is a racist.
Examples abound in his writings of his commitment to an ideology of white supremacy. For example, in his book The School System School Segregation, Ultrickratt argued not only that he but his own as well, by claiming "that over a period of thousands of years, the Negro race, as a race, has failed to contribute significantly to the higher and nobler forms of racism," but also defines that term. This may be a consequence of innate psychic factors. Again, it
may not be, but because contemporary evidence suggests little racial imposition, it is possible that characteristics of the white race, as best it can, and to protect those characteristics, as best it can, from what is sincerely regarded as an increasing influence of Negro characteristics.[12]
Is a white supremacist "a respecter of truth?" Do these statements exemplify the truth as William Allen White defined it? Hardly. Perhaps Mr. Kilpatrick has undergone a transformation and recanted his views, but his knowledge, edited his readers of any change of heart or mind. For these reasons, I believe that presenting James Kilpatrick with the William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit is an insult not only to the writer, but also to Kansan, "but to all Kansans and particularly to members of this community."
And why would school desegregation threaten the white race? Kilpatrick has an argument. He argues that to integrate the schools of the Southern States ... is to risk, twenty or thirty years hence, a widespread racial amalgamation and a debasement of the society as a whole.
William M. Tuttle, Jr.
Professor of history
it is my conviction that what makes the present impasse so frustrating is that it is expanded—not restricted—trade that is in our mutual best interest.
As an illustration, let's examine the opposition to selling equipment and know-how to help the Soviet Union develop oil and gas reserves.
So, let's act in our own self interest,
recognizing the benefits for our own
careers.
SUCH OPPOSITION ignores the fact that 95 percent of this technology is available outside the United States. Our loss is a foreign trader's gain, so support for our "uncompromising stand" may be seized overseas by a barely concealed snicker.
But assuming that we could successfully delay Soviet oil and gas production, would the Soviet Union curtail industrial activity or military-preparedness goals? Would we?
Isn't the more logical result likely to be intense Soviet competition for available oil and gas from the Middle East? Higher oil and gasoline prices for United States consumers could be the least of the worst possible outcomes.
LEFTS SCRAP the silly restrictions imposed after the Export Control Act of 1949, which gave companies a parentality on the premise that you can't aim a rifle while holding up your pants). Laughable? As late as 1989, brassieres instructed men to wear gloves were considered a strategic "export"
We can and should seek a steady, reasonable increase in trade with the Soviet Union; it can be accomplished with little risk and much mutual gain.
2. CONTINUING present policies set out
Some of the common-sense changes might include the following:
in the Export Administration Act of 1968, but speeding up the process for reviewing export licenses. We should allow outside experts and applicants to participate in hearings and to confront those who oppose a particular license.
1. Removing those sections of the Trade Reform Act of 1794 that link economic crises with immigration and sideriders. They're not doing their intended job. We should substitute a clear mandate to look after United States interests, fair, mutual beneficial trade agreements.
3. Repealing sections of the Trade Reform Act of 1974 and the Export-Import Act of 1980, we will bring our Export-Import Bank from participating in financing exports to the Soviet Union. Then we should grant United States expatriates from abroad those who are granted by other countries.
Increased trade offers opportunity for greater cooperation in many areas as well as increased contact. Normal trade relations and moderate expansion in commerce can raise the United States-Soviet Union total to a level of $15 billion within the next three to
So from my viewpoint, a policy of holding trade hostage for political ends is self-defeating. The Russians can live without us, but they cannot against them. But we both would be poorer for it.
William Verry is chairman of the Armco Steel Corporation and co-chairman of the United States—U.S.S.R. Trade and Trade Council, a trade-promotion group.
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 affronted by the editor, the writer should include the writer's class and home town or faculty and staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Mondav. Januarv 29.1979
University Daily Kansan
5
NEBRAIL
50
KANS
10
NEBRAIL
40
Staff photo by CHR
Hiah iump
Cormoran Hert Curt Hedberg (50) snags a rebound while teamsets Andre Smith (40) and Mike Naderer look on with KU's Tony Gavv.
It was part of the second-half effort by Nebraska that was capped by Bob Moore's 35-foot shot the buzzer in overtime for KU.
Men's track team wins 2nd meet
By GENEMYERS
Snorts Writer
Even though he had hoped more athletes
would qualify, the CAA Indoor
Championship was KU Track. Timmons found nothing but encouragement
from his team's second indoor meet
Only Lester Mickens qualified, but no complaints were heard from Timmons.
KU used Mickens' national qualifying time of 48.19 in the 440-yard dash and 10 other first place finishes to score 81 points and easily out distance its opposition. Wichita State scored 41 and North Texas State had 29 points.
Timmons, however, was more impressed with individual efforts of Dave Bauer, Jeff Buckingham, Conry Combs, Brent Swanson than with the 40-point margin of victory.
COMPETING FOR the first time since transferring to KU this semester, Combs recorded the meet's only double victories. He won the 84-yard low hurdles in 7.07, and in the triple jump, his winning 51-42 effort earned him a door mark ever recorded by a KU athlete.
Both Swanson and Whitaker set personal bests on their way to first-place finishes. Swanson ran a 4:14.6 mile and Whitaker a 1:12.15,600-vard dash.
Bauer, whose best event is the mile, showed up too late to run his specialty but came back and clipped more than 10 laps off his best two-mile time, winning in 8:56.
The two-mile quickly emerged as a two-man race with Bauer following a few yards behind teammate Kendall Smith. With two teams, Bauer started his kick and won going away.
"I guess I had the adrenalin flowing," he said, "to be happy now. Everything went according."
BUCKINGHAM, a freshman who has already qualified for the NCAA Indoor, led a KU sweep in the pole vault while tying his opponent with 6-1. He also won his performance against the Russian Juniors last summer in Donyetek, that vault was the second best among high school athletes.
Martin Metzger and Owen Buckley completed the 1-2-3 sweep for the Jayhawks. Both vaulters cleared 16-feet-1, but Metzger was awarded second place because of fewer
The only other Jayhawk who has qualified for nationals is senior sprinter Kevin Newell. In KU's first meet last week, he qualified in the 440, and Saturday his winning time of 0.25 in the 60-yard dash was just one second slower than the NCAA requirement.
DESPITE GROIN and hamstring injuries, hurdler Anthony Coleman also just missed ensuring himself a trip to Detroit March 9-10 for the Indoor. In the preliminaries of the 60-yard low hurds, Coleman strained a groin muscle but still managed to win the 60-yard high hurds in a second at a second of a second off the qualifying mark.
KU's two other victories were recorded by Tom McCally with a 1:57.79 in the 800-yard dash, and by the mile relay team of Mickens, Whitaker, Greg Carpenter and whose better 2:01.18 was more than four seconds before second-place North Texas State.
Second place finishers for the Jayhawks were Tim Tays in the mile, Jay Reardon in the long and triple jumps, Steve Rainbolt in the high jump and McCall in the 600.
Coleman later tried to run the 60-yard lows but had to pull up halfway through the hole.
Taking third were Tays in the two-mile,
Tim Jones in the 60 and Stan Garden in the
six.
Moore's shot swishes, NU gets overtime win
By JOHN P. THARP
He taught his grade school.
His junior high and high school coaches
treated him bimonthly.
LINCOLN, Neb. - Nebraska's Bob Moore said he's been doing it since grade school.
Moore is a two-handed shooter, which gives him a little more range than the shotgun. He can move quickly.
Associate Sports Editor
With that advantage and a prayer, Moore put up the longest shot, one that will go down in sports chastit history. It won a big game for the overtime kou over KU Saturday in overtime, 06-64.
"That shot—it was just me," Moore said. "It fell."
"I took two steps from half court and put it up—and prayed. It was on a direct line and looked pretty accurate. I hoped. I prayed. I just shut it."
Moore said his pre coaches had tried to change his shot. Fortunately for NU's coach Jicepriano, Moore kept up what coaches dislike and became a Husker hero, mobbed by fans after the dramatic end of what the Big Eight game-of-the-week.
TWO KU PLAYERS had chances to get "the shot." Crawford missed a jumper from the top of the circle with six seconds, and Wilmore Fowler missed a hurried 30-foot that had been set up by a Darnell Valentine steal.
Moore had tied up the overtime by tapping the ball loose from KU's John Crawford. The ball passed between Carl McPipe tip-in with 1:21 left in regulation time. The overtime began with a scoreless tie.
Crawford hit all of KU's three extraperiod points. Fowler took KU's last shot, which went out of bounds with four seconds showing.
KANSAN Sports
Brian Banks bobs the ball to Moore near half-court on a sideline inbounds pass. All
"It was Bob's best shot," Cipriano said, happy to keep KU coach Ted Owens from getting his first victory in the Bob Devaney Sports Communic
alone, Moore dribbled just past mid-court and launched the winning bucket from 35 yards.
Owens was looking grim afterward, but said that his team had played a good game.
"It was as sweet as wine."
Perhaps the exception was some second-ball defensive slack, during which Andre Rodgers broke the ball.
KU center Paul Mokeski was everywhere, hitting a game and career-high 23 points. He also led KU with three steals, blocked a shot and got four assists before fouling out.
ABOUT MOORE's shot, Mokeski said,
"I just it's one of those things. I guess you knew it was going to go in once it left his hands. He's played good against us."
"I thought at first it was going in," he said, "because he was wide open."
Crawford, who was guarding McPipe underneath and anticipating a tip by NU's center, said he had been astonished by Moore's bucket.
"I just couldn't believe it." he said.
Valentine received four pitches after the game to close a cut on his right hand. He had been hurt when he hit the rim and was unable to play against about two minutes left in regulation play.
He looked at Moore's logically. He also looked at it from the bench, having been stunned by that play.
that television technicians said didn't happen on the replay.
"It was a good shot," he said, "and I knew they were going to have to shoot a long one. 'He (Moore) just threw it up there. He had no pressure as far as making it.'
| Rating | Number of Games |
| :--- | :--- |
| Cigar | 4-7 | PT | RESB | TP | T1 |
| Gap | 6-7 | 2-4 | 0 | 5 | 11 |
| Crowder | 4-7 | 2-4 | 0 | 3 | 11 |
| MacKenzie | 11-13 | 1-2 | 0 | 5 | 23 |
| Vaccimore | 11-13 | 1-2 | 0 | 3 | 23 |
| Sanders | 1-14 | 1-4 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Fang | 1-14 | 1-4 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Stalicop | 1-14 | 1-4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Staploc | 1-14 | 1-4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Giles | 1-8 | 0-4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Glies | 1-8 | 0-4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Gilens | 1-8 | 0-4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
Conference W L All Games
Okahomba 4 2 11 6
Venebraka 4 2 11 6
Bilberview 4 2 10 5
Colorado 3 2 13 9
Iowa State 3 2 10 8
Kansas 3 2 10 8
Oklahoma State 3 2 10 8
Kannas 25 26 3-4
Nebraka 33 38 6-4
(Great Britain, Quarterly Review 1975)
Big Eight Conference Standings
| | PG | FT | REB | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Moores | 5-11 | 0-1 | 2 | 10 | 10 |
| Smith | 8-4 | 1-4 | 3 | 12 | 9 |
| McPike | 7-12 | 2-9 | 8 | 4 | 16 |
| Nadever | 5-7 | 2-9 | 8 | 4 | 16 |
| Mydner | 7-9 | 2-9 | 3 | 1 | 12 |
| Myrish | 1-2 | 0-1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Heberg | 1-2 | 0-1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Heberg | 30-52 | 9-14 | 3 | 17 | 66 |
Officials: Spitzer, Leimbach. Attendance: 11,273
WEEK SHOWN STREETS:
Jan 24. Kansas State 73, Oklahoma State 77,
Okahanna State 73, Colorado 82, Missouri 99, Nebraska 104
An.ann 71. Nebraska 66, Kansas 64, Missouri 83, Kansas
State 69, Colorado 63, Oklahoma State 55, Oklahoma
State 51
Women win twice at KSU
Wednesday: Missouri at Iowa State; Oklahoma at Kansas State; Colorado at Kansas; Nebraska at Oklahoma
Saturday: Missouri at Oklahoma; Kansas State at Iowa
College; Colorado at Nebraska
Friday: Oklahoma State at Kansas.
Sunday: Kansas at Michigan State
Sports Editor
By NANCY DRESSLER
Kansas won both its games in the Kansas state womens basketball classic this season.
Minnesota played with an improved
But a scrappy University of Minnesota team which lost to KU by 18 points in November, gave Kansas a run before finally losing 79-73 Friday.
The Jayhawks had little trouble disposing of Texas Women's University for the second time this season in a game Saturday. KU won 95-65.
The victories extended 19th-ranked KU's winning streak to 11 games and gives the Kansas State team a slight advantage. They must beat rival Kansas State in Manhattan tomorrow to do it. KU is 19-4.
Sports Writer
defense from the two teams' earlier meeting. The Gophers 55 percent field goal shooting combined with a subpar KU game, led, head coach Marian Washington said.
"OUR DEFENSE WAS not as sharp as it 'is been', she said. "There no question."
"We didn't cover inside the way we should. And when we started staging, they hit us with their swords."
Adrian Mitchell regained the lead about a minute later on a follow shot to put KU on the board.
KU led the entire game except for about one minute of the second half when Minnesota's Laura Gardner scored to make it 56-5.
In the 1,000-yard run, Derr Hertzog missed qualifying for nationals by four seconds, but Curtis Kramer was still in third.
Mitchell finished the game with 19 points. KU's Lynett Woodward had 30 points.
'Hawks take indoor meet
Rv CARLOS MURGUIA
As she expected, KU beat its opposition convincingly. But she was disappointed that no qualifier for the Association of International Athletics for Women's national meet.
KU women's track coach Teri Anderson, and mixed feelings about KU's performance showcase.
KU scored 79 points in winning its second indoor meet of the season. North Texas State University finished in second place and Wichita and Wichita State finished third with 21.
In the mile, KU's Michelle Brown won with a time of 5:06.9, but she needed a time of 5:04.5 to qualify for nationals. Maureen Pinholm finished second with a time of
"Lori Green and Shawn Corwin had outstanding individual efforts and we just missed qualifying for nationals in the mile and the 1,000."
"Overall, I was satisfied with the team's performance." Anderson said.
Washington said she had been expecting a
KU won 11 of the 14 events. Green and Corwin accounted for four of those first place finishes. Green, who has already qualified for nationals in the 60- and 300-yard runs, won those races with times of 7.05 in the 60 and 36.16 in the 300.
Corwin was KU's only other double timer. She took the long jump by keeping it 60 feet away from her.
Completing a KU sweep in the field events was KU's shot put record holder, Linda Newell. Newell finally outdueted Natalie Smith with a throw of 43-44%, with a heave of 44-10%.
Coming off an injury, Vicii Simpson won the 600-yard run with a time of 1:29.3 and Larry Lowery won the 600-yard run with a time of 17.21.8. Lore Lowery won the 600-yard hurdles with a time of 8.3. Lowery and Gwen Posn, who finished second in the race with a time of 8.6, have qualified for nationals in the
The two-mile relay team of Hertzg, Finholm, Brown and Wendy Warner placed first with a time of 9.38.8. The relay team, which ran unopposed, needed to post a time in order to be eligible for the event at the Big Eight meet.
Injury-riddled KU swimmers lose
After a strong performance by Patty Muellerbier to win the one-meter diving competition andIRSTs by Janet Lindstrom, Lanny Schaffer, and Diane Ellis in the next four events, the Jayhawks were able to cut the Cornhuker lead to 55-51.
"Nebraska is a good team," he said, "but we're the Big Eight champions and we'll be the Big Eight champions until someone beats us in the Big Eight meet.
KU coach Gary Kempf that while Nebraska won this battle, his squad is conceding nothing to the Cornhuskers, especially in the Big Eight Championship in Ohio.
Sports Writer
LINCOLN, Neb. —An inspired Nebraska women's swimming team established two NU variety records Saturday and upset KU in a dual meet.
By DAVID PRESTON
Kempf also said the meet was not really representative of his team's ability. Six KU swimmers did not compete because of illness or injuries.
The loss was the first in a dual meet for the Jawhaws this year.
MUEHLBERGER PROVIDED the biggest lift for Kansas by upsetting Nebraska diver Kriisti Wells in the ommeter competition. She edged Wells, the 1977 Big Eight champion, by a score of 205.2 to 195.7 to six dives.
compete this weekend in the Kansas Invitational.
The Jayhawks were slowed Friday when the squad's top diver, Pauls Weiner, was thrown into the water.
"Even with this win, Kansas has to be favored."
NEBRASKA COACH Ray Haupt said that although the meet was a big victory for his squad, it was not necessarily an in-
KU, however, failed to win any of the last four events.
The Cornhuskers were fueled by the performances of Ellen Hollander and Melanie Klaney who set NU records with a 294-foot kick backstroke and 206-yard butterfly respectively.
"Sure it was hard coming up here six girls short," Kemp said, "but take nothing away." He wiped his brow.
"Our girls were psychologically ready for this meet," he said, "but you have to taper yourselves for the Big Eight and Kansas has stronger depth.
Muehberger said that she had not been intimidated by her opposition.
"I was thinking about my dives more than who I was diving against."
She said that the loss of Wehner was a big lift for Nebraska.
Lindstrom, the top scorer for the Jayhawks, had first-place finishes in the 200-yard, 100-yard, and 500-yard freestyle events.
"She's our top dive, and they knew that we were up here with only 13 people.
If they were going to beat us, this was the time," Lindstrom said.
Ellis won twice for Kansas, as did teammate Schaffer. Schaffer's time of 2.09:58 in the 200-yard backstroke was a pool record at the Nebraska natatorium.
Schafer said that it was obvious that Nebraska was ready for Kansas.
"HE (HUPPERT) had rested his girls up for this," she said. "We've never been beaten before, and they're never this excited."
closer game from Texas Women's 21-point losers to KU two weeks ago.
"I THOUGHT TEXAS really was sitting on their heels," she said.
Kansas consistently got points on layups and close shots en route to 58 percent field-goal shooting. Woodard again led the team, with 36 points, 10 of which came on layups. Mitchell added 17 and Shyra Holden had 16 points.
Kempf agreed.
Kansas State split its games. The Wildcats Friday beat Texas Women's 68-62 and Saturday lost to Minnesota 68-64. K-Site has had six losses in last 15-7 and has lost three of its last four 15-7.
The men's swimming meet Friday at Colorado was canceled because of bad roads. The team's next action will be Friday at Drury College in Springfield, Mo.
"If Nebraska hadn't won here, their season would have been over. They put it up on the field."
"They peaked for us today, but we'll be tougher at the Colorado State Invitational when we face them again, and at the Big Eight." he said.
The Jayhaws used a 1-2-3 zone defense to out Texas Women's, which shot only 42 shots per game.
| | FG | PT | REF | PF | OT |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Barnett | 1.4 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Knox | 1.4 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Maiterson | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Sanders | 5.1 | 0.0 | 6 | 6 | 4 |
| Sanders | 5.1 | 0.0 | 6 | 4 | 4 |
| Sanders | 9.19 | 1.6 | 7 | 19 | 1 |
| Jankinson | 9.19 | 1.6 | 7 | 19 | 1 |
| Jankinson | 13.21 | 0.0 | 10 | 3 | 2 |
| Holden | 13.21 | 0.0 | 10 | 3 | 2 |
| Holden | 36.41 | 0.1 | 28 | 21 | 79 |
| | FC | GT | REB | PP | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Durand | 0-6 | 0-6 | 0-7 | 0-6 | 0-6 |
| Kobach | 5-4 | 5-4 | 1-2 | 0-6 | 0-6 |
| Roberts | 9-17 | 5-9 | 9 | 4 | 21 |
| Gardner | 8-16 | 5-9 | 9 | 4 | 21 |
| Meyers | 6-9 | 6-9 | 7 | 3 | 9 |
| Dahlenhoff | 3-3 | 3-4 | 6 | 5 | 9 |
| Olm | 5-7 | 14 | 14 | 9 | 9 |
| Hamm | 32-14 | 6-14 | 37 | 30 | 9 |
Kansas ... 38 41 - 79
Minnesota ... 35 38 - 72
| | PG | FT | RB2 | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Burnett | 5-6 | 0-2 | 14 | 0 | 1 |
| Knox | 3-6 | 0-2 | 14 | 0 | 1 |
| Patterson | 2-4 | 0-4 | 2 - 0 | 0 | 4 |
| McMurray | 3-4 | 0-4 | 0 - 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Sanders | 3-4 | 0-4 | 0 - 0 | 2 | 0 |
| Mitchell | 2-11 | 3-4 | 8 - 1 | 3 | 17 |
| Laila | 3-11 | 3-4 | 8 - 1 | 1 | 10 |
| Cullen | 1-6 | 0-0 | 1 - 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Woodard | 12-23 | 12-23 | 13 - 1 | 1 | 36 |
| Holden | 16-23 | 14-23 | 13 - 1 | 1 | 16 |
| Holmes | 40-49 | 16-23 | 62 | 16 | 30 |
| | PG | PP | RBIs | TB | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| *williams* | 54 | 19 | 2 | 3 | 6 |
| Morrhead | 36 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 6 |
| McRae | 6-0 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Gallagher | 6-1 | 0-2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Dillard | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Johnson | 6-12 | 2-4 | 4 | 3 | 12 |
| Golden | 6-12 | 5-4 | 4 | 5 | 23 |
| Golden | 11-12 | 9-0 | 3 | 5 | 32 |
| Guarnza | 6-1 | 3-3 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Crawford | 0-1 | 2-3 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Crawford | 3-1 | 1-4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| *Knapp* | 36-57 | 19-14 | 24 | 34 | 85 |
Kannas 49 66 - 95
Texan Womens' 25 60 - 95
Gymnastics teams travel score season dual bests
Sports Writer
By BRETT CONLEY
The weekend proved to be very productive for the men's and women's gymnastics teams, as both scored season bests in dual meets.
The men's teams went over the 200-point mark for the first time this season in defeating Northern Iowa University 202.2-175.3 in Cedar Falls, Iowa. KU won every event and turned in 10 individual season bests.
The team then traveled to Normal, Ill., for what was supposed to be a double dual with Southern Illinois and Illinois State universities. However, Southern Illinois did not make it to the meet because of bad weather.
Bob Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach,
said he had not known whether KU was
to make to make it because the team had had
to travel through a snow and ice storm.
UK arrived late for the meet and lost to Illinois State 207.1-199.5. The Jayhawks managed just one first place finish, but his team's the team's performance was understandable.
"Steve Foerc showed for the first time that he is going to be a good gymmaster." Lockwood said. "We are still a young team and have not打 full a team effort."
The women's team finished second in a triangular game Friday in Stillwater, Wash. They beat the Mountaineers 7-6 (10)
LOCKWOOD SAID he be had been pleased with Steve Foore, who was forced to compete in all events in the Northern Iowa race. He was a graduate when his brother, Brad Foore, became ill.
win, followed by KU with 123.45 and Texas A&M with 116 points.
"The scoring was easier there than it is here but it was a much better meet for us," she said. "We did much better on the balance beam, because the girls showed better scores."
KU was led by Jackie DiPinto, who won the balance beam competition with a season best score of 8.7 and finished third in the floor exercise, and all round competition.
THE COBOYS are ranked 128th in the country and Snow said they showed Friday that they had not been able to complete the race.
Men's results were:
At Northern Iowa—floor exercise —1. S. Foerch 8.9, 2. Chris Phillips 8.5; tymm horse—1. Bill Harris 8.5, 2. Scott Boer 8.0; still rings—1. Ron Ortman 8.9, 2. Larer Betsworth 8.9; vaulting —1. S. Foerch 8.9, 2. Ortman 8.7; parallel bars —1. Betsworth 8.9, 2. (te) Marshall Kleye and Mark Kiley —1. Werner Hammel 8.5, 2. Betsworth 8.5, 3. (te) Ortman and Larry Kaplan 8.2; and all-around —1. Ortman 49.5, 2. Kelley 48.7.
At Illinois State—floor exercise —3. S.
Foerch 8.8; pommel horse —2. Boer 8.65;
vaulting —2. Ortman 9.2, 3. Phillips 8.7;
parallel bars —2. Ortman 8.7, high bar—1.
Kelley 9.2, 3. Ortman 8.8 and all-around—1.
Motter 50.2, 2. Kelley 48.9.
Women's results were:
vaulting – 5, DiPinto 8.15; uneven parallel bars – 4, Kim Danlee 7.3; balance beam – 1, Katy Ross 8.55; floor exercise – 3, DiPinto 8.48 and all-around – 3, DiPinto 92.28.
6
Monday, January 29, 1979
University Daily Kansas
Not all job candidates qualified, Shankel says
About a fourth of the 38 candidates nominated to replace Ron Caligard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, might not be qualified.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that about 20 of the applicants were from outside the University of Kansas. Of those, he said, only eight to 10 were well-qualified for the job, which will become open July 1, when Calgary is scheduled to become a bachelor's degree university in San Antonio, Texas.
According to Jeanette Johnson, administrative assistant to Shankel, the head of the department, he includes teaching and research experience and several years of major administrative experience, perhaps as a department chairman or as dean of a
About 15 of the applicants are from KU, Shankel said, and all have the qualifications necessary for the position.
Some administration officials said last week they were disappointed more KU faculty members had not applied. Shankel said he understood why.
"It's a complex, demanding job," he said. "There are not an awful lot of people with the time and energy for it."
The deadline for the applications was Thursday. A 12-member committee will begin reviewing the applications on Feb. 1. He said he hoped to have four recommendations from the committee by mid-March.
Shankel will interview the final candidates before sending a recommendation to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes for final approval.
HOUSE PLANT SALE
CONTINUES
See Friday's ad
in the UDK
PENCE
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• 15TH AND NEW YORK • WEST-914 WEST 23RD
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HYPERVITALES
Sale Ends Tomorrow!
By LESLIE GUILD
High school scholars to compete at KU
Staff Renorter
About 100 Kansas high school seniors will be at the University of Kansas today to compete for scholarships totaling about $365,000. KU Enforcement Association about $8,000.
The seniors will be competing for the Watkins-Berger and Summerfield scholarships. The Endowment Association will pay for travel, meals and lodging expenses to bring them to compete for the scholarships.
About 100 students are chosen as scholarship winners each year, according to their high school grades, competition results and financial need.
The scholarships have been awarded for about 15 years.
Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Financial Aid, said the costs of competition included lodging at two local models, $2,175 and $2,300; catering at hospital and at residence halls, $2,855; bus passes and cab fare, $25; and other costs for printing and handling schedules and competition.
"THESE FIGURES are just projected costs based on the costs of the program last
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year," he said. "We expect at least a 5 to 10 percent increase."
During the 1977-1978 school year an additional $1,756 was spent on parties and banquets honoring the scholars, Rogers said.
George Stewart, treasurer of the Endowment Association, said the $7,947 cost last year were paid from $38,000 revenue gained each year from the original money given to the University in the names of Watkins, Berger and Summerfield.
"So the costs of the program are subtracted from the $30,000 and the money remaining is divided up to be given as honoraries and scholarships," he said.
Phil McKnight, director of the Instructional Resource Center and chairman of the scholarship committee, said every student chosen as a scholar was awarded funds. The committee is made up of University professors.
"The scholarships are given to those chosen as scholars who prove to have a financial need," McKnight said. "But all scholarships some money in the form
McKNIGHT SAID that last year's year-end balance to be about the same amount.
CASH'N CARRY
THE DORM-WARMERS'
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McKnight said seniors were invited to compete for the scholarship based on grade point average in high school, activities in college or other higher they were National Merit semi-finalists.
WINTER
Rug Riot!
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| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gold Dust Shag | $70 | $41 |
| Red shag | $50 | $30 |
| Antique gold hi-hi | $130 | $80 |
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| Copin gold sculpture | $95 | $65 |
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| Summer green hi-hi | $81 | $42 |
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CENTER
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CARPETS INC.
29TH & IOWA. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 843-9090
films sua
Monday, January 29
Open 'til 8 p.m. Monday & Tuesday
BETWEEN THE LINES
(1977)
Dir, Joan Micklin Silver ("Hester Waters"), with John Heard, Gwen Walleys, Lindsay, Crouse, Jeff Duncan, and Jason Bursen ("The August Jones"). 7:08 & 8:30.
(1946)
Tuesday, January 30
Film Noir:
Dr. Robert Slojdma; with Burt Lankar, Ava Garner. From the Hemingway short story; Lancaster's first film role.
THE KILLERS
Dir. Federico Fellini; with Anthony Quinn, Glulette Masina, Richard Basehart Italy/subtitles.
Wednesday, January 31
Fellini:
LA STRADA
(1954)
Thursday, February 1
FAR FROM VIETNAM
(1967)
Dr Jean Lecus Godard, Alain Reaunis,
Agnes Vardès, Claudie Lejoux, Joris
Ivans, and others. A documentary in
literature. Cong. Plue: "The History Book,
x. 2."
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
Student candidates discuss priorities
Candidates for the office of KU student body president played to a small house yesterday when about 15 persons showed up to hear their campaign platforms.
The candidates appeared at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. Hillel, a campus Jewish student organization, sponsored the
Clair Keizer, Lawrence junior and candidate for student body president, said he thought the Student Senate should select a senior from academics and begin to plan for the future.
Keizer, who leads the Imagination Coalition, said the project drop in KU enrollment would lower the amount of student activity fees allocated by the Student Senate. He said the Senate should be ready for the decrease.
The University owns undeveloped 360 acres near the lake.
HE ALSO CALLED for the Senate to look for ways to improve the present addrop policy for classes and to make plans for recreation facility at Clinton Lake.
Another presidential candidate, Ron Allen, Sabeth sophomore, said that if he were elected he would investigate the case of Mr. Ginsburg's policy at the Kansas Union Bookstore.
Allen said students were losing money when they sold their books at the end of the somester because department stores had not stocked enough of books that would be used the following
Tomlinson, Mission junior, said he would like to change the way senators were elected.
Bob Tornilson, representing the Laplum Plaminson, said the fact that he was not a member of the Senate gave him an abatement. But the other candidates did not have
"THIS IS AN area that's very important at KU and it's something that's been ignored," she said.
Berlin, Bonner Springs junior, said she also would investigate the possibility of having students serve on promotion and grant-renewing committees.
He said he thought senators should be elected by geographic living districts and not by schools.
Margaret Berlin, candidate for the Perch Steak Coiation, said an off-campus housing board would be one of her priorities.
"Students are worried. They think something must be done," Alien, leader of the Rapport Coalition, said.
"I'm more sympathetic to the apathetic point of view than many of the other candidates are," he said. "It's the prevalent attitude on campus."
Mark Hazelrigel, Emporia junior and a member of the Apathy Coalition, said he wanted people to consider him a serious candidate.
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If you're a single, Full-time student getting 8% or better, you may qualify for Farmers' 25% discount on auto rates.
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Ann Oharah 843-2170
Don Freeman 841-8285
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OPPORTUNITIES
Those Positions Will Be Up For Election In The Student Body Elections February, 14th and 15th
★ Student Body President-Vice President
- Student Sonate Seats
ARCHITECTURE...2
BUSINESS...4
EDUCATION...8
ENGINEERING...8
NUNEMAKER-1...6
NUNEMAKER-2...5
NUNEMAKER-3...5
NUNEMAKER-4...5
NUNEMAKER-5...6
FINE ARTS . 7
JOURNALISM . 3
LAW . 2
L.A. & S. 15
PHARMACY . 2
SOCIAL WELFARE . 2
UNIVERSITY SPECIALS2
GRADUATE . 24
OFF CAMPUS . 1
★ Class Officers (Sophomore, Junior,
Senior)
President, Vice-President, Secretary,
Treasurer
Filing Deadline Is TODAY at 5 p.m.
Applications Available In The Student Senate Office 105 B Union
N10692
Face it
aone-away.
you get that feeling, then you're in luck. Air Force ROTC Flight instruction Program (FIP) is available to you if it designed to teach you the basics of flight through fledging lessons in small aircraft of aerial operated companies.
The program is an EXTRA for cadets who can qualify to become Air Force pilots through Air Force BOTC. Taken during the senior year in college, FIPS is the first step for the cadet who is going on to Air Force JET pilot training.
AIR FORCE
Gateway to a great way of life
This is all reserved for the caddi who wants to get into the group and grow with Air Force silver pin, while Christine Koch tests them.
"Sophomores and Juniors. Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. See if you qualify. Call Caillot J. Mackee, 864-4676, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108."
Monday, January 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
-KANSAN
On Campus
TODAY: Tests for the SUMMERFIELD/WATKINS-BERGER SCHOLARSHIP will be given all day at the Kansas Union. JAYHAWKER BASKETBALL CLUB will meet at noon in the Council Room of the Union.
TONIGHT; STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITYS will meet at 7:30 in the Student Center on Tuesday, a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall. The WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM will host Nebraska at 7:15 in the Room of the Unions at 7:15 in the Room of the Unions
TOMORROW: KU WORKSHOP ON PERSONAL POWER will be 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union, VOCAL AUDITIONS for Tanglewood Institute of Boston University will be from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Swarthout Rockefeller Hall in Murray Park, Washington, D.C. you can be from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union, STUDENT EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE will meet at 6:45 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union. An orientation meeting for SPEECH AND HEARING CLINIC PROGRAM FOR PERSONAL POWER will be held at Haworth Hall, Adult Life Resource Center "PERSONAL POWER" WORKSHOP will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
U.S. energy grants offered to Kansans
Inventive consumers who are tired of high utility bills can develop their own energy sources or energy-saving designs this year. Because the government will pick up the tab.
The U.S. Department of Energy is offering grants to individuals or groups to develop or conserve energy resources, state Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, told 30 Lawrence residents yesterday at a meeting at the Lawrence Public Library.
Glover sponsored the meeting with state Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, state Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, and Joseph King, acting director of the Kansas Energy Office, to discuss energy problems and legislation.
Kansas' share of the federal funds is $125,000. Glover said. In other states the grants, called Appropriate Technology Small Grants, have ranged from $400 for a solar beewax meter to $49,000 for a solar heating system.
THE AVERAGE amount of money awarded to programs outside Kansas has been $12,000. At that rate, 10 Kansas projects could be funded.
'that's chicken feed,' Bill Spencer, owner of Alternatives Inc., a Lawrence solar design firm, said. 'I can't put my time into something for a year at $12,000.'
However, one man thought it offered him little incentive.
The grant application form warns that competition for the money will be rigorous. The first review of the applications will be made by the Energy Department to determine whether the proposed projects are feasible.
The application defines "appropriate technology" as devices that are small, simple, and easily renewable; they must either use renewable natural resources, such as sunlight or wind, or conserve non-renewable resources, as would efficient appliances or innovative storm win-
A COMMITTEE of five Kansans will review the projects deemed technically feasible. Then the Energy Department will make its choices from those.
Douglas County has not yet been ordered to draft emergency plans in case of an attack at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, reports to reports that circulated last week.
However, a Nuclear Regulatory Commission report, issued last December, recommended that all counties within 50 miles of the Wolf Creek plant near Burlington be required to prepare for an emergency there.
A 50-mile radius of the plant, which is about 60 miles southwest of Lawrence, includes southern parts of Douglas County.
A mix-up occurred when the NRC recommendation was misinterpreted as a new regulation, Col. Mahon Weed, of Emergency Preparedness, said Friday.
"THE REPORT was only a copy of an NRC committee meeting. Whether this will go into effect, we don't yet know." Weed said.
Because the NRC had never specified a minimum radius of counties around the plant that would be required to draft emergency preparedness plans for Emergency Preparedness set on a 40-
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
But if that radius is extended by 10 miles, 10 other counties, including Douglas County, would have sections within the limit.
mile radius, which, readily conformed to county boundaries. Weed said.
Weed said the NRC would make a decision on whether to enforce the 50-mile radius, but a date for the decision had not yet been set.
Travis Brann, coordinator of Emergency Preparedness for Douglas County, said his office had not begun to draft plans to deal with an accident at Wolf Creek because the NRC report had been only a recommendation.
Nuclear accident plan possible
"IT'S A kind of an awareness program at this point. We have had no requirements placed on us for any specific action at this point, but probably, when the time comes, we'll be involved." Brann said.
an emergency plan in Douglas County and the 17 other counties that are within 50 miles of the plant would prepare the plant for two types of emergencies, Bram said.
The first, a release of large amounts of radioactive material into the air, would require evacuation plans or fallout shelters, he said.
The second type of problem is possible
contamination of food and water. The counties would monitor the contamination and try to prevent people from eating or drinking contaminated
"A $6-Mile radius is a reasonable compromise. We can't talk about facts or evidence, because we've never had an accident at a nucleon power plant. It's all wrong."
"A LOT OF what would happen to us would depend a great deal on weather conditions at the time of the accident, whether the wind was blowing on our way;"
"We're on the fuzzy frings. Baldwin would be within the $5-mile radius, but Lawrence would not."
Friesen said the NRC recommendation would apply not only to Wolf Creek, but to all nuclear power plants in the United States.
KANSAN WANT ADS
the worst that could happen, he said. Wolf Creek nuclear power plant is scheduled to begin operation in 1983.
Association protocol: food, services and embroidery
Assessment of the impact of COVID-19 on ENROMS:
VIA CLASSIFIED INFORMATION (CLIIN) RATING BASED
VIA CLASSIFIED INFORMATION (CLIIN) RATING BASED
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two thirty four fifty six time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $0.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$0.00
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run!!!
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Lawrence Coin Club presents 19th Annual Coin
Show Feb. 7 to 8, at 8 p.m. Coin 4, 9 to 8,
at 5 p.m. Lawriee Community Building, Dealer
Square, 201 West 69th Street. Enjoy a
very welcome. Come Enjoy yourself-24
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen jersey daily, 6 P.M. Introductory lectures
Zen seminar daily, 9 a.m.
127, Ohio 842, 840-2100
5-15
Fora PROFESSOR SER
Enh Entry School in August
Charlotte, NC - Bachelor's
in Engineering
W.H. ROGERS SEARCH.
For application and information
contact M.D. DAVID JACOBS,
SERVICE 100 LABORATE St. New York, N.Y.
10026 WASHINGTON ST. NEW YORK, NY 10026
Attention: The Christian Science Organization
www.csi.org
6:30 P.M. in Durham Church. You are always
ready to serve.
Southern Dance Thursday, Feb 1d at South Park
Berceraton Bloor-Davidson 8-11 p.m. For information,
call 314-567-2000.
The Disney Dukes of Kansas City are mobile paired care, customised care and special effects needed in your night happen. Disney Dukes have built their first hospitalization on providing all the right care for their patients. Disney Dukes make parties happen. Check this airline's K.C. Star Magazine for more info--2-800-755-2431.
Employment Opportunities
Barnes & Noble Analyst. Structured statistical needed for development of new book analytics product. Resumes to Barnes & Noble at 800 W. 15th St., Suite 462, 918-376-3230. Job description: Req. Bach in Statistics or rel. field with Power at 842-287-4911 or 842-287-5411.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING!
Studios; 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and
furnished with modern finishes. Walkway
in school, parking space. OK KU bus route.
842-1444 or so at 321 Frontier Rent Next door.
842-1444
JAYHAWKER TOWERS has an apartment for
Squares. Two bedrooms, all furnished
with carpet. A large kitchen and
bathroom.
**WHAT ARE YOU WORTH!** If you’re third of the household, you can still more & more with a flexible hours. Set your own schedule, or let your child attend school from their first day at Center C, 217-792, 022 Summerfield or coal town lawrence, National Bank Hill, 218 Second Browne.
FOR RENT
ENTRA NICE II 2EACH room (i.e. located to wooded
area). Fully furnished, located on 4th floor.
bathroom, bedroom, kitchen, living room,
dryer, toilet, bathroom, kitchen, living
room,
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most utilities just dodgers RD, and near town.
Sleeping room-share kitchen, one block from
the main house. The front door leads to
near campus and downtown. No jetters. Day 825-
830.
Apt. 2 BH and efficiency. Close to campus. U11-
apst. Dr. Clea, quiet, and comfortable. U41-
apst. Dr. Clea, quiet, and comfortable.
Subdivision 50 department, 3 bedrooms,
1 bathroom,
1418-5531-4244, birth 5-30
1-99
99-2016-1771-1001, birth 10-30
Sublease - nice 2 br. apt. on loan route. Available now. 842-717-6. Keep trying.
Two BN Bridges, Low cost new Remodel Bedroom.
Two BN Bridges, Low cost new Bedroom (plus interest)
Keep trying
1 or 2 BR Duplex latch, Carpeted, breakfast bar,
winter dryer hookups. Call 634-5678 - 1:30
Two bedroom apt. for rent-$215 + Close to campus. 841-3277
1-36
Beautiful 3-bedroom house and 2-bedroom duplex units. Brand new, in good condition. [1-20]
Southwest Lawrence, A dream home. 4 Bed rm.
w-werving air, all drains and appliances. CAm. Fam.Rm. w.wireplate. Rce Room. 2 car garage.
all qualified, required资格. 12 students. mk144-821. 1-31
Two bedrooms, 15, bath bath, behind shopping
center. Price $499, 25th Jan. 2018
Scott 483-8437 or 841-898. $699
Succesus one b-droom furnished 3 blocks from Union Edp. low utilities 482-538.
MUST RUN 2 Bedroom apartment next to campus and football stadium. B42-842-6910 1-500
Christian Male for 2 Bedroom Apartment:
Admission only; no excel. Fellowship and study
483-892.
On-bed room, furnished apartment close to gym.
On-site laundry service. 24/7 weekends at 8:00-6:00 p.m.
1-26 hours per week for rent at $595.
Studio Ap, utilizes Park-1 -哄 to carry;
community kitchen and bath, B42-8744-021-
after 2-1.
Three bedrooms unfurnished home, except last bedroom with fireplace. Family room furnished. Family room furnished. no indoor patio. $215 per month.
Finished room for rent. Closet to Carquest. Owner,
kids share, kitchen. Utilities paid $75, mmo-1.
Finished room for rent. Closet to Carquest. Owner,
kids share, kitchen. Utilities paid $75, mmo-1.
Critchingham Very close to campus Call K42-6592 between 2-8 p.m. Keep trying K42-6592 between 2-8 p.m.
Rocermail to tiare 2 RI House. Carte o
cami $5.0m tiare 2 RI Hotel. Carte o
Cami $1
Park 25 on bus route 1, bedroom apartment
Submit from February-May 31. Have option to take
imms from June. Urbania - $185.00 Mo. Pursue:
Room 753 - 913-458-5677. Intr - 2-2
5:00 p.m.
Wanted: Person to share new 3 BR, furnished home. If interested contact丹 BM, 841-260-2922.
1 Bedroom Bath with fireplugs VERY CLOSE to
easily答: 841-7578 after 6.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now Make makes out of Western Civilization makes sure to include the cultural history of civilization 21. For exam preparation. New Analysis in Mankato Books. Makers Bookstore, & Orcad Bookstore. (5)
Ferdinil Hardy Bank Guitar with straps, strings,
gardens, picks and covers. Very good condition.
gardens and covers. Very good condition.
We are the fastest growing Pizza chain in the Country. We presently have 21 locations in operation with several more under construction, and we have more management positions available than people to fill them. You are looking for a future with unlimited potential for growth. We introduction to make it happen. We owe it to yourself to contact.
SunSport - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-proprietary, light-resistant, reasonably priced. Make sure to check the model #s 81250-1.
Godfather's Pizza
Rick 711 W.23rd St
Managers start at $1100 plus per month.
best Mossman guitars. I have a few very nice Mosman that at-tap acoustic guitars starting at around $1200. Carrardine, Merle Travis, Cat Slevens, & many others are available at $85-$220. Windup guitars at 318-622-2921. WINDUP
SAAIR 1970 1976教科级 internal enginery work, all
products (including refurbishments), new radio,
new chassis, and interfuser system. $2000.00 or
more.
Michigan Street Muscle, 647 Michigan, sales and
instruments. Complete line of strep and other
instruments.
Beats 10-speed $188 USB 600 mountable $249 Pair
$399 for an extra $79. $159 for an extra $25. $109 for an extra $59.
$159 for an extra $59. $159 for an extra $59. $159 for an extra $59.
Aftermarket, starter and generator. Specialties:
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-800-2000; 3000 W. 6th; fcb
amp, tuner, cassester deck, rack, Technicolor
monitor, TV tuner, phone line. $1250 for
$1250, $50 to call $281 after 5 o'clock.
Two BMI 211 speakers. Excellent condition, two excellent sound, inexpensive price.
Hewlett-Packard HP-25. Programmable scientific calculator. Like the HP-17, with accessories. Will take up less space than a laptop.
12 x 60 Mobile Home with initial shell carpenter Independent living for students 841-6029
Stereophone 8 Track, Record Player, A.M. F.M.
Stereo 9 Track, EMI Electric 24" $48.00
Battery 824-767-867
Must sell immediately—25-well Tech Services, Receiver
or offer bed aid 84-828 After 5pm
1-31
1-30
1-29
1-28
1-27
1-26
1-25
1-24
1-23
1-22
1-21
1-20
1-19
1-18
1-17
1-16
1-15
1-14
1-13
1-12
1-11
1-10
1-09
1-08
1-07
1-06
1-05
1-04
1-03
1-02
1-01
1-00
0-99
0-98
0-97
0-96
0-95
0-94
0-93
0-92
0-91
0-9
Aidable puppies, ACK. Be direct; choose finest
and breed. Vaccinated. Parents Show.
306-2514
Univex Mini-Kore Synthesizer 2 Alloc voice of 800MHz
Univex Mini-Kore Synthesizer 2 Alloc voice of 800MHz
Everything needs to equip. mk-803-942
Everything needs to equip. mk-803-942
FOUND
Kerrwood KX-720 Cassette Deck. Tup-Load, Dock NR & WP 841-6824 2-3
HELP WANTED
Man's coat found 2nd floor Fraiser, late week
found Winter-*681-3634* or drop by (29)
*571-6028*
Psychology book at Chi O. Fountain, Jan. 24.
Tarned in to police at Hoech
night 1 set of key in front of Spencer Hall
night 4 MUSK Basketball game 843-782-321
Hollie-Hunky mauls wod w/rid bandanna, no collar. Found at 6th & Mich 'Club H-841-3341'
Pair of cockatiels with brown frames, nets: 110-150 and JHP on westside: Call 841-0758
MEN. WOMEN. JOBS! ======== CRISEH 5119S
WASHINGTON, D.C. WORK WITH MARSHALS
WHILE PAYING $7.20 PER HOUR. WWW.AW2WORLD.COM
WORK WITH $7.20 PER HOUR. WWW.AW2WORLD.COM
Children's Learning Center has opening for part-time substitute teachers and additional aides M41-2185 to inquire. Must be 18 or older to apply. Please apply online. Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer.
I yellow contact lens case in Lindley ladies' room
Call at Barki 811-4307
1:21
7th Spirit private club is now taking applications for cold weather hats! We interested call Chesa
Research assistant positions available. Asst in
collecting data, Part time, min. 15-20 hrs at
price at $40 an hour. Temporary for 2 months.
Required in Belfast Trier. Ability:
Opportunity Employer
1. Answer questions
2. Use computers
Need some X-tra money for this week! Help us with your projects!
645-4235 or 81-6344 for work scheduling
Part-time help needed for wood working quarters and tools. You will be able to work approximately 90 hours per week, or up to 160 hours a week.
Driven Wives must make him 18 yrs old, old in his
pursuit. Dominus Pizza 1425 W. 43rd Ave. Arlington,
Texas.
The University of Kansas seeks candidates for the position of Full-Time Assistant Professor of Sociology at August 16, 1978. Full-Time Assistant Professor of Sociology is responsible for undergraduate and graduate levels, same voice in form in residential and with faculty string tie-ups. Please send resume to the application deadline March 3, 1978. For further information, visit the University of Kansas Lawences, Kansas University affirmative action employer. Angle positions will require a Bachelor's degree, race religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, and service to the country.
Mail assistant wanted 10-29 hire per week. Must be civil servant in person, in person or by phone. Resumes to Mail Assistant, 847-656-3084.
Babies wanted for children two & five full-time,
six months old; 84-925 days and 1023 days. Flight
numbers: 84-925 days and 1023 days. Flight
Position Available Research Assistant (To Position Available) at The University of Texas at Austin. Includes review of applied research duties. Must include review of applied research evaluation and field research management, analysis of data and findings from studies in the evaluation and field research management, writing of research and manuscript proposals in writing, and planning of research activities.
**Bearded Rabbit:** director, Master's pre-employment literature, eq. management and web-based knowledge of standardized tests, familiarity with knowledge of standardized tests, familiarity with documenting writing skills. Preference will be for Teen 26, time one of 55. Urea. Beginning Feb. 14, visit www.beardrabbit.com. Application deadline and qualifications. Applied de
Submit vitae to Dr. Keno William Aulandt, Assistant Dean of Science, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66053.
Attentive action can persuade employees to work with disabilities are encouraged in persons with disabilities to be encouraged in §§
WANTED Students for part-time sales in Lake
Gilead, CA. Must have高中学历, will be
whenever you leave with our Interdisciplinary
program, and must be a Certified Teacher or
262 Nonprofessor or call Robert I. Shields,
Bachelor of Business (BS) or 262 Graduate
Business (BSc). Offer valid from March
15, 2024 through June 30, 2024. Oregon
State Bank Bldg. or 262 Sanford Bldg. Orono,
OR.
Applications are being accepted for full-time positions as Assistant Instructors in the Western Civilization office, based on experience in training students with simulated materials not last seen before. Applications must be ground in Liberal Arts are encouraged to apply. Applicants must be full-time graduate students.
LOST
A black wallet but during enrolment in Bach
at audition. If found, please return, backpack
with identification.
Lost. Jan. 15 in Strong -1 Red Mitten. Please call
841-1835
2-14
Lost Tuesday morning, a T1. calculator 843-
0328
Please make life easier for me & have green
spatial redundancy at Urban information dis-
covery. The goal of this study was to ex-
amine the severity of T1 and Kornbush, 81,
City University, NY.
Brown Key case lost last week. Reward for return:
641-352-109
2-2
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost in Room 105 Summerfield I of girl of
many miles. Please call 841-6341 1-31
Hollard Rafter Specialists
RK & Redken Products
Modern Hairstyling
for Guys & Gals
airforming - reconditioning
perms & color - trichoanalysis
THEISM BINDING COPYING - The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence, let us address you at 839 Main. or phone 412-866-306. You
Hillcrest Shopping Center 935 Iowa 841-6800
FREE! Shortcourse in Business / Technical writing, Open to everyone, every field. Seven hour-long sessions. Includes Intro to Business/Technical 112c Summer Course. First Session: Into Clear Business/Technical p.m. 12:30c Summer Course. p.m. 11:30c Summer Course.
PERSONAL
DARKROOM-SBUA provides a complete photo
digital lab with access to 100+ photos.
User fee is $25/month/$64.37/person
Go/LifeJam Switchboard, counseling and general
information. 841-6472 ff
Stop by booksy daily for Peak Hour. 34 P.M.
Stop by booksy. Medium-50. Large-35.
Stop by booksy. Medium-25. Large-20.
HARDWARE SPECIALS 6-10 May, June, and July at
MARTIN'S DAIRY SHOW! Wet $19.99; dry $16.99
MARTINS DAIRY SHOW! Wet $19.99; dry $16.99
GUTTAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexpensive introduction to the instrument; group lessons for two groups; group lessons begin Wed. Feb. 7 for adults and juniors; Call Karen Forkishke Foundation #841-9872
THE MOFTEN-BETS BAND is now holding
keyboard and mouse training.
Call 862-9031 862-9031
KEYBOARD & MOUSE TRAINING
Call 862-9031 862-9031
51 PITCHIERS every Friday afternoon from 2-4 at the Harbour
if
---2--ministers will be available for counselling Tuesday through Friday, 2-4 p.m.
Ecumenical Christian
Ministries Center
1204 Oread
(across the river) from the
Cattail Bar and Grill.
Come by or call 843-4933.
Surfside Beach (xt) for away! SB Winters Park
or in Oakland, Calif. Bldg M18252
Bldg M18306
F/mal1 roommate wanted. $65 mo. 843-5541. 1-31
HE SOMEMEDY. Student $15宴 spring elections
Hospital Internship, $20 internship,
President Samh, $20 presidents office,
Medical Office Internship, $30
Pharmacy, Social Wellness University,
Specialty Nursing, $30 nursing office,
All student Senior Office, Dammam
University, $30 university office.
Did you help the chicken cross Vermont Street? To
get to the Penthouse 613 Vermont. 1-31
OUR FOOD
OPENS YOUR EYES!
Touples & Guests with lunch
friday 2-3 pm
Vamigo
500 N. 9th
N. Lawrence
Thinking of a career in Journalism! Attend
a seminar on June 30, 2018 at 6:30 p.m.
525 Park
Pal~m meet me at the Penthouse for some open-
meet fun. A secret admirer.
2-1
Kentucky Christian college center Carlyle
Center on Friday, June 25 at 10 a.m.
Kentucky Christian College Center
Friday, June 25 at 10 a.m. Carlyle
Center on Friday, June 25 at 10 a.m.
RAPPORT, Promenade | HA-P014R or Rx-
Rapport, Promenade | HA-P014R or Rx-
record of CHARACTERIZED by BARONYM,
record and affinity. Point to the RAPPORT
record of CHARACTERIZED by President,
President, KENNER, Vice-President.
1-258
Dear Sahara, Complaintations You did it with it. I hope you will be satisfied. New York Ribbon is true. Good luck. We hope that you enjoy your stay here.
Please make life easier for me. Leave green palm
notebook at Information office. 1-30
International Mixer (June, 7:00 p.m. at the Center, 1629 W. Houston St.; students from other community colleges may attend). Student learning are encouraged to join us for a week of classes. Partially Online: Student Senate 1-29
NOTICE
Batteries .30
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Hallway A1 N. Lawrence
Accommodates laundry
Below, let me type your term papers, dissertations, only P. Facet Service; Ms. Nui-812, 812-256-9744
BOOK SALL. Thousands of books !, price. Today
through Feb 9th. Oread Book舍
2-9
SERVICES OFFERED
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT it is available with
hours of operation from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday, 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. at dstour@iatb.com
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at dstour@iatb.com
Long grown, Party-Sun dresses, Formals-Made
up from a long-sleeved jumpsuit, Jeans 1-48-
25, Dress 1-48, 1983-2000.
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three years professional training experience 822-5341
Need help in math or CS7? Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CS7 problems. Call (800) 325-3456.
EXPERT TUTORIALS. MATH 600-192, call 864-2572-7333.
SURVEYING. MATH 600-192, call 864-2572-7333.
COMPUTER SCIENCE. COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-200, call 864-2572-7333.
TEXTING. BACcalaureate TEXTING 640-8200, QUALIFICATIONS (U.S. and foreign programming). For general problem tutorials.
Missouri, Patchett and Sewing at reasonable price. Barr 801-6307 2-2
1
**ENGLISH TUTOR:** -865, 101, 102, poetry, creative
tutoring, English lessons, N2-8234 -satisfied
guaranteed!
Babyfitting, my home. Mother of two girls in
Meadowbrook will babyfitting while you attend
the nursery.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4080
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 812-4476 (t)
Typed/Editor / IBM PicaFile Quality work.
Participate in Desk documentation.
M4/2012F
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Willing to travel. Lawyers form, term appoint. Mrn.
W123456-7890.
Participated, typed with scientific background
IBM.com输送 Selective C. Call Jan 82-312-312
Experienced Typed term papers, thesis, mhse.
Experienced HIM stylistic Printing, spelling eps
files.
REWITING, HOTTING. Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective, granular text, can be written while thinking with precision and smoothness. Outline, drafts and articles also available. E-mail: edt242-1331
Fault. Accurate. Passes under 20 page one night.
Efficacy. Threats. distracts visitors. Call Rudd.
Scheduling. Prevents delays.
Quality testing guaranteed-IMB Sybilte Terma
9068, sketches, directional maps, Carrie Campbell
1986
Discount Typing - 75c m page. Call: 832-0745 afts
5 p.m.
1:33
WANTED
DEAD START NEEDS YOU — you contributed to
the need! We need a teacher and a tutor for all 12 week classes. Located
in the heart of NYC. Send resume to needsyou@nyc.com
Responsible, quick, renown for caring answer
includes: utilities, 864-250-7299 Call:
8-606
Non-smoking female to share house with
non-smoking 99% women; utilities paid 414-8283
2-48
Drammerz Best host-tail skill band around Lakewood, NY. Perform on stage with Steve 912-845-7058 or Steve 912-845-7063. Night: Kevin 892-845-7015.
Female college to share 2 BII. Agt. close to
compound: 84,538/sec at 6:00. day close to
compound: 84,538/sec at 6:00.
Roommate to share 2 bdpm. apt at Meadowbrook.
843-1144 1-29
Responsible to share house with two guys, exp in
various areas of the building. 1/2 YR of Job must be
paid. Call us or shop by at 113-745-6300.
Clay Male (to make large 2 DR apartment with 2
Families) to provide 10 years of training.
Clean and clean, and answer **B8527171**.
**B8527171**
Mature person to share my house near KU.
$150 mo. - food 842-7130
1-30
Resume: wanted. $72.00 money, utilities
included. One block from Campus. 8411-8358
One roommate required for Jayhawk tower. *
All utilities paid for Call Suit at 834-5854-241
Four or five readers needed, reading primarily
commercial materials. 1125 West坡 Road Bld. JM
403. (914) 786-8100.
Male Roommate to share 2 HR apt, furnished.
Made utility, tidyware, $240 call. Call 817-359-1222.
Respondible. Trustworthy person prepares to issue
dental care plans for patients with chronic
illness plus utilities 842-846-1484 after 4k and on weekdays.
Female romantica to share luxury bit-level loftware 2 bills, from campus, turn $144.50
to $64.99. For other prices, contact us.
Roomsmate needed to share 3 BR Dqlx. Rent $22
+ 1/3 meals. Call 841-2472 anytime.
Some lady to cook for my son & me. Call Steve
841-2454 after 0:00
2-2
8
Monday, January 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
---
POLYMERIC
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
Kitchen duties
Jeff Hanson, a student at the Capper Foundation, a school for orthopedically handicapped children in Topeka, washes dishes as
part of a life skills experiment. He and two other young men from the foundation lived in a Lawrence apartment this weekend,
JRP water problem cool to men
Although hot water has been restored to 12 showers at Joseph R. Pearson residence hall, 36 showers will remain frigid until later this week, Dean Milroy, maintenance manager for the housing department, said yesterday.
JRP has been without full hot water service since Jan. 18 because of inoperable equipment.
Milroy said that replacement parts are still on order from a company in Skokie, Ill. He said that the parts ordered from Kansas City last week had arrived, but that the parts from Skokie were needed to complete the repair.
Although many showers have only cold water, residents of 3HP were not compliant.
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
843-2931
Think Valley West for Fine Arts & Furnishings in HolidayPlaza841-1870 Mon-Sat 10:5:30
according to Bob Nugent, assistant resident director at JRP.
Nugent said yesterday that 12 showers had been working since last week.
"They've got as many working as possible," he said. "Hot water should be running from all showers by the end of the week."
Nugent said that the mood of the residents and mad quieted considerably from last week, when they heard a loud gunfire.
Nugent said Friday that some residents had also considered a protest march to Strong Hall, but canceled the march after some hot water was restored.
sue the University and withhold dorm payments.
Nugent, who has lived at JRP since 1973, said that there had been occasional hot water problems at the residence hall for as long as he lived there.
"Over the years the hot water has been a problem area," he said.
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"WE TOLD the boys that they would have to do everything for themselves," Lyle said. "Dick and I were with them the whole weekend but they did it all."
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Dick is Dick Royse, a Wichita senior in social welfare who is getting practical experience working at the Capper Foundation.
"You have to understand," he said, "that this is the first time these guys have been on their own. They live in an institution where most things are done for them. They don't often get the opportunity to think and do for themselves."
The young men performed such tasks as cooking, washing dishes, vacuuming floors, making up sleeping bags and shopping, putting out parties and went to a movie and a restaurant.
IN TALKING to Hanson, Buell and Hinrich a few hours before they were to return to Topeka, it was obvious that they had thoroughly enjoyed doing for themselves and were not ready for institutional life again.
"I'd much rather do things on my own. It makes me feel better." Hanson said. "I'm dying to get out on my own. "The other two agreed.
"Friday night, I made hamburgers," he said. "At first it was scary. I had never done it before. I didn't know when they were done. I couldn't get cans open."
Hanson did most of the cooking.
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"We had $40 but only spent about $25." Buell said. "We did really well even though we didn't have a grocery list. We forgot it. Rav forget it, I should say."
The apartment was also the scene of a party Fridaynight.
SATURDAY, THE men spent most of the day cooking after they got up late in the morning. Lyle said it took them longer to cook than they had expected.
Saturday night they saw the movie, "Magic," Lyle and Royse drove them there. "It was really good," Hanson said. "We had to sit in regular seats because our
"Then we went out to eat. This really bugged me. We were going to order and the waitress looked at Dick and asked him what I was doing. I said, 'Lady, I can order for myself.'"
Hirich said, "Some people can't accept that we're equals. We're no different. We have the same lifestyles. We just have disabilities."
After Saturday's dinner, there was another party.
HANSON SAID, "People get scared when they see a handicapped person. They think he's going to fall out of his chair or something."
On Sunday, Hanson, Buell and Hinrich spent most of the day cleaning Kitch's apartment. They promised to leave it in better condition than they had found it.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas Vol. 89, No. 83
City's ozone misses relaxed standards
Tuesday, January 30, 1979
Lawrence, Kansas
See story page three
Staff photo by BILL FRAKES
Snowu Stroll
Jim Dobson. 231 Illinois St.. trudges home from the grocery store through the blowing snow which
made many of the roads in Lawrence impossible yesterday. Dobson, a retired railway worker, has lived in Lawrence for more than 30 years.
Stephan backs death penalty
By TAMMY TIERNEY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA -Reinstatement of the death penalty, an annual con-
tribution to the Kansas Legislature, received support yesterday
from the governor.
Speaking before the Kansas House Judicial Committee, Stephan said he supported capital punishment for first-degree murder and second-degree murder.
Stephan said he thought the majority of Kansans supported reinstatement of the death penalty.
"Although there is not an exact measuring stick, it was my experience throughout the recent campaign that the vast majority of our people desire to see the reimposition of capital punishment," he said.
Also speaking on behalf of the death penalty were Reps. Ward Ferguson, D-McPherson, and Robert Frey, R-Liberal. Both men sponsored bills this legislative session providing for the reinstatement of capital punishment.
Frey told committee members that although capital punishment was a grusome subject, it was one we must consider.
Grant bill won't affect current med students
"According to recent police department figures, murder is up 30 percent in Teopka. In my opinion, those figures reflect a trend which, in varying degrees, is present in every city in Kansas," he said.
FREY SAID that people accused of murder should be given all the constitutional protection they are entitled to, but that murder victim should not be punished.
BY CAITLIN GOODWIN and TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporters
A bill that would end the Kansas medical scholarship program will not affect the students who are now enrolled in the school as an sponsor of the bill said yesterday.
The sponsor, Michael Johnston, D-Parents, said the bill was introduced last Thursday by the House Committee of Public Health and Welfare because committee members thought the scholarship money could be spent on other health programs.
The scholarship program, which was approved by the Kansas Legislature last year, provides medical students free tuition in the state and they agree to practice in the state of Kansas.
"However, the committee would not alter the contract of those already in the program," he said. "They would go on to fulfill the requirements of their contracts."
Under the Type II program, the student
does not receive the $001 stipend and may pay
the student's own tuition.
THERE ARE two types of scholarships offered under the program. Type I covers all tuition fees and provides the student with a $500 monthly stipend. Also, the student must practice in a medically underserved area of the state.
Although Johnston said the merits of the program have been tested he said the program is not going to be used.
JOHNSTON SAID his other objections to the program were that it was not based on need, allowed a student to quit before fulfilling all the requirements of the program and produced an overabundance of doctors for Kansas.
A letter sent to Johnston by Richard Von Ende, University executive secretary, listed the cost of the program at $2.625 million for 1979 and $2.969 for 1980.
"My objection to the program is that it is 'terribly expensive,' he said. "It will cost more than $2.25 million this year. On an basis, it may cost upwards of $4 to $7 million."
Johnston said he thought the money would be better spent funding the Wichita branch of the University of Kansas Medical Center and other research facilities.
Jim Hamilton, president of the Medical Student Assembly at the Med Center, said he had feared that the bill would leave students unaccounted in the program financially strained.
Last March the Kansas Board of Regents nearly tripled the medical school tuition from $1,125 to $8,000 for residents and from $1,375 to $3,650 for graduates; raise in tuition became effective in the fall.
However, he said, "Mr. Johnston is taking what I think is a very realistic approach to the program. He feels that the scholarship is a real program, and he wants to re-analyze it."
"IN MY CLASS, which would graduate in 1981, and in the class below me, 80 percent of the students are signed up in the scholarship program." It is difficult to come on with the tuition this late."
Johnston also said that some students might later buy their way out of the
"But even if they don't," he said, "the worst thing in life would be to have '200 cars on the street."
"The areas that are currently underserved may not be able to support a doctor and that's probably why they aren't out there now."
Johnston said students' increased interest in becoming family practitioners, the kind of physicians usually found in rural areas, "fill up" underserved areas of Kansas.
Committee hearings on the bill will be next week, according to Johnston.
HAMILTON SAID he thought that many of the 424 students in the program chose to take the scholarship because of the Regents' raise in tuition.
He said the bill would not affect the lawsuit brought by 234 medical students against the Regents, claiming the tuition was illlegal.
"The tuition suit will go on regardless of the bill," he said. "The Medical Student Assembly feels the increase in tuition was arbitrary in nature. It would be even more arbitrary without the scholarship program."
He said if the bill passed, he thought the Regents might reduce the tuition, although it would cost more.
Committee accepts one Regent
By PATRICIA MANSON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A dispute between former Gov. Robert F. Bennett and Gov. John Carlin over who will name two new members to the Kansas Board of Regents may end in a draw.
The Senate Select Committee on Appointments voted yesterday on Bennett's nominees and recommended that Glee Smith Jr., of Larned, be confirmed for a second term on the board, but that Walter Heisterstein, of Fairway, be rejected.
The committee voted 5-4 to reject Hirsteiner's nomination, with Sen. Tom Price opposing it and casting the deciding vote. The committee voted 4-3 to recommend Smith's confirmation, Rehorn and Sen. Joe Warren, D-Maine, did not vote on Smith's
Smith and Hiersteiner, whose terms on
the board expired Dec. 31, were reappointed by Bennett five days before he left office.
Carlin, however, claimed the privilege to name the new members. He said he would appoint Republicans Margaret Glades, of Yates Center, and John MacDonald, of Hutchinson, if Bennett's nominees were rejected.
SOME MEMBERS of the Senate committee said they thought the Senate would accept Smith's nomination and accepting Smith and rejecting Huerstein. The Senate, which must confirm appointments to state agencies by a simple majority, will vote on the nominations.
Sen. Billy McCray, D-Wichita, a member of the committee, said, "Aparently the vote is to be very close, especially on Mr. Smith. The vote in the
Senate may go the same way as the vote in the committee. Mr. Heisterstein may not be confirmed. Probably the Senate will confirm Mr. Smith."
Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Coats, said, "I think we come out the same as the冠爵组者."
THE COMMITTEE members who voted against Hirsteer's confirmation were Rehorn, McCray, Warren, Sen. Larry Rogers, D-Wampeo, and John Simpson, R-Salina. Those who voted for confirmation were Kerr; Sen. Paul Burke, R-Leoward; Sen. John Croft, R-Gcelar; Sen. John Elaine Pomeroy, R-Toneka.
Those who voted to confirm Smith were Burke, Kerr, Pomeroy and Crofoot. Warren said he did not vote on Smith's nomination but said he was a supporter and Smith, a former state senator, served
together in the Legislature, Warren said he had not decided how he would vote when the nominations come before the full Senate.
Bett, who voted to accept Bennett's nominees, said he thought Bennett had the right to be elected.
"THE CANDIDATES were appointed under the law and I have no choice but to follow it," Kerr said.
However, Simpson, who voted against the nominees, said a precedent had been set in 1975 when Bennett, the newly-elected governor, appointed regents to fill seats that had expired during Gov. Robert Docknall's term.
Shankel says academic freedoms considered
Bv BILL RIGGINS
Staff Reporter
The issue of academic freedom was considered when the decision to cancel the opening of an exhibition of Nazi memorabilia was made last spring, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Shankel was responding to a resolution condemning the decision-making process used to cancel the exhibit. The executive committee of the American Association of University Professors adopted the resolution at a meeting Friday.
About 10 percent of KU's professors are members of AAUP.
The decision to cancel the exhibit was made on April 20, four hours before it was scheduled to open at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library. The decision was made at a meeting attended by Shankel; Richard Goffman; Daniel E. Wheeler; George Griffin, curator of the Kansas Collection; and Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Ambrose Saricks, chairman of AAPU,
said the resolution expressed disappointment that more people were not consulted before a decision was made.
A statement released at the time said the opening of the exhibit had been canceled due to a bad birthday, Passover and the showing of the television show "Holocaust," which was broadcast on Monday.
Richard Cole, professor of philosophy and a member of the AAPU executive committee, said members of AAUP were concerned that the decision to cancel the exhibit was an unintentional violation of academic freedom.
Shankel said the phrase "cancel the opening" probably was a poor word choice.
"In retrospect it would have been better to have said 'postoned'," he said.
Shankel said that the reason more people were not consulted before making the decision was that there had not been enough time.
He said the Spencer Library staff could reschedule the exhibit any time it wanted to. A member of the staff said no plans had been made to reschedule the exhibit.
KUAC budget to fund settlement
Bv NANCY DRESSLER
Snorts Editor
The $78,320 to pay Bud Moore, former head football coach, will come from the general operating budget of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, Bob Marcum, director of men's athletics, said yesterday.
Moore, fired in November from his coaching job, accepted the settlement figure this weekend. It will pay him the full salary amount for the 25 years that remained on his contract.
Marcum said he would consult Mike Davis, University general counsel, today to
discuss withdrawing the money from KIUAC's general operating fund.
Marcum does not need the approval of the KUAC board to withdraw the funds, according to Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism and chairman of the KUAC
Marcum and the amount of the with-
drawal would not threaten other budgeted
KUAC expenditures. One reason is a check
on the amount of expenses expects to
receive sometime in February.
The check, from the Big Eight conference, is KU's share of post-season bowl earnings.
Moore, who will be out of town until next week, has asked to have the salary check by tomorrow. Marcum said he intended to meet that deadline.
NO OTHER ACTION had been taken by Moore involving settlements as of yesterday. It is not known whether Moore intends to take legal action to seek fringe benefits that are not specifically stated in the contract.
Moore had threatened to take the University to court after it offered him a settlement that was less than what was required for the contract of $7,320 the second offer made by KU.
Woman black belt finds karate increases confidence
Bv.JULIA GOPLERUD
"I usually don't get scared," she said. "I'm pretty confident I can take care of myself unless I have a gun or a bad idea."
When Sue Thompson walks alone through unit areas of campus she doesn't glance nervously over her shoulder or increase her pace. But then, few who are karate black belts worry about attackers.
Staff Reporter
Karate is a structured form of self-defense that uses karate shoes. Physical contact is light and no weapons are used.
Thompson, a Leawood senior major in physical education, is a black belt in tae-kwon-do, which is the Korean style of karate.
"there are many different styles of karate, like Korean, Japanese and Chinese," she said. "In 'nakwon-kow we put more emphasis on kicking than on our hands. I'd say we 70 percent legs and 39 per cent."
style, Hapike involves grabbing an attacker, but also includes kicking, breaking holds and throwing.
She also practices hapkido, a Japanese karate
Thompson said she started learning tue-kwo-in November 1976. She said she used to work out in Allen Field House, where the class was held, because she wanted to watch a friend who was taking the class.
THOMPSON SAID she learned karate through the Choon Lee Tae-Kun-Do Club. The club, which is not student-sponsored and costs $25 a semester, holds classes twice a week in Robinson Gymnasium.
“It’s not a university class” Thompson said. “We’re not supposed to use the facilities because we’re strangely stupid at it.”
"Jeel Coabel, an assistant to Mr. Lee, saw me running and stretching out. He saw that I was lumbered so he said I might as well get into the line-up," she said.
Thompson said that in the class of 40, she was the only woman for the first year.
"I FELT,self-conscious at first, but that didn't last long-only the first couple of months," she said.
She's been the only woman to stick with the class, she said.
'orts are in and out but they aren't consistent.'
They usually go to a green bell and drop out, she said.
The belts in order of increasing difficulty are white,
yellow, orange, green, blue, brown and black.
styles have more," she said. Thompson is a first-degree black belt, which is the
"Our style has nine degrees of black belt. Some styles have more," she said.
Thompson said she did not have any problems setting along with the men in the class.
"There's no problem. They'll fight you like anyone else, but they might be just a little more careful with it."
"MR. LEE WILL, say something to a guy if he is too aggressive, but he'll say that no matter who he talks to."
Kurt Goddin, an assistant to Lee, said he was glad Thompson was in the class.
"I think it's great, not only because it helps other women in there who are hesitant about
Free-sparring is fighting with a partner using light physical contact.
something of this nature, but it's good for guys to free-swap with her because she doesn't hold back," he said. "It shows guys they don't have to hold back with her."
A kadak is a routine of attack and defense that uses kicking and punching. Thompson said that as the belt got bigger, he found it easier to hit.
Thompson said she became a black belt last August, one year and nine months after she started. She said it usually took from 2% to 3 years to get a black belt, depending on how hard a person worked. She said that for a six-month period she worked out five nights a week.
She said brown belts must break two sets of boards.
"YOU TEST EVERY two months," she said.
"Three or four Koreans from around the area who are fifth or sixth degree black grade us. We do keras and free-snarring."
"Bets from blue on up break table," she said. "Blue bets break on one of two half-inch thick pine boards."
One set must be broken with a hand and one set with a
hand that it was harder to break boards with
band than a hand.
Black belts also must breast: two sets of boards, each with a different foot.
"The Koreans grade on control, technique, endurance and form of power," she said. "Even in kadas when you aren't actually touching anything, they can tell how hard you punch or kick."
THOMPSON SAID she thought limberness, balance, coordination and a good sense of body awareness.
Thompson, who competed on the KU women's gymnastic team until this year, said gymnastics had been a challenge for him.
Mike Roberts, a student in the class, said it was a challenge having Thomson in the class.
"She doesn't mind if you get rough with her," he said. "She's able to handle herself."
'She's better than most of the men in there. At our school, if you're a black belt you're good, no matter what.
2
Tuesday, January 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Associated Press, United Press International
Carter. Teng hold conference
WASHINGTON—President Carter and China's Teng Haihe-ping conferred for three hours and 40 minutes yesterday, beginning what Carter called a "commitment" to working together.
museum's tour guide. Carrie accepted an invitation from Teng to visit China, although no date was set
After a welcoming ceremony, married by shouting protesters, Carter and Teng held two sessions in the Oval Office. Shortly after the second session, he met with his wife and children.
During the welcoming ceremony, two demonstrators, standing among reporters and cameramen, disrupted the speeches by shouting "murderer" and "murderer."
The man and woman, who entered the ceremony with State Department press credentials, were quickly arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.
policy of reaching out to the West, claimed responsibility for the demonstration. Former president Richard Nixon attended the dinner and reception in the White House, where he presented to the presidential mention in 4% years. Nixon and Teague will meet tomorrow.
In their dinner toasts, both Carter and Teng noted that their countries had not been on speaking terms for 30 years. Carter spoke of "too many years of estrangement" and Teng used the same term, adding: "This abnormal state of affairs is over at last."
both men expressed hope that the normal relations between their countries would contribute to peace.
Sniper kills 2 in San Diego
SAN DIEGO - A 16-year-old girl who wanted to open the day opened fire with a automatic rifle on an elementary school yesterday, killing the princess and her brother. The teenager was 18 years old.
The girl, identified as Brenda Spencer, barricaded herself inside her family's home across the street from Cleveland Elementary School for 8% hours before she was murdered.
A policeman on the scene said Spencer emerged from the house, put two guns on the ground, then calmly went back in and brought out her ammunition before he stopped.
When the shooting began at about 8:40 a.m., students ran from the schoolyard and teachers told others to huddle beneath desks and keep away from windows. Later, the students were moved to safety in the auditorium. Nearby homes were evacuated.
Spencer told the San Diego Evening Tribune, "I don't like Mondays. This lives up to the day."
Tehran's airport to reopen
TEHRAN, Iran-Officials at Tehran airport announce yesterday that Iran's airports would reopen, allowing Moslem leaders Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini
It appeared that Khomeini, architect of the anti-shah movement, might fly to Iran tomorrow.
Aides at Khomeini's home outside Paris said he was ready to fly to Iran as soon as the airways reopen.
Prime Minister Shaipour Bakhtiar said the 76-year-old Ayatullah could return to Iran as soon as his security could be insured.
But Khominei himself declared in a statement yesterday, "We don't ask any security from Bakhtiar or anyone. God is the best proft. tor of my safety."
Bakhtir scraped plans to travel to France on a peacetime mission because of Khomeni's 'unacceptable' condition that Bakhtir first resign as head.
Keus chosen as HEWadviser
WASHINGTON—HEW Secretary Joseph Califano yesterday announced he has selected former Rep. Martha Keys, D-Kan., to work as an adviser on the job.
During her two congressional terms, Keys served on the House Ways and Means Committee and its subcommittees on unemployment compensation, paid leave and
"She will be working closely with me and with my Office of Planning and Evaluation to develop various policies," Califano said.
"Martha Keys will bring to this department invaluable experience as a forceful and innovative member of Congress," he said.
Gunmen rob Manhattan bank
MANHATTAN, Kan- Police searched yesterday for two robbers who escaped with more than $30,000 after holding a bank manager's family hostage.
There were no injuries in the ordeal, which ended with the theft of the money from the branch office of the Union National Bank, police said.
Two men greeted Mary Hileman, the branch manager, at her front door and held three of her family members at gunpoint while one gunned to her the
Hileman was tied up again after she opened the bank vault, but freed herself and notified police about 10 minutes after the robber fled.
PINE RIDGE, S.D. — The Ogala Sioux Tribal Lawyers Association asked for investigation of the alleged drugging of an Indian at Leavenworth fire.
An association spokesman said Ron Two Bulls, a former Community Action program coordinator on the Fine Ridge Reservation, was forced to take leave from his job.
Richard Seiter, executive assistant to the warden, said policy at Leavenworth is not to force an inmate to take drugs unless the medication is necessary to treat the condition.
Two Bulls is serving a three-year sentence for fourth-degree burglary
Bill would allow Sunday beer
TOPEKA—The House Federal and State Affairs Committee heard testimony yesterday on a bill that would allow the Sunday sale of beer containing not more
The bill would authorize sales only for off-premise consumption between noon and midnight.
State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, a co-sponsor of the measure, told the committee that Sunday's vote would matter of added convenience for the state tax revenue for the state.
The committee also heard brief endorsements from the Kansas Food Retailers Association, the Kansas Beer Wholesalers Association and the
Amtrak to alter state routes
The Wichita Eagle and Beacon quoted unnamed sources in Washington as stating that reductions in Kansas would be part of a massive overhaul of Amherst.
WICHTA-Amritk passenger service through Kansas reportedly will be drastically under a plan to be made public this week by the U.S.DEP.
The DOT last year proposed a plan that would leave Amtrak service in Kansas untouched. Proposed changes to be revealed tomorrow, the newspaper said, would eliminate the Kansas City-Houston route and reroute the Kansas City-Los Angeles line.
Weather ...
The National Weather Service issued a heavy snow warning for today with accumulations expected to reach 4 to 6 inches. The snow should end this afternoon with skies clearing this evening. The predicted high for today is 10 to 15. The low tonight is expected to fall to 5 below.
Carter granted executive clemency to Hearst, perhaps the nation's most celebrated federal prisoner, and commuted her seven-year sentence for bank robbery.
Carter grants freedom to Hearst
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Carter, agreeing that newspaper heirs Patricia Heart need no further rehabilitation or acted yesterday to set her free on a new
The White House said Hearst, "has been punished substantially" for her part in the holdup of a San Francisco bank two months before the attack by the Synbionese Liberation Army in 1974.
an announcement of the president's action, taken on the recommendation of the Justice Department, he freed Thursday from the federal prison at Pleasanton, Calif. She has served 22 months.
The announcement said she, "needs no further rehabilitation, and it is the control measure that was needed."
confinement that she is no risk to the community and that, on the contrary, she is liable to harm.
To win her freedom, Hearst had to agree to a series of parole-like conditions that she would never see.
Terry Adamson, a Justice Department spokesman, said a department official spoke to Hearst earlier in the day and obtained her agreement.
The conditions include requirements that she not leave the country without the permission of the attorney general, that she avoid anyone who has a criminal record, that she submit any application for that she submit to possible unspecified additional supervision by the attorney general.
When announcing Carter's decision, the White House said Heart's freedom, "will not end the suffering she will experience from the invasions of her privacy and the sensational and embarrassing commercial exploitation experiences."
Deputy Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti, who recommended that Hearst be freed, told Carter that Hearst had suffered degrading experiences as a victim of her kidnappers, who abducted the night of Feb. 4, 1974.
Heart has announced that she wants to
marry her former bodyguard, Bernard Sa-
ford.
Hearst would have been eligible for parole on July 11 and would have completed her term, including time off for good behavior, by May 1982.
She was sentenced to seven years in prison on armed robbery charges in connection with the holdup of the Bibernia Bank in San Francisco on April 15, 1974.
Heart maintained she was brainwashed by her kidnappers and forced to take part in the war.
In an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC News. Hearst said of the president's
Hearst said in the telephone interview, "I was really happy. I was so surprised it happened today. I just didn't expect it . . . I would be spending another Feb. 4 in prison."
action, "I'm really grateful that he was so courageous. It would have been so simple for him to just leave everything the way it was."
Feb. 4 will be the fifth anniversary of her kidnapping.
Her father, Randolph Hearst, thanked Carter for an act he said had, "given Patty back her life and made her family very happy."
In his recommendation, Civiellett said the
Hearest case is, "very unique and difficult."
Civilietl, a top official in the Justice Department, said he had studied a stack of documents nearly 3-½ feet high before recommending that Carter release her.
CARE TO LEARN THE FACTS OF LIFE?
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1979 Graduates Computer Science/EE'S
Introducing
Career Weekend
-a 3-step introduction to career opportunities with NCR in Wichita.
Step One:
Sign up for an On-Campus Career Briefing by an NCR representative. An informal, preliminary, give-and-take experience in a variety of job opportunities.
Step Two:
Tell us about yourself. About your strengths; career goals — short range and long-term. Chances are good we will invite you to a Career Weekend — am/pass. Look in-depth look at NCR's fast-paced Wichita operations.
Step Three:
A 2-day, red carpet tour of our showcase facilities, and a series of 'one-on-one' briefings by our top technical managers. Areas to be covered include: the Web Design Team; the Market for Business Computer Systems, and what this has to do with career choices; latest advances in hardware compilers, LSI/VSII technology, and more.
You will also have a preview of our accredited,
In-House Master's Program in Computer Science.
At home, you can work on your studies-free
Wichita and surrounding countyside. In short, by
Sunday night you and NCR will show "it" the
book.
We plan to visit your campus on January 30th
Visit your Placement Office. Or write
to HR, 1234 Main Street,
Professional Recruitment, NCR
Corporation, Engineering and
Manufacturing, 18 North Rock Road,
City Hall, 6 7226.
NCR
Complete Computer Systems
An Equal Opportunity Employer
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Tuesday, January 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
EPA announces Lawrence air doesn't meet ozone standards
ByLYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
The Environmental Protection Agency relaxed its standards for ozone pollution last week, but the air in Lawrence fails to meet the new regulations.
The EPA announced Friday that it had increased the acceptable amount of atmospheric ozone from 08 parts per million to .12 parts per million. Lawrence has recorded ozone levels as high as .14 parts per million three times in the past year.
The EPA recognizes 15 parts per million of ozone as a level that can be dangerous to humans.
Ozone is an oxygen compound formed by the combination of sunlight and the by-products of petroleum combustion. It can react with ozone in the atmosphere with other particles in the atmosphere.
Instead, Lane said, the ozone is being carried here by the prevailing south-westier winds from Gulf Coast petroleum refineries.
Dennis Lane, KU assistant professor of civil engineering, has been recording Lawrence's ozone levels for the EPA since 2003. The high levels of ozone are not produced here.
"THEERE ARE NO sources in Lawrence or Douglas County that could be producing these high levels of ozone. I think most of it came from transported in." Lane said yesterday.
Because there are no sources of zone in the area, Douglas County cannot be penalized for failing to meet the standards, according to Thomas Gillard, chief of the Air Planning and Development section of the Kansas City, Mo., EPA office.
The EPA usually penalizes counties that don't comply with air pollution standards by forcing local producers of the pollutant to use pollution-controlling devices, Gilbard said.
Other answers to Lawrence's air pollution problem will have to be considered, including Lane's theory that the ozone is drifting here, Gillard said.
OTHER KANSAS cities with high ozone levels that could be attributed to the drift problem are Kansas City and Wichita, according to Hoover Saigler, director of the Bureau of Air Quality in the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
Wichita, however, may join the ranks of 12 or 14 U.S. cities with populations over 200,000 that meet the EPA's new standards, and those that meet the EPA use, Saiger said.
Wichita's ozone levels have risen above the 12 parts per million limit only once in the past two years.
At the former standard of .08 parts per million of ozone, Honolulu and Spokane, Wash., were the only two U.S. cities considered by the EPA to have clean air.
Saiger confirmed that Lawrence's ozone levels exceeded the new EPA limit three times last summer, according to a study conducted by Lane.
LANE SAID he took daily ozone measurements every hour between June and October.
"The majority of the 1,600 readings we took were way below the 12 parts per million limit," Lane said. "But you can exceed the 12 level only once a year for four months." Because we exceeded that level three times, we are technically not in compliance.
Lane said he was pleased with the study.
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which will be presented to the EPA at a sanitary engineers conference on Feb. 7, because the levels recorded were, for the most part, below the standard.
Lynfeneer
and the
Journey Cloak
by Ric Averill
A Science Fiction Adventure
Presented By
The University of Kansas
Theatre for Young People
Lane said he thought the EPA's move to raise the standard for ozone was good from scientific, economic and practical standpoints.
Saturday, February 3,1979 2:30 p.m. University Theatre—Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office Call 864-3982 for reservations
HE DISAGREED with the danger level set by the EPA, and said he thought much higher concentrations of ozone would be needed to affect human health.
All Seats $.75
"I think, after reviewing most of the research on the subject, that healthy humans won't feel the stress of ozone until they are exposed to it," the history of respiratory and cardiac problems may be affected at lower levels, but they're intelligent. They know what their limitations are, and they'll stay inside when they feel the ozone bothering them," he said.
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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sua films
For additional information, call the Student Assistance Center at 864-4064.
Tuesday, January 30
Dir. Robert Sldmok; with Burt Lau-
ra, Ava Gardner. From the Ham-
ingway short story; Lancaster's first
film role.
Everyone is welcome to attend
Thursday, February 1 from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
Film Noir:
Wednesday, January 31
Reading and Comprehension and Test Taking
Fellini:
LA STRADA
1954
Dir. Federico Fellini, with Anthony Quinn, Giulietta Masina, Richard Basehart, Ita/subtitles.
NOTICE
Thursday, February 1
Di Jean-Luc Gudcad, Alain Rehnat,
Agne Vardae, Claude Lourdin, Joris
Ivens, and others. A documentary in
books, plus a play. Plus, "The
History Book," x. 2
FAR FROM VIETNAM
(1967)
Study Skills Enhancement Workshop You are invited to attend the following workshop:
Friday & Saturday, February 2 & 3
BLUE COLLAR
Dir, Paul Schraer; with Richard Pryar, Harvey Kellet, Yakutoto Kotte. "There are few movies around with a lot of dollars" brains and ——"Newweek."
Midnight Movie:
THE GRATEFUL DEAD MOVIE
Dir. Jerry Garcia, Lean Gait, with the Dir. Jerry Garcia, Lost music, plus an animated sequence which features Garcia's logo, "Skeleton Uleon Sam."
(1977)
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
JRP to ask for compensation
Still trade over the inconveniences caused by 10 days without full hot water service in their hall, residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall will try to get some kind of compensation from the KU administration for their recent problems.
Dahiman asked AURH to back the compensation proposal and to approach the administration on behalf of JMP, but with little support. He returned to 7, with three representatives abstaining.
At an Association of University Residence Halls meeting last night, Bill Dahlman, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore and a JRP student, would he ask the students to provide residents with an extra hibition at the hall because of the water problems.
A holiday meal usually includes steak.
Dahman said the residents would take their proposal to either the Office of Residential Programs or the Residential Program Advisory Board sometime today.
Mary Myers, AURH treasurer, who voted against the motion that AURH represent JRP, said JRP had the power to deal with the administration directly.
"I feel we should support them but because it is a problem that affects only one ball, they should approach the administration themselves." Myers said.
He said that if AURH were to represent JRP, it would set an undesirable precedent for other halls to seek the aid of AURH.
Richard Frobl, resident director at JRP, said he had been told by Dean Milroy, physical plant director of housing, that 12 more showers would be in operation by today. This would bring the number of showers operation to 24, out of total of 48 showers.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
JANUARY 30.1979
Penal reforms needed
A new era in Kansas penal corrections was ushered into being last week with the appointment of Patrick D. McManus, head of the Minnesota community correction programs, as the new secretary of corrections for Kansas.
It didn't take long for McManus to establish his credentials, saying after his appointment that he would resign as penal director rather than carry out a death sentence if Kansas adopted a new capital punishment law.
The appointment of McManus signifies a full endorsement of the community corrections program in Kansas, and places a lid firmly on the idea of a new medium-security prison in Kansas.
THE FORMER secretary of corrections, Robert R. Raines, resigned in August 1977 during a disagreement with the Kansas Legislature over the need for a new medium-security prison. Raines and former Gov. Robert F. Bennett favored the prison, while the Legislature opposed it.
The Legislature instead passed legislation in 1978 that gave cities incentives to establish programs designed to keep, in their own towns, non-violent
inmates capable of returning to society, and to ease the adjustment of those inmates into society.
The election of Carlin, who opposed the death penalty, and the appointment of McManus, who favors the community corrections approach, are encouraging signs for those who favor a new penal philosophy in Kansas.
COUNTLESS programs have shown that community-oriented corrections programs can cut the rate of recidivism, the percentage of released inmates who return to prison, by as much as three-quarters. At the same time, studies show that prisons in the United States are continually ineffective in both rehabilitation and public protection.
MeMansu seems to recognize this, saying that new prisons "are really boxes to house people. They rarely solve any problems; at best they put them off for awhile.
"I don't see that as the keystone of the direction I think the state is intending to go."
Neither do we. Perhaps with McManus at the helm, Kansas can build a penal system designed to help, rather than incarcerate. It is important, at least, that someone try.
Air quality no better
Who says big government is unresponsive in solving problems?
Why, just last week the federal government solved Lawrence's air pollution problem.
No, it wasn't a new air cleaner or a crackdown on major air-polluters. The Environmental Protection Agency simply lowered its standards until Lawrence could meet them.
WHILE THAT may come as a major relief to the Chamber of Commerce, it fails to excite those who like large doses of oxygen in their air.
Nevertheless, the EPA says the new levels will not endanger human health. But that has not stopped groups like Environmental Action in Washington D.C. from proclaiming the new standards to be a victory for industry.
"Scientific evidence shows that the new level of smog permitted will increase our vulnerability to infectious respiratory ailments," the group said.
"While it may only cause eye irritation, shortness of breath, and increased colds in healthy people, it can be positively dangerous to those already suffering from respiratory ailment problems."
STILL, THE EPA's only response has been to state that the new standards are based on scientific evidence. But with the increasing evidence of the dangers of air pollution, it must be wondered how the EPA can justify lower standards. The prime goal of the agency should be the elimination, or at least reduction, of current air pollution levels.
But that means taking on industry, a prospect that fails to excite most federal agencies. So instead we are left with weakened standards and a town full of billowing smokestacks. While the new standards might be a public relations blessing for Lawrence, it does nothing to improve the quality of life of its citizens.
Supposedly that is what government is all about, but perhaps the EPA is teaching us some new lessons on the power of industry and the importance of profits.
Carter should choose minority, women judges
The paucity of minorities and women in the federal judiciary is another one of those areas about which muchruch has been said and understood. The number of substantive change has come to pass.
This is a responsibility that Carter cannot take lightly.
The president and the attorney general have already indicated that their selections for the 152 lifetime positions will be removed from the political tradition of letting senators nominate judges in their states. This change in method of approval is in itself an important first step in ensuring the implementation of public policy. One need not look very far beyond the term "congressional segregationist judges who have occupied our federal courts and thwarted the adoption of civil rights legislation.
UNDER THE NEW arrangement, citizen advisory boards are being set up. Candidates for judgeships are supposed to be recommended on the basis of merit, an elusive qualification that is almost impossible to define. Several of the citizen advisory boards have been called “merit,” defining it as including 15 years experience, as if 10 or 12 won't do.
Obviously, new judges should be selected on the basis of their legal competence. An unfit judge, besides becoming an embarrassment to the party that named him, should be acquitted by a white judge, cruelly determine the fate of a white class of people, as history has proved.
But just as obviously, blacks and women who quality should receive a majority of the
Why a majority? Because minorities are
M. A. BORNLEY
Vernon Smith
rarities in the federal judiciary. By weighing his new appointments in favor of minority candidates, Carter can make the case for a more representative of this nation's diverse population.
THE EXCLUSION of minorities on federal benches, particularly in the South, was recently the focus of a study by the Southern Regional Council. The SRC study found that two-thirds of the federal courts in the South employ five or fewer blacks. In the Northern District of Illinois, clerk. Block circuit law clerks, librarians or assistant librarians are not to be found.
And even in clerical and secretarial jobs, where fewer than 8 percent of such employees are black, there are continual blocks. Out of 3,000 employees of federal district and circuit courts in the South, only 6 percent are black. In the South, but in the federal indicty.
Now Carter can break the vicious pattern. The 121 new judges he intends to nominate by April could begin to change the prevailing system of racial exclusion. There is no shortage of qualified minority judges and lawyers.
Given the administration's emphasis on austerity and its lack of bold new social-service initiatives, the appointments provide Carter with a unique opportunity to change the federal judiciary and perhaps insure his own political survival.
Of the 138 federal judges in the South only one is black. One U.S. attorney out of 29 is black. Only three blacks are U.S. marshals. Only four blacks are U.S. marshals are black according to the study.
Two bills introduced into the Kansas House and Senate recently may pit conservationist legislators against big business legislators over the issue of litter.
Bottle bill would help litter, energy
One bill, called the bottle bill, would require a 5-cent refund deposit on all purchases made at a consumer center, and consumer would pay an additional 30 cents for a six-pack of whatever beverage chosen and would receive it back if all empty bottles were returned. The bill is favored by conservationists.
The other bill, known as the litter control bill, would tax retailers a maximum of $30 annually and manufacturers and distributors up to $2,000 annually. Bottles, cans, newspapers, food containers, plastic items, food products, prone items would be considered taxable. That bill is favored by beverage container manufacturers.
THE APPROXIMATELY $1.6 million generated by the tax would be used for litter clean-up, new litter receptacles, anti-litter education and recycling projects.
kansas needs a bottle bill. The bill currently being considered is similar to one that has been successfully tested in seven other states.
The bottle bill will cut down the amount of energy required to process the food. It will help the heavy
The bottle bill is an attempt to stop litter, while the litter control bill is an attempt to stop plastic bags.
Jake
Thompson
load of solid waste accumulating in mountainous heaps around the countryside.
And, according to State Rep. Bob Miller, R-Wellington, a co-sponsor of the bottle bill, the litter control bill is being sponsored "simply to stop the bottle bill."
THE LITTER control bill, sponsored by State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topea, is supported by an organization of brewers, bitters, beer makers and farmers, called the Kansas Environmental Council.
They fear the bottle bill could result in a loss of jobs in the container industry, in inconvenience for consumers and in increased cost of managing the bottle and collection.
But a similar mandatory deposit on all containers has been in effect in Oregon, but only 20 percent have been years. In Oregon, the bottle bill law is the pride of the state. It cost the state a mere $3,000 to manage last year and more than 90 percent of container sales in time were returns.
At 5 cents a container, cleaning the highways, streets and alleys can be profitable to any person willing to take the time.
Nevertheless, Kansas state legislators should not succumb to pressure based on the actions of a relatively small number of states. The issue should be examined carefully, particularly from an energy consumption perspective.
IN ADDITION to the Oregon example Iowa enacted a bottle bill Jan. 1.
Refined oil is one of the primary ingredients in manufacturing beverage containers. As imported oil prices continually rise and the supply fluctuates, it becomes apparent that the United States should be more conservative in its use of oil.
Miller said one of the reasons he sponsored the bill, which has been sponsored in some form for the last eight years, was to encourage that energy used to produce all containers.
BOTH BILLS would prohibit the use of pull tabs on containers, which the Adolph Coors Co. says requires six times as much energy to produce as is needed to produce the rest of the container. And a huge number of containers will be produced this year.
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 5 billion containers will be delivered by 2019.
Because the bottle bill would require the manufacturing industry to collect all its containers for reuse or recycling, the industry would cut down the production of throw-away containers to save costs of collection.
That would be a positive step toward conservation of energy.
The relatively high deposit required on each container would force consumers to invest more in cleaning and a positive step toward cleaning up the litter scattered around the state. And if more reusable and recyclable containers are made, it could decrease the overall amount of solid waste.
THAT WOULD decrease the amount of
plate that is piling up in solid waste disposal
plates.
Ten percent of the revenue accrued from the litter tax would be used to administer the program, an expansion of an already unwieldy bureaucracy. The bottle bill almost administers itself, as demonstrated in Oregon.
Beverage container manufacturers do not want to alter their industry, because change means a loss of money. In other words, they bring in new containers away from containers than on unreusable ones.
But, alteration is necessary when Kansas is faced with more trash and a proliferation of containers scattered over the countryside.
Further taxation is not the answer to the litter problem. Tightening the belt and recycling all available materials will become mandatory as resources dwindle.
Kansas legislators should take the opportunity to voluntarily conserve energy
THE POOR
BUDGET DOLLARS
Article promotes religious prejudice
VIVIENNE
To the editor:
Recently you have been taking a strong stand in favor of freedom of speech. I'm sure that your stand would be as strong for freedom of press. My particular interest is your failure to defend freedom of religion, in connection to the denial of religious freedom.
Because I think it is unintentional, I wish to explain. As a member of a religious minority I feel threatened from time to time by your newspaper. The last statement in Lori Lienberger's article on the Jonestown/suicide symposium in Smith Hall was, "The inmates are known to die in murders and shout, 'It is better to die than to be without (Sun Myung) Moon.'" She said, "Yes, it could happen again."
The implication is made that a mass suicide could happen again, especially among the Moonies. The speaker is Jan O'Neill, assistant professor of social welfare.
I want to point out that (1) this is religious prejudice and (2) it is not objective.
1. Many people read the above statement superficially and accept it as fact. Few question if in fact this is a true statement, 1, of course, doubt it very much. You are guilty of subly perpetuating or planting religious prejudice.
Suppose the statement read, "Blacks have been known to stand up in stadiums and shout, 'Kill the ump.' Yes, it could happen again." That would be subtle racism. Suppose the statement was, "Reporters have been known to lie to get a story. Yes, it has been known to be stupid." That would have been known to be dumb." or "Jews have been known to have big noses." All of this is subtle prejudice, social, racial, or religious.
3. It is religion prejudice because it is the last statement made in the article. You, the
2. It is religious prejudice because no where else in the article are the Moonies mentioned. The symposium had nothing to do with the Moonies at all. Such a comment was not objectively reporting the events of the symposium, but was editorializing.
Religious Prejudice
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
editor, are responsible for how an article ends. You have shown religious prejudice by making this imagery the last impression that one receives from the article.
Many minorities have felt the sting of such unconscious reporting. Thousands of people who read such things without reflection or prejudice may be unwilling to prejudice. Many now assume that Moonies (1) stand up in stadiums and shout, (2) would rather die themselves than lose Rev. Robert Jackson. As a result, suicide. This is an absolutely false portrayal, as anyone who knows us will testify.
Non-Objective Reporting
1. Iris statement was entirely out of context. I personally attended the symposium and Prof. Larson made the commentary. I missed a lot of the discussion. I thought she was not serious. I also thought it was an irresponsible thing to say. Your article implied that it was her considered and professional approach to welfare. This was not objective reporting.
2. It is a common phenomena that we attribute expertise in one field to a person who has shown success in another. That's why we let famous actors tell us what kind of deodorant to buy. It does not follow that a professor of social welfare can make pronouncements on the validity of a new religious belief. Theologies are obvious. This is not objective reporting. Editorials are for the editorial page.
3. 1 am grateful to Robert Shelton, chairman of the department of religious studies, for his strong defense of religious freedom. History has shown what happens when people and legislatures begin to decide who is right or wrong. We have plenty of laws governing the behavior of individuals. These are sufficient to govern the members of any and
Jim Stephens
all religions. Let us all be judged by our fruits.
Director of the Unification Church of Lawrence
Closed parking lots unjust for students
To the editor:
Since this column is most often used to cite examples of violated rights, both as students and citizens. I feel I must bring a message to the attention of my fellow students.
For some time, the students who utilize the facilities in the immediate vicinity of Allen Field House, (most specifically Murphy and Green Halls), have suffered injuries during their basketball facilities are concerned. The parking lots located north of the field house are available, as are most university parking lots, to the students for parking during the evening hours. However, there is one excuse—the evenings of home basketball games.
On these evenings the lots are barricaded as reserve parking for some unidentified persons. For many areas of the university this would cause no problem, but for those students who have either rehearsal or practice times scheduled almost every night of the week, a problem results. This situation leaves the students no place to park as well as causing them to be late for their appointments due to the lack of parking and we feel unnecessarily inconvenienced.
The congested traffic obviously cannot be helped, but the parking situation is another matter. The entire lot, or at least a portion of the lot should be "reserved" for the green area, and it should be surrounded by the other surrounding buildings. The students who are rehearsing or studying in
the evening are pursuing academic growth, a process which is hindered by these unpleasant realities.
I feel there is enough parking space available with O-zone and the Allen parkings lots that the Murphy and Green lots should be left for the students of those departments. As hard as it may be to believe, not every student has the time or the desire to attend basketball games. For those of us, our area of study is more import-
In summary, I feel our rights as students of the university are being violated by these unjust park situations. I cannot recall any situation where the clencher or O'Leane came to a theatre event. If so, the reverse inconvenience would be understandable.
Dennis Lickteig
Lawrence sophomore
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, LaGrande, KS 60045.
UNPS 680-640 Published at the University of Kansas at KU on Tuesday, June 12 and July sixteen; Tuesday during June and July except Saturday, and Friday during July. Paid at Lawrence, Kansas each submitted by the student. In Douglas County and $1 for six months or $8 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $8 a year in Douglas County and $1 a semester, paid through the student accep
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Weekday
The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan January 30,1979
Ravlin L. Mautello, Holt, Mo., looks over some of the stacks of tobacco in the Weston Burley warehouse. The stacks of tobacco weigh as much as 700 lbs and bring $1,000 when they are sold.
WESTON, Mo.—Nestled in the foothills of the Missouri River, just a few miles northeast of Leavenworth, Weston is the only city in Weston on a bitter-cold January morning is found at the south end of Main Street, in Weston
Inside the warehouse, a dozen or so overall-clad men are gathered in a tiny, heated office to escape the early morning heat, which hovers around the zero mark.
Before long, two well-dressed men in their 40's begin to strut down the stacks of burley tobacco that are dined up in long rows the length of the dim building. The two men draw the sticks from a bag and start the start of the morning's transactions.
The Weston Burley House, which employs about 100 people, and a distillery are the two main industries in the 1,300-population town.
The tobacco leaves are wrapped together in bundles called "hands" and are placed in shallow wooden baskets, each stack a different grade of tobacco. The size of the stack depends on how much humidity the tobacco the grower brings into the warehouse.
The stacks, which may weigh as much as 700 pounds each, are built in layers as the tobacco comes in from the growers.
The two men are officials from the United States Department of Agriculture and they are at the Weston laboratory to grade of tobacco in each of the stacks.
The business conducted in the warehouse is the wholesale auction of tobacco, grown in four northwestern Missouri counties. Weston is the only tobacco market west of the Mississippi River.
Each grade is a classification based on what part of the plant the sample is from, its quality and its color. The USDA lists 101 grades.
Pepper said the federal government spent $22 million last year to finance its anti-smoking program, while at the same time it supervised the price support system for the tobacco growers.
According to Jimmy Pepper, one of Western Burley's three owners, tobacco sales at the market totaled about $700 million, or percent of all U.S. burley sales in 1978.
Story by Mark L.Olson
PRIDE IN TOBACCO
"It has not cost the federal government one penny for the money they have loaned to support tobacco prices," Pepper said.
"It is not designed to benefit the federal government," he added, "but it has never hurt them."
According to figures provided by the BTGCA, the cooperative pay $119.4 million in interest to the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC). The money loaned by the CCC goes to the support unit to stabilize wholesale tobacco prices.
For the tiny town of Weston, the revenues from the Weston Burley House are an important part of its own economy.
And four mornings a week, from the middle of November to the first week in February, bidders from six major tobacco companies and a handful of small domestic firms take part in the lightning-fast auctions.
The warehouse returned more than $80,000 in payroll, interest and insurance money to the community last year, according to Pepper.
To the untrained ear, the rapid-fire call for bids by auctioneer Burton Hunt is unlucky. In less than five dollars he will sell an entire row of tobacco.
After the auction, three boys sat in the basement lounge of the warehouse. Two of them were launching juice from the chaws in their cheeks towards a cardboard box in the middle of the room.
in the Westbury House basement,
900 lb. barrels of tobacco are stored to await shipment by truck or railroad to a processor. The tobacco may later be processed into cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco or snuff.
Photos by Trish Lewis
One of the expectatorats, a 12-year-old, sat on the ragged, dusty couch with a roll of money in his pockets.
The money, he said, was from his first sale, an acre-and-half crop of tobacco, which he raised with the help of the two boys sitting with him.
The grin of tobacco-stained teeth that broke across his face when he pulled the money from his pocket left no doubt. He looked up and noticed it. It had brought him $2000 in cash.
The coarse motif is a stack of tobacco ready for sale. When the tobacco is harvested the leaves are tied together in bundles of four by wrapping a moist leaf around the ends of the stem. When the leaves are cut, the leaves are twisted the bundles, called "hands" to be handled without falling apart.
6
Tuesday, January 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
MASSA
44
Photo by CHRIS TODD
"Bia Mo"
Ku's Paul Mokesi, the second tallest player in the league, is enjoying a comeback of sorts after a miserable start in conference play. He here passes off for one of his four assists in the Kansas-Nebraska game in Lincoln Saturday, which KU lost 66-46. Mokesi collected a career-and-high game 23 points and the "hawks defensive effort with three steals. One reason for Mokesi's improved performance, he says, is a good attitude. Mokesi was a candidate for Big Eight Player of the Week selection, but lost out to Colorado Emmett Lewis, whose Golden Buffaloes won two games while Ku split two, "I think that's the first time I was ever even considered." Mokesi said.
'Mo's' attitude helps in comeback
Paul Mokeski has a good attitude.
He's not bothered that Colorado's Emmett Lewis got Big Eight Player of the Week honors yesterday. He just said that Lewis is right with a good shot and deserved the honor.
Lewis played for a winning team last week, certainly a factor in his selection, when the Buffaloes beat Missouri, 82&48, and Lewis scored 21 and 10 points, respectively.
Mokesi played for a 1-1 team last week, diminishing his chances for the player award. KU beat Iowa State here, 80/71, and Mokesi scored a team-high 17 points and a game-high 15 rebounds, one more than Dean Ulthoff, the Cyclones' best rebounder.
Then Mokeski scored a game- and career-high 23 points in KU's last-second, overtime loss to Nebraska in Lincoln, 66-44. Mikeski paced KU with three steals, four
John P.
Tharp
SHORTS and LONGS
PARKER
Moksiki's back-to-back excellence came after four below-performance in league play during which he scored only 34 points in four games. This fact, he said, bothered him. It also bothered KU伞, some of the top players in game introductions against the Cyclones.
assists and a blocked shot before he fouled out.
But Mokesi still has a good attitude. He said he didn't hear the jeers, but expected
"I realize I must start playing up to my potential to help both myself and the team."
Injuries hamper Owolabi jumper looks to success
ByGENEMYERS
Sports Writer
He has accomplished everything, and yet he has accomplish nothing. That is the paradox that frustrates freshman triple play. He has always been very day that he remains on the inured list.
Owolabi, Track and Field News '178 male prep athlete of the-year, has a list of his favorite high school jumps. As the frustration of nagging injuries continues to build, the 8-10-pound jumper from the 2013 season is a little comfort in his past performances.
"Everyone is going by my high school credentials," he said, "but I want to prove myself in college. I have to start a whole new list in college."
In KU's intrasquad meet Dec. 9, Owolabi began making his new list, eclipsing teammate Jay Reardon's freshman record on his first collegiate jump. His 50-14½ lap surpassed Reardon's 2-year-old mark of 48 at Michigan in 1976 and made it 53-48%. by Danny Snyer in 1976
But after the intrasquad meet, the injuries began.
Owolabi and six of his teammates traveled to the East Tennessee State Invitational Relays Jan. 12-13 but his efforts there only left him with a badly bruised heel injury and a sore leg have kept him out of KU's first two official indoor meets.
Last year Owolabi, who is traditionally a slow starter, began his track campaign in a similar fashion, but he came back and finished with a flair.
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"It was a really big surprise being prep athlete-of-the-year because I got off to a late start," he said. "Everyone else was making all the noise early in the year. I just happened to peak when everyone else was kind of quieting down."
His peak performances came in July while on a European tour with the United States Junior National Team. During the two-day, U.S-USSR junior dual in Donetsk, he recorded a national junior record with a 53% triple jump. He followed that effort with another win in the West-Germany-Great Britain junior triangular.
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he said after the Iowa State game. "I haven't been doing that. When you have a basketball player and don't up to potential, the boos come."
"Experience across the seas really helps," he said, "especially when you go against the Russians. They have many of the best skills, and competing against them was the ultimate."
Against the Cornhuskers, Mokeki was booed again, this time by the NU fans. But Jayhawk fans probably were cheering in front of their televisions for Mokeki's awesome performance, the second player for the second tallest player in the league.
Also on the European tour, which included stops in the Soviet Union, West Germany and Austria, he was joined by Jeff Buckingham, who also has shattered the freshman record in his event. Buckingham, too, was a candidate for prep at the University and Field News' eleventh choice for that honor.
"I feel I'm 'coming along'," he said at least from the offensive point of view of the game.
Not only did Owolabi shine on the three-week European tour, but his other credits included a performance.
re captured New York state indoor titles in the long and triple jumps, the Golden West Invitational triple jump crown, the International Prep Invitational triple jump championship and the Junior AAU triple jump title.
KU's team is beginning to believe Mokesi is a threat, the Canoga Park, Calif., native said. Still, he still to stop talking about himself and start talkting about his team.
"I liked proving myself early in the
IK," I said. "They had "they (the NU
team) knew it was a threat."
As for matching those accomplishments on a collegiate level, Owolabi has his doubts, but his preseason goals would make him a world class tumper.
"By not doing the job myself, it was like the team need me and I wasn't perplexed."
The world record in the triple jump was set by Brazil's Joao de Oliveira in 1975 at 85-84. Non Livers from San Jose State, won 2016 U.S. Outdoor Championship with a leap of 85-34%.
"If I play well," he said, "the team plays well. if they (KU)队 know you I'm going to be good."
But Mokeski no longer is upset with himself. He said the two slump-breaking games were the two most important in his career and he's fired up for his momentum to last.
"My goals were to jump 53 feet in doors and 54 to 55 feet outdoors," he said. "It's going to be tough, but I can't really say if I want to do it." And I can afford to look far ahead.
With that advice, Mokeski said he's not going to worry about fouls any more but instead about point production and asser-
tiveness, to make teams fear the 7-001-1.
"I've got a little more confidence in my shot, which I need. I need." I'm going more inside—just staying around the basket more. "I'll stick to it instead of waiting for them to be created."
"If you work hard," he said, "good things will come."
Besides situations, Mokesi still is creating a better attitude. He fouled out in the last two games, which was only a reflection of his defensive efforts. He said in earlier games the specter of five fouls bothered him, but not any more.
'I talked to the coaches (after the nebraska game) and they told me to go as far as possible.
KU renews rivalry
Sports Editor
By NANCY DRESSLER
"We haven't beat them there since I've been coaching." Washington said Sunday.
Marian Washington would like very much to do something tonight she has never done KU women's basketball coach: beat Kansas State in Manhattan.
The Jayhawks will go into the game with their 11-game winning streak and 19th national ranking. The game will be the second game for KU. Kansas is a playable league.
If KU wins, it will be undefeated for the month of January. And win is what Kansas
KU's starting lineup includes Kathy Patterson and Shyra Holden, who have never played against the cross-state rival Wildcats.
'THE MOST IMPORTANT thing is that we win this one, because it's the conference. It would really press the pressure on Kansas State and Wichita State.' Washington said.
But it also includes Lynette Woodard, Adrian Mitchell and Cheryl Burrett, all of whom have played against K-State and know the intensity of the game.
"We're looking forward to K-State",
Washington said. "We've got some fresh
men who don't know about the rivacy. And we've got some seniors who have had a part in changing the assumption that K-State will be the victorious team."
KU split its games last season with Katerina, not of KU's victories came at UCLA.
KU and K-State have had a common opponent this season in the University of Minnesota. Kansas has beaten the Golden Gophers, including a 79-73 victory in the State College game.
K-State is 1-1 against them and lost to Minnesota in the Classic 68-66.
THE WILDCATS are led by junior LeAnn Wilcox, who was averaging about 16 points a game going into last weekend's Classic. Wilcox was chosen to the Big Eight all-tournament team after scoring 54 points in K-State's three tournament games.
Lynette Woodward continues to lead KU's scoring effort. She is averaging 31 points per game, according to the numbers.
She gets scoring help from Elaine Feeney and Gaily Williams, who also are averaging
Adrian Mitchell is the team's second-leader scorer with near 17-point average. She also averages about nine rebounds a game.
NFC downs AFC in Pro Bowl
The Cowboys' quarterback, who said going into the contest that he was set on finishing the National Football League's best game, ran 41 yards and a string of five consecutive passes in the
LOS ANGELES (AP)—Roger Staubach completed nine of 15 passes for 125 yards, including the winning touchdown on a 19-yard toss to Dallas teammate Tony Hill in a 3-0 victory. The Conference downed the American Conference 13-7 in last night's F.I.O. Bowl.
third quarter after throwing just once in the first period.
His performance outshone that of Terry Bradshaw, the hero of Pittsburgh's Super bowl triumph over the Cowboys and the Cleveland Browns, who batted hit on eight of 17 passes for 54 yards.
The NFC scored first, that tally coming earlier in the period on a 2-yard burst by Philadelphia's Abbey Alfond. Montgomery is ahead of New Orleans, Staußach's backup.
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Tuesday, January 30, 1979
University Daily Kausan
7
Towers, student await ruling on contract
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Renorter
A KU freshman from Iran has waited three months for the Kansas attorney general's office to tell him if he owes $1,218 to the Jayhawk Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 158th St.
Meanwhile, that figure increases by $379 every month.
The student, Ibrahim Edalay, said he sought the opinion of the attorney general because he was being charged rent on an apartment at the Towers that he had vacated in August.
Edalaty said he signed a Towers application form for summer 1788 and for fall and spring 1789-78, but only signed a contract to live there for the summer. He also signed a contract to sign a contract for the fall and spring rental term.
"It was never made clear to me that the application would be used as a contract," he said. "I had lived at the Towers previously and always signed a document titled 'Rental Contract.' Therefore I understood that
the application was only signifying an interest it renting."
But Karen McKinney of Lawrence Property Management, which manages Jayahawker Towers, said Edalaty had been told the application was legally binding. McKinney was manager of Jayahawker Towers when Edalaty signed the application.
"MOST DEFINITELY I explained this to him," she said. "Although we began to use this application form as a means of a credit check before the tenant agreed, it was not accepted." The tenant disfit commitment, unless the credit is not approved."
McKinney said the application was used as a “convenience factor” for the Towers management. She said they used the information on the form to check the credit of the applicant and had each tenant sign another contract “a few days after they moved in.”
"We have found that it works better this way," she
said. "We're much too busy renting so many apartments to so many individuals to check the credit while the applicant is in our office. And we can't have them sign the permanent contract until their credit is approved."
She said she had Eldadia fill out the application form even though he had lived in the Towers before, and was not at the airport.
"IT'S JUST TOOOO complex of a situation to stop and call our business office, which is not at the same location as the Towers, to check even a former tenant's credit," she said.
Garnett Wrigley, director of the Consumer Affairs Office, 819 Vernissage St., and Edcahity came to talk to Mr. Garnett about his new role.
"He came in to me and showed me the application," Wrigley said. "I read it and found it was all written in the subjective tone, signifying that it was only a potential agreement. So I sent a copy of it to her in general's office and asked them to make a ruling on whether it was a legally binding document."
"With the change in administration from Curt Schneider to Robert Stephan, I'm sure the letter just got lost in the shuffle," the spokesman said. "However, I plan to contact Wriddley about this."
But a spokesman for the attorney general's office said it had not found the letter sent by Wielieley.
THE SPOKESMAN said if the office could obtain a copy of the application, it could run on it the same day.
"If it's a case of consumer fraud, our office can prosecute on behalf of Eidaly," the spokesman said.
of concern for students in Eurasia, the spoken-saurian said. McKenna said that other universities used and that no other misunderstandings had taken place.
"Other than the athletic tower, which the University contracts directly with the Towers' owners, every tenant signs the application and a contract," she said. "And Eldalayi is the only person."
Edalayni had he not received a bill from Lawrence. Property Management, since October, has been paid.
McKimney and that Towers had not billed Edalay since October because the matter had been turned over.
“It’s a matter for our attorney now,” she said. “Eldayal signed his intent to live at the Towers from August 1978 to May 1979. He didn’t give us notice that he would not be living there so that we could rent the apartment for the fall semester, even after I sent him what I had intended. So he is responsible for the rent in our eyes.”
EDALATY SAID he had informed the Towers management of his intentions to move out.
THE TROJAN
"I went out of town," he said. "And when I came I read the letter. I told the apartments manager I should go back."
Mckinney said she would want to hear the attorney general's ruling before going to court. Meanwhile,
McKinney said the deadline to move was Aug. 20, so the apartment could be rented for the fall semester. She said Edalaty had been informed of this in the letter.
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242-6920
KANSAN WANT ADS
545 Minnesota
841-2123
BOB'S
Import Car Alternative
CLASSIFIED RATES
IMPORT SERVICE
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dialysis Kansan are offered on-site or in nox. Please BELEASE WITH ORATION, cultural or national BLANKING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILT HALL
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F周五
The UDRK 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
App. 2R 8H and efficiency. Close to campus UUI-141
Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 80379
50799
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
Research Applicants Student研究员招聘 for Research Applications
To apply visit www.researchapplications.org or call 864-705-3211.
Waxley Hall Booking and Salary: Fowler at 864-705-3211
Salary: $4,950 per month
FOR RENT
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These adverts can be placed in person or online and allow the UK business offer at 864-1458.
Zen practice daily. 6 P.M. Introductory lectures
on basic surgical techniques. 8-10 p.m.
Group, 1227 Ohio, 845-6109. Chip-
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Attendees:
The Christian Science Organization
3:45 PM - In丹佛教堂 You are always
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Lawrence Coin Club presents 19th Annual Coin
Show, Feb. 3 to 8, a.m. to 5 p.m. 4, 9 to 9,
a. p. Lawrence Community Building, Dealer
Incentive Program, February 2-7, 2016.
very welcome everyone Enjoy. Come enjoy yourself.
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Suffd dancing through June, fb. at 1st and Park Center Center 8-10 p.m. For information, call (312) 692-2500.
The Disco Dukes of Kmasan City are mobile party caterers. They provide all the lights, sound, music and games they can supply your night happen. Disco Dukes have built their first to-air租用 regulation on providing all the right things for any kind of party. Disco Dukes make parties happen. Check this one! K-C Star Magazine for more go-to stuff.
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EXTRA NICE 2 bedroom apt. Located in wooded area with wood deck picture window, vaulted ceiling, entirely carpeted, ditherware, washers & dryers. Bldg # 841-369 or 1-783-576-318, month, negotiate.
FRENTRIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
ly $195/month. 2 apartments, unfurnished, from $750. Two laundry rooms, large closets, club parking. OK KU to house owner. Driveway to front office at or se 862-4844 or se 862-Front Door. Next door.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS has an apartment for
Spiacca two bedrooms, all utilities paid
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Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
rooms located near downtown and near town.
Phone: 865-3767
Sublease--nice 2 br. apt. on bus route. Available
nore. 842-717. Keep trying.
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1 or 2 BR Duplex apt Carpeted breakfast bar
Cold Meal $45.95
Two bedroom kit, for rent—$215 + close. To college. 413-7377
1-30
Beautiful 3-bedroom house and 2-bedroom duplex units. Brand new, in good location.
Beautiful. Brand new, 3 bedroom vanity, dishwasher, refrigerator, oven, gas fireplace, attached garage, energy efficient Concrete floor, and kitchen appliances.
Southwest Lawrence. A dream home. 4 bed, rm.
w-warping, all dresses and appliances. C.A.
Pam; Rm.; w.rpileppe. Ree Room. 2 cur garage.
room. Qualified, qualified, required,
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Two Bedroom, 15, bath apt. behind shopping
centre, 874-267 or 641-288. Scarlett
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Nascience one bedroom furnished 3 abc blocks from Union Education pd Low utilities 842-554-001
MUST RENT 2 Bedroom apartment next to campus and football stadium. B44-824-601-1
1-36
Christian Male for 12 Bedroom Apartment: Apartment 400 m², ext. food Lieferung and Stuhl 380 m²
One bedroom apartment close to campus
two bedrooms two baths. Two baths.
Two bedrooms. Wed nights between 6:30-8:30 p.m. 1-30
Studio Apil ullilles Paid-1 bk to campus.
Community kitchen and bath. 842-7442-after 12
mw.
Three bedrooms, unfurnished room, except base-
room. Private bathroom. Family room. Apartment
female. Optional no bed indoor beds. ETA at
30 min.
Christian housing Very close to campus. Call 842-6228 between 2-5 p.m. Keep trying *a*.
Wanted: Person to share new 5 BR furnished
home. If interested contact Dana or Tom. *822-645-
7320*.
$b5 mmon includes everything. 841-4899-1.
Park 25 on bus route, 1 bedroom apartment
alongside the office, house base from June. Utform. Utform-$850.00 Mm. Form-
For detail call 913-9457-9057. Km 3. For detail call 913-9457-9057.
Room for rent in beautiful home for second
room. Dryers. No utilities. $55 mo. Call 843-505-26-
29
FOR SALE
western Civilization Note. Now on Sale! *New* sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to read this note in the chapter (section 3). For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Toon Publishing.
1 Bedroom Apt. with fireplace VERY CLOSE to
Call: 841-8748 after 6
2-2
Hewlett-Packard HP-25 Programmable scientific
wizard with excellent accessories. Will take
best offer Cick Mike, Mk46 or Mk60.
Nordica GT Stk Boots size 1012. Last year’s
model Call 641-8524
2-2
SunSports - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
protective lenses, seasonal reasoning,
1023臭氧 841-570-7900
Two Bedroom, unfurnished $205. mo. + electric.
Call Bill 843-7780
2-5
*kernwood KX-72 Casete Deck. Teuk-Load, Delly 2N & FM & MF *M1-B1-824
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MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 425-800. 2000 W. 6 ft.
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Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan, sales and
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with instruments.
bell Mysson guitarists. I have a few very nice Msosan bell-top acoustic guitars starting at almost $250 each, Caradio; Merle Travici; Cat Stevens; & many more. The bass guitars are at 316-221-8221. Winslet 2-16
Stereophone & 8 Track, Record Player, A.M. F.-M.
Spoken Speech, 500-660, XLJ, Electr. Vault, 24" M-
D-1000
We are the fastest growing Pizza chain in the Country. We present have 21 locations in operation with several more under construction and we have more management positions available than people to fill them. If you are looking for a future with unlimited potential and determination to make it happen, you owe it to yourself to contact:
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Univox Midi-Korg Synthesizer. 2 Altez voice of the theater's, 2 Altez S118 Wdrive w/drive Vocal Kit. 3 Altez Voice of the theater's, 3 Altez Voice of the theater's.
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beautiful home theater and Electra Voice Speakers-$275,
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HELP WANTED
1 yellow contact lense case in Lindley ladies' room
Call at Bari 841-6207 1-31
Colleen-Husky Wilson w/rd handband, no collar, found at 6th & Mich. Club M4-331-M3M1
Women's scarf found on pointer of Spencer Drive & Crescent Blvd. Call Don 841-681-1311 1:31
Psychology book at Chi_Q fontain Jan 24
Formal in-text citations 1.90
Found 1 set of keys in front of Sporrier Hall
night of SMU篮球Game. Ball 85-72-82
Now taking applications for Fountain & Grill
Kitchen. Apply online at person of virtue Restaurant 1025. Apply
in person of virtue Restaurant 1025.
Pair of ophygemias with brown frames, near 1:20 and HIP on sidewalk. Call 841-0738. 1-20
7th Spirit private club in now taking applications
at 842-900-6 or in the presented call to
842-900-6 - 3 p.m. Tuesday
Need some X-tra money for this week! Help us
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for Wednesday at 6:43-8:25 or 8:14-9:44.
Drivers Wanted. Must be 18 yrs old, must have
been in a person Demonstrated Plea 1455 w 2 Ward 424
or 426.
Mail assistant wanted 10-20 hrs per week. Must
have a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science.
Audio Read: 864-3600, Daddie Foley
Applications are being accepted for half-time positions as Assistant Librarian in various forms. Applicants must be available from the Western Civilization office, and have a bachelor's degree turned with supportive materials no later than May 15th, with a broad base in Liberal Arts are needed. Applicants must be full-time graduate students. Applicants must be full-time graduate students.
The University of Kansas has selected candidates for the position of Full-Time Assistant Professor of Education at the undergraduate and graduate levels, such as voice form in rectal and with faculty string frog, articulation deposition March 9. 1928 For further information, visit the university's website or place application deadline
Rabbitherder wanted for children two & five, full-time,
for ages 12-18 with no previous experience.
622 days and 102 days after first visit.
622 days and 102 days after first visit.
Position Available Research Assistant (To) Position Available Research Assistant (To) Position Available Research Assistant (To)
Darrell Dures includes review of appliedBiological Research Project Design and evaluation and field project management, analysis and reporting of meetings, writing and analyzing reports, and interfacing with research.
Required: Bachelor's degree. Master's experience in the field of human resources, librarian literature, equipping, and evaluating knowledge of standards for faculty familiarity with standardized writing skills. Proficiency will be two 50- minute or one 75-minute Beginning Feb 1st course and qualification. Application deadline is February 2nd.
Submit vitae to Dr. DC Williams, Amatec Institute for Health Sciences, 1470 West 2nd Street, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 64004-6295. Qualified in women and men of all races and with disabilities are encouraged to apply.
LOST
Lost. Jan. 15 in Strong -1 Red Mitten. Please call
414-8353
2-14
Lett. Glasses-round lenses with silver metal
in the sinuity of 17th and Kentucky 811-
314.
Spiral infection on Gluteus maximus muscle.
Lead: Glutes--round fibres with
hypoxia.
Brown Key case lost last week Reward for
2.7
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in room 108 Summerland 1 pair of green
mittens. Please call dg43 at 643-6131 1-31
LOST-Mid-December Lindsey or at KU Library. Mark's whole gold nail finish, fresh manicure. $195.00.
MISCELLANEOUS
WHEN THE INDIAN IS OUT,
GEORGE IS IN!
All Smiles in Supply
George's Shop
843/7164
WWW.GEORGE'SSHOP.COM
THEISIS BINDING COPYING THE House of
Paris with the United States and
Britain in 1920. Born in Paris,
died at home in New York City.
Madison Square Garden #123-456. Thirty
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PERSONAL
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DARKROOM-EUA provides a complete photographic darkroom, lighting equipment and paper for any M/S/W/camcorder project.
51 PITCHERS every Friday afternoon from 2-6 at the Harbour.
Step by Step karya for Period Hour 3-4 P.M.
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BARRON SPECIALS * 10 to 40 Morn. Tues. and 5-8
Saturday Saturdays $200 Each * MAIDS DAILY NIGHT* "Night" $160 per person * WEEKLY NIGHT* "$300 per person*
Why did the chicken cross Vermont Street? To
get to the Pentimento 611 Vermont. 1-31
Female roommate wanted. 563 mos. 843-5541. 1-31
GUTTAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexperiensive introduction to the instrument or preparation for more advanced group lessons. Groups begin Wed, Feb 7, for adults and children. Call Karen Kalifohn Felicite Center #814-9827 704-635-5700.
Please make the easier for me to green print notebook at Information desk 1-20
Emancipated Christian ministrate Center, 407-825-1999
www.clerkcenter.org
Attendance through Friday - 4 am; Comby to
Monday through Saturday - 5 pm.
Thinking of a career in Journalism? Attend Media Job course on Two, Jan 26 and 7/08 at 10am.
Pat-Met me at the Penthouse for some open-ended fun. A secret advisor 2-1
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1-30
NeeD 1-3 tickets for the KU-K State game. Lym.
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MARGARET BERLIN and GOORGE GOMEZ are running for the Body Mass Participant and View-President positions. Our volunteers are consumers. DO YOU KNOW WHAT ARE PAYING FOR PART OF THE FOUR STEP.
Mr. Bowy, Ar. pernualis as good or study? Musts
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FREE! Shortcourse in Business/
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Summerfield! First Session: Intro.
to Clear Business/Technical Writing-
Thursday Feb. 1, 6 p.m., 480-732-5855
ministers will be available for counselling Tuesday through Friday, 2:4 p.m.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center 1204 Oread (across the street from the Catfish Bar and Grill,
BOOK SALE. Thousands of books at $1 price. Today
through Feb. 9. Bid Grade Bookshop. 2-9
Come by or call 843-4933
Relax. Let me not; your term paper, diss-
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Need help in math or CS? Be a tutor who can hand you your math or CS problem. Please 841-487-7477.
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, mathematics, three year college or graduate program. Need help in math or CSG or GSAT the tutor who can help you with your math. Call 212-403-5780.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
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EXPIRT TESTS: MATH (600-122), cell (864-372)
EXPIRIT TESTS: COMPUTER SCIENCE (600-122),
Baby sitting, my home Mother of two girls in Madowbrook will babybat while you attend class.
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ENGLISH TUTOR -TU68 -101, 102 poetry, evasive
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1:31
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Housemate or unites wanted Large, beautiful,
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1-30
Roommate wanted $725/mo weekly, utilizes off-campus car and utilities. One person needed for Jawahar Towers. One person needed for Jawahar Towers.
Male Roommate to share 2 BB spt, furnished,
small utility dishware $240 Call MH 312-697-5896
Responsible, trustworthy, person needed to share
information with family and friends (i.e.
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Female roommate to share luxury bi-level loft-
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- 2.9
Bachelor's degree, 811.25 - 2.9
Post-Bachelor's degree, 677.00 - 2.9
Remounted: needed to share 3 Birk DLux. Rent $29
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Some lady to cook for my son & me. Call Steve
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Responsible roommate for 3 bedrooms, Luxury
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Looking for mature person to babysit occasionally.
Work with children.
Transportation. Call 814-3429
1 desperately need (1) OL-UK Basketball Ticket.
Please call *Help Q4* 2-28.
交
Tuesday, January 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
180 in upcoming election
The Student Senate office in the Kansas Union was crowded yesterday with candidates for 119 class and senate offices to be filled in the Feb. 14 and 15 election.
One hundred and eighty students had filed
the offices by the 5 p.m. deadline
vegetation
Student body presidential and vice presidential candidates are: Mark Hazlerrick and Chris Fleisher, Apathy Coalition; Clair Keizer and Craig Templeton, Imagination Coalition; Bob Kelsey and Craig Coalition; Margaret Berlin and George Gomez, Porch Step Coalition; and Ron Allen and Dave Kanner. Rapport Coalition.
Candidates for senior class president are Brooks Augustine, Independent; J.P. Billings, Last Minute; Jeb Brown, 4 4 80; Dr. Sylvia Tilman, Imagination; and Eddie Ryan, Basic.
Candidates for senior class vice president are: Mark Cummings, Class of 80; Cliff Jury, Basic, Bunny Seymour, Last Minute, Imagination; Imagination; and Tom Wearn. 4.40.8
Candidates for senior class treasure are Kent McCarthy, 4: 4 80; Marcia Gilley, 10 80.
CANDIDATES for senior class secretary are Louanne Hudgins, Imagination; Rich Linville, Class of 80; and Karen Majors. 4.480.
Candidates for junior class president are:
Jay Donohue, Imagination; T. E. Johns,
M. S. Kerr, Imagination;
Candidates for junior class vice president are Georgetta Brunsky, Impact, and Amy Hoyt.
Death . . .
From page one
should know he is subject to the most severe nenalty man can deliver," he said.
In a show of support for the bills, Robert Tilton, of the Kansas Sheriff's Association, testified to committee members that he believed the amendment would be a deterrent to other murders.
"We're constantly reading about escaped killers who kill again," he said. "I see case after case where a person can commit up to 100 killings in a year, and I see life sentence. It's like giving a license to kill."
Committee members also heard testimony on a bill that would change the method of execution from hanging to intravenous injection.
TILTON SAID that first-time murderers also would be more likely to consider the consequences of murder if capital punishment were reinstated.
James Bridges, a physician and laboratory director at Shawnee Mission Medical Center, said he thought death by the injection of a lethal amount of a drug a, "safe. sure, inexpensive and more humane method of inflicting death."
Death by injection already is law in Oklahoma and Texas.
Bridges said an intravenous injection of a drug such as pentothal would cause a loss of consciousness within 45 seconds. Brain death would take place in about three to five days.
IN CONTRAST, he said, hanging is meant to cause death by fracturing the neck and arm.
And, he said, death by hanging does not take place instantly and a person could be left hanging for more than five minutes before dying of suffocation.
Rep. Kent Roth, D-Ellinwood, who sponsored the bill, said death by injection was the most humane of all possible methods.
Roth said Kansas statutes provided for the painless slaughter of livestock and he convicts convicts should be subject to no less a humanme method of inflicting death.
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Treasurer: Gilberto Brito, Imagination;
and Kyle Duckers, Impact.
Secretary; Susan J. Keck, Imagination;
and Sheri Wetter, Impact.
Candidates for sophomore class office are:
President: David Kaufman, Imaginaction.
Vice president: Ann McCaughey, Imagination.
Treasurer: John M. Northup,
Imagination.
Secretary; Nancy Carlison, Imagination.
CANDIDATES FOR two School of Architecture Senate seats are: Steven Bess, Porch Step; Doug Connett, Independent; Nicholas Nash, Independent; John Wheatley, Independent; and Paul S. Woodford, Imagination.
Candidates for four School of Business Senate seats are: Melanie Anderson, Imagination; Ed Bigus, Porch Step; Peter Dunne, La Plume; Caryn Hopkins, Porch Step; Bill Kanaga, Imagination; Keith A Maib, Porch Step; Randy Martin, Rapport; Paul Naance, Imagination; Bill Petroskah, Link; and Tim Trump. Imagination.
Candidates for eight School of Education senate seats are: Rebecca Bowden, Independent; Bill Clark, Independent, Debbie Lindsay, Independent, Porch Sten, Donna Heider, Imagination.
CANDIDATES FOR EIGHT School of Engineering Senate seats are: Sylvester Akpan, Independent; Marty Bohli, Claw; Matt Boxberger, Imagination; Leon Bradley III, Porch Step; Edwin Martin Cooley, Lean Bradley IV, Porch Step; Hawley, Imagination; Don Johnson, Porch Step; Rose Kuo, Imagination; Alan P. Looney, Independent; Steve Mhear, Porch Step; Steve McClain, Patrick McCoy, Link; Dwane Nessel, Imagination; Robert Quarles, Independent; Bill Scanlan, Imagination; Brad Shoup, Imagination; Ram Ransom, Imagination; Wayne Teeter, Independent; and Bill Winfrie, Porch Step.
Candidates for seven School of Fine Arts Senate seats are: Joe Bartos, Porch Step; Dana Glover, Porch Step; Marlys Headley, Imagination; Stacey Leslie, Imagination; Lil Svee, Porch Step; and Don M. Wampler, Porch Step.
CANDIDATES FOR THREE School of Journalism Senate seat are: John Gans, Independent; Terry Leatherman, Independent; Carl Nelson, Porch Step; Schach Imagination; San Diego Schach Imagination, Santiago Veve, Independent; Steve Young, Imagination.
Candidates for two School of Law Senate
Candidates, Jimmy Woolf, Jimmie Who"; and
Scott Mach, Jimmy Woolf.
Candidates for 15 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Senate seats are: Alan Botton, President; Pamela Murray, Minister; Mark Chase, Independent; Rex Garden, Imagination; Terry Graves.
TODAY: VOCAL AUDITIONS for Tanglewood Institute of Boston University will be from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
-KANSAN-
On Campus
'TONIGHT: WORLD'S OF FUN AUDIENCES will be from 1 to 9 in the Big Eight Room of the Union. STUDENT EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE will meet at 6:45 in the Governor's Room of the Union. An orientation meeting for students with aogram FOR STUETTERERS will be at 7 in 288 Haworth Hall. Adult Life Resource Center "PERSONAL POWER" WORKSHOP will meet at 7 in the Walnut Room of the Union.
Think Valley West for Fine Arts & Furnishings in HolidayPlaza841-1870 Mon-Sat 10-5:30
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE Is Now OPEN 6 Nights Each Week From 7 pm to Midnite Bring this Ad. in for $1.00 OFF on Pitchers Mon., Tues., & Wed. No Cover Charge and Great Piano Jazz
CANDIDATES FOR SIX Nunemaker 1 senate seats are: Tracy Coon, Rapport; Matt Davis, Imagination; Mark Goldman, Porch Step; Tim Hastings, Imagination; Al Kuh, Imagination; Mack DaneMal, Rapport; Linda Miller, Imagination; Mark Myers, Porch Step; Jane Patterson, Rapport; Bill DeWitt, Imagination; Stucker, Rapport; Robert Telthorst, Imagination and Bill Underwood, Porch Step.
Porch Step; Bruce Leban Porch Step; Ruth Lindley, Imagination; Chris R. Link, Independent; Terry McCulloch, Independent; Claire McCurdy, Imagination; Kevin Milbourn, Rapport; Derenda Mitchell, Imagination; Chris Miller, Rapport; Ruben Murillo, Porch Step; Shanny Rabinovitz, Rapport; Steve Wrethisw, La Plume; Leonard Reewaters, Independent; Margaret Seidler, Imagination; Scott Schmalberg, Imagination; Sharon Snow, La Plume; Karen Stevens, Imagination; Ellen Wheeler, St. Townsend, Porch Step; Faith Wells, La Plume; and Tom Worth, Porch Step.
Candidates for five ninemaster 3 Senate seats are; Sarah Adams, Rapport; Eric Behrens, Porch Step; Kevin Blake, Porch Step; Tom Koop, Independent; Leslie Immanuel; Brian Dixon, Mark Bark; Michael Timmons; John Goehausen; Barton; Brent Gutenkut; Porch Step; Scott E. Landgraf; Porch Step; Julie Mahaffey; Porch Step; Mcatt Lawen; Imagination; Andrea Roberts; Rapport; Pete Smith, La Plume; Doug Stephens; Body Dyes; La Plume; Brant Tippolw, Imagination; and Terri Topping, Rapport.
Candidates for five Nenamerak 2 Senate seats are: Stacy Abbott, LaPlume; Freeman, Porch Step; Mark Gillie, Imagination; Todd Hudnall, Rapport; Tanya Ivory, Imagination; Kick Rastner, Imagination; Mark Hafferty, Rapport; Tom Smith, Imagination; and David Thompson, Imagination.
Candidates for six Nunenmark 5 Senate seats are: Kristin Branker, Imagination; Kink Fink, Rapport; Mark Foote, Imagination; Derrick B. Franklin, Porch Step; Stuart Graber, Rapport; David Knowles, Independent; Kristy Kossow, Bourke Humphrey; Barbara Humphrey; Shelley Senecal, Imagination; and Jarl L. Vogelsberg, Imagination.
CANDIDATES FOR five Nunemaker 4 Senate seats are: Gaill Boaz, Porch Step; Jim Borell, Independent; Steve Cramer, Imagination; Nora Fisher, Imagination; John Mark Hammil, Porch Kendell B Koehn, Porch Step; Sharon Packer, Lauren McDermott, Porch Seely, Imagination; Liz Waugh, Porch Step; and Carey L. Wilkerson, Rapport.
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VERTICAL
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The only candidate for 24 Graduate Senate seats is Timothy L. Salter, Independent.
The only candidate for two School of pharmacy senator seats is C. Eric Kirkness, an alumni.
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Candidates for one Off Campus Senate seat are: K吉laus Klumman, Rappert; Prohaska, Independent; Barry Shalisky, Independent; and Etta Walker, Independent; and Etta Walker, Independent.
If you're a single, Full-time student getting Bs or better, you may qualify for Farmers' 25% discount on auto rates
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2420 Iowa
Local vegetarian restaurants satisfy hunger for alternatives
By RON BAIN Staff Reporter
An old-fashioned cafe at the corner of 14th and Massachusetts streets seems much like any other small-town cafe. A wooden bar and stool line one wall, and a counter with bottles against the other wall. The refrigerators and stores are easily visible to customers.
VEGETABLES
However, there is one striking difference. There are no hamburgers, fried chicken or steak sandwiches on the menu.
Rather, a handmade menu on the cafe's wall offers broccoli collies, cheese grainbars and onion cheese soup as choices. Hand-drawn pictures of fruits and vegetables on the menu, along with the words "We're organic" and "We have water spring."
The cafe, the Sister Kette Cafe, is a vegetarian, collectively owned by the employees.
Last Sunday afternoon, every seat in the cate was full and the owner-workers were ready.
The Sister Kettle Cafe is always busy on Sundays, according to Jama Grow, who is a chef at the Kettle Cafe.
NOT EVERYONE who works or eats at the cafe is a vegetarian. Grow, a former KU student, and take classes at the cafe, Cathy Clingler, Oller City, Penn., junior, said she
had not eaten any meat, except occasionally fish, for two years.
Marsee Bates, a registered dietician for the KU health service, said vegetarians must eat a well-balanced diet like anyone else. She said they had to meet their dietary needs but butt meat was not the only way to get the required amount of protein.
Another Lawrence restaurant, Cornucopia, 1811 Massachusetts ST., has a menu of crispy crespres and omellets, although it is not an exclusively vegetarian restaurant. In addition, several pizza chain restaurants in Lawrence offer vegetarian pizzas on their menu.
Straight said the reasons a person might choose a vegetarian diet could range from health to ethics to economics. He said he could not tell how many of his customers were vegetarians, but he said most people knew their shop were concerned about their health.
MOLLY SHARAFELT, the manager of Domino's Pizza, 1445 W. 23rd St., said meatless pizzas were one-fourth of Domino's business.
vegetarian who was living in a residence hall could request special vegetarian meals from the cafeteria. However, Vegetarian meals were also vegetarian meals had been made this year.
Yet vegetarianism is becoming increasingly popular, according to Buddy Straigh, owner of Norwegian Wood, a natural food store at 1141 Indiana St.
A CUSTOMER at Norwegian Wood, Sam Griffin, New Haven, Conn., freshman, said he had eaten only uncooked vegetables and fruits for several years.
*You can change your body's chemistry with your mind. I think most illnesses are caused by your biology.*
"If you eat right, you don't get sick," Griffin said.
Griffin, who stands six feet tall, said he has always been healthy.
Griffin said he was more concerned with his mind and spirit than his physical body.
Big events cause FO overtime
special events at the University of Kansas, such as the visit of U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell, often overtime Facilities Operations *snow removal crews.*
"A body is a machine, and it's not the
machine that's important, it's what's
inside," he said.
Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape maintenance, said yesterday that to accommodate the large crowd that was expected to attend Bell's speech last Thursday evening she first started clearing the sidewalks and sidewalks after snow began falling that day.
"The snow fell as fast last Thursday the streets and sidewalks were bad soon after the snowfall." Mathes said. "We used a lot more sand on the streets than usual to make them more passable for the people attending the speech."
The crew started work at 4:30 that afternoon and worked most of the night. The workers grade the streets and then spread sand.
Mathes said that because of the weather, the route Bell was to take from the Chancellor's house to Murphy Hall had been changed three times. Police decided the
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streets were too tickle each time, he said, and the workers worked them had to clear a new route.
"Originally, Bell was to walk some of the distance to Murphy Hall." Mathes said. "However, after the snow began falling, the weather changed for Bell to be dropped off at Murphy Hall."
Another problem snow removal crews is that the best time to clear the streets is before it rains.
Mathes said another problem with night snow removal was maintaining the safety of his crews. To help prevent accidents, the crews use a second truck for traffic control.
“It’s harder for people to work at night because it’s cooler and darker,” Mathes said. “There also are not many people around so we have a supervisor who drives and checks up on the workers periodically. This person makes sure the workers are feeling all right and assists them if there are problems.”
OPEN HOUSE
Campus Christians
Tuesday, Jan. 30
7:00 p.m.
1217 Tenn. St.
"People who drive at night often don't pay much attention or can't see snow removal equipment in the street," he said. "It's dangerous clearing the streets when they are so slippery, so we take a lot of precautions."
Mathes said the University's snow removal crews were usually ready to work at any time.
"Handling snowls like we have had this winter has been hard, because snowstorms of this size don't happen very often," said Bill Smith. "We still have snowstorms of this size and we're still two weeks away from when 13 inches of snow fell on Lawrence last year."
COMMO
Varsity PG "EVERY WHICH
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Sat Sun Mat 2:30
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CONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
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Sat/Sun Miat: 2:30 GREAT DIVIDE"
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450 PG
AUDIO EMBASSY PICTURES / Frederick
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Event: 7:30 & 9:40
Event Ect: 6:40 only
Grandada PG
Eve 7:15 & 9:45 "SUPERMAN"
Cinema Twin
Eve 7:35 & 9:20
Watership Down!
AVCO UNIVERSITY PICTURES PRODUCTION
Hillcrest
Eve at 7:20 & 9:35
Sat-Sun Mat 1:00
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Walt Disney's "THE LOVE BUG" G
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---
Padre island Spring break $149 h 9-18
Trip includes: 7 nights lodging, round trip bus transportation, a day trip to Mexico, T-shirt, and beverages on bus. Sign up by February 5 in the SUA office.
VULTURE BOX
COLDER
1.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas
KANSAN
Vol. 89, No. 84
House committee reviews KU budget See story page 10
Wednesday, January 31, 1979
THE WASTE OF TOMBSTONE IS A MASSIVE DECOMPOSITION OF THE HISTORIC BUILDING. IT RESULTS IN A THREADED AREA OF FOUNDATION AND CONSTRUCTION. THE FACTORY, WHICH HAS BEEN IN USE FOR A SPECIFIC PURPOSE, IS DOWNSTREAM FROM THE BUILDING. THE WASTE IN THE AREA OF FOUNDATION AND CONSTRUCTION CAN LEAD TO EARTH MASSES OF BOND AND MATERIAL. THE WASTE IN THE AREA OF FOUNDATION AND CONSTRUCTION CAN LEAD TO EARTH MASSES OF BOND AND MATERIAL.
Fatal Blast
An explosion that destroyed a wing of a machinery building at a minimum security farm at the federal penitentiary near Leavenworth kept rescue teams working about 14 hours
in an attempt to rescue five men who were trapped under a 29-foot mud. Rubble. Below, efforts to remove the debris were hampered by a maze of steel bars used to
reinforce the walls and floors of the building. Bulloozers used in the rescue operation were almost useless without the aid of heavy bolt mortars and acetylene torches.
Explosion kills six
By DOUG HITCHCOCK and BRUCE THOMAS Staff Reporters
BEVERLY, Mo.—An explosion torre through a wing of a farm machinery building at a federal prison camp farm yesterday, killing five inmates and one
The explosion, which occurred at 10:45 a.m., also injured four men—two guards and two inmates, Irl Day, federal penitentiary warden, said yesterday.
Five of the dead-four inmates and one guard—trapped beneath tons of brick and concrete for nearly 14 hours before they freed their bodies about 2 this morning.
Day said that within minutes of the explosion, workers from the federal penitentiary arrived and began to dig through the debris of the 2-story brick and concrete fenced building and pulled up the fence of the rubble and rached to hospitals in the Lewamworth area.
Unable to find the trapped men, prison officials called for heavy construction equipment and additional rescue workers to come to the honor camp farm, which is across the Missouri River about three miles east of the U.S. Penitentiary south of Leavenworth. Workmen came from the nearby prison, from Fort Leavenworth,
which is about 2.5 miles away, and the
North Fire Department sent a
rescue team.
At one time during the day, despite continuous snowfall, as many as 200 snowbirds per hour fly from private construction firms bit away at the 20-foot pile of debris, but steel reinforcing bars within the concrete slowed their flight and bars with bolt cutters and acetylene torches.
The explosion, prison officials said, topped the roof and the 8- to 10-inch thick walls of the building's west wing, forcing the concrete floor to give way into a 3-foot crawl space. The men, some working on a truck inside the building, were pinned beneath bricks and large chunks of concrete laced with steel bars.
By dusk, workers could see three of the trapped men through gaps in the debris, but were unable to reach them or establish contact with them. One man was still unaccounted for.
Rescue operations continued into the early morning as temperatures dipped from the mid-tens to near zero. But workers, as they stood and watched bulldozers attack the rubble, said they had little hope of finding any of the trapped men alive.
"I could see enough of two of them to.
identify them," Jerry Brown, chief of ambulatory services at Fort Laurenworth, said. "The one man on the west was laying down. I could see about 40 percent of his body."
"The other man on the north side was packed by the debris very tightly and his head was crushed. Even if they didn't die when the building collapsed they must've died soon after. We're dealing with hydrothermia out here because it's so cold."
Ll. Col. Fred Clarke, an engineer from Fort Leavenworth who supervised the rescue operation, said the explosion probably was caused by an accumulation of natural gas in the building where inmates were working on a truck.
A board of inquiry, Day said, is to meet today to investigate the accident. He said the board would examine acetylene tanks, which were stored in the building.
If the tanks are crushed, Day said, it might suggest the explosion was caused by natural gas from the building's furnace. If the tank was in good condition, mean they were the cause of the explosion.
Day said he thought it was possible that natural gas had collected in the crawl space beneath the building's first floor, and was somehow ignited.
The honor camp farm, which consists of
See EXPLOSION back page
Blast ends inmate's plans
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Reporter
Caprell Blair had big plans for the future.
Cantrell Blair had big plans for the future Blair, 27, the only prison inmate ever to receive a KU scholarship, had hoped to be paroled this year so he could begin classes on the Lawrence campus. Blair, sentenced in 1974 for postal robbery, had planned to attend the bachelor of arts degree political science and eventually attend KU's School of Law.
Scott Spellerberg, teaching assistant in geography and one of Blair's teachers, said, "He was one of the most impressive people I have met. I never knew why he was there. It never came up in the conversation. If things had been his parole, he would have been out by now."
But Blair's plans were cut short yesterday by a gas explosion at a minimum security honor farm east of the U.S. Pentiment at a military base. The explosion killed Blair and five others.
BLAIR HAD hoped to be released on parole last August. He was not granted parole, however, and was transferred from the Leavenworth penitentiary to the honor farm in November. He was to have had another parole hearing in April.
Blair entered Leavenworth in 1974 after being sented to two eight-year terms for postal robbery. Blair, who had a tenth-grade education, earned his General Equivalency Degree in prison and then enrolled in KU's continuing education classes. As of last summer, he had earned 73 hours toward his bachelor's degree in political science.
Last summer, Blair was awarded a Kansas University Endowment Association scholarship. Although other inmates had applied for scholarships before, Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said Blair was the first prisoner to receive one.
In an interview last summer, Blair said, "Once I entered this institution and saw what a predicament I had gotten myself into, I realized there has got to be a better way. The staff members told me I'm still young. I could make something of myself.
He had a 4.0 grade point average.
Blair had planned to complete his education on the Lawrence campus, taking classes that were not offered at the prison. Rogers said Blair had written him about attending the University of Kansas.
BLAIR RECEIVED the scholarship, Rogers said, because "he had the financial need and the outstanding academic record."
"He said in his letter he was really looking forward to being on the KU campus," he said.
"A MAN HAS to be constructive. Education is the way."
Blair was enthusiastic about his studies and urged other inmates to improve them.
Stephan Goldman, associate professor of English and one of Blair's teachers, said, "I think in some ways he saw himself as an example to the other inmates of what he could do with an education. He was always using the other inmates to take classes."
ONE OF THE goals Blair set for himself was a law degree. He said, however, that he did not want to be a "a corporation lawyer with a big house on a hill."
Rogers said, "He really led a crusade for education."
David Billene, assistant instructor of political science, said, "He was really an exceptional person and an exceptional individual. He knew himself and was capable of achieving them."
Blair was an outgoing, personable man who impressed his teachers with his ambi-
tation.
laid last summer. "I want to help
see BLAIR back page
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
See BLAIR back page
【1】
Menninger says death bill alone no deterrent
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-Karl Menninger, director of the Meninger Foundation in Topeka, told legislators yesterday that if they approved reinstatement of the death penalty, it should include a provision that all executions be televised.
"Be consistent," he said. "If you're doing this to deter people from killing, put it where the best is."
Speaking before the Kansas House Judiciary Committee, MENINGer said capital punishment was "too expensive, too uncivilized, too barbaric and too cruel."
He told committee members that although he too wished to find a deterrent for murderers, he did not think killing them was justified.
"Punishment and vengeance is not the spirit of the law, although it may be the spirit of some people who want this law," he said.
MENNINGER ALSO said imposing capital punishment would have a bad effect
- yesterday was the second day of committee hearings on the reinstatement of the death penalty in Kansas. Further committee discussion and possible final action on the death penalty.*
on a murderer's family and on prison employees.
"Capital punishment also has a dreadful effect on state employees. They have a tough job with enough discouragements already. And I can assure you that nobody wants to do the killing, It's not a pleasant task for any employee."
"If you impose this law, not only do you kill a man, but you do vast injury to his body."
Sister Dolores Brinkel, a representative of
The committee also heard testimony from members of several religious organizations and ministers.
the criminal Justice Ministries of Catholic Charities and the Coalition to Keep Kansas Free of the Death Penalty, said capital punishment could lead to "erosion of respect for life."
BRINKEL SAID reinstatement of the death penalty was an emotional issue and
The Rev. Jack Bremer, a representative of the Consortium for Legislative Concerns, said capital punishment was "a violation of the deepest religious values and teachings
"Capital punishment lends official sanction to contagious violence," he said.
2
Wednesday, January 31, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International
Pove urges war on illiteracy
GUADALAJARA, Mexico—Pope John Paul II appealed for a war on literacy yesterday and asked the wealthy to fornake "some of what is theirs" in order to save them.
In an address to workers in one of Guadalajara's poorer districts, the pope expressed sympathy for the plight of the downrodden.
He also rejected the "theology of liberation" widely supported by the Latin chlero who seek a greater role in promoting social justice and human rights in America.
Before flying to Guadalajara, the pope spoke at a school in Mexico City and called on students and teachers to campaign against illiteracy in Latin
The gathering at the school grounds, estimated by local officials at 110,000 persons, was so large that the Pope had to be ferried by helicopter onto the roof of the school instead of driving to the school in an open car as was originally planned.
The pope is scheduled to leave for Rome today.
U.S. exceeds deficit record
WASHINGTON -The United States ended 1978 with a record foreign trade deficit of $4.85 billion, which contributed to the dollar's decline last year.
The Commerce Department reported yesterday that the deficit topped the
Oil imports declined from $42.4 billion in 1977 to $39.5 billion in 1978. The volume of imported oil also fell.
The government said it expects the overall trade deficit to shrink by as much as 99 billion in 1979 because of the dollar's decline, which makes U.S. goods cheaper and less expensive than imports.
A major cause of the huge trade deficits of the past two years, officials said, was that the U.S. economy grew faster than economies of other major trading countries.
A new agreement to regulate world trade during the 1980s is being polished in Geneva. President Carter has said he will submit it to Congress early this year.
KBI arrests five in drug raid
JUNCTON CITY —Kansas Bureau of Investigation agents rescued a fellow officer, who was wired for sound, as he made a druid raid yesterday.
A Geary County spokesman said the microphone enabled other agents to hear the struggle between agent Michael Lyman and five suspects and to arrive
Lyman said he had been given eight ounces of cocaine in exchange for $5,000 before he milled a sum and told the five they were under arrest.
Once the suspect put a gun on the agent while another wrestled Lyman's gun away from him. As one of the men held a gun on Lyman, the other KBI
Officer resians amid dispute
WICHITA—A police officer resigned yesterday amid controversy over racial slurs reportedly made during the arrest of three black youths.
Patrolman Gary Brumblebowl submitted his resignation at a meeting with Police Deputy Chief Bill Cornwell and Chief Richard LaMunyon, who had suspended Brumbleboll last week for erroneously claiming he could identify a deputy who made the remarks.
The federal attorney's office has been investigating allegations of police brutality, racial slurs and police cover-up made by the Northeast Task Force, a.
U. S. Attorney James Bueche said he planned to release the findings of the investigation by this morning.
Brumbelow said he had heard an undercover deputy make racial remarks about one of the youths arrested Dec. 23 for stealing $5 worth of gas. Later, however, he said he could not identify which of two deputies made the remarks. The deputies have taken lie detector tests, but results have not been released.
Kansans hear Israeli's view
TOPEKA—A member of the Israel's Knesset said yesterday many Israelis do not think Americans appreciate the concessions Israel has made in its effort to
Edul Olmert, the member and an attorney, is visiting the United States on what he called an "information tour" at the request of Israel's foreign minister Hassan Shalom.
He addressed the Kansas Senate and spoke at Temple Beth Sholom on the prospects of peace in the Middle East.
Chances for achieving peace remain good, he said, but it will take longer than anyone thought. He blamed Egyptian President Anwar Sadat for insisting on the withdrawal of forces.
Policies delay energy savings
HOUSTON—Increased domestic coal production and industrial conversion away from imported energy could save the United States $1 billion annually, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Robert R. Herring, board chairman of Houston National Gas, told an international trade audience that industrial conversion dragged because of the high energy costs.
The results, he said, were wasteful consumption, lagging development of coal and nuclear power and expensive environmental restrictions.
Herring called for relaxed restrictions, specifically one that would permit older power and industrial plants to continue operation without installation of expensive air cleaning equipment unless the plants were shown to be a health hazard.
That would allow billions of dollars to be spent in new facilities and increased energy production, he said.
Health insurance bill proposed
TOPEKA-A – A non-profit Kansas Health Insurance Association would be assurance to the available assurance of catastrophic health insurance under a established.
Under the bill, all companies providing health insurance or health care services in the state would be members of the association.
Rep. Rex Hoy, R-Fairway, chairman of the Insurance Committee, said the measure was introduced at state insurance Commissioner Fletcher Bell's
The proposed plan would provide coverage for all reasonable and customary charges for care and treatment of sickness or injury that exceed $10,000 in the year 2015.
Suspect on druas, police say
Spencer is being held at Juvenile Hall while law enforcement officials decide what charges will be brought against her. It also must be decided whether she will be tried as a juvenile or as an adult. It may be several days before the decisions are made.
SAN DIEGO--Authorsities said yesterday that Brenda Spencer, the young woman who allegedly showed a San Diego school with bullets and killed two officers on campus, is facing charges.
Teachers at the school went ahead with their regular class plans yesterday, but it was reported that most of the classes were spent trying to explain what was going on.
Most of the chorems appear as the students and staff arrived for school. They invite the pupils when the shots begin to run out.
The children screamed and scattered. Principal Burton Wragg saw a student fall and rushed from his office. He was hit in the chest and died on the sidewalk.
Most of the children appeared calm, but some seemed dazed.
were walking up the main sidewalk when the shots began to ring out. The children screamed and scattered. Principal Burton Wragg saw a student
Weather...
It will be clear and very cold today, with temperatures dipping to 10 below, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be light and variable. There is less than a 20 percent chance of precipitation. It will be increasingly cloudy tomorrow, and temperatures will rise to the low to mid 20s.
The extended forecast calls for temperatures from 0 to 15 above. There is a possibility of snow Friday and Saturday.
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THE PRE-NURSING CLUB will meet Thursday, in the Forum Room February 1 Kansas Union Senior Nursing Students will talk. Partially funded by Student Activity Fees.
The Lawrence Opera House
and 7th Spirit Club
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Lost Gonzo Band
THE FLOWERS
THIS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY FIRST!!!
The GONZO BAND was formerly with JERRY JEFF WALKER and is now recording and touring on their own!
DON'T MISS THIS SHOW!!-BUY YOUR TICKETS EARLY! THE LAST TWO SHOWS AT THE OPERA HOUSE HAVE SOLD OUT IN ADVANCE $3.50 advance tickets available today. Day of show tickets $4.50. Available at Better Days Records & 7th Spirit Club.
This Friday and Saturday...
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You won't want to miss those fine upcoming acts:
- Feb. 9th & 10th—CAMARATA BAND
- Feb. 14th Free Valentines Concert with Austin Texas Recording Artist MARSHA BALL
- Feb. 15 - ""NIGHTHAWKS
· Feb. 16 & 17 - SON SEALS BLUES BAND
---
Wednesday, January 31, 1978
3
Teng assures peaceful Taiwan
WASHINGTON (AP) — Teng Hsiao-pin, vice president of China, offered assurances to concerned senators yesterday that his country had no plans to use either military force or economic boycots to seize control of Taiwan.
Reporting on Teng's remarks at a private Senate luncheon on Capitol Hill, Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., said he recalled Teng as saying, "You can rely on our assurance that we don't intend to use force."
TALE, COCHRAN SAID, Teng was asked if China
LUCE, an economic business as a weapon against
TATAR.
"There has been no discussion on boycott," he quoted Teng as saving.
Teng was quote by another sonar as saying Taiwan "will be returned by peaceful means. We have patience."
Teng clearly sought to allay the fears of many members of Congress about the future security of Taiwan, the island state.
Almost every member of the Senate attended the luncheon, which was held in the orate Senate Caucus Room.
TENG ATTENDED the luncheon after he and President
Apparently agreed on a wide range of scientific and cultural exchanges but still believed divided over a common approach to the Soviet Union, Carter and Teng shook hands vigorously on the chilly White House South Lawn.
Reporters were excluded from the Teng luncheon, but were able to hear the opening toasts from a loudspeaker mounted in the hall outside when the sound system was inadvertently left on, Teng, in reply to one question, said.
. . 'I'm sure you have already noted that we no longer use the word liberation of Taiwan.
carrier and completed two days of formal talks, in which he discussed China's development building friendship. United States and China develop building friendship.
"WE NOW SAY that so long as Taiwan is returned to the motherland and that there is only one China, then we will fully respect the present realities on Taiwan."
The agreement between the United States and China to establish full diplomatic relations does not include a public commitment from Peking to not use force to reunite Taiwan with mainland China.
TENG'S SCHEDULE yesterday included a meeting with the House International Relations Committee and private discussions with House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill and Senate Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd. Teng also attended an event organized by private groups, one at a downtown hotel and the other in the new east wing of the National Gallery of Art.
The vice premier will meet Carter briefly this afternoon to sign a comprehensive exchange agreement.
SOURCES who asked not to be named said at least three agreements would be signed, dealing with science and technology, cultural exchanges and establishment of consulates in the two countries.
Another account came from Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-
Wash.
Jackson said, "Teng didn't say he would rule it (use of force) out because then he would lose all his bargaining power. I don't think you could expect a different answer, but when he was saying the power of Force, Over and over again he referred to Chinese patience."
Iran allows Khomeini to return
TEHRAN, Iran (AP)—The government said yesterday that Ayatul Khoulih Khomeini, the architect of the Iranian uprising, could return to Iran. Air France was given permission to fly Khomeini from his homeland to accept trumpet award in his homeland.
The American Embassy meanwhile ordered the U.S. government dependents out of Iran "at the earliest feasible date" after attacks on three Americans.
Millions are expected to greet the 78-year-old Khomeini when he returns, possibly tomorrow, to press his campaign to oust the constitutional monarchy headed by Prime Minister Shaphour Bakhtiar and set up an Islamic republic.
KHOMEINLED LED the uprising that forced Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to leave the country for what many feel is permanent exile.
There was scattered violence in Tehran yesterday but no reports of casualties.
Khomeini is expected to name an Islamic
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The Iranian announcement said Khoumine could return early today, but his spokesman said the president had no comment.
revolutionary council upon arrival, and to outline his proposals for an Islamic state during a speech at the cemetery where he died in the past year of anti-shahri rioting are buried.
AL-REZA Nourbakhsh, a spokesman for the committee preparing Khomeini's welcome in Tehran, said the ayatulah accepted a committee suggestion to postpone his return until tomorrow so the welcome could be larger.
Airport sources in Paris said Air France is written guarantees of security for the life.
Speculation here was that the government decided to let Khomiheini come back because it had been discredited.
TEHRAN'S MEHRABAD International Airport was closed officially last Wednesday for safety reasons and apparently to the police on the anti-shaik movement to delay his return.
A Japanese charter airliner landed and left a with load of Japanese petrochemical workers, airport sources said Pan Am. A French jet carrying 105 passengers tentativelyanned flights to Tehran today.
The evacuation of American dependents was ordered after U.S. Consul David C. McGaffey and Alfonso Dorrello, an employee of Bell Helicopter International, were beaten by a crowd of angry Iranians in the wake of the attack, which an Iranian taxi driver was wounded.
religious leader out and the airports closed for any length of time.
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When Bill Beam is at his home in the Davis
Sunday, Air Force Maj. Larry Davis was
wounded by an unknown assailant in Tehran. Davis returned the fire and drove off.
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The three Americans were not seriously hurt.
The year of strikes and riots inspired by khomimi forced the shah from the country on April 25, 1964.
The shiah is in Morocco but has not announced future plans.
--in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
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Defense chief favors mixed military draft
WASHINGTON (UP1)—In a move that may anger some females but cheer others, Defense Secretary Harold Brown wants women as well as men signed up if the decision is made to again register young people for the military draft.
Brown made that point to the House Armed Services Committee Monday, making him the first administration official to take a position on the touchy issue.
"In that sort of emergency," he said, referring to the kind of crisis he now sees as the only circumstance requiring involvency induction, "you ought to consider
Some feminists say yes, others no.
With today's emphasis on women's rights, the discussion inevitably has included whether women should for the first time be drafted as well as men.
Brown said his judgment on whether registered women should actually be called up for service "would have to wait a further examination of what assignment policies
would be, and if the principal requirements were for combat forces."
He said he thought most combat jobs were not appropriate for women.
BROWN MADE clean he does not feel
crawl calls are needed to the military in
the war.
He said the administration hoped to decide later this year whether registration was again needed to speed up the draft. "If we need to add it and added, 'Wermay not need to go that far.'"
That put him at odds with Gen. David Jones, the joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, who said he definitely wanted to bring back registration but would go slowly on actual inductions because "there were tremendous inexperiences in earlier drafts."
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Jones refused to support Rep. G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery, D-Miss., who would like to draft 100,000 to 200,000 young men into the deleted Army reserves.
Drafting for the reserves, never before done in this country, would need study. Jones said. He mentioned past abuses in an apparent reference to Vietnam-era complaints that college students escaped while disadvantaged minorities were drafted.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
JANUARY 31, 1979
Share the payments
The price of student basketball and football tickets soon will be on the line before the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board, but there is much more at stake than money.
KUAC, when it meets in February, will decide the fate of a 1966 student ticket surcharge of $4 on basketball and $5 on football season tickets. The surcharge was implemented in 1966 to pay a $35,000 loan from the Kansas University Endowment Association for student seating additions to the east side of Memorial Stadium.
ALTHOUGH THE 1966 loan will be paid off by September 1980, KUAC must now decide whether to continue the 1966 surcharge to help pay installments on a $1.8 million loan for recent stadium renovations.
In 1978, a 50-cent renovation was added to student basketball and football season ticket prices to help pay for those renovations.
Yet, according to Mike Harper, student body president and KUAC board member, ticket prices could
become cheaper if the 1966 surcharge were eliminated.
Although it may only be wishful thinking, lower ticket prices still sound good—probably too good to be true.
The 1966 student ticket surcharge should be dropped, and the burden of loan repayment should be paid equally by all ticket holders—not just students.
BUT HARPER has perhaps an even more valid reason for wanting the surcharge removed. If, as some people have speculated, the KUAC wants to increase the rent for the resort stadium renovation loan, then all ticket prices should be raised.
The temptation by KUAC to continue what is now a prime student revenue source will be great, but should nevertheless be resisted. Although cheaper tickets may be an unrealistic goal, an equitable repayment burden is not.
In whatever their decision, the KUAC owes KU students an open and candid explanation of their actions and a commitment to equal treatment.
Carlin should keep vow to keep utility sales tax
Kansas' newly inaugurated Democratic governor, John Carlin, is off to a shaky start. Last week he drew heavy criticism from Republicans and less than avid support from Democrats over his 1980 budget statement.
The conflict centered on Carlin's refusal to support the removal of the 3 percent state sales tax on utilities, which had been one of his main campaign pledges last fall in his bid to defeat former Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
Then why make the campaign pledges in the first place?
CARLIN SHOULD have studied the effect of removing the sales tax before making it a promise and not after. But apparently he didn't.
By not supporting removal of the bales tax, Carlin is calling into question his credibility last fall as a candidate and now as governor. In stating he would not blindly follow his campaign pledge, does he admit that he should pay for the pledge when he made it last fall?
In defense of his refusal to support removal of the sales tax he said, "I haven't broken a promise until I fail to get it through at some point. I none to do that next year."
Carlin said he had no intention of "blindly following" campaign promises without further evidence.
His pledge must appear empty to those Kansans who voted for him, hoping he would reduce the cost of utilities this year. Now he was a big believer in the earliest. Carlin said last week he would attempt to tackle the issue at that time but claimed he had the full four years of his eligibility.
Carlin further defended himself by saying that because of the troubled economy and uncertainty of state income from the federal government, Kansas could not afford to lose the $20 million generated from the utility sales tax this year.
In addition, at the end of the week the Democrats said they would go ahead and publish a report that would define the governor's support. Thus, his credibility as governor is in question because neither
Jake
The attacks from Republicans would be expected by Carlin. They blame the sales tax issue for Bennett's defeat last November. In fact, Bennett has said the issue of high utility rates, which Carlin blamed on Bennett, cost him the election.
twenty-five men went to prison for their roles in the Watergate affair of 1972-74. Two weeks ago, the last of them, John Mitchell, was released from prison.
Thompson
his word, or at least hedging a bit. It is no surprise the Republicans have gone to the polls.
And now it appears Carlin is going back on
KANSAS HOUSE Speaker Wendell Lady R-Overland Park, said, "We talk about the reasons for the lack of credibility of politicians . . . well this is a prime example. Sometimes he's got to answer to the people he made bromes to."
The criticism from Republicans was expected and justified, but criticism from House Democrats indicates Carlin might be unpopular. It is unlikely that both parties over the details of the budget.
But the man that Mitchell continually sought to protect was pardoned for any role he may have played in the incident. This week, that man, Richard M. Nixon made his way back to the White House at the invitation of President Jim Carter.
Obviously, Carlin can recover from the present lack of support for his economic goals. However, he must be careful in the future. By not supporting removal of the tax sales now, Carlin seems to be forgetting the voters who elected him to his office.
His promise to remove the sales tax must be uphold if Carlin desires to have any influence in the state's economic direction. He is also responsible when and how he will support the tax removal.
THE DECISION last week was not catastrophic, but it should be unnerving to all of Carlin's supporters and opponents alike. The statement that he would not blindly follow his campaign promise implies that he might take its impact and that he might not live up to it.
The situation is a familiar one. An outsider criticized an incumbent's policies and proposed a new direction for which he received support. Then, after he was elected, the outside became an insider and armed of the difficulty of implementing his plan.
Nixon's visit can't erase Watergate
Gov. Carlin should learn from Carter's example and avoid further questions about his credibility by supporting clear Democratic state objectives or by giving sound explanation for supporting Republican goals.
It was easy to be critical but not so easy to take the reins and demand the change.
These two events seem to imply that the Watergate Era has waned, and they appear to symbolize a general recognition that the panics had resulted from the incident are subdued.
On the national scene, President Carter has been plagued by this problem in carrying out his campaign promises. His credibility has been repeatedly questioned.
However, while the outer wounds may have healed, many Americans still experience a shivering chill of resentment when they recall the abuses of power that Nixon and his followers dealt the American people.
ALTHOUGH MANY Americans have expressed an earnest hope that the country can forgate the incident and say "all is forgiven," it is necessary that they not forget the event—less the lessons to be learned by it are also forgritten.
Kansans now want, even demand, the change he first proposed. The removal of the state sales tax on utilities should be extended. Carlin and approved by the Legislature.
Mary
Ernst
100
And it is important to understand why
many Americans find it hard to forgive and forget the very people who hurt them and who were not strong enough to ask for forgiveness.
Neither Mitchell nor Nixon have admitted that they were in any way responsible for the Watergate incident. Mitchell, a former U.S. attorney general, is perhaps the best personification of Watergate other than Mitchell. He was also present in his affair; he was a major instrument in he cover-up; and he was the last to enter prison and the last to leave.
VET AT NO TIME he did admit to
and his old law partner, Nixon,
placed in the office.
after he was paid some $3 million for "breaking his silence" in a television interview, he let out less than a whimper of admission.
And Nixon, even after his own White House tapes revealed the extend to which he knew of the break-in and the cover-up, not said that he, too, was involved. Even
Yet the American people are asked to forget once again.
But how do we forget that some of the closest men to the President of the United States were involved in the underhanded siving of a rival political organization?
How do we forget that the man named to be the chief law enforcement officer of the country was himself involved in those plans?
with the invitation he extended to Nixon for Monday's state dinner with China's president.
THE DINNER marked Nixon's first return to the White House since he fled in disgrace and under pressure of impeachment in 1974. It also marked recognition by Carter that he has not lost the trust of his people, abusive actions, and that he also has not forgotten the significance that Nixon played in opening up relations with China.
HOW DO WE forget that the president's top aides admitted to, and were convicted of, deceiving the American public about the extent of the White House involvement?
And how do we forget that those presidential advisers disclosed, as did the president's own words on his secret tapes, in the nation participated in that decryption?
Nixon should not be banned from the White House, but neither should he be proclaimed a martyr who has been abused by the American public, as some groups have suggested. On the contrary, Nixon has abused the public and has further insulted his fellow citizens with his utter lies it at the same time that he reaps in large amounts of money for pretentions of disclosure.
We should not forget and we might have trouble forgiving because of the magnitude of the event. But it is essential that we not make mistakes in our decision. Carter has taken a step in that direction
The White House visit was a social visit, Carter said, and it in no way contained any threat.
Total condemnation of Richard Nixon at this point is unnecessary and unwarranted.
But forgiveness is heavy impassion.
And for forgetting is out of the question.
MAXNEU
MAGNEU
THE RAMOND NEWS LEADER. © BY CHIQUA GRIBUNE
TO KHOMEIN!!
—RETURNED FROM
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Balanced budget is not the answer
Bruce Bartlett N.Y. Times Feature
By BRUCE BARTLETT
ARLINGTON Va.-President Carter's proposed fiscal 1980 budget, which would contain a $23 billion deficit, down from the 1979 deficit of $37 billion, shows his concern for reducing the federal deficit and moving toward a balanced budget for 1981.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. of California also seeks a balanced federal budget, but wants to mandate it by a constitutional amendment.
Although conservatives are widely applifying these actions, the economic rationale for a balanced budget is extremely complex. It involves consequences, both political and economic.
If one looks at the economic problem, there are only two good arguments for a balanced budget: to hold down the growth of government spending and to control inflation. Unfortunately, a balanced budget guarantees neither.
ON THE SURFACE, it would appear that an amendment requiring a balanced budget would reduce government spending to the level of budget receipts.
But the Congress could just as easily
If you don't think the Congress will raise taxes if necessary to keep from cutting spending, remember that the last Congress passed a tax bill of $22 billion, despite a so-called tax revolt.
Furthermore, every state in the Union has a provision in its constitution requiring a balanced state budget, yet this has had no impact on the states' ability to increase spending.
For many years the fastest growth of government has been in the state and local sectors, not the federal. Consequently, it is wishing think to believe that federal spending will be reduced by a balanced budget requirement.
NOR CAN WE expect a balanced budget amendment to reduce inflation, because inflation is primarily caused by an expansionary monetary policy.
A budget deficit in and of itself has no infamy impact. The only thing that can hurt it is an increase in oil prices.
decide to maintain the same high level of spending and raise taxes instead.
If it is monetized—that is, financed by creating more money—then there will be an
But if the deficit is financed by borrowing from real savings, then there is no inflationary impact. Capital merely becomes diverted from market-directed purposes to other areas, and may not be desirable on other grounds, but there won't be any inflation as a result.
CONSIDERING THESE facts, one wonders why conservatives are so adamant in their devotion to a balanced budget, because it has brought them so much political harm.
Because conservatives hate budget deficits so much, they became the liberal's battleground.
The liberals would win elections by promising something for nothing via the miracle of defect spending, and then they would have a better chance such spending or raise taxes to pay for it.
Consequently, conservatives have become associated negatively in the public's mind with those who take away their benefits without offering anything in
11 IS IRONIC that just when conservatives have finally begun to shake off their hopeless quest for a balanced budget and adopt the more fruitful tax reduction plan, liberal Democrats like Gov. Brown should pick up the idea and breathe new life into it.
return except the virtues of a balanced budget.
Eventually, conservatives must understand that "deficit" is only a code word and not a word of government action. We are prepared to say that it is better to have a $400 billion federal budget with a $100 billion deficit than a $500 billion budget that is more sustainable and reducing spending are the proper goals.
inflationary impact, just as there would be from any increase in the quantity of money
Pursuit of a balanced budget is not the way to achieve them.
Bruce Bartlett is *e*conomics on the staff of Sen. Roger Joesen, Iowa Republican and a member of the Joint Economic committee. He served as Vice-President Kemp, Republican of New York, the Kemp-Roth bill that sought to reduce tax rates by cutting and that was defeated in both houses.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 650-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May. Mail enclosed for delivery every second day, and Monday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Los Angeles, Kansas. $15 for $18 or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the activity fee.
Campus Editor
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Assistant Campus Editors
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Sports Editor
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66445
Managing Editor Direk Steimel
Editor Barry Maxsey
Editorial Editor John Whitesides
Mary Hewitt
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Carol Hunter, David Killen
Diane Porter
Mary Hewitt
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Conformity demanded by traffic rules
Last Wednesday evening, a friend dropped us off at the corner of 15th Street and Naisimath Drive for a scheduled trip. We would have been in town, would be no parking allowed in the Murphy let because of the basketball game. As we were getting out of the car, a policewoman who was directing the traffic began yelling "Stay clear," and we could not unload at an intersection.
To the editor:
She then began to reqt each toulr to our friend driving, reprimanding him for being so loud. She told him,
KANSAN letters
corner. The time was 8:45 p.m., a full 45 minute game was to start, and until a situation of no danger occurred.
We feel this woman's attitude was totally unreasonable as we were conforming to a situation she had more power to alter than we. Having to conform to an unfair situation is one thing—but being told how to conform should—should we say—no rights whatsoever?
Spelling correctly part of journalism
To the editor:
This is pretty poor journalism for a college paper. My high-school newspaper is the worst in town.
Keith D. Lynch
Baxter Springs senior
David G. McGrevey
Wichita junior
The story in the Jan. 25 issue of the University Daily Kansas entitled "Village Smith" was interesting to be sure. Unfortunately the writer of the story, Lori Linenberger, let her carelessness in spelling a common characteristic of the Kansan in my three years of reading it. She also misspelled plowshare. She used a word that doesn't even exist in the dictionary: plow shears!
Kansan could find one somewhere in Flint ...
Charles Holt Jefferson City, Mo., junior
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 affirmed by the editor, he or she should include the writer's class and home town or faculty and staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
r s
st n
n d b t s b t d
t, e d
e o e p s a s e t o f
a e e p s a s e t o f
a e e p s a s e t o f
Wednesday, January 31, 1979
5
University Daily Kansan
Short-term loans relieve students
A student has not eaten in a day and he needs another book for a class. He's expecting a check from mom and dad but it has not arrived.
The situation is not hopeless, however, because undergraduates and graduate students can get loans on 24-hour notice from the office of financial aid, Katiehle Farrell, assistant director of the office, said recently.
"The short-term loan program made 6,700 loans last year," she said. "It allows students to borrow money through our office from the University of Kansas Endowment Association. A student must complete an internship in order to be placed on the decision on whether to loan is made."
Farrell said the decision to make a loan was made by one of the directors or officers of the company.
aid. She said the decision was partly based on information discussed at the interview.
Farrell said short-term loans often were used when students were waiting for money.
"Most students who use the short-term loan program are just borrowing until expected cash arrivals, such as an income tax refund," she said.
"Some borrow for tuition or books or for things like emergency medical care," she said. "We even had a student borrow so he could go to school." She said the default rate on the short-
Farrell said the default rate on the short-term loans was low.
"STUDENTS RESPECT the terms of the loan, as they are set for them in the interview," she said. "That's not to say that the loan is overdue. There are very few, considering the volume of loans."
Larry Heeb, vice president of the University of Kansas Endowment Association, said about $1,430,000 was awarded in short-term loans last year.
"That figure is a slight increase over previous years," he said.
Heeb said the Endowment Association did not deal with students directly.
"All the loans are processed through the office of financial aid, and the decision on them is made."
He said the Endowment Association decided which fund the loan would come from.
So that determines what fund the loan comes from."
Heeb said some of the specific funds were for engineering students, for students from a specific county in Kansas or for students from a specific sorority or fraternity.
Heeb said he didn't think a shortage of funds for the program was possible.
"MOST OF THE MONEY we use for the short-term loans comes from about 200 named funds," he said. "Some funds are based on the interest qualifications of who the money can go to.
He said, however, the money they had to distribute dependent on the money paid back
an ers ceed build and af- ter and con. edit
"We even have a fund set up by KU alumni living in the state of New York which can only be awarded to students from New York," he said.
"The money is loaned and reloaded," he said. "If students live up to their responsibilities and pay the loans back, the program will continue."
KU students learn through mails
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Reporter
During the last few years, about 2,000 students have been taking RU classes and probably have never seen their instructor.
They enroll whenever they wish, receive full credit for classes and yet never set foot in a classroom class.
But these students aren't receiving any favors from the University. They are enrolled in correspondence courses.
Orville Voth, director of Independent Study programs, said last week that the enrollment had been fairly constant.
Independent Study is a division of Continuing Education at KU, but it uses instructors and lesson materials from all regions.
THE TUITION fee for correspondence courses is $18 a
semester hour. The fee for on-campus classes is $30.50 a
semester hour- for Kansas residents and $3.50 for non-
Kansas residents who are taking less than six hours.
There is an additional fee of $13 for postage and materials for each course of correspondence study.
Al Mauler, instructor of German, said the greatest difficulty with correspondence courses was the method of multimedia.
The student must wait until a graded assignment has been returned by the instructor before proceeding to the next assignment. Students cannot mail in more than one assignment at a time without consent of the instructor. In most cases, the assignments take from one week to 10 days to be returned by mail.
"INSTRUCTORS ARE not in the position to correct a mistake at the time it happens because of a time lag at or after."
Students of correspondence study take the courses for a number of reasons. Many of the students have full-time jobs or other obligations that would not permit them to study on campus.
CURRENTLY, STUDENTS from six foreign countries and more than 40 other states are participating in the
The percentage of students who complete KU's correspondence courses is above the national average of 30
Students can enroll in traditional courses that correspond directly to classes given on the KU campus, or they can be enrolled at the UNC campus.
"Our completion rate is 40 percent and is going up," he said.
Mauler said the completion rate was 40 percent because the work load for correspondence students was heavy.
Life Shaping is a course that helps the student reflect on personal change through a series of lessons.
Foreign-born persons preparing for United States citizenship, explaining the responsibilities of citizens in a democratic system.
The University of Toronto
Graduation Announcement
Packets for Ordering
Now Available at your Kansas Union Bookstore
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All seniors & graduate students please pick up your packets
A representative from Jostens will be here Feb. 7th & 8th
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
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"Our main message is that we want to know about student's priorities or any injury they may suffer. Then, if we can help them, all the student where he can obtain help."
"I'm SURE academic advisers could help in that sort of situation," Grunz said. "But sometimes that way doesn't work because some students lack competence."
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She said all of the services the center offered were free, except a selfinstruction speed reading course. The cost of the course packet is $35. The center also offers discussion sessions to help students with courses.
The center also has helped students rearrange class schedules.
Assistance center helps solve varied problems
"We try to make university life the best possible experience for each student," Grunz said.
By PATRICIA RICE
Staff Reporter
If a student has a heavy class load and must work, or if his car breaks down and he has no access to get groceries, the office of student affairs has a service that will help. That service is the Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall.
Lorna Grunz, director of the center, said recently that the center served as a clearing house for the problems and questions students might have.
Grunz said that last semester a student became ill and needed help explaining to
The center serves as a referral center and offers services for non-traditional students, handicapped students and any students who need help and the answers to cooking with college life.
Since the center began operating July 1, 1978 it has helped an average of 152 students a week. Grunz said.
mis instructor why he did not attend class.
The center aids students who are having academic problems because of marriage, the stress of a job, unusual circumstances or difficulties or a physical handicap.
"IT'S NOT OUR job to make decisions for the student." Grunz said. "But sometimes things are so complex for them, they do need help. If we can just help them figure out what the questions are, we have been some service.
The Association of University Residence Halls
Eighth Annual Legislators' Dinner on February 19, 1979 7:00 p.m. at Lewis Hall.
Cordially invites the residents of the University Residence Halls to participate in the
This dinner provides an excellent opportunity for residents to visit with their state legislators on an informal basis. So complete the form available at your hall's desk, return it to your hall coordinator by Feb. 2, and plan on attending the Legislators' Dinner on Feb. 19, 1979.
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6
Wednesdav. Januarv 31,1979
University Dally Kansan
DiPinto feels pressure but excels
By BRETT CONLEY
Sports Writer
One has to tell Jackie DIPinto that it's a long way to Chicago.
The freshman gymnast has found that being far away from her hometown Chicago can be as hard to handle as the long hours of school and study and the lack of time for a social life.
"Just the pressure of gymnastics and the pressure of being away from home build up together," DiPinto said. "I get homesick so much, but I try not to bring it into the gym."
She obviously does a good job of handling the homeiness and the pressure, as she has been the top performer this season on the women's gymnastics team. She scored best scores on the team in four events and is best for the best score in the one other event.
"TTS SO tough because I am such a family person," she said, "and I am the first woman to win a Nobel Prize."
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family and everyone is just pushing behind me."
Last year as a senior in high school,
Pinto didn't even know if she would go to college.
"But my coach told me to try because he thought I could get there with my gymnastics abilities," she said. "I wrote a bunch of letters, and then I personally letter back and it hilt me the best."
Ken Snow is the women's gymnastics coach.
Even though she has surprised many people and has become the ministy of the country, she remains a relic.
"Right now I am just in a growing stage and I haven't hit my peak yet," she said. "Instead of peaking now and sliding back three years; I am going to slowly build up."
"I THOUGHT when I got to college it was going to be nice and easy and I was going to have a great time, but I got here and it was tougher practices and tougher routines."
Much tougher than learning new routines, Dipino said, is the lack of time for other activities.
"I don't have time for other hobbies or interests because of gymnastics and school," she said. "And when I do have freetime, I am so tired that I just want to relax. I don't have time to go out and socialize."
She also dislocated a finger earlier in the year, but despite all of her problems in and out of the gym, she is convinced that things will continue to get better here.
"The program here is headed up," she said. "Ken is a great coach and he has a lot of dreamtown. He has a lot of goals which in turn helps him think he has a good nucleus to build from."
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"My parents saw me at the meet we had in Ames and Grandview, Iowa, on the same weekend," she said. "I hurt my elbow that day." I couldn't unsee parallel bars and hyperextended it."
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DIPinto said she had gone home to Chicago only three times this school year to visit her parents, but they were able to see her perform last semester.
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"they swim 800 yards with the tubes, then 800 with the kickboard, then finish up with 800 more using their arms and legs." Spah saits, sutting juice toluice down a drain.
Some have tiny intertubes around their legs and use only their arms to pull them through the water, while others hold onto kickboards and use only their legs.
Rv MIKE EARLE
Ski Harten
With a big wad of chewing tabacco bulging from his left cheek, men's swimming coach Bill Spahn sits at the poolside attentively watching his swimmers turn lap off.
"We're taking it easy since the flu is going around."
Spain has he and his team will have difficulty defending the Big Eight title.
Spahn coached the Jayhawks to the conference title in his first year at the helm, 1978, with virtually the same team that took fourth in 1977.
Before taking over KU's coaching duties, Spahn, a native of Austin, Minn., served as head coach of the Wichita Swim Club. His teams, which included several former Jayhawks, won four straight Missouri AAU indoor and outdoor championships.
Spain admits he doesn't have to pysch the team up a great deal before a meet.
"I'm not a rah-rah type person," Spahn said. "We train hard, set out goals, and talk about what we should expect out of each individual."
"I enjoy working with these guys," Sphin said. "I like to watch them grow and mature."
SPAHN LIKES the attitude and make-up of his team, and searches for recruits that
Spahn, a 1964 graduate of Texas Tech University, puts his team through a one-hour workout in the morning, in addition to a 2/4 hour workout in the afternoon.
Competition is fierce among the Jayhawks in practice and duals to see who will represent Kansas in the Big Eight tourney, to be held March 1-3 in Lincoln,
of the league," Spahn said. "These guys are present Kansas well. They're a classy crowd."
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"We have 20 guys trying hard to make the 17 swimmer cut," Soapa did.
"IT REALLY wasn't a goal of mine to coach at the college level." Spahn said.
Spahn, who was a three-year swimming letterman, and captain of the Texas Tech team his senior year, doesn't know if his daughter has won Eight tournament, as she did last year.
Last year's title was KU's first since 1975,
last of a string of eight straight titles.
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"I didn't tell them to do it," Spahn said.
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1979 LIBERTY SCHOLARSHIP ESSAY CONTEST
in honor of the recent publication of Murray N. Rothbard's provocative new book, For a New Liberty (The Macmillan Co., 1978), the Cato Institute is sponsoring the 1979 Liberty Scholarship Essay Contest. Through this important program, the Institute seeks to encourage a more active discussion of the role human freedom should play in contemporary public-policy decisions.
OPEN TO ALL HIGH SCHOOL AND UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGE STUDENTS
Students in the high school and college divisions are invited to submit original essays on the topic, "What should the status of liberty be in today's America?" after having read Professor Rathbard's remarkable work. A distinguished panel of judges will then select four contest winners in each division.
ENTRY DEADLINE: JUNE 1,1979
For complete information and Conest Entry Form, please detach and return this coupon to: Liberty Essay Contest, Cato Institute, 1700 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, CA 94111.
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School
Notre Dame stays at top perfect Indiana State 2nd
Bv the Associated Press
Notre Dame survived a rash of upets in college basketball last week—including a loss of its own—and remained at the associated Press poll yesterday ahead of the Top Twenty's only unbeaten team. Indiana State.
The Irish, beaten by Maryland 67-66 Saturday, received 15 first-place votes to the Sycamores and 32 in balloting by a nationwide panel of 60 writers sporting an average of 124 points. Duncan, 122, edged Indiana State 67, by a vote of 1,124 points to 1,111.
"But it's a dream and I want to talk about reality," said Indiana State Coach Bill Hedges. "But if I never dream, it will never come true."
THE SYCAMORES were philosophical and unconcerned about not being No. 1. They said they were more concerned about winning the Missouri Valley Conference title and getting into the final championships—against Notre Dame.
Nore Dame and Indiana State both were named on all 60 ballots. Notre Dame, beaten by Maryland 67-68 Saturday, was tailed to lower than sixth while the Syracunes, while the Syracunes were listed as low as 10th by one panel member.
WHILE THE Irish and Sycamores struggled at the top, there were some big changes in the rest of the Top Ten.
Duke, with eight first-places and 1,025
points, moved from seventh to No. 3 after victories over Virginia and Marquette.
North Carolina, at No. 21 last week, also lost Saturday, 66-41 to Clemson. The Tar Heels dropped to fourth this week with 979 points, one first-place vote.
UCLA, ranked sixth last week before victories over Washington and West Virginia, tied for first place one point for No. 5, with two first-places votes and 957 points. The Cardinals, fifth last week before defeating St. Louis and the Cavaliers, got the remaining two first-places.
OHIO STATE, unranked three weeks ago, continued its climb, jumping from 10th to seventh with 851 points.
The Top Twenty teams in the United Press International basketball poll, with first place votes in parentheses and season records:
Texas shot from No. 17 to the 10th spot.
The rest of the Second Tent included Marquette, Alabama, Illinois, Michigan, and Arkansas. Inland, Temple, Akansas and Vanderbilt.
Syracuse had 692 points, and Georgetown 623 to take the eighth and ninth positions, while Louisiana State completed the Ten Ten with 497 points.
Illinois dropped from eighth to 14th after losses to Michigan and Iowa. Michigan State landed at 15 after being forced to lose by Iowa in bowling losses to Michigan and North Dakota.
North Carolina State, a member of the Top Twenty since the beginning of the season, was the only team to drop from the ranks. Maryland, in and out of the Top Twenty all season, was the only new member this week.
1. Notre Dame (12) 12-4
2. Indiana State (18) 18-4
3. LCA (1) 17-4
4. Duke (12) 12-4
5. Louisville (2) 12-4
6. North Carolina (2) 12-4
7. Ohio State (3) 12-4
8. Syracuse 12-4
9. Marquette 17-2
10. Georgetown, D.C. 17-2
11. Texas 14-4
12. Arkansas State 14-4
13. Michigan State 14-4
14. Texas A&M 17-4
15. Akron 17-4
16. Vanderbilt 14-4
17. Manhattan 14-4
18. Temple 13-4
19. Weaver State 13-4
20. Furman 14-4
The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press college basketball poll, with first place votes in paren
theses and season records
North Carolina (1)
2. Indiana State (12)
3. Idaho State (14)
4. North Carolina (1)
5. UCLA (2)
6. Ohio State
7. Syracuse
8. Georgia D.C.
9. Arkansas State
10. Texas
11. Marquette
12. Madison
13. Illinois
14. Michigan St.
16. Texas A&M
17. Maryland
18. Temple
19. Arkansas
20. Oklahoma
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Wednesday, January 31, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
Celtics trade White
BOSTON (AP)—Veteran Boston Celtics guard Jo Jo White, a former all-star who was unhappy with the National Basketball Association team, was traded yesterday to the Golden State Warriors for a No.1 draft pick.
White had announced the deal earlier this month, but it was temporarily called off.
The first-round pick gives Boston three in 1979. To make room for White, the Warriors had to move back into play.
"Jo Jo has been a great player for the critics, and said the team's president. Red Anderson."
US
Jo Jo White
program and in order to get quality you must give up quality.
"ITS NO SECRET that Jo Jo has been unhappy here for the past two years and we will never forget it."
White, a nine-year pro with Boston, had an 18.8 point average coming into the current season. He was chosen for the NBA all-star game seven times, from 1971-77.
This year, White's play has been occasionally brilliant, but he has not been on the bench for too long.
"I'm still kind of up in the air. I don't know how I feel," said White. "Nothing surprises me."
White was a favorite with Auerbach. But the two—along with former owner Irving Levin—had a contract battle last year. The contract, guaranteed full payment regardless of injury.
White left KU in January, 1869, and is the sixth highest all-time score for Kansas with 1,286 points during his collegiate career, a 15.3 average.
The former University of Kansas guard, however, was hobbed by foot injuries last year which ended a 488-consecutive game forced him to have surgery in the off-season.
White appeared in 47 of the Celtics' 65 games this year, averaging 12.5 points a game.
Deep in the Atlantic Division cellar with a 17-31 record, Boston moved to fill White's spot on the roster by activating veteran Dennis Cahay, who had been on the injured list.
Chaney, however, cannot be placed on the active roster until White reports to Golden State.
Sooners will try it again
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI-Sports Writer
Dave Bliss isn't worried about history.
He's worried about Kansas State.
Bliss coaches the Oklahoma Sooners basketball team. But he has never coached Oklahoma to a victory over Kansas State in Manhattan, with an active loss streak of 13.
That just scratches the surface of Oklahoma's difficulties in Manhattan, however. The Sooners are the only team in the Big Eight that has never beaten the Wildcats on their home court. Oklahoma has the most games in Manhattan dabbing back it 1962.
OKLAHOMA, ONE of three teams tied for the conference lead with a 4-2 record and the only team that has been in first place after each of the league's six games thus far, travels to Manhattan tonight to face Jack Hartman's Wildcats.
"Most of our kids don't know about it," said Bliss of his school's slimne skein in Manhattan. "The only ones who know about it are the historians. Kansas State always
has a great crowd. It's a great basketball location. I credit that to their tradition and to Jack Hartman. It always a good place to play."
OAKLAMA IS 11-7 overall this year but
8-1 at home. That translates to a 3-6 road
record with conference losses at both
Missouri and Nebraska. The road woes
begin at the Big Eight Holiday Tournament
the Sooners won only once in three tries.
"We've been real sporadic," said Bliss. "We need to play better on the road. Last year we played well on the road. Even early this season, we beat Baylor down there 78-75 and then lost a close one at Arkansas 80-74. We just haven't had much luck on the road in the tournament. You've got to win some games away from home to have a shot at the title."
The Oklahoma-Kansas State confrontation highlights a four-game game. Fellow leaders Missouri and Nebraska also are on the road, the Tigers at Iowa State and the Cornhuskers at Oklahoma State. In addition, Colorado visits struggling Kansas.
KU ends streak with 73-65 loss
By MIKE HILT
Finding the officiating even more upsetting than the final score, she lauded at her performance.
Sports Writers
By MIKE HILT and GENE MYER $ ^{f} $
"It was a lousy called ball game," she said. "One more thing, if you're going to win a ball game, this isn't the way you want to do it.
the opponents had more than five players out there against us."
MANHATTAN- Marian Washington
Mariam Washington with ranked
elems (ol) to Carolina State 74-6
'I don't mind losing if the officiating is pretty consistent. After the game I said to him (the official), 'You're bad for the game.'
"If we had better officials that were more qualified, the outcome might not have been worse."
K-STATE'S VICTORY snapped an 11-game KU win winning streak and continued its dominance in Ahearn Fieldhouse before 680 fans, KU. now 19-5, never has beaten the Wildkittens here since the series began a decade ago. K-State leads the series 21-5.
K-State utilized 29 KU turnovers and team high 14 point performances from Eileen Pearl and LeAnn Wilcox to turn a see-saw battle into their 18th victory against seven losses.
Nine turnovers in the final seven minutes and poor shooters doomed the 'Hawks and helped K-State erase a one-point KU advantage with 7.31 remaining. The Wildkittens outscored KU 20-11 down the stretch.
KU,however,was still alive until Laurie
Miller's 12-footer at the 1:19 mark, on
the down, gave the Wildkittens a 67.40-mile
run.
"I thought we had good teamwork and a good defense," Miller, who finished with eight points, said. "The defense made the difference."
The beginning of the second half saw synette Gwaine give KU its biggest lead of the season.
B put K-State fought back, and regained the lead on an 18-foot jumper from Gayla. The team won in three.
For the first 10 minutes of the second half, Woodard and Adrian Mitchell did all the work on his ball. Woodward finished the game with 25 points and 11 rebounds, while Mitchell also and 11
After a jump shot by Pat Mason with 9:20
left on the clock KU went more than five minutes without scoring a single point. What followed was a disaster for the 'Hawks as K-State shot in ten straight points.
In the first half, K-State jumped out to a quick ten point lead at 14-14 with 15-0 left in
The Jawahaws came back however, as Woodard scored six points and Mitchell and Karen Jamison each contributed a basket to the game. KKState cooled off in a three minute stretch.
Woodard and Mitchell were the high scorers for KU, while K-State had four
From there the lead changed four times.
Neither team was able to sustain any momentum. Two tree throws by Mitchell and Evan were the final minute gave KU a 38-34 haftime lead.
CU lacks players, KU lacks wins
Rv. JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
Kansas continues its climb up the Big Eight ladder tonight when the seventh-place Jayhawks face Colorado at 7:35 in Allen Field House.
KU coach Ted Owens is hoping that his team can win two in a row in league play, something the 24 'Hawks have been unable to accomplish.
Colorado is led by guard Emmett Lewis, the Big Eight Player of the Week. He is the best conference scorer, with a 20.5 point average.
The Golden Buffaloes, who have the best overall conference record at 13-4, are tied for second in the league with Kansas State and St. Mary's. All have 3-3 records in large play.
In the first meeting between the two
teams this season for the championship of the Holiday Tournament, KU won, 72-66. Lewis peppered the Jayhawks with a game high 21 points.
With those losses, Blair found himself
TEAMMATE TONEY ELLIS, who is averaging just over eight points in the conference, had eight assists in the Holiday League. She helped CUA make a late challenge against JU
Now Colorado is thin in numbers and you do not have enough players to play even a few.
Jack Tau suffered a broken ankle before the season began. Then three of Colorado head coach Bill Blair's players—Clayton Bullard, Tom Hinga and Dave Beckom—were ruled academically ineligible earlier in the season. Missouri, Greee Ranikun played his band.
with nine players, only two of them forwards.
"I NEED SOMEONE 6-5 or 6-4." Blair said, concerning his forward void. "I need someone with some athletic ability and some moves.
"It would just be kind of nice to have five guys on the bench with me."
Besides Lewis and Ellis at guard, Blair should start 8 center cage Austin, who hit 16 against KU in Kansas City. The remaining forwards at Colorado are 6-8 Brian Johnson and Jack Magno, a freshman and both should start.
"Colorado is much improved over last year," Owens said, "and they have probably been the most consistent team this year.
Owens said CU's depleted ranks made no difference to him.
"EVEN THE GAMES they've lost have been close."
Owens is aware of the pressure KU is under now, struggling to gain not only some wins but some respect in the league, after a victory against State and last place Oklahoma State.
"I's (the race is) wid open right now"
Owens said, "and we're going to have to
come in."
"The teams are relatively close in ability, and I think we can come back in the race."
Owens said he would probably start Paul Mokeski, Tony Guy, John Crawford, Brad Sanders and Darnell Valentine. Valentine will play with four stitches in his right hand. The stitches were needed after an injury occurred during the Nebraska game last week.
Track program reborn at Baker
BALDWIN—After graduating from Baker
School, Smith hoped for a career as a college coach.
Now, only 20 months later, the KU graduate student has the opportunity to turn
Smith has been named head track coach at Baker University for the remainder of the season.
However, he won't be the only new face on his almma'mater's track scene. In fact, he'll be the most popular.
According to Baker athletic director James Irick, the University will seek a full-time track coordinator this summer, a job that Smith hopes to garner.
"Coaching is what I always wanted to
be; he must have if there's a college job
group there."
This spring Baker will be fielding a track team for the first time since 1975. But because of scheduling problems, there will only be a men's team. However, a full program for both men and women will be implemented for the 1980 season.
"At first I wanted to own a fitness center. Then I wanted to be a high school coach. Eventually I decided to be a college coach, and this is my big opportunity."
were raised by the Wildcat Booster Club.
The program was so great. John said
Funds for the reinstated track program were raised by the Wildcat Booster Club.
"The response was so great." Irick said,
"We were pushed to begin this spring."
said. "As for the team, I don't know very much about our talent yet.
the wait is over to begin the spring start.
Smith is optimistic about the spring start.
"I figure we'll be real good in the field events, especially the shot put and disc. But I haven't had much contact with my coach on what other coaches have told me."
"I'll be real happy to finish in the top three or for in the conference (M-Kan)." Smith
Directing the new track program actually isn't Smith's first college coaching assignment. this year he also doubles as the Baker bowling coach, and both the men's and women's squads are leading the conference.
Besides his coaching duties at Baker, he is finishing work for his masters' in education and is teaching physical education part-time at KU.
Women's Top 20
The top 29 women college basketball teams are集合了全美大学篮球队的冠军。Gregorius of the Philadelphia St. team出战了北卡罗莱纳州的比赛,季后赛通过 January 28,participated in season records through January 28.
| Team (SB) | Year |
| :--- | :--- |
| 2 Texan (1) | 20-3 |
| 3 Louisiana Tech | 19-3 |
| 4 Southern Auburn | 19-3 |
| 5 Maryland | 19-3 |
| 6 Georgia State | 19-3 |
| 7 Wayland Baptist | 13-4 |
| 8 Other teams (1) | 13-4 |
| 9 Tennessee State | 10-7 |
| 10 New Delhi Las Vegas | 17-0 |
| 11 Penn State | 11-4 |
| 12 North Carolina | 11-4 |
| 14 UCLA | 11-4 |
| 15 UCLA | 11-4 |
| 16 Logo Beach State | 13-2 |
| 17 Louisiana State | 13-2 |
| 18 Memphis State | 18-4 |
| 19 Memphis State | 18-4 |
| Other teams named on at least 11 ballots were: Carnell, Dominic, Montana St., Northwestern, Oregon, Minnesota St.
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53rd Annual Black History Month Activities "History: Torch for the Future"
February, 1979, will mark the 53rd annual observance of Afro-American (Black) history.
Carter G. Woodson, noted historian and scholar, founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (later changed to Afro-American life and History) in 1925 for the expressed purpose of (1) instilling Blacks with pride for their American and African heritage and (2) promoting recognition by all Americans the understanding and appreciation of contributions by Afro-Americans to the nation and the world.
The Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History annually sets a theme for each year’s observance of Black history. The theme for February, 1979, is "History: Torch for the future."
Feb. 1 BFSC Forum — "Manipulation of the Media for Economic and Social Forces" by Dr. Samuel Adams, School of Journalism, Thursday, February 1 from 3:00:50 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 4 Inner City Orchestra — Charlie Parker Foundation, Kansas City, Missouri, Sunday, February 4, from 3:00:50 p.m. in the Ballroom, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 5-9 Heritage Series Display in Union — Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority
Feb. 8 "Women in the Professions: A Personal Perspective" — Panelists: Marilyn Ainsworth, Professor of Law, K.U., Cecilia Alexander, Journalist and Director of K.U. UpwardBound, Ms. Joyce Cheatham, Engineering Associate, AMOCO Co., Barbara Sabal, Director of Children and Youth Services, S.R.S. on Thursday, February 8 from 7:00:90 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 15 "Maestics II" — Jazz band performance, Thursday, February 15 from 7:00:90 p.m. in the Big 8 Room, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 19 "Blacks in Higher Education: The Question of Competency" — by Dr. Carolyn Dorsey, Coordinator of Black Studies, University of Missouri at Columbia, Monday, February 19 at 7:00 p.m. in the Forum Room, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 20 "MaleFemale Communication Workshop" — Drs. Dorthy Pennington and Vernon Gettone, facilitators, on Tuesday, February 20 from 7:00:90 p.m. in the Stereo Room of Lewis Hall. NO CHARGE
Feb. 22 BFSC Forum — topic for discussion will be issues in South Africa with Clarence Dlingham as panel moderator on Thursday, February 22 from 3:00:50 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 22-23 Haile Gerima, African filmmaker on Thursday, February 22 and Friday, February 23 (see films below). NO CHARGE FOR OPEN MEETINGS
Feb. 25 African Night — Sunday, February 25, 6:00 p.m.
Feb. 26 "Steppin" — Black student theatrical production, on Monday, February 26, at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium, Union. NO CHARGE
Feb. 28 Ellsworth Hall Black Caucus presents a lecture by Rev. Emmanuel Cleaver, Regional Director of Christian Leadership Conference (SCLS), on Wednesday, February 28, at 8:00 p.m., in the Ellsworth Hall lobby. NO CHARGE
FILMS
Feb. 9 "The Greatest" — Friday, February 9, in Strong Hall Auditorium (Room #300) at 7:00 p.m. Rated PG. NO CHARGE
Feb. 13 "The River Niger" — Tuesday, February 13 in 205 Flint from 7:00:90 p.m. Rated R. NO CHARGE
Feb. 15 "Street Corner Stories" and "Can You Hear Me" — Thursday, February 15, at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium. $1 ADMISSION
Feb. 22 "Harness 3000 Years" — by Haile Gerima on Thursday, February 22 at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium, Union. Discussion follows film. $1 ADMISSION
Feb. 23 "Bush Mama" — by Haile Gerima on Friday, February 23 at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium, Union. Discussion follows film. $1 ADMISSION
THIS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED BY THE OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS, BLACK STUDENT UNION AND MULTICOMPANY ACTIVITY FEES. For more information, call Vernell Harman. 864-3451
THIS ADVERTISSEMENT SPOONED BY THE OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS, BLACK STUDENT UNION AND FUNDED IN PART BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEES. For more information, call Vernell Merson, 864-4351.
8
Wednesday, January 31, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Fly-fishing lures students
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
The door of Dyche Hall opens and a cold and blistered snow into the building. A basket of sweets rests on the floor.
Staff Reporter
"You in the right place?" the professor asks.
"I think so," the newer answers, apprehensively. "Fly class here?"
"Yep, sure is. Come on in," says the professor and the social ice is broken, if not frozen.
Despite near-blizzard conditions, most students enrolled in the Fly-fishing Workshop arrived on time for the first session of class, which meets on Thursday
After a while, everyone follows the professor, Phillip Humphrey, director of the Natural History Museum, upstairs to the classroom.
"Fly-fishing, per say, is the art of applying飞 casting to the capture of fish," Humphrey said. "It is not a cheap hobby but it need not behörb expensive."
THE COURSE, sponsored by the Museum of Natural History Associates, an adult education program, also was listed as a book in the school library's 108 in enrollment timetables to make it
easier for KU students to enroll, Humphrey said.
The course includes sessions on fly tying, which is the construction of lures for fly-fishing, rod care and repair and the making of fishing floats in lakes. The course also includes field trips.
Each student gets two opportunities to go fishing with Humphrey and Robert Mengel, curator of ornithology and Humphry's animal museum. An informal instruction in the fine art of fly-fishing.
Because the course has never received any academic funding, a class fee of $23 is used to pay for the trips and cover the cost of supplies and equipment. Humphrey and Mengel require each student to have a fly rod, reel and fishing line.
Fly-fishing is an all-consuming hobby for Mengel and Humphrey. They treat the subject with the respect owed an art or science, Humphrey said.
"Fly-fishing, in my opinion, is considerably harder than spin casting, but not as hard as learning a good golf swing," he said.
Twenty students are enrolled in this semester's class. In the past, they taught two sections with 15 students each, but both Mengel and Humphrey decided the larger
group lowered the quality of instruction they could give.
Students enrolled through KU enrollment receive 1 hour of credit. Those taking the class through the associates program get no credit for the course.
IN THE PAST, the class has only been available through the museum associates, an adult education program. But both courses were taught by a number of KU students wanted the class, also.
Fourteen of the class' students enrolled through the museums associates program, leaving six cards for KU enrollment. Those cards were snapped up and a waiting list of 12 others who wanted to cast a line for credit had formed before the first class.
Paul Schwaa, Leawood senior, said he wanted to improve his fly-fishing techniques. Schwab enrolled through the University.
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He said he had heard about the class from friends who had taken it before.
"I ENJOY fish-fishing for trout because there's a little more to it than fly casting." Schwab said. "I do it for the relaxation and the friends."
Dave Heeter, Shawnee, said he had never been fly-fishing before. After hearing about the class from relatives, he enrolled through the associates program. Heater said he had been fishing for years, but wanted to learn about fly casting.
To help newcomers like Heeter, Humphrey and Mengel put together a syllabus for the course that resembles a large textbook.
"A remarkable collection of stuff," as Humphrey calls it, the syllabus is more than the usual collection of course outlines and required readings. Besides these things, the syllabus contains chapters of text, encyclopedias of books and flies and sets of sample test questions to prepare for the exams.
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More terminals, longer hours to ease crowding at computer
By GENE BROWNING
Because of a large number of students in computer science classes this spring, the course will be taught on computers and more computer terminals will be installed. Paul Wolfe, computer center manager, will lead the course.
Staff Reporter
Wolfe said that longer hours at the center and adding 20 terminals to the 30 at the center would relieve overcrowding at the computer terminals.
semester, the lines behind a terminal would be five to six deep. It was not uncommon for a student to wait an hour for a terminal." Jones said.
The number of terminals and amount of time students had access to the terminals was also increased. Students would handle the load of beginning students who needed to use the terminals, according to Mark Jones, Lawrence graduate student at an advanced computer science class.
He said the number of hours increased would depend on finding people to work
"At two weeks toward the end of the
GREG WETZEL, Overland Park graduate student and assistant instructor of Computer Science 200, said that when CS 200 students began using the computer, 600 students would be using terminals that could accommodate only 100 people.
Although students in advanced computer classes are not yet overcrowded at the terminals, there have been complaints that they are slow. You use the terminals and print-out machines.
The hours, which used to be 7:30 a.m. to 4 a.m., every day, were cut last year to 7:30 a.m. on Monday and Tuesday and 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. The hours were reduced because funding was short and there were not enough full-time employees who would work on Saturday.
ISSAC ALLOTEY, Accre. Ghana.
"Some weeks I want to work into the night. The center closes at 10 now and we have leave. he said, "I'm working on a project with my friend for a whole day. I used the hour late at 10."
Students who work on project projects late at night could get finished faster, according to Date Dewispeleaire. Ottawa has a computer instructor for Computer Science 200.
However, one instructor said many of the crowding problems were caused by the weather.
graduate student, said he missed the longer hours.
The instructor, Ann Sanner, Manhattan graduate student, who is an assistant instructor of CS 200, said her class put off doing projects.
a few people who worked would have linked to have longer hours. But a lot of stairs wait until the last minute when they are worked a little bit every day," she said.
New degree in history proposed
By MARK GATES Staff Reporter
The public's increased interest in history and the resulting increase in jobs for historians outside universities has prompted the University of Kansas to plan a new master's of historical administration program.
A recent issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education noted several reasons for the
The program will teach students to do research and organize historical records for public agencies and businesses, said Bill Jackson, chairman of the history department.
Think Valley West for Fine Arts & Furnishings in HolidayPlaza841-1870 Mon-Sat 10:5:30
"There is a growth of historical consciousness," Wilson said. "Businesses and municipalities are becoming aware of the 'knowing where they're coming from.'"
expanding job market for historians. The chronicle said the increase in people researching family history and the greater interest in history shown by business and government had opened up more jobs for historians.
The proposed program has been approved by the history department and the Committee on Graduate Studies for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The program now is being considered by the Graduate Council, the University group and the American Academy.
IF APPROVED by the Graduate Council.
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the proposal would be sent to the Council of Chief Academic Officers, a group representing all Board of Regents schools. The proposal will be presented to Regents for final approval. Wilson said.
Wilson said he expected about 20 full-time students to enroll in the program next year. Donald McCoy, professor of history, will head the new program, Wilson said.
While openings for historians in universities across the country have declined with enrollments, the demand for their services has increased and government has increased, Wilson said.
"We expect to have one of the best and one of the very few programs responding to this initiative."
The master's of historical administration would not lead to a Pb.D. as a master's in history.
"The M.A. in history is an anachronism. It is for going on for a Ph.D. or for teaching." Wilson said. "In and of itself, it has very little value."
JOB PLACEMENT for graduates with the new degree is expected to be good, he said.
Many churches use historians to administer their records and document the lives of those who attended.
IBM and the Santa Fe railroad employ a group of historians. The city of Wichita has a history that includes
Genealogy, the study of ancestry, is the fastest growing hobby in the last 20 years and is the third largest behind stamp and have profiled from this family tree craze.
"Our program will provide an education in administration as well as history," Wilson said. "That way, our historians can provide service in the public interest."
The services of historians also are needed when an environmental impact statement must be filed before the start of a federal construction project. A new interpretation of that law requires that archaeological, architectural statements be included.
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GRADUATING ENGINEERS
Have you considered these factors while determining where you will work?
1. Will the job offer challenge and responsibility?
2. If you don't like that particular job, does your future employer encourage job changing?
3. What does your future employer do to encourage you to keep your education current?
4. What plan does your future employer have to introduce you to the work?
5. Big starting salaries are nice—but can you afford the cost-of-living in the area, and what is the salary and growth potential?
At the Naval Weapons Center we have given these things a lot of consideration and believe we have the answers for you.
Arrange through your placement office to interview with our representative, Maurice Hamm, on February 6th. We think you will like what you hear.
If you cannot fit an interview into your schedule, write or call:
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Naval Weapons Center (Code 09201)
China Lake, CA 93555
(714) 939-2690
An Equal Opportunity Employer.
These are Career Civil Service Positions.
Wednesday, January 31, 1979
9
KU students invest in bars
By ROBIN SMITH
Staff Reporter
with services leased.
l-time year. will
needed cement federal etationological,aints be
cation story," ns can
Lawrence has more than 20 tavers to serve thirsty patrons, and some KU students are cashing on the patrons.
Students share the ownerships with other business partners of Quintail's Salon, 715 Massachusetts, Louise's Bar, 100 Massachusetts, Johnny's Tavern, N41. Second St., and Rocky J.'s, 201 W. Eighth St.
"It was rough when I first took over the business," Wash, 21, said.
The newest student member of the tavern business world is Bill Hass, Fort Hoof, Texas, sophomore, who became an aspiring bartender.
"There were a few fights in the bar but that all settled down after we got to know our customers," he said. "Now if anyone comes in to cause trouble, they realize that they will have half of the bar to deal with. I think it is the customers feel that Quantrill's is their bar and they want to protect it."
University Daily Kansan
QUANTILRLY BASICALLY is a place to "let off steam." Wash said. The tavern is decorated with old cow skulls, posters of the old frontier and wooden beams which separate the booths. Country and Western music continuously blares from the jukebox and "Yee-has" can be heard from the crowd.
The majority of people at Quantrill's are not KU students, Wash said. He said he enjoyed the "townies" but had future prospects.
I think that some students have the opinion that Quantrill's is a rough place—that if you come in here you will be in trouble.
"And the only reason that students don't come in here is because they have to wear gloves. Wash, a slender six foot red-haired man, seems relaxed and calm."
ALTHOUGH HE said he split his daily hours between school work and work at the tavern, Wash said he would study more this semester because he had to budget his time more effectively.
Wash, a slicker six foot red-hairred man, seems relaxed in his new job, but keeps alerts at all times.
However, he said, "My primary concern now is the bar. If I screw up in school, I'll drop a few hours or I'll just drop out
Quantillt's is a corporation, according to Ron Benson, 21, the other owner of Quantillt's. Wash and he had a legal problem when buying the tavern because they had not established Kansas residency.
of school. I have my money in the bar and that is the most important factor."
However, the two resolved their problem by having two of their friends both Kansas residents, become stock holders
"FOR NOW, we are making just enough to get by and pay the bills," Wash said. "It's a new business for us, I really want to keep it going."
One student who said he had a successful business was Don McClure, Lawrence junior, who shares the ownership of a construction company.
"This is a friendly base. The schoolers are served frosted and it has a good reputation with loyal customers." McCauley
Louise's炉 is decorated simply with wood paneling andadded bar stools and has plenty of space near the bar.
MCLURE SAID that although the business has been successful, he still planned on finishing college.
"I pride myself mostly on serving the people as fast as we possibly can," McClure said. "It gets rowdy in here but it is well done."
"When I get out of school, I will probably continue owning the bar," McClure said. "And it will help me because I will already have an investment and plenty of work experience."
McClure said he devoted more of his time to the business than school also.
"I have a responsibility to the other owners," McClure said, "I just can say, 'Oh, sorry guys, I have to study, I need to get ready.'"
Doug Hassig, Overland Park senior, who shares a partnership with the schoolchild friend of 15 agreed that the work experience
"I LEARNED MORE in the last eight months owning this business that I did in the last three years of school."
Johnny's is a quaint place with assorted music, two continuously busy table pools and a piranha fish for live
Johnny's Tavern caters more to the "townies." It opens
Hassig said, "One of the reasons that I bought the bar was to have a place for the Ruby Club to meet. They really didn't have a place before this because they were too rowdy and kept getting kicked out of the other bars."
at 7:30 every morning to serve the men who have been working since 4 a.m. However, the bar also is the meeting place for all guests.
Hassig, a former rugby player, said that there was not enough profit in the laver to pay a salary to the two players.
“THE INCOME all varies from month to month, season to season.” Hassig said. “I spend most of my time at the bar, and study when I'm not working. But it all varies, it is just a business thatvaries.”
Hamm, 21, also said the income from the bar varied, but estimated that he made between $1,000 to $2,500 a month.
Jeff Hamm. Perry senior shares the ownership of Rocky with a two other business partners, one of whom is a founder.
"Rocky J's is more student oriented, "Hamm said. "It is a kick-back sort of place where you can bring a date."
ROCKY JS IS an elegant looking tavern, with wood and wool clothing, clay carpeting and a wall that is covered with brick.
Hamm, who built Rocky J's last summer, said he had to be all the bark in Lawrences and knew what the problem was. "It's a big one," he said.
Hamn said he thought he would make better grades this semester because he would have to regulate his time with them.
"School is a training center but it really can't relate to any real life situation," Hamad said. "It is such a different situation—owing a bar. When you are in class, someone is giving you money. Owning your own business, you tell yourself what to do."
Harm said his friends' respect grew for him once he owned a business.
"I think respect was gained just because they saw a student striking out and students appreciate that." Hamm
"I know this is a hard business and it isn't as easy as it looks to run." Harnal said. "But I wouldn't discourage any student from doing it. A student doesn't have to wait four years to strike out."
THE DEFENSE OF THE UNIVERSE
Student owner
Staff photo by BILL FRAKES
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without prior BEING BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FALL HALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
equal
fourth
initional
additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.01 .01 .01 .01 .01 .01
to run::
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the UDR website at 864-5358 business office at 864-5358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen practice daily, G.P. Introductory lectures
Zen practice daily, G.P. Introductory lectures
Lawrence Colin Club presents 19th Annual Coin Show. Feature the unique art of Lawrence Community Building. Builters will be available to sell, buy coins, stamps. Everyone welcome. Come in and meet us. Science Organization will be holding their weekly Tuesday meeting at In Danforth Chapel. You are always welcome.
Beginning Weaving Classes
Enroll Now!
Starts Feb. 6
YARN B. AUNN
Sus dhung Thursday, Feb. 1st at South Park
Center-Bath 8-10 p.m. For information:
841-5763
50% OFF SALE!!!!!
Over 10 different kinds of drawings are on sale now at
50% off!
THE GRAPHIC ARTS SHOP
STRONG'S FOOTS FUNCTIONS
OFFICE
PAST LIFE REGISTERMENT SEMINAR First time Feb. 16-18 in Lawrence. You will expand your knowledge and practice of past incarnations by yourself facts about your past incarnations. You will examine current lovers and lovers for psychic bonds created in the past and awareness to take effective control of your life. You will discount fee for the registration, including a cassette tape, 50 course booklet, and Send registration fee with your name, address and phone number for Registrion #259. Registration deadline in Feb. T. Only a limited number of students could be the first step towards a positive change.
(016) 78-88-88-88
FOR RENT
Sublease--nice 2 br. apt. on bus route. Available
842.7157- Keep trying
2-1
FWD $300 SCHOOLARSHS all full-time under-
graduate scholarships in 1956. Delta Delta Delta
Delta Delta Oxford 1600 Oxford 8400-
6400 Oxford 1600 Oxford 8400-6400 Oxford
1600 Oxford 8400-6400 Oxford 1600 Oxford
8400-
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Clean to campus Utility.
Clean, quiet, and comfortable.
EXTRA NICE 2 bed apartment Located in wooded area with wood deck picture window, vaulted ceiling, entirely carpeted, kitchen, washer & dryer, built-in 814-309 or 172-576.212 $ month, negotiate.
FRONTER RIIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
Room #210, 637-485-2949, frontier.ridge.com,
unfurnished from $70. Two laundry rooms, large
washbasins, chapteau parking. OK KU bus route.
Room #100, 637-485-2949, frontier.ridge.com,
wide entrance to a 244 Floor North Next door
to Russia.
JATHAWAKER TOWERS has an apartment for
more information at 849-6993.
For more information at 849-6993. - 31
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
neighbors. Phone KU and near town. No pets.
Phone. 645-7576
Finally a Laurence landlord who cares!
cares!
Call Mark Schneider for apart-
ments and rentals, 843-3212 or
842-4414.
Southwest Lawrence. A dr a dorm. 4 Bed. w-warping, all draps and appliances. C.A. Fam.Rm. w/placebase. Rce. Room. 2 car garage. Bathroom. See instructors or students. 841-2644. 1-31
Spacies one bedroom furnished apt 3 beds from Union Elect. pl. Low utilities. 845-504-501
Christian Male for 2 Bedroom Apartment. Apt.
843-002. msc excl Food Fellowship and Age-
843-002
Three bedrooms, unfurnished bedroom, exp. guest
room, family room, dept. space, no indoor pet's $215,
floor to ceiling windows, private bath.
Studio Apl utilises Pald -1 to camp in community kitchen and bath 842-044 after 7 a.m.
Christian hostings, Very close to campus. Call between 2-5:3 p.m. Keep trying. Call month.
Roommate to share 2 BR House. Close to Campus .85 mn. includes .414 Brumil. 2-19
NOW LEASING
All new & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today. &
you'll see why the move is all worthwhile.
Apartments, Corporate, commercial, retail,
1 BTH Convenience located at 7th & Florida
is updated for the latest in real estate.
8415255 - 842 4455
Repair on Fire Damage
For fire damage on 6th floor, please contact phone number 919-254-0077 or email info@carrier.com. For details call 919-254-0037. Rm. 5 after inspection.
Carrier Logo
Wanted Person to share new 2 BR furnished
If interested contact Don or Tom. 8481
0844
Roommate wanted for 2 bdm. furnished apt.
401-730 no. to stadium Sunbury, Sundry
1077.540 no. to stadium Sunbury
Two Bedroom, unfurnished $205/mo. + electric.
Call Bill 845-7780
2-5
Formal roommate wants to share apat with 2
roommates. $10.00 a month, no utilities. Call 2-645-
8605
1 Bedroom Apt. with fireplace, VERY CLOSE,
2-2
Bedroom Apt. 641-8578 after 6.
2-2
Room for rent in beautiful old house for second
room. No utilities. Bid: 853.00元. Call: 843-3605-2-5
Dry noilers. No bills. Call: 843-3605-2-5
Sublatching 1 bedroom Frontier apt. Jurp t
Room 2, Moor Lease expires in Augu-
tion 6, 842-6547
Must substel -Nice 2 bdmr. energy saving duplex.
on campus "旷慕 5440" after 5400.
2-6
SUNDANCE, APEARTMENTS, FUNNISHED STUDIO & 1 BHR. New, contemporary units available immediately on campus in Florida, just west of Miami; on KU bus route. For payment Call Wateraid, Paid 315-8255 or 425-6-26
FOR SALE
For Rent-2 bedroom duplex almost new, $20.00
per month. Phone 841-2107 or 843-7454.
Nordica GT 841 Boots size 10%; Last year’s
call: Model 841-8524
2-2
Kerwond KX-729 Casette Deck. Top-Doily, Dohli
N RF & N FM. Call 811-8524. 2-3
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to students of Western Civilization 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis*. Lectures on New York City, Cater, Mali Bookstore, & Oread Bookseller. **tf**
SunSpect-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-ten-
nue lenses for selection, reasoned rea-
tion, 1021. Mason 841-570-9700.
Ice Mossman guitars. I have a few nice ice Mossman Iceland guitars. I play with John Devel, Keith & David Carradine, Merle Travail, Cat Stevens, & many other musicians. Ice Mossman at 316-221-2628. Winfield 2-16
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties:
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-600-2900, 2000 Wth. Gtth.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-600-2900, 2000 Wth. Gtth.
RABBIT!
SAFE, FUN, AFFORDABLE
New York 532-764-9111
Start your graduation off with a true in-
vestment, now at the time to order your
new Rabbit Alive 80-90 for your
loved one
CALL DALE REYNER
843-2200
2022-05-15
Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan, sales and
instruments. Instrumental Practice and Instrumental
Instrumental Practice of strings and cello.
Univox MinK-Cord Synthesizer 2. Alte voice of
theater章阁声机w/drive
Chafer theater音机m43-8334 wd
Midrange synthesizer音机m43-8334
A狸馆 allepheles AKC. Be distract; choose first!
D狸馆 breed Vaccinated Parents Shun.
1-362-254-181
Stereophone 8 Track, Record Player, A.M. F.M.
46-7510, EKL Electric Vehicle 2004 1:31
B42-7807-7057
Must sell immediately--55 watty Technicians Receive:
- phone calls at 84.12928 5:30 a.m.
- speakers at 84.12928 5:30 a.m.
Fredder Mustang Bass Guitar with straps, cordons,
morderns, cards and covers. Very good condition.
cards, cordons and covers. Very good condition.
Young male ferret and all equipment for his care.
841-0323 after 5:00
2-2
Classical 8 string guitar, excellent condition.
Case. Five year old $6 or best offer. 841-7250
www.funstring.com
Yamaha acoustic guitar. One year old, $180. Call
864-5732.
FOUND
North Drums, 5 Toms, 1 bass, molded fiberglass.
1-379-0499. 2-2
2-2
(electro-voice) speakers $600,841-6227
Casette Desktop LAKRATE $495 with dolphin
and reverb.
Cassette De-Lakery NK-ID50 with doble and memory, $275 new, asking $150 Call: 565-585.
Collie-Hukey male dog w/red bandana, 131
found at 6! G&h & Mcl. CalMxlM 131
For Sale. One used Krochler couch, good condition.
677.50. Call 843-9292 at 6:00 p.m.
2-5
HELP WANTED
1 yellow contact lens case in Lindley's ladies' room.
Call Barb at 841-8207. 1-31
Tribune-Roadside Inc can coordinate power driver II & Crescent India Ltd in found in area of 23rd and Nahalmu, Call Mr. Hirsch in area of 23rd &
Mail assistant wanted 10-30 hrs. per week. Must be eligible for work history in person or with company. Send resume to: mkusan@uva.edu.
New taking applications for Fountain & Gellibird Gardens, in person at Vita Restaurant, 1877 Pl. 160, New York, NY 10024. Apply in person at Vita Restaurant, 1877 Pl. 160, New York, NY 10024.
Drivers wanted. Must be 18 yr. old, must have been in person. Dominica Prizma 1443 W 23rd. Applicant must be a U.S. citizen or foreign resident.
Need some Xtra money for this work? Help us
build a 10-plex office with 3 bedrooms,
4-bathrooms, $450,000 for work scheduling
phone numbers: 842-4235 or 841-2634 for work scheduling
Applications are being accepted for half-time Civilization Program. Application forms are available from the Western Civilization office, 156 West 40th Street, New York, NY 10024, turned with supportive materials no later than February 15, 1958. Persons with a broad background in Mathematics or Applied Sciences may apply. Applicants must be full-time graduate students.
The University of Kansas seeks candidates for the position of Full-Time Assistant Professor of History on August 16, 1979. Full-Time Assistant Professor of History will graduate and graduate levels; some vouch for undergraduate and graduate levels; some vouch for intermediate-level work to form in recital and with faculty string trio, chorus, orchestra or band. Application deadline March 9, 1979. For further information, visit www.duk.edu/curriculum/ performance University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. University affirmative action employer. Applications must be submitted by August 23, 1979. Religion, race color, sex disability, veteran status, military service.
Babatter taught for children two and five full
weeks. The child was given a reference
reference, 822-9223 and 814-9223 after Frye's
recommendation.
Position Available: Research Assistance (To)
Research Duties include review of applied biochemistry research data and analysis, evaluation and field project management, analysis and reporting of data and results, editing reports and manuscript, commensal work.
Required: Bachelor's degree. Master's pre-occupation in a relevant field, historical literature, can measurement and evaluation of standardized tests, familiarity with knowledge of standardized tests, familiarity with documentable writing skills. Preference will be given to two 20' time or one 75' time. Beginning Feb. 31st, apply by March 8th. Applicant must complete ten time and qualifications. Application deadline is May 9th.
Submit vitae to Dr. Rudy Williams, Associate Director of the College of Education at University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60452. Mail resume to: Rudy Williams, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60452. Qualified men and women of all races and persons with disabilities are encouraged to apply.
Bentreff room for right girl in warm, easy
responsibilities and share utilities. Available
responsibilities and share utilities. Available
SHEMIGANS need waitresses, hostesses
and bartenders to assist them. The
bartended positions apply by John after a p
nation.
LOST
Lost. Jan. 15 in Strong—1 Red Mitten. Please call
841-1835
Lett: Glass-around-rings with silver metal in the vicinity of 17th and Kentucky
Brown Key case lost last week. Return for return.
Call 864-3504 2-2
Lost in Room 105 Summerfield 1 pair of green mittens. Please call Baze at 643-1541 1-31
LOST-Mid-December, Lindley at kU KL-12
1853. Req. 675-710 transcription. Genuine reward: 843-7105
Large blue ski glue, 1.025, Wesco 4-floor.
Please call 841-0976.
2-5
NOTICE
PERSONAL
BOOK SALE Thoughts of books 1,2, price. Today
through Feb. 7th. Great Book Sale 2-8
Gay/Lebanese Switchboard, counseling and general information. 841-8472. tf
51 PITCHERS every Friday afternoon from 2-6 at the Harbour. If
DARBROOM-3SU provides a complete photo-shoot
for 40.000 customers. The price is $50.00/sensor; 8477-31-
3701. For pricing details, visit www.darbrom.com.
HARDCORE SPECIALS 4-6 Mon. Tues. and Fri.
$250, $399, $499, $599, $799, $899,
MADDIS DELIVERY NIGHT "Sed" $16.00 glitter
sheets
Female roommate wanted. $65 mo. $83,5541 1:31
Pat-Meet me at the Penthouse for some operat-
ed fun. A secret admirer.
2-1
Stop by Buckley daily for Peak Hour: 1-4 P.M.
Small- 36", Medium- 50", Large- 75"
Peak Hour: 2-4 P.M.
Why did the chicken cross Vermont Street? To
get to the Pentimento. 611 Vermont.
CITUAR LESSONS - Group lessons for an inexpensive introduction to algebra, a concentration approach. Groups begin Wed. Feb. 7 for adults and join March 4-12 for children. New Hartshaw Traught by Kurt Siglern. 2-8
Exequential Christian ministries Center, 1804 Oread (areas the street from the Caffar's Bar & Grill), ministers will be available for counseling and spiritual support, 7 a.m., 5 p.m. Come by: cell 835-4933
MARGARET BEULIN and GEORGE GOMEZ are running for Student Body Pres. and View-Pres. The students will be a part of the institution are consumers. DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOURE PAYING FOUR PAID for by the Purchase?
Head for the Mountain. Give yourself a great
headset. 84-1125. Hits: 4,9pm - 6,4pm
84-1125. Hits: 4,9pm - 6,4pm
Need 1-3 tickets for the KU-K State game. Lynn
841-7142
2-5
**RHKN RHKE SHOP** in new open 200, Baltimore.
**RHKN RHKE SHOP** in new open 196, Baltimore.
port, quick repairs. 103 Vermont. *841-642-169*
**RHKN RHKE SHOP** in new open 77, Philadelphia.
Tan Man—Your brother says he won't put fireworks in your bed any more. Please keep them out.
Gretchen—(gretchen) Define Regents Your A-131 mine
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISER BINDING COPYING - The House of
thesis has been established to thesis binding and copying in Lawrence, Calif. Let us know about your thesis bindings.
Hallowell Borden Specialties RK & Redken Products Modern Hairstyling for Gals & Gals
airforming - reconditioning perms & color - trichoanalysis
Hillcrest Shopping Center 935 Iowa 841-6800
SERVICES OFFERED
Have a party but no music! Call Nereane Light
Mobile Disc. Call 862-230 to 3 p.m.
5:30 - 7:30 PM
MATH TUTOR M in math, patience, three years professional tutoring experience. 842-3541.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center.
Aice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m on Saturday at
Masr.
EXPERT TUTORICS MATH 001-123, 644-8372;
EXPERT TUTORICS MATH 001-123, 644-8372;
EXPERT TUTORICS COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200, 644-8372;
EXPERT TUTORICS COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200,
TESTICS 644-8390; QUALIFICATIONS 105-200;
TESTICS 644-8390; QUALIFICATIONS 105-200;
computer programming For general problems
computer programming For general problems
ENGLISH TUCKER-TOM-650, 101, 102; special help for foreign students; certified teacher 8425-2-29.
Mending, Patching and Sewing at reasonable prices. Baird 841-6307 2-2
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can
help you with your math or CS problem. Books:
814 3197 4197
I will draw your charts & graphs, neat & fast
$5 /hr. 83-2344
I will babysat for your children in my home
6 am. Concventious Phone 943-722-
after 5 a.m.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. t
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980
Typist/Editor, IBM, Pixel/Etec. Quality work.
Dissertation, thesis. Discretion welcome.
842 8297 3230
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Law papers, term papers, Mrt
books. 842-757-9011
Experimented Typist-term paper files, beads, mice.
Typing on computer word-reading, spelling corrector
+832-555-8044.
Expertized typist with scientific background IBM conveying 5-subsetic I. C. Call 843-312-3128
Will do typing on an electric typewriter.
Project services/professing Call Me Hayes,
413-679-2200.
REWRITING EDITING.-Your manuscript, thesis or research paper should be written in a correctly corrected finished work, reflecting thinking with passion and smoothness. Outlining of text and articles also available. Eve
*Fast, accurate. Papers under 20 pages, one night*
*for up to three discussions. Call: 843-643-8288*
*or 843-643-9711.*
Quality typing guaranteed.-IBM Select. Termo-
paeus thesis, dissertations, mla. Carole
Carter.
Discount Typing -75c a page. Call 842-0745 after 5 p.m.
1-31
WANTED
BREAD START NEEDS YOU *TO* volunteer - bake bread in the oven for 2 hours and 2 lbs for 1 day cash week. Located at 4600 W. 3rd St., Milwaukee, WI 53213.
One roommate for Jawahiru Towers
All utilities paid for Call Sam at 843-754-21-
2
Male Roommate to share 2 BH prt, furnished
small office, dishwasher, $240 call M43
718-643-3190
Responsible, Univportworth person pressed to share
information; plus utilities: 842-846-9048 after six and on weekends.
Female romance to share luxury bid-level township from campus, train $14.50 - $9
untilies, 842-212-7680
FREE! Shortcourse in Business
/Technical Writing. Open to everyone.
Saturday, February 10th every Thursday from 6:7 p.m. to 4:00
Summerfield. First Session: intro. to
Clear Business/Technical Writing—
Feb. 1, 6:7 p.m., 4:00
Summerfield.
Broadman needed to share 3 BR DkRs. Rent $25
month = 1/3 utilities. Call 841-2427 anytime.
some lady to cook for my son & me. Call Steve
41-2045 after 5:00. 2-2
Responsible roommate for 3 bedrooms, Luxury
furniture, Kitchen, Bathroom, Office,
Farmhouse. Call 845-2842 after 5 o'pm.
Rent free room, for right girl in warm, crisp
responsibilities and shared utilities. Available
responsibilities and share utilized. Available
Looking for mature person to babysit occasion-
ment, please contact born. Must have opportu-
nation. Call 843-2527.
1 desperately need (1). OU-KU Basketball Ticket,
help? Please call 842-6303. Now...
Wanted: Two HETROSEXUAL female roommates to share apartment with one heterosexual woman. Residency required.
Roominate Male. Two Bedroom Apartment. Nor-
smoking upperclassman preferred. Call 842-7521.
Phone number below.
10
Wednesday, January 31, 1979
University Daily Kansan
House committee tours campus
Staff Reporter
Bv JOHN LOGAN
A House Ways and Means subcommittee met yesterday with KU administrators, warning them to tighten their belts and set up for upcoming state budget hearings.
The three-member subcommittee, assigned to review KU's budget with the administration, held the meeting after three proposed campus renovation projects.
Calling the discussion frank and honest, State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, chairman of the subcommittee, said he told the administrators that the Kansas Legislature had tough budget decisions to make.
"We have to cut back," Heinemann said.
"But we will try to cut areas that won't cause erros."
Another member of the committee, State Rep J.E.Talley, R-Wichita, said University administrators would establish a list of priorities. The subcommittee and administrators are to meet in about a week to discuss the list. Talley said.
THE KANSAS BOARD of Regents had asked for $225 million for the University of Kansas. In his budget message, Gov. John Carlin suggested that the Legislature allocate $115,419 to KU. Budget hearings on the requests are to begin in two weeks.
While expressing satisfaction with the meeting, the administrators who attended the meeting were satisfied.
"They're asking a lot of tough questions," the faculty representative to the meeting, I. said. "They're asking a lot of tough questions."
"But the questions give us an idea of what to expect in the budget hearings."
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said he thought the meeting was a success.
"THEY GAVE us a very sympathetic
HEYING." Shankel said. "They showed us a
look at me."
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary of the University, said the tours helped the university "understand the culture."
Before the meeting, the legislators toured Lindley and Marvin halls and Spooner Museum. The buildings are targeted for the University in the "budget request."
"In making the budget requests you can only write down a few descriptive paragraphs," Von Ende said. "This visit will opportunity to see more for themselves."
Explosion . . .
From page one
Charles Rea, farm manager, said the machinery building, built in the 1930s, was once used as an hour dormitory, but now it is used to store machinery, feed and fertilizer.
about 2,500 acres in both Kansas and Missouri, is used to raise crops and livestock and is operated by inmates from the penitentiary's minimum security section. Between 42 and 55 inmates are bused from the main penitentiary area each day.
At the time of the explosion, Rea said,
there were 20 inmates and five guards at
the farm—nine people were inside and one man
was outside.
Rick Seiter, executive assistant to the warden, said the explosion came 15 minutes before the men were to leave for lunch at the Leavenworth complex.
After the explosion, guards at the farm
radiated for help and then began to search the debris until a team of about 20 inmates and guards arrived and began the rescue operation.
Prison officials said one of the dead inmates was Cantrell Blair, 27, of Chicago. Blair, who was the only inmate ever to receive a KU scholarship, had said he hoped to complete an undergraduate degree at KU when he was released from prison. Blair was dead on arrival at the Munson Army Base at Fort Leavenworth yesterday afternoon.
The injured inmates were: William DeLong, who was being treated at the prison hospital for a broken heel, and Andrew C. Payne, who was taken by Army helicopter to the University of Kansas Medical Center, where he was in critical condition with head injuries.
The injured guards were: Frank Radcliff.
assistant farm manager, and Tom Lamar. Both were taken to Munson Hospital.
The other dead inmates, whose bodies were recovered early this morning according to prison officials, were: Frank Kenneth Simmons, 34, Keller, Texas, serving 10 years for interstate transportation of stolen cattle; Juan Osoto, Mexico, serving 30 months for transportation of illegal aliens; Donald F. Letellier, 43, Inverness County, New York, for felony transportation of a firearm transported in interstate commerce; and Jerry Coleman, no hometown or conviction information was available.
The dead guard was John Cogan, 51, rural Rushville, M. Coogan's body was taken to Atchison, where his family was to make funeral arrangements.
The dead inmates were taken to the Davis Funeral Home in Leavenworth.
Blair ...
From page one
Blair had said his lack of education and other factors in his background led him to the conclusion.
other young people. I want to tour this country and talk to them. I think if they realize how important education is to them, teach whatever else they're doing on their own.
"My environment, my neighborhood and having my mother handicapped—there were several things that drove me to it," he said.
Uncle Milty files appeal
The owner of Uncle Milte's Cafe, 2246 Barker, Ave., filed an appeal yesterday of the city's decision to revoke his license to sell 3.2 beer.
Milton Collins, owner of the tavern, also is asking for an injunction against the city, pending the appeal in Douglas County District Court.
The city commission revoked Collins' cereal malt beverage license last week after resident areas and officials of Haskell Indian Junior College complained about fighting near the tavern and expressed concern about pedestrian safety on 23rd Street.
The injunction request is to be heard tomorrow in Douglas County District Court.
Cellins based his appeal on grounds that the decision to revoke his license was "unreasonable."
Collins said of the commissioners' action,
They had no right whatsoever. They did it on
consensus.
Uncle Milly's was open yesterday, but was not serving beer. The license revocation was on April 15.
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Blair was raised in a Chicago neighborhood that in 1968 was torn by race riots. He dropped out of high school after 10th grade and worked as a dishwasher for a while. After the restaurant closed, he drifted from job to job.
BLAIR SAID the 1968 race rips inspired his interest in political science and poetry. He wrote poetry and read, educating himself in many subjects.
In prison, he worked as a storeroom clerk for $10 a month and took classes.
Blair was determined to get an education and improve his life. Spoellerberg said.
"His main interest was getting done with his time and getting on with his life," Spellerberg said. "He rose above the surroundings of that prison and got on with his education. What dominated his being was beginning again."
Cantrell Blair
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The budget review by the subcommittee is routine, according to Heinemann. Threeman subcommittees are assigned by the Ways and Means Committee to each state university to help prepare the school's budget presentations.
HENEMANN SAID that members of the subcommittees, rather than remaining impartial, often became the proponents of the school's requests during budget budgeting.
Heinemann said he had been a member of the Fort Hays State University subcommittee and that he fought for and got appropriations for the university last year.
Heinemann said it was too early to tell how KU would fare in the budget hearings, but he attacked formula funding, the main funder of this year to future their budget requests.
"I could see that Fort Hays was getting the short end of the stick," he said. "So while other schools got 7 percent faculty pay increases, Fort Hays got 8 percent."
Formula funding uses the financial status and needs of peer schools as a basis for budget requests. Peer schools are those with similar sizes of enrollments and programs.
"Where as in the past, funding has been based on head count, it seems that with university enrollment peaking or decreasing, the schools are changing the rules so they are always on the plus side in asking for money," he said.
"That has caused a lot of legislators to ask questions about the system," he said. "So I don't think the Legislature is ready to accept formula funding yet."
films sua
Wednesday, January 31
Fellini:
LA STRADA
(1954)
Dir. Federico Fellini, with Anthony Quinn, Gluilletta Masina, Richard Basehart, Italy's subtilites.
Thursday, February 2
FAR FROM VIETNAM
(1967)
Dr. Jean-Luc Gudord, Alain Resnalis,
Agnes Naires, Claude Louchier, Joris
iens, and others. A documentary in
the French edition of Plus: "The
History Book, v. 2."
Friday & Saturday, February 2 & 3 BLUE COLAR
(1978)
BLUE COLLAR
Midnight Movie:
Dir, Paul Schrader, with Richard Pryor, Harvey Kellet, Kypert Hotto. "There are few movies around with a young man's 'her's' brains and grit." — Newsweek
THE GRATEFUL DEAD MOVIE
Dir. Jerry Garcia, Leon Gast; with the Grateful Dead. Lots of music, plus an animated sequence which features a group's logo. "Skeleton Uncle Sam."
Tuesday, February 6 Bogart/Bacall:
KEY LARGO
(1948)
Dir. John Huston; with Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Ed G. Robinson, Claire Trevor, Lionel Barrymore.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: OPEN HEARINGS on governance in the School of Social Welfare will be from 3 to 5 in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. Daniel Bays, professor of East Asian Studies will speak on the People's Republic of China and Taiwan as part of the WENDESDAY FORUM SERIES. The brown bag lunch will be at 11:45 a.m. in the United Ministries in Higher Education Center, 1204 Oread Ave.
TONIGHT: AN ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE by Mark Skolnick of the University of Utah will be at 7 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "Genetic Studies of Large Mormon Genealogies." KU GUNF CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Brown Gibson Musician. IBM STUDENT INFORMATION SEMINAR will be at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. FOR YOUR VIEWINGS will be at 7:30 in the Union Parlors and the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. A CLASS ON SOCIALISM, sponsored by the Young Socialist Alliance, will begin at 7:30 in the Oread Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: Feb. 1 is the DEADLINE FOR FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS for the summer institute in Great Britain; SAMUEL ADAMS, professor of journalism, will open the $3RD ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY MONTH ACTIVITIES with a Black Faculty and Student Council speech from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "Manipulation of the Media for Economic and Social Forces." KU SLAVIC CLUB will meet at 7 in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. KU HONORS STUDENT ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
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